This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
20924 | ? |
20924 | | offering? |
11510 | Why is n''t everyone fat in this city of such excellent cafes? |
11510 | Hills and Vistas What city built on hills has not been exalted in song and legend? |
11510 | Sailors-- trade winds-- ships-- what lurking thoughts of adventure, realized or denied, do they not summon in all of us? |
11510 | What do we see? |
26958 | But did he destroy any? |
26958 | But how were those who assisted him treated? |
26958 | Does it not seem curious that Ingle should give a receipt for one batch of tobacco, and within a short time have other tobacco forcibly seized? |
26958 | What was Baltimore''s opinion? |
26958 | What was the English law at the time of Ingle? |
16297 | A separate book shall be kept there, and names and marks[ of identification?] |
16297 | In an undated document( 1627? |
16297 | In the year 60-[?] |
16297 | Martin Castaño;[ undated; 1627?] |
16297 | Martin Castaño;[ undated; 1627?]. |
16297 | holed_: we?] |
16667 | But if you had beaten me? |
16667 | Darest thou kill Caius Marius? |
16667 | Is this well? |
16667 | Shall we have the circus factions in the Church? |
16667 | What will you leave us then? |
16667 | Who art thou? |
16667 | Whom do you rank as the third? |
16667 | Whom the next greatest? |
16667 | What was to be done with them? |
16667 | mother, what is it you do?" |
16667 | without gaining any advantage?" |
18685 | How can we send Mary to the scaffold on the testimony of perjured witnesses? |
18685 | If it was a grievance to pay more for a commodity, how could it be a grievance to pay less for the same commodity? |
18685 | In that case, how can we accept evidence which the forgers have supplied? |
18685 | Le plus souvent le pere n''est- il pas penetre de l''esprit de routine, tandis que le fils represente et defend la science progressive? |
18685 | May we be allowed to imagine the minds of men everywhere working together during many ages for the completion of our knowledge? |
18685 | Si la force materielle a toujours fini par ceder a l''opinion, combien plus ne sera- t- elle pas contrainte de ceder a la conscience? |
18685 | What have men to do with interests? |
15157 | ... Would he not have done better to preach to Alcalde Avalos, and to remind him that he was a man? |
15157 | ;[ 1589?] |
15157 | And what can be offered in this matter that the reader could not infer as a necessary consequence, contained in the preceding propositions? |
15157 | Can it be, perhaps, that your Lordship would send to Japon without my permission any vessel that you wished? |
15157 | [ 125] Now the port of Mariveles(?).--_Rizal_. |
15157 | [ 126] Subik(?).--_Rizal_. |
13130 | I then desired to know who among them were of Betagh''s opinion? |
13130 | Lau, understand you? |
13130 | Leaving_ Mallua_[ Moa?] |
13130 | Soon afterwards Rajah Laut came on board, accompanied by one of the sultan''s sons, and asked in Spanish, Who we were? |
13130 | There grow here a prodigious number of trees, producing a small kind of lemons called_ limasses_,( limes?) |
13130 | When it was broad day, I saw our ship close by us, on which I asked our guide, why he had brought us so far about? |
13130 | _ Arubon_[ perhaps Amboina?] |
13130 | _ Budia, Celaruri, Benaia, Ambalao, Bandon_[ perhaps Banda?] |
13130 | on the 25th January, 1522, they arrived at_ Tima_[ Timor?] |
13130 | passing the isles named_ Chacotian, Lagoma, Sico, Gioghi, Caphi, Sulacho, Lumatola, Tenetum, Bura_[ Bouro?] |
27233 | A question that is very frequently put is,"What has been the influence of Christianity upon Japanese life and thought?" |
27233 | How long, without the mainstay of religion, will the Japanese cling to this outworn but beautiful relic of his old life? |
27233 | On the other side patriotism is kept alive by the pilgrimages of school children to the national shrines, but one is confronted with the questions? |
27233 | WILL THE JAPANESE RETAIN THEIR GOOD TRAITS? |
27233 | What is it that has kept them unspotted from the world of business? |
18270 | *** Why should I say more of_ these two planks_, I may call them, for saving men? |
18270 | But, it may be asked, how has such a change been wrought in the minds of Episcopalians on both sides of the Atlantic? |
18270 | Is it not the name of God? |
18270 | What matters it whether priests claim this right as having been given them by means of baptism or penitence? |
18270 | Who then but the individual offender can know the sins for which forgiveness is asked? |
18270 | Why delay to enter on that which thou knowest will heal thee? |
18270 | Why then not concede to priests at least this same measure of honorability? |
16180 | But the question arises, Why should the Bocca della Verita, if such was its origin, have been used for the superstitious purpose connected with it? |
16180 | But what shall we think of the worship of the god Caligula and the god Nero? |
16180 | Filled with wonder and awe, the Apostle exclaimed,"Domine quo Vadis,"Lord, whither goest thou? |
16180 | How are we to regard the vaticinations of the heathen oracle? |
16180 | The question is naturally asked, Where were the obelisks originally placed? |
16180 | Why is it that we Christians look upon death with feelings so widely different? |
27701 | ( Train 3 passes 4:4(9? |
27701 | ), the"Griffin,"in which he sailed the Great Lakes to Lake Michigan,( and?) |
27701 | After four years of study in Springfield, Ohio, he was admitted( to?) |
27701 | Discovering the Ohio River, he travelled down possibly as far as( its?) |
27701 | Howe purporting to show that"the historical p(art?) |
27701 | In 1682,( after?) |
27701 | In 1919 the corporation spent$ 1,131,446 for safety work and the like, and( 1? |
27701 | Mayor Jones was re- elected on the non- partisan ticket in 1(899? |
27701 | Nine miles southwest of Painesville at Kirtland was( one?) |
27701 | The winter of 1679 La Salle passed at a post above Niagra Falls, where he built his famous( ship? |
27701 | When he returned there two years( later?) |
27701 | Where an inference is not certain, the presumed missing letters are in parentheses with a question mark, for example"p(art?)". |
27701 | [ Illustration: An American Cartoon( 1813) Queen Charlotte is represented as saying,"Johnny, wo n''t you take some more Perry?" |
27701 | many adventures, he floated down( to?) |
27701 | which he sent back laden with( furs?) |
13255 | --blank space in_ Alguns documentos_] whatever manner, in said lands and islands that are discovered by said fleet,[ whether(?) |
13255 | 11(? |
13255 | But how could we solicit such things without a preceding sentence in accord with the suit depending upon the petitions, etc? |
13255 | Couos, sect? |
13255 | It was indeed corrupt and defective, and what government is not? |
13255 | Moreover, you must watch and see to it that all the rents belonging to us[ in(?) |
13255 | [ 190] Referring to the_ Ymago Mundi_( 1483?) |
13255 | _ Clemens VII_( Giulio de''Medici).--Born 1475(? |
13255 | could the said Perez be a Spaniard?] |
18170 | And how could anything endure if thou wouldst not? |
18170 | And what is calculated to impress us with these truths if not serious reflection upon them? |
18170 | But what may and should a Christian ask for? |
18170 | How, then, can I deny my beloved Master, King and Saviour?" |
18170 | Indeed, is not the flower of the field clothed more beautifully by the hand of God, than was Solomon in all his glory? |
18170 | Is there not in this resemblance and likeness to God an unspeakably high dignity and glory for man? |
18170 | Is this possible? |
18170 | Not having any weapon, he said to the high priest Achimelech:"Hast thou here at hand a spear or a sword?" |
18170 | Of what little value is a flower which so soon withers? |
18170 | Since we are then so utterly dependent upon God that at any moment He could cut the thread of our lives, how greatly should we fear to offend Him? |
18170 | The prophet Jeremias asks:"Who is he that hath commanded a thing to be done, when the Lord commandeth it not?" |
18170 | What does this mean? |
18170 | What does this messenger from heaven desire of this humble virgin, unknown to the world? |
18170 | What is there about a man of less account than a single hair of his head? |
18170 | What would you think of a soldier ashamed of his colors? |
18170 | Would God deny such prayer? |
26004 | But who would say that such an expedient would ensure the duration of commerce, and the ability of your vassals and the foreigners to maintain it? |
26004 | By order of the royal Council a compilation is made( February, 1637?) |
26004 | Heredia''s list( 1618?) |
26004 | What do ye seek? |
26004 | Who brought you here? |
26004 | [ 84] From another direction there came, under a white flag, a letter from the Recollect fathers whom the Moros held captive there, that[ our men?] |
11820 | Are you happy? |
11820 | Can Europe keep the peace? |
11820 | D''apres Paris? |
11820 | D''apres Paris? |
11820 | Has the Jew spent his farthing? |
11820 | Have we outgrown religion? |
11820 | Have we outgrown religion? |
11820 | MCLESTER, FRANCES C. What is teaching? |
11820 | New minds: new men? |
11820 | Oh yeah? |
11820 | Oh yeah? |
11820 | SEE Goldwater, S. S. GOLDWATER, S. S. By what criteria shall the trustee judge his hospital? |
11820 | SEE Simonds, Frank H. Can Europe keep the peace? |
11820 | Was I a rooster? |
11820 | Was I a rooster? |
11820 | Was I a rooster? |
11820 | What can a father do? |
11820 | Where is Tommy? |
11820 | Where is Tommy? |
11820 | Will revolution come? |
18102 | Then,said he,"how do you consent that the Castilians and captain treat me thus in your presence, when you could easily kill them?" |
18102 | What, no more than that? |
18102 | And if religious were lacking, what would become of them? |
18102 | But if the Lord chose to take him, who doubts that it was fitting? |
18102 | But who can free himself from an evil tongue, and an ill will? |
18102 | For, if the devil learns that there are no soldiers, who doubts that he will return to gain the mastery of what was taken from him? |
18102 | If the more important things are entrusted to your governor, why not the lesser? |
18102 | Then why do not Portugal and Castilla unite in this South Sea and the coasts of Asia, where the enemy acquires so much wealth? |
18102 | What then would this holy provincial do? |
18102 | Who can tell what these convents did, and what they gave and supplied? |
18102 | Who could know the truth? |
18102 | Who would dare give his opinion freely, if he had to fear that it might be amplified or not? |
18102 | Will your Majesty grant him the favor of this dignity? |
18102 | Write to the new governor that we have heard of the lack of wood and of the other things that are[_ word illegible in MS._; necessary?] |
18102 | [_ Words illegible in MS._ The assembly hall?] |
18102 | replied Doña Catalina;"If we are drowning, for what do we love Him?" |
15412 | +"Ecquid verisimile est, ut tot ac tantae[ ecclesiae] in unam fidem erraverint?" |
15412 | -- III THE SILENCE OF OTHER NEW TESTAMENT WRITERS What are the objections brought against all this evidence? |
15412 | -- Or, because St. John omits all mention of the institution of the Holy Eucharist, are we to suppose that he knew nothing of that Sacrament? |
15412 | --* Harnack, What is Christianity? |
15412 | And if He is indeed sinless, the sinless Example, the sinless Sacrifice, how could He be otherwise born? |
15412 | For what is the Catholic doctrine of Incarnation? |
15412 | How can any serious student think that any but Jewish hands could have penned the first two chapters of St. Matthew''s Gospel? |
15412 | To reply--( I) First, we may surely ask-- Why should they mention it? |
15412 | What solid reason is there for not accepting it? |
29778 | But what can be expected in a land where the ant- heaps are ten feet high and twenty- four feet in circumference? |
29778 | But where was Goa? |
29778 | What country in the world is more independent than we are? |
29778 | When, in reply to her touching inquiry,''Is it quite hopeless?'' |
10118 | Item, for two doss( dozen?) 10118 Ma''am,"exclaimed the woman in astonishment,"do n''t you know this is the 11th October?" |
10118 | ''How comes,''I said,''such music to his bill? |
10118 | ''Why so?'' |
10118 | 3):--"Have we eaten of the insane root That takes the reason prisoner?" |
10118 | A quaint phrase applied to those who expect events to take an unnatural turn is:--"Would you have potatoes grow by the pot- side?" |
10118 | Dura taneu molli saxa cavantur aqua?" |
10118 | His wife then called him, thinking he must have hid himself, but he only replied,"Why do you call me? |
10118 | It is thus described by Burns:"Wee Jenny to her granny says,''Will ye gae wi''me, granny? |
10118 | Quid mollius unda? |
10118 | What mortal can now harm, Or foeman vex us more? |
15530 | Will that scourging do me any good? |
15530 | ), 1668; term as governor September 28(? |
15530 | ); San Lorenzo, April 22, 1608(? |
15530 | ); San Lorenzo, April 22, 1608(? |
15530 | ;[ 1616?]. |
15530 | ;[ Manila, 1616?] |
15530 | In amazement he said,"Shall I do that, Father?" |
15530 | Is it not evident that what is more than enough to fill it must overflow, and be the same as lost? |
15530 | The other things mentioned in the memorial, namely,[_ original MS. broken_; the appointment(?)] |
15530 | What were the good people to do in a village without a priest, and far distant from the residence where the fathers lived? |
15530 | [ Council of the Indias? |
15530 | [ Council of the Indias? |
15530 | [ Felipe III-- Valladolid, December 31, 1604(? |
15530 | [ Felipe III-- Valladolid, December 31, 1604(? |
15530 | _ Juan Alaminos y de Vivar_--Becomes governor, January 24(? |
15530 | _ Juan Manuel de la Peña Bonifaz_--Junior auditor of Manila Audiencia; succeeds as governor(_ ad interim_) by trickery, September 28(? |
16086 | But they do not pay in[ Macan?] |
16086 | But who would say that that victory was to begin his perdition, and so many troubles as I shall relate? |
16086 | From Xapon a great quantity of silver;[ abundance?] |
16086 | He died at Fuscimo( Fushimi? |
16086 | If any one should make bold to put the bell on the cat, as the adage says, who would make him comply with it? |
16086 | It is brought refined from there and is carried by way of Yndia to Portugal, where each ba[r?] |
16086 | It will carry two or three[ hundred?] |
16086 | They carry another kind of black wood from which the Chinese make certain little sticks one cuarto[_ i.e._, one- fourth vára?] |
16086 | They pay eight and one- half per cent at Goa, both for entrance and for clearance; and the same is true at Malaca, going and coming to[ India?] |
16086 | [ 24] Contract and agreement have been made to build another ship in Sasima[_ i.e._, Satsuma?] |
16086 | [ 44] Who but He gives kingdoms and monarchies? |
16086 | holed_: edict?] |
16086 | holed_: last?] |
16086 | holed_: oppress?] |
16086 | holed_] resolution and execution of many, among whom are some who have issued a proclamation[ for the services of the Indians? |
16086 | is worth six[ maçes?] |
28899 | Francisco de Villalva;[ 1687?]. |
28899 | Francisco de Villalva;[ Madrid, 1687?] |
28899 | He was sent to Europe as procurator( about 1656? |
28899 | He went to Europe( about 1674?) |
28899 | I remember that one Day they asked how many Wives the King of England had? |
28899 | Or does he think that we are afraid of him, that he speaks thus? |
28899 | Then, what is such a post good for? |
28899 | When the General had been informed of these Discourses, he would say, What, is Captain Swan made of Iron, and able to resist a whole Kingdom? |
28899 | and from whence we came? |
12892 | For what reason on earth( said he) did God curse the serpent? 12892 And could the world not have its existence in the Good God, when all the good were chosen by him? 12892 And how did the babbler fear the Angels whom he had himself made? 12892 And how unaware is again the vagabond that he confutes himself by his own babbling, not knowing what he gives out? 12892 And in what scripture did Peter prove to him that he had neither lot nor share in the heritage of the fear of God? 12892 For how will obscene things give life, if it were not a conception of daemons? 12892 For if( he cursed him) as the one who caused the harm, why did he not restrain him from so doing, that is, from seducing Adam? 12892 For what does he say? 12892 For what is thissword of detachment"but another aspect of the"fiery sword"of Simon, which is turned about to guard the way to the Tree of Life? |
12892 | O Fire- god, how were those seven begotten, how were they nurtured? |
12892 | Then again how did the Lower Regions come into existence, for Epinoia to descend to them? |
12892 | What was the Universal Principle of the"weeping philosopher,"the pessimist who valued so little the estimation of the vulgar([ Greek: ochloloidoros])? |
12892 | [ 21] How and in what manner, then, he asks, does God fashion man? |
12892 | [ Footnote 17:[ Greek: phronaesis], consciousness?] |
12892 | _ Tat._ And where hath he set it? |
12892 | _ Tat._ But wherefore, Father, did not God distribute the Mind to all men? |
12892 | v.[ Hippolytus(?)] |
15184 | That and nothing more, Father? 15184 What art thou doing, woman? |
15184 | ''Art thou resolved to serve the true God and to be a good Christian, or dost thou ask this with thy mouth only?'' |
15184 | ''Does love for God and for thy salvation move thee?'' |
15184 | ''Hast thou determined to abandon all the maganitos and to exchange them for the true God?'' |
15184 | A chief said to me:''Would you believe, Father, that all night long I did not close my eyes, I was so anxious and eager to pray?'' |
15184 | At once he made answer with much affection:"The hair, Father, and nothing more? |
15184 | Father, would I be false to God? |
15184 | I said to him in a loud voice, while all the rest preserved silence:''Dost thou say this heartily?'' |
15184 | Letters from Pedro Chirino( undated; 1604?) |
15184 | Pedro Chirino;[ undated; 1604?] |
15184 | Pedro Chirino;[ undated; 1604?]. |
15184 | They cast themselves at my feet, and upon their knees besought me not to depart, saying:''If we again fall into sin, to whom shall we have recourse?'' |
15184 | This took place near Sebu; what must be the condition of affairs elsewhere?" |
15184 | What do you fear from a man unarmed and alone, who puts himself in your power? |
15184 | When he was told that the father would not know it, he replied:''But will God fail to see it, even if the father does not know it?'' |
15184 | When the light penetrated their souls, they were astonished; and, full of joy, they began to ask one another,''What is this?'' |
15184 | When we were taught last year that we must not sin against the Divine Majesty, would we dare to do so?'' |
15184 | Your Reverence will doubtless ask:''Who inspired them with such warmth and fire, since they are a people so heedless by nature?'' |
15184 | _ Fray Jhoan de Tapia_, associate of the late provincial and secretary of the province[?]. |
15184 | dost thou dare to work on Christmas day?" |
30397 | And who can tell all that they suffered from all these causes? |
30397 | But the very injustice of the Indian giving the father courage, he said to the chiefs who had accompanied him:"What is this? |
30397 | Father Rois asked him"What is this, Father Vicar- prior?" |
30397 | For what time, then, is the purpose of inexorable justice, if it is not applied at such a time? |
30397 | What is this? |
31793 | Why should I rust in inactivity? |
26380 | Is it so very much farther? |
26380 | Oh, well, what''s the use of worrying? |
26380 | Some in Europe? |
26380 | Some in the United States? |
26380 | What business have you got to order us about? |
26380 | Where''s mother? |
26380 | Who are you? |
26380 | You see this gun? 26380 = Blistering Showers of Hot Ashes-- The People Frantic-- Cry EverywhereWhen Will It End?" |
26380 | A flow of lava, rain or stones or a cataclysm from the sea? |
26380 | And what was the awful power of evil that robbed of life 50,000 in city and neighboring villages almost in a moment? |
26380 | Are we going to die asphyxiated? |
26380 | Behold now, this city is near to flee unto, and it is a little one: Oh, let me escape thither,( is it not a little one?) |
26380 | Blistering Showers of Hot Ashes-- The People Frantic-- Cry Everywhere"When Will It End?" |
26380 | Had they not beheld the cataracts of flame fleeting unhindered up the broad avenues, and over the solid blocks of the city? |
26380 | I seemed to be saying to myself, will it never, never stop? |
26380 | Should they flee or not? |
26380 | The city became frantic from fear and everywhere was heard:"When will it all end?" |
26380 | They shot some men without provocation, and never thought to cry''halt''or''who comes there?''" |
26380 | What has to- morrow in store for us? |
26380 | Who can tell? |
26380 | Will it be by fire or asphyxia? |
26380 | Would their beautiful homes become a waste of jagged lava and black sand, like the neighboring district of Puna, once as fair as Hilo? |
26380 | he shrieked,"Why in heaven''s sake do n''t you bring the books?" |
22550 | ''Who,''she continued,''will take care of us poor women? |
22550 | Are staves or lumber the more profitable to ship? |
22550 | Are there not streams like thee flowing through the paradise of God? |
22550 | But, what is climate? |
22550 | But, whence is the grain derived? |
22550 | But, who can estimate a commerce which every year increases in many fold? |
22550 | Has nature done this by gradual recession, or by the slow upheaval of the land? |
22550 | How many are there in Detroit and other portions of the State, who will avail themselves of this beneficent republican measure? |
22550 | I think I hear him already stirring and inquiring for his children, and when he does awake what must become of you? |
22550 | Is it not so in Europe? |
22550 | Is this relative rate of increase of the exterior and interior cities to be changed, and, if it is to be changed, when is the change to commence? |
22550 | The second reason for their belief in this theory is the impossibility to explain from whence come the waters of Lake Huron and Lake Michigan? |
22550 | Why, then, can not both parties hit on some scheme that will bring them more closely into the fellowship of trade? |
22550 | Will it be said that this new region of the Northwest is less productive in agriculture? |
22550 | Will it not be so? |
22550 | Will not the general increase of population be greater in the interior States? |
22550 | Will not the productions of the soil increase faster? |
22550 | where our enemies are?" |
10838 | Is it a jaunting- car? |
10838 | Sure it''s not the ways of all Ireland, my dear,said Molly;"and it''s only them that has not that ca n''t pay-- how can they?" |
10838 | What''s all this, woman? |
10838 | Where''s my supper? |
10838 | --"And did you never invoke the three holy Maries?" |
10838 | --"And pray, Sir,"replied Foote, very gravely,"would that do you any harm?" |
10838 | --"What have you always done?" |
10838 | --"_Black_, cousin? |
10838 | And where''s the skin of excellent Calcavella, from the Caballero''s overflowing vaults? |
10838 | Did the comet bring coughs and catarrhs in his train? |
10838 | I can not dissemble with you; what would you have me do? |
10838 | In short-- shall we welcome a happy new year? |
10838 | Shall we check crafty care in his cunning career? |
10838 | Shall we have any war? |
10838 | Where''s the wild- fowl and the Bologna sausage sent you by that rogue, Gomez? |
10838 | Who would not wish that he had been so fortunate as to relieve a fellow creature so accomplished, from wretchedness, despair, and suicide? |
10838 | Will McAdam continue"Colossus of_ roads?_"Will Venus''s boy be abroad with his bow, And make the dear girls over bachelors crow? |
10838 | Will McAdam continue"Colossus of_ roads?_"Will Venus''s boy be abroad with his bow, And make the dear girls over bachelors crow? |
10838 | Will critics from caustic coercion be free? |
10838 | Will gas, so delicious,_ perfume_ our abodes? |
10838 | Will poets the pent of Parnassus attain? |
10838 | Will swindlers, as usual, the credulous fleece? |
10838 | Will the season produce us a_ deluge_ of rain? |
10838 | Will travellers''tomes touch the truth to a T? |
10838 | Will_ quid- nuncs_ from scandalous whispers refrain? |
10838 | and can it be true, That your_ double- fac''d_ sconce is again in our view? |
10838 | or will there be peace? |
10838 | that a_ misfortune?_ explain yourself, my poor fellow." |
10838 | would you send me to school again?" |
21258 | Whence do you come? |
21258 | Whither do you go? |
21258 | 33 and the square of gold, which signify the supreme place in the world assigned to the liberty of gold"? |
21258 | Does not the Englishman, consciously or otherwise, put a curse on everything he touches? |
21258 | How came this red- tied scoffer so far on the road of religion as to be damned? |
21258 | How did Leo Taxil become possessed of these rituals? |
21258 | If the Eucharist be liable to profanation, why reserve the Eucharist? |
21258 | Is that a Manichæan doctrine? |
21258 | Is that diabolism? |
21258 | Is that the cultus of Lucifer? |
21258 | Need I say that Miss Vaughan''s first impulse was to fall in worship at his feet? |
21258 | Some time subsequently to the third of August, our witness published a volume entitled"Are there Women in Freemasonry?" |
21258 | Under what circumstances and why did it do that? |
21258 | When the doctor subsequently drew her on the subject of this history, she replied, after the manner of the walrus,"Do you admire the view?" |
21258 | Where is it practised? |
21258 | Who are its disciples? |
21258 | Why did Signor Margiotta abandon Palladism and Masonry? |
21258 | Why has he changed the impeachment? |
21258 | Why was the doctor privileged to be present at these proceedings? |
21258 | _ A House of Rottenness._ Who would possess a lingam which was an_ Open Sesame_ to devildom and not make use thereof? |
18383 | ''Have you heard what has been determined about the horses?'' 18383 Why is this?" |
18383 | ''How?'' |
18383 | ''If you take them at all, why not take them in the face of day? |
18383 | ''You have made a great improvement by so doing,''I replied;''but are the British employed on this work?'' |
18383 | And again,"Can these Goths be the inventors of that architecture vulgarly called Gothic? |
18383 | And what shall we say of those lofty, slender, and finely fluted columns, which appear a part of the sublime structure they support? |
18383 | As for the poor weary wife, she thought of her crockery, and remarking in a matter of- fact way,"What shall we have for supper now?" |
18383 | But how can I help you in the matter, seeing that the work is not mine? |
18383 | But who can any longer consider these as wonders, after having seen so many in Rome? |
18383 | I asked one of the soldiers what they were there for? |
18383 | Milizia says of Theodoric,"Is this the language of a Gothic barbarian, the destroyer of good taste? |
18383 | One day I asked him, how he had attained to such a degree of perfection as to have gained so high a rank among the great painters of Italy? |
18383 | What were the Greeks then doing?" |
18383 | What would the ancients say, could they see our modern imitations of their labyrinths? |
18383 | Which are the most profane-- these pictures, or the Venus Anadyomene of Apelles, the Venus of Titian, and the Leda of Correggio? |
18383 | and are these the barbarians said to have been the destroyers of the beautiful monuments of antiquity? |
18383 | and if Filippo be ill, is that his fault?'' |
18383 | and what dost thou mean us to have for dinner, since thou hast overturned everything?'' |
18383 | do n''t you see that to create form and relief on a flat surface, is a greater labor than to fashion one shape into another?" |
18383 | eh? |
18383 | eh?'' |
18383 | is not Lorenzo there? |
18383 | said one of them,''do you not know what his intentions are?'' |
18383 | why does not he do something? |
18383 | why wilt thou not speak?" |
25930 | How is the stewardess? |
25930 | How many children have you? |
25930 | What matters to you the good or poor harvest, so long as you have fools to impose upon? |
25930 | Who could eat free soup[ 100] as you do, father, without working? |
25930 | And all this, for what motive? |
25930 | But by adopting an average for the students in the conciliar seminary of Manila in 1842 and 48[_ sic_; 43?] |
25930 | Consequently, will you kindly grant me three days? |
25930 | Going north, one meets the island of Polo[_ i.e._, Polillo? |
25930 | Granting the above, would freedom of worship be advisable for Filipinos? |
25930 | How many insurgents have abjured Catholicism? |
25930 | If the villages are in disorder or revolt, to whom will the alcalde turn his face for aid in checking and punishing them? |
25930 | Is it strange, then, that they are not more in the current of social forms? |
25930 | Let him not pour out the wine or break the wine- jars; for who has given him any authority for that? |
25930 | The Americans enjoy in America the most complete freedom of worship; why, then, should they not enjoy that same freedom when they go to Filipinas? |
25930 | What other recourse is there for him in such a conflict than to flee or to die in the attempt? |
25930 | What was the result of their apostolic labors? |
25930 | What would you say it you knew what passes in the villages that even preserve the names of missions? |
25930 | What, then, would the good Father Diaz wish? |
25930 | Why must one forever pursue an ideal perfection, which can not be obtained, and which is unnecessary in human society?" |
25930 | Will it be believed that the affair is left in this condition? |
25930 | Will the Americans grant them the latter because of that fact? |
25930 | [ 157] Why, then, has not that freedom of worship been granted to the Filipinos, if they themselves ask it? |
25930 | [ 17] Garo: probably the same as_ garita_; a fortified outpost? |
10479 | Does this mean the Jews? |
10479 | Factories arn''t doing much now, are they? |
10479 | For? |
10479 | Things are flat there as well as here are n''t they-- eh? |
10479 | What are they used for? |
10479 | What''s the reason there are so few people here? |
10479 | When shall we three meet again? |
10479 | Where will you sit? |
10479 | Who are the Presbyterians? |
10479 | Who erected the building? |
10479 | Why? |
10479 | Why? |
10479 | At the end somebody said,"Now, will some of the women pray?" |
10479 | Did you ever, gentle reader, see the"Book of Mormon?" |
10479 | He has a perfect right to venerate Mr. Tindall, and if he is a little fashionable, what of that?--isn''t it fashionable to be fashionable? |
10479 | He is rather too impervious and too oracular; but then who would not be if they had the chance? |
10479 | He said one Sunday"None of you are ower much to be trusted-- none of us are ower good, are we? |
10479 | How many people do you think there were in them? |
10479 | How would it be if the manuscript could not be found? |
10479 | It would be wrong to say that lucre is at the bottom of every parsonic change; but it is at the foundation of the great majority-- eh? |
10479 | Pews may be owned, seats may be taken, few sittings may be to let, but where are the worshippers? |
10479 | Standing in a narrow pulpit for a length of time must necessarily be fatiguing to him; but why ca n''t things be made easy? |
10479 | The thin woman then looked forward at the red- haired youth and in a clear voice said"Bin round there yet-- eh?" |
10479 | We could n''t help admiring the preacher''s eloquence; and a man who sat near us, and at the finish said,"Who is that fellow?" |
10479 | What could be more particular than Particular Baptism? |
10479 | What more could you desire? |
10479 | Who bids? |
10479 | Why ca n''t a few shrubs and flowers be planted in it? |
10479 | Why is not the ground trimmed up and made decent? |
33649 | 11 Why remain sad and idle? |
33649 | 20 What is it that renders death terrible? |
33649 | 27 Wouldst thou know what thou art? |
33649 | June 1 CAN WE, amongst all hearts, find one more amiable than that of Jesus? |
33649 | Why exhaust thyself in the anguish of melancholy? |
23155 | Are you going to murder me? |
23155 | Come,said Grayson, producing materials for writing;"here are pen, ink, and paper: are you willing to write as I dictate?" |
23155 | Do you, indeed? |
23155 | Have you no other''signs of promise''? |
23155 | Is it possible,said she, with some asperity,"that you already care so little for me as to enrol yourself for an absence of six months?" |
23155 | It''s Elwood''s horse, is n''t it? |
23155 | Spread out earth''s holiest records here, Of days and deeds to reverence dear: A zeal like this, what pious legends tell? |
23155 | What do you mean? |
23155 | What for? |
23155 | What_ did_ you mean then? |
23155 | When was he stolen? |
23155 | Whiskey is a pleasant drink, after all, is n''t it? |
23155 | Wo n''t anything else satisfy you but a written certificate? |
23155 | Yes, they are,answered Elwood quickly;"and we are here to know whether you intend to obey the authorities, and leave the country?" |
23155 | [ 49] What had become of this immense population? 23155 And Napoleon, was he aught but an abridgment of the French nation, the sublimate andproof"essence of French character? |
23155 | And if a deadly hatred of the Indian took possession of his heart, who shall blame him? |
23155 | And what more perfect correspondence could be conceived between the moral and intellectual and the physical outlines? |
23155 | In this juncture, what measures does he take? |
23155 | Strengthen his fortifications, and prepare for war, as the men of other nations had done? |
23155 | Such is the wife and mother of the pioneer, and, with such influences about him, how could he be otherwise than honest, straightforward, and manly? |
23155 | The Indian has no humor, no romance-- how could he possess poetical feeling? |
23155 | They were equal to the times in which they lived.--Had they not been so, how many steamboats would now be floating on the Mississippi? |
23155 | We come, finally to the question of the Indian''s fate: What is to become of the race? |
23155 | What was Cromwell but_ the Englishman_, not only of his own time, but of all times? |
23155 | What wonder is it, then, if he was a prime favorite with all the women, or that his advent, to the children, made a day of jubilee? |
23155 | What, then-- to apply the principle-- is the state of this sentiment in the Indian? |
23155 | When Stone manifested some anxiety on the subject, she turned suddenly upon him and demanded--"You do not think our marriage legal, then?" |
23155 | that''s it, is it? |
30888 | How can I cease to pray for thee? 30888 My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
30888 | What is their object? |
30888 | What name do they bear? |
30888 | Can He not hear me when for thee I pray?" |
30888 | Can He not reach thee with His tender care? |
30888 | If not, then how came about their universal acceptance and continuance even unto this present day? |
30888 | In time there grew up a church there, a mixed society of Jews and Gentiles, and the citizens of Antioch naturally asked,"What are they?" |
30888 | N N or M.--The letters placed after the first question in the Church Catechism,"What is your name?" |
30888 | This being the case the question, therefore, is not"Shall we have forms?" |
30888 | What becomes of the living soul when thus separated from the body by death? |
30888 | but,"_ What_ form shall we have in our Public Worship?" |
12111 | 1728), Thomas Frye( 1710- 1762), Edward Fisher( 1722- 1785? |
12111 | 1816? |
12111 | And what of the women of Ireland today? |
12111 | And when that"next rebellion"came, the great uprising of the outraged race in 1641, what do we find? |
12111 | But, we may lawfully ask, will not this peace bring with it a special danger, against which we ought to take precautions? |
12111 | Could there be more striking proof of the natural bent and aptitude of the Irish mind for journalism? |
12111 | Did they keep before the Norsemen to America too? |
12111 | From our point of view, what would be the result of that arrangement? |
12111 | If it be further asked:"Does this statement stand the test of strict investigation?" |
12111 | If it is a question of languages, why not learn one of the more useful ones? |
12111 | Oh, whose shall be the potent hand To give that touch informing, And make thee rise, O Southern Land, To life and poesy warming?" |
12111 | On our side, what shall we say of it? |
12111 | Shall they come short of the high ideal of the past, falter and fail, if devotion and sacrifice are required of them? |
12111 | To what element in the Irish nature are we to attribute this joyous and illuminating gift? |
12111 | We can do it if we wish it: the question is, shall we wish it? |
12111 | What did learning bring him? |
12111 | What of the sister of Henry Joy McCracken, Mary, the friend and fellow- worker with the Belfast United Irishmen? |
12111 | When did this language begin to be used in literature? |
12111 | Who does not know of his brilliant performances on the track? |
12111 | Who has not heard of the great music school of San Gallen, founded by St. Gall,"the wonder and delight of Europe,"whither flocked German students? |
12111 | Who has not heard of the wondrous little Thomas Conneff from the short- grass county of Kildare? |
12111 | Who would ask anything racier in its kind than the former''s"Father O''Flynn"? |
12111 | Why was he so eager to bear for its sake"all the thousand aches That patient merit of the unworthy takes"? |
12111 | With such workmen, having such instincts and training, what of the housing and surroundings to contain them and give them a fit and suitable setting? |
22639 | ).--Why is Lord Crewe always called so, and not Bishop of Durham, considering his spiritual precedency? |
22639 | ***** Whereshall we go this morning? |
22639 | 61. of the_ Spectator_, as"The Witches''Prayer,"which falls into verse either way, only that it reads"cursing"one way, and"blessing"the other? |
22639 | Anthony Horneck._--Do any of the letters of the once celebrated Dr. Anthony Horneck exist in any library, public or private? |
22639 | Are we not apt to underrate the number of Romanised Celts remaining in England after the Saxon Conquest? |
22639 | At what parts of the service were these psalms and hymns directed to be introduced? |
22639 | By what authority was it sanctioned? |
22639 | Can any of your readers inform me_ when_ the elder Tradescant came over to England, and when he was appointed royal gardener? |
22639 | D. C._ Shaking Hands._--What is the origin of the custom of_ shaking hands_ in token of friendship? |
22639 | Does he mean to infer that it did not in reality equally belong to Shakspeare''s age? |
22639 | Have these collections been carefully examined, and their contents made use of in any topographical publication? |
22639 | I. H. T._ Meaning of Waste Book._--Can you or any of your readers inform me the origin of the term used in book- keeping, viz.,_"Waste"book_? |
22639 | If so, how has its place been supplied heretofore in our diplomatic correspondence? |
22639 | In a burlesque some years ago, I recollect a passage was brought to a climax with the very words,"Wilt eat a crocodile?" |
22639 | May I hazard a few conjectures? |
22639 | Or is the epigram only a creation of the pleasing author''s fertile imagination? |
22639 | The books were sold by auction; but what has become of the manuscripts? |
22639 | The question is: Does the meaning MR. SINGER attaches to this word require in the passage cited the expression of quantity to make it definite? |
22639 | Was it not in the reign of Elizabeth? |
22639 | Was not Lord Bristol( who was an Earl) always called Bishop of Derry? |
22639 | Was this custom contemplated by the compilers of the Book of Common Prayer? |
22639 | When and how did the custom of singing metrical psalms and hymns in churches originate? |
22639 | Whether_ any_ portrait of Thomas Earl of Ormonde has been published? |
22639 | Why should sixes and sevens be more congruous with disorder than"twos and threes?" |
22639 | _ A Cracow Pike._--Can any of your readers tell me what_ a Cracow pike_ is? |
22639 | _ George Steevens._--Can any of your readers inform me whether a memoir of George Steevens, the Shakspearian commentator, ever was published? |
22639 | _ How many_ engraved portraits of Thomas, the famous Lord Ossory, have been issued? |
22639 | _ How many_ engraved portraits of the first and second Dukes of Ormonde, respectively, have appeared? |
22639 | _ Lincoln Missal._--Is a manuscript of the missal, according to the use of the church of Lincoln, known to exist? |
22639 | _ Newburgh Hamilton_.--Can any of your readers inform me who Newburgh Hamilton was? |
22639 | and whence comes the saying? |
22639 | and, if so, where may it be seen? |
22639 | or that I was ignorant of its earlier prevalence? |
32483 | Father,she said,"you see this vessel standing here; can you call it by any other than its right name?" |
32483 | Is it heaven for you, and earth for me? |
32483 | What should I gain by becoming a Christian? |
32483 | Why, then,asked Constantine,"will you not join the Church?" |
32483 | Why,said the bishop,"should we trouble ourselves to remedy evils which will probably come to an end to- day?" |
32483 | But Donatus flew out into a great fury when he heard of this--"What has the emperor to do with the Church?" |
32483 | He sent for some of them, and asked why they did not offer sacrifice as their law had ordered? |
32483 | How can I, who am forced daily to drink bitter things, draw forth sweet things to you? |
32483 | Turning to Remigius, who led him by the hand, he asked,"Is this the kingdom of heaven which you have promised me?" |
32483 | _ Cloth boards_ 1 6= When was the Pentateuch Written?= By GEORGE WARINGTON, B.A., Author of"Can we Believe in Miracles?" |
2101 | Justify? 2101 ''Nevertheless, Madam,''said I,''does not your Majesty place really your trust in God? 2101 -- So that, it would seem, there WILL gradually among mankind, if Friedrich last some centuries, be a real Epic made of his History? 2101 --Which will mean also that M. de la Bergerie may go home? 2101 --While this was going on, her Brother, Duke Ernst August, came into the Queen''s room,--perhaps with his eye upon me and my motions? |
2101 | 74( quoting_ Memoires du Comte de Dohna);_& c.& c.]--about what? |
2101 | A Crown- Prince of Prussia, ought he not to learn soldiering, of all things; by every opportunity? |
2101 | All that he did was to knock at the gate( the Kaiser''s gate and the world''s), and ask,"IS it achieved, then?" |
2101 | And then her mind,--for gifts, for graces, culture, where will you find such a mind? |
2101 | And what did he achieve and suffer in the world?" |
2101 | Are you for Bedlam, then?" |
2101 | But now, how extricate the man from his Century? |
2101 | But what else was possible? |
2101 | Curiosity quickened, or which should be quickened, by the great and all- absorbing question, How is that same exploded Past ever to settle down again? |
2101 | Do not you fly(_ n''a- t- elle pas recours_) to the blood and merits of Jesus Christ, without which it is impossible for us to stand before God?'' |
2101 | Do you not very earnestly(_ bien serieusement_) crave pardon of Him for all the sins you have committed? |
2101 | Does not the new Sovereign Lady, in her heart, wish YOU were dead, my Prince? |
2101 | Elector Friedrich was indeed advised, in cipher, by his agent at Vienna, to write in person to--"Who is that cipher, then?" |
2101 | Every original man of any magnitude is;--nay, in the long- run, who or what else is? |
2101 | Has the reader heard of Sauerteig''s last batch of_ Springwurzeln,_ a rather curious valedictory Piece? |
2101 | Hope it perhaps? |
2101 | How did the like of him contrive to achieve Kingship? |
2101 | Is Brandenburg grown ripe for having a crown? |
2101 | Kaiser, Karl or Charles VI.? |
2101 | Let us give some Excerpt, in condensed state:--"How can St. Jerome, for example, be a key to Scripture?" |
2101 | Men not"of genius,"apparently? |
2101 | One question only are we a little interested in: How he came by the Kingship? |
2101 | Such waste of labor and of means: what can one do but be silent? |
2101 | We are to try for some Historical Conception of this Man and King; some answer to the questions,"What was he, then? |
2101 | What doomed dog questions it, then? |
2101 | What remains but that I blow my brains out, and do at length one true action?" |
2101 | Whence, how? |
2101 | Why not give him this promotion; since it costs us absolutely nothing real, not even the price of a yard of ribbon with metal cross at the end of it? |
2101 | Will it be needful for you to grant Brandenburg a crown? |
2101 | [ Mirabeau,_ Histoire Secrete de la Cour de Berlin,_ Lettre 28?? |
2101 | [ Mirabeau,_ Histoire Secrete de la Cour de Berlin,_ Lettre 28?? |
2101 | at Madrid, 1st November, 1700, for whose heritages all the world stood watching with swords half drawn, considerably assist Pater Wolf? |
34067 | He continues:-- How many testimonies of this violence which is in love, are daily found? |
34067 | Now which of these systems has ever consoled an afflicted heart, or repeopled a lonely one? |
34067 | This he promised to do and, as she found out from his servant( what is it these nuns do not find out?) |
34067 | What else could he say?" |
34067 | Which of these teachers has ever shown men how to wipe away a tear? |
22459 | How came these Gospels to be so alike and yet so different? |
22459 | We receive nothing whatever of the Arsinoite, or Valentinus, or of Mitias(?) 22459 ), and about the assimilation of His life by the believer( vi.)? 22459 *** Peshitta version,? 22459 **? 22459 **? 22459 *? 22459 *? 22459 *? 22459 *? 22459 *? 22459 *? 22459 11- 39)? 22459 13)? 22459 2- 5)? 22459 9- 20), 63, 285Babylon"in N. T., 242, 279 Balaamites, 266 Baptism, St. Paul''s doctrine of, 164, 175, 205; for the dead, 140 Barnabas, St., author(?) |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | ? |
22459 | An* denotes a direct quotation or the expression of almost no doubt; a? |
22459 | And if Marcion is really quoted in 1 Tim., how could Polycarp have quoted 1 Tim., as he does, before Marcion''s book was written? |
22459 | But if it originally formed part of the Epistle, as appears to be the case, can we regard this as a conclusive proof that St. Peter did not write it? |
22459 | But if so, why is not the individual''s name mentioned, like the name of the recipient of the Third Epistle? |
22459 | Can we fix the date more accurately than this? |
22459 | From A.D. 29 to? |
22459 | From A.D.? |
22459 | How is righteousness to be attained? |
22459 | Is it sin? |
22459 | Next, St. Paul asks why it is that we are no longer under the Law? |
22459 | Shall I go on sinning that God''s mercy may be all the greater in forgiving me? |
22459 | What did he first write to you in the beginning of the Gospel? |
22459 | What is the meaning of the name"Galatia"? |
22459 | What, then, shall we think of the Law? |
22459 | Why return to the beggarly rudiments of knowledge? |
22459 | With regard to the other Elders, the question at once arises, Did Papias include among those Elders the apostles whom he mentions? |
22459 | [ 1] ANALYSIS Salutation from Paul and Timothy to Philemon and Apphia(? |
22459 | [ 4] We naturally inquire what became of this Hebrew Gospel? |
22459 | to, identical with"Ephesians,"176, 182 Latinisms in St. Mark, 54 Law, teaching of Christ on, 44, of St. Paul on, 154, 163, of Hebrews on, 216 Linus,? |
22459 | who also were the compilers of the new Book of Psalms(?) |
11729 | For what reason? |
11729 | ''Am I to be hunted in this manner?'' |
11729 | ''Are we alive after all this satire?'' |
11729 | ''Because a man can not be right in all things, is he to be right in nothing?'' |
11729 | ''Do n''t you consider, Sir, that these are not the manners of a gentleman?'' |
11729 | ''Do the devils lie? |
11729 | ''Do you know how to say_ yes_ or_ no_ properly?'' |
11729 | ''How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?'' |
11729 | ''How much do you think you and I could get in a week if we were to_ work as hard_ as we could?'' |
11729 | ''How will you prove that, Sir?'' |
11729 | ''If a bull could speak, he might as well exclaim,"Here am I with this cow and this grass; what being can enjoy greater felicity?"'' |
11729 | ''If any man has a tail, it is Col,''v. 330;''I will not be baited with what and why; what is this? |
11729 | ''Pray, Sir, have you ever seen Brentford?'' |
11729 | ''Upon the whole, which is preferable, the philosophic method of the English, or the rhetoric of the French preachers? |
11729 | ''What harm does it do to any man to be contradicted?'' |
11729 | ''What have you to do with Liberty and Necessity? |
11729 | ''What is your drift, Sir?'' |
11729 | ''Who can like the Highlands?'' |
11729 | ''Who is the worse for being talked of uncharitably? |
11729 | ''Why do n''t you dash away like Burney?'' |
11729 | ''Why do you shiver?'' |
11729 | ''Worth seeing? |
11729 | 126;''Have you no better manners? |
11729 | 141, n. 2;''Does the dog talk of me?'' |
11729 | 153, n. 1;''do the devils lie?'' |
11729 | 248; which is the best? |
11729 | 273; humane one, a, v. 357;''is any King a Whig?'' |
11729 | 320;''If I accustom a servant to tell a lie for_ me_, have I not reason to apprehend that he will tell many lies for himself?'' |
11729 | 320;''Is getting £ 100,000 a proof of excellence?'' |
11729 | 321, n. 3;''is this your tragedy or comedy?'' |
11729 | 341;_ Lives of the Poets_, 200 guineas(? |
11729 | 36, 257; what is poetry? |
11729 | 444; what should be taught first? |
11729 | 461;''Who can run the race with death?'' |
11729 | 4_; v. 389, n. 1;''Describe the inn, Sir? |
11729 | 51;''If one man in Scotland gets possession of two thousand pounds, what remains for all the rest of the nation?'' |
11729 | 57;''To a sick man what is the public?'' |
11729 | 69;''What, is it you, you dogs?'' |
11729 | 94;''Do you think that a man the night before he is to be hanged cares for the succession of a royal family?'' |
11729 | Biddle?" |
11729 | Boswell?" |
11729 | Can a leaf be cancelled without too much trouble? |
11729 | I owe to the authenticity of my work, to its respectability, and to the credit of my illustrious friends[? |
11729 | Mr. Berkeley, being called upon, enquired what was to be done? |
11729 | Or what more than to hold your tongue about it?'' |
11729 | Pray, now, are you ever able to bring the sloe to perfection?'' |
11729 | You may be sure that I do[? |
11729 | _ Sir Thomas Brown''s remark''Do the devils lie? |
11729 | a prig, Sir?'' |
11729 | is Signor Florismarte there?" |
11729 | what is that? |
11729 | why is a cow''s tail long? |
11729 | why is a fox''s tail bushy?'' |
10151 | But where,demanded the wise grandson of Olga,"is your country?" |
10151 | But,says he,"it will be said, perhaps, how do we know that this work came from the Lord? |
10151 | Desirest thou power? |
10151 | Did not I tell thee,said the latter, mournfully,"what the consequences would be; that we should be driven from our palace and country?" |
10151 | See you,said he to his disciples,"these hills? |
10151 | Thou wert indeed a true prophet,replied the self- accused father;"but what power could avert the decrees of fate?" |
10151 | Valiant warriors,said Hastings to Rollo,"whence come ye? |
10151 | Yes,said Rollo,"we have heard tell of him; Hastings began well and ended ill.""Will ye yield you to King Charles?" |
10151 | And what shall we do-- whither shall we go, when we have no longer a country?'' |
10151 | Are these military ensigns, or are they not rather the garnishments of women? |
10151 | Are you ignorant that these fierce inhabitants of the desert resemble their own native tigers? |
10151 | But what can one man, however able and advanced, do against the current of his age? |
10151 | But who art thou, thou who speakest so glibly?" |
10151 | Can it happen that the sharp- pointed sword of the enemy will respect gold, will it spare gems, will it be unable to penetrate the silken garment? |
10151 | Could the holiest office in Christendom be more deeply outraged than by a sale such as this? |
10151 | Dost thou not perceive that thy Moslems flee? |
10151 | Dost thou wish the Mussulmans to curse me? |
10151 | Had he the right to massacre? |
10151 | How can our Lord say to such,''Ye are the light of the world,''''the salt of the earth''? |
10151 | How can the saying be applied to them,''Blessed are the poor in spirit''? |
10151 | How can they say with the apostle Peter,''Lo, we have left all and followed thee,''and,''Silver and gold have I none''? |
10151 | If peradventure these walls had been confided to thy keeping as they have been to mine, wouldst thou do as thou biddest me?" |
10151 | If these can only be rallied, who can say what may follow? |
10151 | Is it peace, or is it war?" |
10151 | Knowest thou not that King Charles doth purpose thy death by cause of all the Christian blood that thou didst aforetime unjustly shed? |
10151 | Now who is it who writes thus? |
10151 | The weight of the name of Olga decided her grandson, and he said no more in answer than these words:"Where shall we be baptized?" |
10151 | Upon one occasion the King came to speech with Leif, and asked him,"Is it thy purpose to sail to Greenland in the summer?" |
10151 | What are they about? |
10151 | What did that signify to him? |
10151 | What do ye, sirs? |
10151 | What does it matter? |
10151 | What insufferable madness is this-- to wage war with so great cost and labor, but with no pay except either death or crime? |
10151 | What is the name of your lord and master? |
10151 | What miracle dost thou work that we should believe thee? |
10151 | What seek ye here? |
10151 | Whence, therefore, O soldiers, cometh this so stupendous error? |
10151 | Who can say that, in such a case, the three kingdoms would have taken the form they took in 843? |
10151 | Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury upon thee? |
10151 | [ 40][ Footnote 37: These chains are not mentioned by the Arabs; but what can be expected from their brevity?] |
10151 | said the African,"how long wilt thou remain here? |
10151 | what tidings bringeth this stranger? |
30730 | ''But is not that a rather irreverent way for Thompson to be talking about God, calling Him a hound? 30730 ''Is he a mystic of the orthodox sort, like Cynewulf or Crashaw; or an unorthodox mystic, like Blake or Shelley?'' |
30730 | ''Oh, I see, Thompson is pursuing God, is he?'' 30730 ''Well, now, what do you consider his greatest production?'' |
30730 | ''Well, then, God is pursuing Thompson, is that it?'' 30730 ''Well, then, how can God be going after Thompson? |
30730 | ''Well, what on earth does Thompson mean by that Hound?'' 30730 ''What kind of poet is he?'' |
30730 | ''Why did you choose Thompson?'' 30730 But I think I acquired a satisfactory answer to that question so often put to me: Can the Japanese really grasp a spiritual truth? 30730 Do they really get at the meaning of Christianity? 30730 Halts by me that footfall: Is my gloom, after all, Shade of His hand, outstretched caressingly? 30730 How are we to discover the extraordinary seal in a case that requires special and extraordinary treatment? 30730 Is it a physical pursuit?'' 30730 Strange, piteous, futile thing, Wherefore should any set thee love apart? 30730 Such is; what is to be? 30730 The pulp so bitter, how shall taste the rind? 30730 What does he mean by comparing God to a hound?'' 30730 What is God after?'' 30730 What''s that? 30730 Where shall we find its equal for exaltation of mood that knows no fatigue from the first word to the last? 30730 Whether man''s heart or life it be which yields Thee harvest, must Thy harvest fields Be dunged with rotten death? 30730 Whom wilt thou find to love ignoble thee, Save Me, save only Me? 30730 [ Illustration: Titanic glooms of chasmèd fears_ Page 45_]''But, see here; according to Thompson''s belief God is everywhere, is n''t He?'' |
30730 | [ Illustration: Whether man''s heart or life it be which yields Thee harvest, must Thy harvest fields Be dunged with rotten death? |
30730 | is Thy love indeed A weed, albeit an amaranthine weed, Suffering no flowers except its own to mount? |
30730 | must Thou char the wood ere Thou canst limn with it? |
33708 | 2nd, Should the_ Anima ejus et animae omnium_, etc., be said, and is there any definite rule about it? |
33708 | 3rd, When is the_ De profundis_ to be said, and when is it to be omitted? |
33708 | An dicendum sit in fine absolutionis mortuorum requiescat vel requiescant? |
33708 | And may we not ask has not the Irish Catholic sufficient grounds for adopting this opinion? |
33708 | But is the verse_ Anima ejus_ to be said at the end, after the_ Requiescant in pace_, if the remains are not present? |
33708 | Can he show that no intervening links are omitted between these two names? |
33708 | Does it denote a descent from father to son? |
33708 | Does it not seem obviously to point to his_ retinue of servants_? |
33708 | Has not all the legislation of the country for centuries been directed to the destruction of Catholicity? |
33708 | Is it improbable that among five men of 80, some had grand- children who had attained the age of 20? |
33708 | Or does it signify a lengthened period of time? |
33708 | What can be the meaning of the_ house of Jacob_ thus distinguished from_ his children_ and_ their little ones_? |
33708 | Would he abandon now those men of loyal heart whom he had known from a boy, and who had grown up with himself in his father''s house? |
34268 | A HOMILY OF CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA, entitled, Who is the Rich Man that is Being Saved? |
34268 | Friction makes the gyrostats fall, what is it that causes a top to rise? |
34268 | If we have a spinning ball and we give to it a new kind of rotation, what will happen? |
34268 | Or this--"What metal is as strong compared with steel as steel is compared with lead? |
34268 | What do they do?" |
34268 | What is it all about? |
34268 | Where has its flexibility gone? |
34268 | Who are the members of the British Association? |
34268 | Who ever heard of an old inhabitant of Japan or Peru writing an interesting book about those countries? |
34268 | Why did they destroy what never can be replaced?" |
2139 | And happy? |
2139 | And then? |
2139 | And what became of your brother? |
2139 | And what was your family name? |
2139 | Are the followers of the Black Prince again attacking us? 2139 Canst thou not do,"he said to himself,"what these have done? |
2139 | Did he live in Rue de Seine? |
2139 | Is he alive? |
2139 | Then you know something of him? |
2139 | Where is he? |
2139 | Who are those young men? |
2139 | Who is that old man? |
2139 | You had a sister? |
2139 | As if seeking more time for deliberation, he asked her another question"And, my child, what became of your father?" |
2139 | Could even the pious people who flocked to the cathedral know there was amongst them a Charles whose hands were stained with parricidal guilt? |
2139 | Could joy be greater? |
2139 | Could she have misunderstood the prophetic voice of her sainted Father Francis, who knew the secrets of God in her behalf? |
2139 | Could the delicate frame and soul of her little sister bear the hardships of a soldier''s life? |
2139 | Could the man of God who made it so venerable to his people meet the wretch who had assumed it to dishonor it? |
2139 | Could we, in the face of the holy teachings of the Church, institute a comparison between the mother of the soldier and the mother of a priest? |
2139 | Do you not think his murderers would pay dearly for this attack on him? |
2139 | Have any witnesses come forward to swear to his assassination? |
2139 | How is this exoteric teaching consistent with the full and final revelation of divine truths? |
2139 | Is it the venerable cloister buried in the snow, buffeted by the storm, and threatened by the avalanche? |
2139 | The Turks seeking revenge for the defeat of Lepanto? |
2139 | Then, amidst a death- like silence, he cried out in a voice of thunder that penetrated the regions of the damned:"Catherine, where art thou now?" |
2139 | Timid youths and tender maidens have abandoned the deceitful joys of time for the imperishable goods of eternity; canst thou not do likewise? |
2139 | Was it a dream? |
2139 | Was it the hallucination of a spirit of evil that revels in the human passions? |
2139 | Were these lions, and art thou a timid deer?" |
2139 | What juvenile album is complete without a sketch of Mont Blanc? |
2139 | What must have been the character of the homes that received such men after their midnight revels? |
2139 | Whence come the sound of arms, Louis, to fire thy young ambition? |
2139 | Who can flee from the eye of God? |
2139 | life''s heartless mockeries who can bear When grief is dumb and deep thought brings despair? |
2139 | or Christian Spain still intoxicated with its own dream of ambition? |
2139 | what have I done?" |
2139 | who would inhabit This bleak world alone? |
12911 | A star? 12911 It is; what will you take?" |
12911 | No sight? 12911 What are sail- needles?" |
12911 | What do you think of it? |
12911 | Whom shall we name? |
12911 | Yes; but is he also able? 12911 After the lecture, a few days later, he turned to me and asked,Is she here?" |
12911 | And until we have made our own churches fully free and fruitful in spiritual life are we absolved from the call to service? |
12911 | And what course can we pursue to get the most and the best out of it? |
12911 | Boylike I would say,"Father, what shall I do?" |
12911 | But what_ is_ best in life? |
12911 | Can you wonder that I have kept this from you? |
12911 | Do you know I believe work with boys is about the only hope? |
12911 | Finally I mentioned, casually like, that I was_ Tom_, whereat he feigned surprise, and remarked in his pleasant voice,"Was that you? |
12911 | HAVE WE DONE OUR WORK? |
12911 | Have we earned our discharge from the army of life? |
12911 | Have we not done our work?" |
12911 | He smilingly replied,"You see its place? |
12911 | How passed the night through thy long waking?" |
12911 | I arose well at the side of the chamber, while the leader stood directly in front, but the Speaker happened(?) |
12911 | I asked,"Who do you think we have in mind?" |
12911 | I said,"What''s the idea?" |
12911 | If an Indian wishes to ask where you are going, he will say,"Ta hunt tow ingya?" |
12911 | If he is not read, whose fault is it? |
12911 | In all innocence I asked the somewhat leading question:"What did Jesus charge them?" |
12911 | Is it possible that after a separation of nearly six years I have at last met my father? |
12911 | Is it?--and if not, why not? |
12911 | Langdon would suggest some procedure:"How will this do, Jim?" |
12911 | My own sister asked in indignation:"Who is that old man making eyes at me?" |
12911 | OUR FATHER Is God our Father? |
12911 | On every hand was heard the question,"What shall we do with our boys?" |
12911 | One of the members later cornered him and asked"Where is the watershed?" |
12911 | Shall human will succumb to fate, Crushed by the happenings of a day? |
12911 | Shall we retreat? |
12911 | The brother lingered and finally drawled,"Deacon, it''s customary, is n''t it, to_ treat_ a buyer?" |
12911 | The elder, looking up, said,"Why did n''t the pesky fool bring her with him?" |
12911 | The fifth line of the seventh verse originally read:"Or is civilization a failure?" |
12911 | Then of Perkins he asked,"By the way, Senator, how is Brady doing?" |
12911 | There are those who say,"Why should we keep it up? |
12911 | WHY THE CHURCH? |
12911 | We met one of his friends, who said,"How are you, Ames?" |
12911 | What is the most important thing in life? |
12911 | What is their testimony in this particular case? |
12911 | Where are the sellers of lottery tickets, where the horse- races and the open gambling? |
12911 | Who are we that we should complain that life is hard, or conclude that it is not better so? |
12911 | Why do we covet other opportunities instead of doing the best with those we have? |
12911 | no sound?" |
19528 | Do we forget the angels when once they visit us? |
19528 | Hark, is it not the angel voices? 19528 How did you happen to come here?" |
19528 | My dear sir, do you still remember me? |
19528 | What are you doing here, are all the Eastern soldiers here in this place? |
19528 | Who is your sister? |
19528 | After a short silence she heard another sound and she called,"Are you ill, Mary? |
19528 | As I passed he said,"Are you going to forget your old postman of 120 Charles street, Boston?" |
19528 | At last father spoke, with tears of gladness in his eyes,"Where is Mary, your mother, my children?" |
19528 | Can he surmount the technical difficulties and the mechanism of the vocal organs? |
19528 | He came up and said in an off- hand way,"Maggie, how would you like to make a Bear flag?" |
19528 | He replied,"Will it make me sing?" |
19528 | He said,"Are you not Miss Kroh? |
19528 | How is it possible for them to guide the young singer when they can not give a pure tone example themselves for the pupil to follow? |
19528 | How many of these thousands of dollars come back to these students? |
19528 | How should the longer sung notes be taught? |
19528 | I could not reply for a moment, and I looked at him and said,"Are you Charles Blake?" |
19528 | I looked at him in astonishment and said,"My dear comrade, where have I seen you before?" |
19528 | I looked up in surprise and said,"A bear flag? |
19528 | I said,"What song would you like best to hear, now that you are sick, if you could hear anyone sing?" |
19528 | I said,"Yes, will you do it?" |
19528 | I said,"You were unable to hear the music today?" |
19528 | I saw the situation and let out a merry laugh, saying,"Was it then so bad you had to cry?" |
19528 | I was so dissatisfied, I said,"What is the matter that you do not take this note?" |
19528 | In her girlish way Pauline used to say,"Oh, dear auntie, when I am a great singer wo n''t you be glad and proud of me?" |
19528 | Is it real? |
19528 | Is not then this constant vibration of the voice a gross fault? |
19528 | Mother was awakened during the night and said,"Mary, are you up?" |
19528 | Now what do we hear? |
19528 | Shall I hear her sing before I go?" |
19528 | Was ever such a windfall of good fortune as this proved to me? |
19528 | Was this then San Francisco? |
19528 | What kind of a flag is that?" |
19528 | What more could anyone ask? |
19528 | What was to be done for music? |
19528 | When George came home he said to mother,"Where''s Maggie?" |
19528 | When they turned to leave she asked,"Whom shall I say called?" |
19528 | Who would not justly feel grateful for such deep respect and appreciation from neighbors and strangers? |
19528 | Why all this work to acquire the art of producing beautiful tones? |
19528 | Will you do one more thing for me?" |
19528 | [ Illustration:"Should Auld Acquaintance be forgot?" |
19528 | is it death? |
13287 | Capagot? |
13287 | From San Thome or Bengal,_ out of the sea of Bara_? |
13287 | From thence I went to_ Servidone?_ which is a fine country, its king being called the_ king of bread_. |
13287 | From thence we went to_ Mandoway?_ a very strong town, which was besieged for twelve years by Echebar before he could reduce it. |
13287 | Good aloes wood comes from Cochin- China; and benjamin from the kingdoms of_ Assi_, Acheen? |
13287 | I thought to have given you three thousand pieces of gold; but now I shall give you nothing, you dogs and progeny of dogs?" |
13287 | On our arrival in Goa we were thrown into prison, and examined before the justice, who demanded us to produce letters,[ of licence?] |
13287 | One of the first towns we came to is called_ Bellergan?_ where there is a great market of diamonds, rubies, sapphires, and many other precious stones. |
13287 | Our friend Mr Barret, commendeth him to you, and sent you a_ ball_[ bale?] |
13287 | Pandaram_? |
13287 | The branches are made into bed- steads after the Indian fashion, and into_ Sanasches_? |
13287 | The inhabitants wear mantles of silk, and_ syndones_? |
13287 | The kind which is called_ Chiappe_ comes from_ Bezeneger_, Bijanagur? |
13287 | The south- east of the three trees is_ brandiernaure?_ and all the coast is a white sand. |
13287 | The substance called Spodium, which is found concreted in certain canes, is procured in_ Cambaza_, Cambaya? |
13287 | Then asked he what manner of men were these Portuguese? |
13287 | Then said one of the elders,"Are you slaves?" |
13287 | Then the Christians asked how I, being a Persian, happened to be of the Christian faith? |
13287 | They are of a whitish colour with large foreheads, round eyes; and of_ brasyll_? |
13287 | They asked if I were a Christian? |
13287 | This king is an enemy to the sultan of_ Machamir_? |
13287 | This place affords nothing but rice, but contains many manufacturers of_ armesies_? |
13287 | To avoid prolixity, I pass over many other kingdoms and peoples, such as_ Chianul_? |
13287 | To this the king answered,"Will you yet contend with me in liberality?" |
13287 | What have they done in Sicily, in Naples, in Milan, in the low countries? |
13287 | What heart so hard as not to melt at so grievous a sight, especially considering the beastly and ignorant insolence of the Spaniards? |
13287 | What help may be expected from the natives, either in building the fort, or in defending it afterwards? |
13287 | When the nairs understood who we were, they asked the Persians why they carried me along with them, without licence from the king? |
13287 | Wherever we happened to anchor on this coast from our first watering place, we always found the tide[ of flood?] |
13287 | Who hath there been spared even for religion? |
13287 | Zeramme afoye, Have you enough? |
13287 | _ Bangalore_,_ Cananore_,_ Cochin_,_ Cacilon_? |
13287 | _ Dabul_,_ Onouè_? |
13287 | and having answered that I was, they demanded to know whence I came? |
13287 | and weavers of girdles made of wool and cotton, black and red like_ moocharie_? |
13287 | and_ Trompatam_? |
34878 | 10, 11) he asks,"Who shall give praise to the Most High in the grave?" |
34878 | 1900) and_ Glaubenslos?_( 1893) the life of the Austrian aristocracy in town and country. |
34878 | 20);"Man cherisheth anger against man; and doth he seek healing from the Lord?" |
34878 | 21("who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward? |
34878 | 26, where the Hebrew is, Hast thou a wife? |
34878 | Hast thou a hated wife? |
34878 | He does not believe in home- spun wisdom;"How shall he become wise that holdeth the plough?" |
34878 | Other of the Biblical Wisdom books( Job, Proverbs) are compilations-- why not this? |
34878 | To what end was the world created? |
34878 | [ 5] The clause is obscure; literally"he( or, one) rises at(?) |
30253 | Besides this, who are the people who support us in these lands and those who furnish us food? |
30253 | Besides this, who cares for the cattle- ranches? |
30253 | Could the Spaniards, perchance, maintain themselves alone in this country, if the Indians did not aid in everything? |
30253 | How well the wedge of the same wood will force its way, without there being any one to say to him, curita facis? |
30253 | In closing, we may note that Dewa in Malay, Déwa in Javanese, Sunda, Makasar, and Day[ak? |
30253 | Is it not the poor Visayan Indians, who bring it in their vessels annually? |
30253 | Is it not the same Indians? |
30253 | Is it the Spaniards? |
30253 | Perhaps it is the Spaniards? |
30253 | Perhaps the Spaniards dig, harvest, and plant throughout the islands? |
30253 | Question-- How many and what are his peculiarities? |
30253 | Quibus hoc Contingere templis Aut potuit muris nullo Trepidare tumultu Cæsarea pulsante manu?... |
30253 | San Agustin probably refers to his Virtudes del Indio( 1650?). |
30253 | The Spaniards? |
30253 | The transcriber of M. has wrongly made the viviendo acephalos of the Ayer copy, bebiendo à sed[ i.e., drinking when thirsty?] |
30253 | The translation of the two lines is as follows:"What is better than Rome? |
30253 | Then they do this stretched out in their houses, as says our father master? |
30253 | What is the Indian? |
30253 | What is worse than the Scythian shore? |
30253 | What justice, what fidelity, what honesty should there be amid so great cruelty and tyranny? |
30253 | What plague of locusts can be compared to the destruction that they would cause in the villages? |
30253 | What temples could enjoy this blessing, or what walls be in confusion in any tumult, if the hand of Cæsar move?" |
30253 | When they are asked by the Spaniards"Who is So- and- so?" |
30253 | Whence can this mental weakness come? |
30253 | Who cultivates the fruits-- the bananas, cacao, and all the other fruits of the earth? |
30253 | Who guide and convey us to the villages and missions, and serve us as guides, sailors, and pilots? |
30253 | Who provide Manila and the Spaniards with oil? |
30253 | Who rears the swine? |
30253 | [ 147] This sentence is omitted in M. The following is there a question,"And what shall we say if they bring four eggs?" |
30253 | [ 154]"And tell me, your Paternity,"says Delgado( p. 309),"who is not given to this vice in this land?" |
30253 | [ 198] What fault do the Indians have in trying to get and defend their own? |
30253 | [ i.e.,"Dost thou play the cura?"] |
30253 | of which there is always abundance in the islands, unless unfavorable weather, locusts, or some other accident cause their loss? |
36435 | ''Coming ashore?'' 36435 ''Coming ashore?'' |
36435 | And what could be more fitting? |
36435 | Disappointed in Alaska?'' |
36435 | If there is a single newspaper reader in ignorance of the fact that the State census of 1885 found them with a population of 240,597? |
36435 | What of the city itself? |
36435 | for are they not wonders in themselves, presenting, as they do, the most astonishing picture of rapid expansion the world has ever seen? |
35925 | And who shall say that they were wrong? |
35925 | But how does the question stand to- day among European countries which can mobilize their full fighting strength at a few hours''notice? |
35925 | Is it best for the defenders to rely on armoured protection or on concealment for his guns? |
35925 | It is necessary to perpetuate this advantage?" |
35925 | The lines run:"Thou cheat''st us, Ford; mak''st one seem two by art: What is Love''s Sacrifice but the Broken Heart?" |
35925 | The question of course is, When is resistance hopeless? |
35925 | What is the best means of flanking the ditch and of protecting the flanking arrangements? |
13298 | Do you believe in affinities? |
13298 | You are not certain? |
13298 | *** Is not your life a composite of all these, not one complete? |
13298 | ***** What dawn of Life saw ye, Grand Prophets old? |
13298 | And now what will hasten this development most of all? |
13298 | And they? |
13298 | And what shall be the children''s tree, To grow while we are sleeping? |
13298 | Art thou some flash of central fire, So pure and strong thou wilt not expire Tho''plunged in ocean''s seething main? |
13298 | Aspiring, abandoning all desire Shaping perfection from Life''s pain? |
13298 | Black desolation covering as a pall-- Is this the end, my love and my desire? |
13298 | Can you understand for one moment how strange this seems to me? |
13298 | Dear oriole, sing, while I listen to thee-- When will my true love come riding to me? |
13298 | Gray wind- blown ashes, broken, toppling wall And ruined hearth-- are these thy funeral pyre? |
13298 | Have you slept in a tent alone-- a tent Out under the desert sky-- Where a thousand thousand desert miles All silent''round you lie? |
13298 | Have you, like the sculptor, held to one till it carves itself"into the marble real?" |
13298 | Hobson; what heart could quit beating at it? |
13298 | How could we spare the lark, that most companionable bird of the plains? |
13298 | In the bleak desert of an alien zone, Child of the past, why dwellest thou alone? |
13298 | Insect or blossom? |
13298 | Is there any kind of climate, Any scene for painter''s eye, The Almighty hath not crowded''Neath our California sky? |
13298 | JOHN MUIR, in_ The Mountains of California._ OCTOBER 10. Who can hear the wild song of the ouzel and not feel an answering thrill? |
13298 | Like a sphinx she speaks, The scornful desert:"What would''st thou from me?" |
13298 | No longer poises on its fluttering wing; How could it hover in this bleak despair? |
13298 | Now what is thy secret, serene gray dove, Of singing so sweetly alway? |
13298 | O prince of the fairies, O pygmy of fire, Will nothing those brave little wings of yours tire? |
13298 | O whence, ye winds and billows, flown To cry your wordless tale? |
13298 | On a wild prancing bronco, my love, will he ride? |
13298 | On the Berkeley Hills for miles away I went a- roaming one winter''s day, And what do you think I saw, my dear? |
13298 | River Road, eh? |
13298 | Saying:"How do you do?" |
13298 | Sing of my lover and tell me my fate, Will he guard me as fondly as thou dost thy mate? |
13298 | So high on your tree top you surely can see, O, how will my true love come riding to me? |
13298 | Tell me, O rose, what thing it is That now appears, now vanishes? |
13298 | Through the Goldy Gate, what see? |
13298 | To guard an outpost of this sunset land? |
13298 | Were ye there, ye men of Gloucester? |
13298 | What advents manifold? |
13298 | What art thou, strange, mysterious flame? |
13298 | What changes of the sun? |
13298 | What earthquake shocks? |
13298 | What fairer thing looks up to heaven''s blue And drinks the noontide sun, the dawning''s dew? |
13298 | What matters it? |
13298 | What power can rend The veil, and bid it speak-- that spirit dumb, Between two worlds, enthroned upon a Sphinx? |
13298 | What pristine years? |
13298 | When first the glaciers in their icy throes Were grinding thy repasts; and feeding thee with snows? |
13298 | Who prates of care and pain? |
13298 | Who says that life is sorrowful? |
13298 | Why do men so love their native soil? |
13298 | Why have I grown so cold and cynical? |
13298 | Why should not exiled Californians yearn to return? |
13298 | Why then should they not love their mother, even as the mountaineers of Montenegro, of Switzerland, of Savoy, love their mountain birthplace? |
13298 | Will he come with his lariat hung at his side? |
13298 | _ How can one convey meaning to another in a language_ which that other does not understand? |
13298 | why are the brooks so full of laughter, the birds pouring forth such torrents of sweet song, as if unable longer to contain themselves for very joy? |
34019 | But why should one take trouble to insist upon the advance of science and art in the medieval city? 34019 Does it not seem to you that we have rightly and deservedly departed from the curiosity of all these men, so idle and so full of error?" |
34019 | --"_tantaene animae celestibus irae_"--and we might be tempted to ask, can there be such foolish intolerance on the part of scientific teachers? |
34019 | 1 May Catholics dissect? |
34019 | But it will at once be said, what of Galileo? |
34019 | Dante says:--"Perceive ye not we are of a wormlike kind, Born to bring forth the angel butterfly, That soars to Judgment, and no screen doth find? |
34019 | Does not his case show the anti- scientific temper of churchmen? |
34019 | How do our cities of 100,000 inhabitants compare with it?) |
34019 | Long ago Virgil asked in a famous line,"Is it possible that there can be such great wrath in divine minds?" |
34019 | Should we not rather maintain that they helped save science from its enemies? |
34019 | That the careers of these men are profitless, who shall allege? |
34019 | The Arabs and Paris said:"Why dissect if you trust Galen? |
34019 | Till Pliny of the first century after Christ, what Roman was a scientist? |
34019 | Virchow, in his address at Rome, said Morgagni was the first pathological anatomist who, instead of asking What is disease? |
34019 | Whence shall this be obtained-- from religion or from some temporal reward? |
34019 | Who would guess from this brief epitome of Eusebius''views that the latter had devoted to the subject more than thirty pages? |
34019 | Why doth your soul lift up itself on high? |
34019 | Why should a permission be necessary, however, will be asked? |
34019 | With these seven centuries can we not properly compare the later seven in which the Christian Fathers were the teachers of the civilized world? |
34019 | Yet what writer of to- day rises to charge them with a cardinal sin, because Science remained at a standstill among them for seven full centuries? |
34019 | _ Analogous Examples_.--Should we be surprised, then, if men so occupied failed to add much to the world''s store of scientific knowledge? |
34019 | asked Where is it?" |
12047 | And are thou come for saving, baby- browed And speechless Being? 12047 But he answering, said to him that told him,''Who is my mother? |
12047 | Then drew near the last day of the feast of the Lord; and Judith her handmaid said to Anna,''How long wilt thou thus afflict thy soul? 12047 Whence is this to me,"exclaims Elizabeth,"that the mother of my Lord should come to me?" |
12047 | ),"Who is this that ariseth from the wilderness leaning upon her beloved?" |
12047 | 10;) on another,"_ Quæ est ista quæ ascendit de deserto deliciis affluens super dilectum suum?_"( Ca nt. |
12047 | 5;) and on the third,"_ Quæ est ista quæ ascendit super dilectum suum ut virgula fumi?_"( Ca nt. |
12047 | A group of three learned Bishops, who had especially defended the immaculate purity of the Virgin, St. Cyril, St. Anselm, and St. Denis(?). |
12047 | A man coming forward seems to ask of Mary,"Whose son is this?" |
12047 | And Judith her maid answered,''What evil shall I wish thee since thou wilt not hearken to my voice? |
12047 | And fear thou not the evil spirit, for hast thou not bruised his head and destroyed his kingdom?" |
12047 | And he said unto them,"How is it that ye sought me? |
12047 | And on the third day, Jesus said to the angels,"What honour shall I confer on her who was my mother on earth, and brought me forth?" |
12047 | And she said unto him,"Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us? |
12047 | And the Hebrew woman being amazed said,"Can this be true?" |
12047 | And the angel said,"Why dost thou ask my name? |
12047 | And they asked again,"How long is it since?" |
12047 | And what were these gifts? |
12047 | As for this fillet, some wicked person hath given it to thee; and art thou come to make me a partaker in thy sin?'' |
12047 | Being come there, they asked at once,"Where is he who is born king of the Jews?" |
12047 | But thou, with that close slumber on thy mouth, Dost seem of wind and sun already weary, Art come for saving, O my weary One? |
12047 | But where? |
12047 | He replied,"Woman, what have I to do with thee? |
12047 | In an altar- piece by Cigoli, she is seated on the earth, looking out of the picture, as if appealing,"Was ever sorrow like unto my sorrow?" |
12047 | In his own heart? |
12047 | In the compartment on the right stand St. James Major and St. Catherine; on the left, St. Bartholomew and St. Elizabeth of Hungary(?). |
12047 | In the first place, who were these Magi, or these kings, as they are sometimes styled? |
12047 | It is not indeed so written in the Gospel; but what of that? |
12047 | Lady, wilt thou choose to alight? |
12047 | Morales and Ribera excelled in the Mater Dolorosa; and who has surpassed Murilio in the tender exultation of maternity? |
12047 | Shall I attempt a rapid classification and interpretation of these infinitely varied groups? |
12047 | Show me that you love me: Am I not here to be your little servant, Follow your steps, and wait upon your wishes?" |
12047 | Such was the reasoning of our forefathers; and the premises granted, who shall call it illogical or irreverent? |
12047 | They had travelled many a long and weary mile;"and what had they come for to see?" |
12047 | Vuoi, Signora, scavalcare? |
12047 | Where has it been attained, or even approached? |
12047 | Wise ye not that I must be about my Father''s business?" |
12047 | [ Footnote 1: In the Casa Ruccellai(?) |
12047 | and she, weeping tears of joy, responded,"Is it thou indeed, my most dear Son?" |
12047 | and the angels, who received her into heaven, sung these words,"Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness leaning upon her Beloved? |
12047 | and who are my brethren?'' |
12047 | art thou come for saving? |
12047 | in his dreams? |
12047 | is she indeed so divine? |
12047 | or does not rather the imagination encircle her with a halo of religion and poetry, and lend a grace which is not really there?" |
12047 | to what shall I be likened? |
12047 | to what shall I be likened? |
12047 | to what shall I be likened? |
12047 | to what shall I be likened? |
12047 | who hath begotten me? |
12047 | who hath brought me forth? |
28384 | And why not? 28384 But surely, Count, you would not presume to dispute Mr. Webster''s opinion on a question of constitutional law?" |
28384 | Does n''t she intend to finish her education? |
28384 | From where? |
28384 | I must go,impatiently remarked the Lieutenant, mounting his horse;"what shall I report to the General?" |
28384 | My Heavens, Mr. Satan, am I then doomed to return to Newark? |
28384 | Newark? |
28384 | And pray who were there? |
28384 | By being that, may I not flatter myself I have some claims upon their benevolence if not upon their justice? |
28384 | Can comeliness of form or face so fair With kindliness of word or deed compare? |
28384 | Can they be dissevered? |
28384 | Can you believe that a vivid memory can turn back so many years? |
28384 | Do you know of any opportunity? |
28384 | Everett?" |
28384 | Fish say?" |
28384 | His facetious rejoinder was:"Was ever the Father of his Country so defamed?" |
28384 | I inquired:"What is wrong, Captain?" |
28384 | In my astonishment I said:"Where?" |
28384 | May I not ask that State, especially you, sir, their Governor, to fulfil in some respects the engagements entered into by their predecessors? |
28384 | May I request you to accept this humble but sincere tribute to the memory of a most valued friend? |
28384 | More than once as I passed him he accosted me with the interrogative,"Are you Nancy Hazard''s brat?" |
28384 | Much to the amusement of the guests whom he met, his salutation was:"Would you know me?" |
28384 | Now I ask you candidly, have we retrograded in matters of taste or become less loyal to the true spirit of our Republican institutions? |
28384 | Oh, home of my boyhood, why must I depart? |
28384 | Only a short period had elapsed when several mounted officers dashed up our driveway and anxiously inquired:"Where are the guards?" |
28384 | Referring at once to"Uncle James,"he inquired:"Who is that man?" |
28384 | Soon after her birth, several Chinese asked me:"How many girls do you keep?" |
28384 | Sumner?" |
28384 | The insignia of the society is an orange ribbon bearing the words inscribed in black:"Should auld acquaintance be forgot?" |
28384 | The quick response was:"I must first know the circumstances of the case; but what have you been doing?" |
28384 | This suggests, although remotely, the inquiry heard many years ago:"Have we a Bourbon among us?" |
28384 | Upon receiving a favorable response, she asked:"Why is His Holiness, the Pope, like a goose?" |
28384 | Was it for glory or was it for pelf, Or just for the pleasure of quoting yourself?" |
28384 | Wend you with the world to- night? |
28384 | Wend you with the world to- night? |
28384 | Wend you with the world to- night? |
28384 | Wend you with the world to- night? |
28384 | Wend you with the world to- night? |
28384 | What the bright sparkling of the finest eye To the soft soothing of a kind reply? |
28384 | What, said he, do n''t you want to see it if it is in writing& genuine? |
28384 | Who wadna draw the sword? |
28384 | Who wadna up and rally, At their royal prince''s word? |
28384 | Why do n''t they work?'' |
28384 | Will you excuse me if, from a sincere desire for your success, I go farther& touch upon matters not political, or at least not wholly so? |
28384 | dear Kneeland, pray what do you mean By such a fat book on the subject of Lien? |
28384 | for is not my sorrow a twin sorrow? |
28384 | quintessence divine New joys entrance my soul while thou art mine; Who takes? |
28384 | who takes thee not? |
34992 | ( T. K. C.) FOOTNOTE:[ 1]_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ p. 66. |
34992 | ), Malik(? |
34992 | ), and became four heads(? |
34992 | ), or as an abstract science( What are the true principles which must pay, presupposing an ideal?). |
34992 | A gentilic of the form Ru- u- ai occurs in a letter( of an Assyrian king?) |
34992 | Although at Edessa itself no cuneiform documents have yet been found, a little more than four hours journey eastwards, at Anaz(= Gullab?) |
34992 | BLASTOIDEA.--Pelmatozoa in which five( by atrophy four) epithecal ciliated grooves, lying on a lancet- shaped plate(? |
34992 | Did they exercise their powers? |
34992 | ECKHART,[1] JOHANNES["Meister Eckhart"](? 1260-?1327), German philosopher, the first of the great speculative mystics. |
34992 | Hence Delitzsch(_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ p. 79) suggested that"Eden"might be a Hebraized form of the Babylonian_ edinu_,"field, plain, desert." |
34992 | How can such a huge mass of general propositions as are necessarily included in a system of economics ever be thoroughly tested by an appeal to facts? |
34992 | How much of it is relevant to the subject of inquiry? |
34992 | How shall we determine the relative weight and importance of different kinds of relevant evidence? |
34992 | Include only_ Echinocystis_,_ Palaeodiscus_ and(?) |
34992 | It may be conceived either as an historical science( What principles have in fact paid? |
34992 | It still bears its earlier name, modified since the 15th century( by the Turks?) |
34992 | Sand- flies are common, and in the eastern forests the tiny_ piúm_ fly(_ Trombidium_, sp.?) |
34992 | We are further told( v. 10) that"a river went out from Eden to water the garden,"and that"from thence it parted itself(? |
34992 | What is to be the principle of selection? |
34992 | What then, it may be asked, becomes of the"old Political Economy"? |
34992 | to chiefs in a( Babylonian?) |
34992 | | 4| Mexico, Georgia,? |
23673 | 144 GENERAL Why art thou sorrowful? |
23673 | 186 Fourth Word"Deus meus, ut quid dereliquisti me?" |
23673 | 2. Who am I, my Jesus, That Thou com''st to me? |
23673 | 2. Who can requite the love Shown in the wondrous plan, Whereby the God above For me became a Man? |
23673 | 2. Who is there meekly lying In yonder stable poor? |
23673 | 3. Who is there near the cradle, That guards the holy Child? |
23673 | 5. Who could see, from tears refraining, Christ''s dear Mother uncomplaining In so great a sorrow bowed? |
23673 | 6. Who, unmoved, beheld her languish Underneath His Cross of anguish,''Mid the fierce unpitying crowd? |
23673 | 80 THE BLESSED VIRGIN Whither thus, in holy rapture? |
23673 | 80 Wondrous Love that Can not Falter 56 Why Art Thou Sorrowful? |
23673 | 98 SAINTS, St. Peter Seek ye a Patron to defend? |
23673 | A father to me? |
23673 | A message from the Sacred Heart; What may its message be? |
23673 | And how revere this wondrous gift, So far surpassing hope or thought? |
23673 | And what is this dulness that hangs o''er thee now? |
23673 | Aut in quo contristavi te? |
23673 | Dear Saint I stand far off With vilest sins oppressed; Oh may I dare, like thee, To lean upon His Brest? |
23673 | Die nobis Maria, quid vidisti in via? |
23673 | For love is stronger far than death, And who can love like Thee, My Saviour, Whose appealing Heart Broke on the Cross for me? |
23673 | For what did Jesus love on earth One half so tenderly as thee? |
23673 | Gounod Lento con espressione Deus meus, Deus meus, Ut quid dereliquisti me? |
23673 | Gracious turn Thine ear to suppliant sigh; If sins of men Thou scann''st, who may stand That searching eye of Thine, and chast''ning hand? |
23673 | Have we no tears to shed for Him, While soldiers scoff and Jews deride? |
23673 | How can I love Thee as I ought? |
23673 | In Accents Burning 66 Sacred Heart of Jesus, Fount of Love 59 Saint of the Sacred Heart 103 See, Amid the Winter''s Snow 5 Seek ye a Patron to Defend? |
23673 | Jerusalem, my happy home, When shall I come to thee? |
23673 | Lone in grandeur, lone in glory, Who shall tell thy wonderous story, Awful Trinity, Awful Trinity? |
23673 | Mittit crystallum suam sicut buccellas: ante faciem frigoris ejus quis sustinebit? |
23673 | Mother of Christ, Mother of Christ, What shall I ask of thee? |
23673 | Mother of Christ, Mother of Christ, What shall I do for thee? |
23673 | O who shall dare her glory paint? |
23673 | Popule meus, quid feci tibi? |
23673 | Pro nobis egenum et foeno cubantem Piis foveamus amplexibus: Sic nos amantem quis non redamaret? |
23673 | Quem patronem rogaturus? |
23673 | Quid dormitis? |
23673 | Quid sum miser tunc dicturus? |
23673 | Quis est homo, qui non fleret, Matrem Christi si videret In tanto supplicio? |
23673 | Quis non amantem redamet? |
23673 | Quis non posset contristari, Christi Matrem contemplari Dolentem cum Filio? |
23673 | Quis non redemptus diligat, Et Corde in isto seligat Aeterna tabernacula? |
23673 | Seek ye a patron to defend Your cause? |
23673 | Shepherd, why this jubilee? |
23673 | That He thinks for us, plans for us, stoops to entreat, And follows u, wander we ever so far? |
23673 | That can utter hymns beseeming All her matchless excellence? |
23673 | They know but little of Thy worth Who speak the heartless words to me, For what did Jesus love on earth One half so tenderly as thee? |
23673 | Though poverty and work and woe The masters of my life may be, When times are worst who does not know Darkness is light with love of thee? |
23673 | Thy joys when shall I see? |
23673 | Vel Judam non videtis, quo modo non dormit, sed festinat tradere me Judaeis? |
23673 | Vel Judam non videtis, quo modo non dormit, sed festinat tradere me Judaeis? |
23673 | What else but love divine, Could Thee constrain to open thus That Sacred Heat of Thine? |
23673 | What gift or present, Jesus, can I bring? |
23673 | What may the gladsome tidings be Which inspire your heav''nly song? |
23673 | What meeker than the Saviour''s Heart? |
23673 | When shall my sorrows have and end? |
23673 | When times are worst who does not know Darkness is light with love of thee? |
23673 | When wilt Thou always Make our hearts Thy home? |
23673 | Who can measure All it means? |
23673 | Who doth not crave for rest? |
23673 | Who is the King of glory? |
23673 | Who is there kneeling by Him In Virgin beauty fair? |
23673 | Who shall sound Thee? |
23673 | Why art thou sorrowful, servant of God? |
23673 | Why so fleetly art thou speeding Up the mountain''s rough ascent? |
23673 | Why your rapturous strains prolong? |
23673 | Wither thus in holy rapture, Royal maiden, art thou bent? |
23673 | Word made Flesh, the bread of nature By His word to Flesh He turns; Wine into His Blood He changes: What through sense no change discerns? |
23673 | by N. A. Montani Moderato Quae est ista, quae est ista, quae ascendit de deserto; deliciis affluens enixa super dilectum suum? |
23673 | this daily food And the daily granted treasure Of His sacrificial Blood? |
23673 | ut quid dereliquisti me? |
14754 | Are ye of the sea, the heavens, or the earth? |
14754 | But where,they asked,"does your God dwell? |
14754 | Then are they slaying Him innocently? |
14754 | What crime has He committed? |
14754 | Who are ye? |
14754 | ( Where is Domhnall?) |
14754 | And if he does believe this, why should he not believe another history, of which there has been truthful preservation, like the history of Erinn? |
14754 | And these writers, whence did they obtain their historical narratives? |
14754 | As he was near his end, he was heard exclaiming, in his own beautiful mother- tongue:"Foolish people, what will become of you? |
14754 | Burke''s great leading principle was: Be just-- and can a man have a nobler end? |
14754 | But is it not also paganism to represent the rain and wind as taking vengeance? |
14754 | But was it so necessary as the King had hitherto supposed? |
14754 | Can you be surprised that the Irish looked on English adventurers as little better than robbers, and treated them as such? |
14754 | From whence did they derive their reliable information? |
14754 | He had no fancy for churchmen meddling in secular affairs, and a rough"What brought him there?" |
14754 | He stole a shilling and a hen-- poor fellow!--what else could he be expected to do? |
14754 | His speech was repeated to the King of Leinster, who inquired"if the king, in his great threatening, had added,''if it so please God''?" |
14754 | How could the Irish people ever become an integral portion of the British Empire? |
14754 | How long will it take only to extirpate these traditions from the recollections of the natives? |
14754 | How, indeed, could they die more gloriously than in the service of their country? |
14754 | How, then, can the condition of Ireland, or of the Irish people, be estimated as it should? |
14754 | How, then, could the Irish heart ever beat loyally towards the English sovereign? |
14754 | If the one statement is true, why should the other be false? |
14754 | If women may excel as painters and sculptors, why may not a woman attempt to excel as an historian? |
14754 | In Shirley''s comedy,_ A Bird in a Cage_( 1633), one of the characters is asked,"You are one of the guard?" |
14754 | Is it in the sun or on earth, in mountains or in valleys, in the sea or in rivers?" |
14754 | Is the value of a chair to be estimated by the number of pupils who surround it, or by the contributions to science of the professor who holds it? |
14754 | Is this a history to be ashamed of? |
14754 | Is this a history to lament? |
14754 | Is this a history to regret? |
14754 | Plait came forth and exclaimed three times,"_ Faras Domhnall_?" |
14754 | Several of the German princes had thrown off their allegiance to the Holy See: why, then, should not the English King? |
14754 | Suppose the Parliament should make a law that God should not be God, would you then, Master Rich, say that God were not God?'' |
14754 | The first question, then, for the historian should be, What accounts does this nation give of its early history? |
14754 | The law could legalize the King''s inclination, and who dare gainsay its enactments? |
14754 | The man who bore him from the field asked, tauntingly:"Where is now the proud Earl of Desmond?" |
14754 | Thus commenced the union between Great Britain and Ireland: must those nuptials be for ever celebrated in tears and blood? |
14754 | Was it not on this day that Christ Himself suffered death for you?" |
14754 | What should be thought of a school where English history was not taught? |
14754 | What would gentlemen say on hearing of a country in such a position? |
14754 | What, then, was the duty of an English minister? |
14754 | When shall the picture be reversed? |
14754 | When the King''s tutor and his chancellor had been sacrificed, who could hope to escape? |
14754 | When will Irishmen return from America, finding it possible to be as free and as prosperous here? |
14754 | Who will heal you?" |
14754 | Who will relieve you? |
14754 | Why should not other genealogies have been preserved in a similar manner, and_ even the names of individuals_ transmitted to posterity? |
14754 | Will the constitution be made more solid by depriving this large part of the people of all concern or share in the representation?" |
14754 | Yet, who can count up all the evictions, massacres, tortures, and punishments which this people has endured? |
14754 | and is Irish history of less importance? |
14754 | and why should they suppose that he would exercise a tyranny as yet unknown in the island? |
14754 | replied Brian,"Erinn has fallen with it: why should I survive such losses, even should I attain the sovereignty of the world?" |
14754 | she exclaimed,"have I made this long and painful journey only to meet with a refusal? |
14754 | the best of our men was O''Connell, for who dare assert that he was ever unfaithful to his country or to his country''s faith? |
14754 | the second, What account of this nation''s early history can be obtained_ ab extra_? |
32016 | ''Am I not an apostle?'' |
32016 | ''Have I not seen Jesus our Lord[2]?'' |
32016 | ''If an altar of a god be not set up, is there no god? |
32016 | ''Take away the word, and what is the water but mere water? |
32016 | ''Where is the wise? |
32016 | ( Now this, He ascended, what is it but that he also descended into the lower parts of the earth? |
32016 | A man takes it for an insult if he is said to be"made of stone": and is God truly described as"born of the rocks"? |
32016 | Against what is our spiritual struggle? |
32016 | Are we to set to work to revive St. Paul''s ideal of the life of a Church? |
32016 | But because this requires to be made emphatic, does it follow that we are to neglect or depreciate the inward, personal, spiritual struggle? |
32016 | But how then does he account for the authority inherent in the apostolic office, as it is represented by St. Paul, and in the Acts? |
32016 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
32016 | How are we to receive this great and manifold ideal of what the Church means[13]? |
32016 | How can St. Paul, who insists continually that he is one of the apostles, call them, without self- complacency, God''s holy apostles? |
32016 | How, in fact, did the later church ministry connect itself with that which we find existing in the apostolic age? |
32016 | In what sense are Christians one? |
32016 | Is he shut up in the temples? |
32016 | Is there no moral evil, but in the human heart? |
32016 | Let us attempt to answer the questions-- what was Ephesus? |
32016 | Now the parts of the armour, the elements of Christ''s unconquerable moral strength, what are they? |
32016 | Or it is a more profitable question to ask, How shall we make it mean the same thing again? |
32016 | The question still remains; are there no spiritual beings but men? |
32016 | What are we to say as to the truth of these accounts of the moral condition of the heathen world? |
32016 | What is this''unity of Spirit?'' |
32016 | What was the old life? |
32016 | Why has the world lost this sense of the{ 189} moral meaning of catholic churchmanship? |
32016 | Why has''ecclesiastical''come to mean something quite different to''brotherly''? |
32016 | Why, then, have almost no women been poets of the first order, or musical composers, or painters? |
32016 | Yet Heracles was a man deified by his goodness and noble deeds; and were his virtues and labours greater than mine? |
32016 | [ 14] How many husbands are capable of''teaching their wives at home''about religion? |
32016 | or if an altar be set up to what is not a god, is it a god-- so that stones become the evidences( witnesses) of Gods? |
32016 | what was the history, and what were the circumstances of the Ephesian church? |
32016 | where is the disputer of this world? |
32016 | where is the scribe? |
23027 | What form is that, that scowls beside thee? 23027 ).--Why may not the word have the same meaning as it has now? 23027 ):Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are Gods?" |
23027 | 1546? |
23027 | ? |
23027 | ? G. |
23027 | A Query of some interest still remains-- In what author do we first find the compound word? |
23027 | A. R._ Sonnet( query by Milton? |
23027 | By what mysterious species of arithmetic can it be demonstrated that"nearly_ seventy_ years"elapsed between 1498 and 1557? |
23027 | Can any characteristic anecdote be related of him, suitable for giving_ point_ to a sketch of his life for foreign readers? |
23027 | Can any of your correspondents inform me if such was the fact, and from what source they derive their information? |
23027 | Can any of your readers give me an instance from any one of our standard classical authors of a verb active"to decease"? |
23027 | Can any of your readers give me further particulars of Mr. Standfast, or tell me where to find them? |
23027 | Can any of your readers inform me who now possesses this medal, and where it is to be found? |
23027 | Can any of your readers refer me to any book where such a fact is mentioned? |
23027 | Can any of your readers( among whom I trust there are many retired West India planters) give the etymology of this word? |
23027 | Can you or any of your correspondents inform me who is the author of them? |
23027 | Can you, or any of your kind correspondents, favour me with an account of it? |
23027 | Did not Theodorus Lector, early in the sixth century, reduce into a harmony the compositions of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret? |
23027 | Does any one now feel inclined to vindicate for Inchofer, Scioppius, Bariac, or Contarini, the authorship of the_ Monarchia Solipsorum_? |
23027 | Had Humphrey Mosley any presentiment of the deathless fame of Milton? |
23027 | Has any later edition appeared? |
23027 | Has he remained incognito? |
23027 | Has not Cotelier furnished us with an"_ Epitome_,"compiled by Metaphrastes from Clementine counterfeits, concerning the life of S. Peter? |
23027 | Have we here no specimens of abbreviation; no allusion in the prologue to"omissis quæ videbantur superflua?" |
23027 | How many sacks hast thou stole?" |
23027 | I lately heard it applied, in conversation, to the Jesuits, but I think it is of some antiquity:--"Jurat? |
23027 | If this be so, how comes it to pass that not only the general histories are silent as to the event, but that even the newspapers omit it? |
23027 | In what year was the work first published? |
23027 | Is it an offshoot from the Reformation? |
23027 | Is it certain that Joshua''s words are absolutely at variance and irreconcileable with the present state of astronomical knowledge? |
23027 | Is it not true that extracted portions of these Constitutions are found in some old MS. collections of Canons? |
23027 | Is not Mr. Cureton undoubtedly in error with respect to the year 1495? |
23027 | Is there any instance of a recess of this kind on the south side, and an Easter sepulchre on the north, in the same church? |
23027 | May we not class this story of her majesty''s{ 152} predilection for the hundred merry tales among the"black relations of the Jesuits?" |
23027 | My Query is, Can any of your correspondents inform me where this collection can be met with? |
23027 | My Query is, What were they afraid of? |
23027 | Taylor, of Norwich, writes to Southey, asking,--"Can you tell me who wrote the_ History of the Sevarambians_? |
23027 | This, I think, satisfactorily answers the original question,"Whence comes the expression?" |
23027 | To commence with the West,--is not Mr. Cureton acquainted with the manner in which Rufinus dealt with the_ History_ of Eusebius? |
23027 | W. Adams._--When did Mr. Adams, the accomplished author of the_ Sacred Allegories_, die? |
23027 | When and by whom were they compiled? |
23027 | Whence and when did the aversion to, and contempt for, a pun arise? |
23027 | Why should they not have been intended for the holy sepulchre at Easter? |
23027 | Will any of your contributors be so obliging as to inform me where the form of prayer spoken of as_ customary_ is to be found? |
23027 | _ Abbot Eustacius and Angodus de Lindsei._--Can any of your learned readers inform me in what reign an Abbot_ Eustacius_ flourished? |
23027 | _ Meaning of Cefn._--What is the meaning of the Welsh word"Cefn"used as prefix? |
23027 | _ Withers''Devil at Sarum_.--Where is Withers''_ Devil at Sarum_, mentioned in Hudibras, to be met with? |
23027 | _"Jurat? |
23027 | and where can we meet with any account of them? |
23027 | crede minus: non jurat? |
23027 | crede minus:"Epigram._--Can any of your learned readers inform me by whom the following epigram was written? |
23027 | credere noli: Jurat, non jurat? |
23027 | ii., p. 439., recalled to my recollection a"Note"made several years back; but the"Query"was, where to find that Note? |
23027 | of rouge or some such paint for the face,& c.,_ the mark left by the pressure of two fingers of a small hand was distinctly visible_(?)." |
23027 | what authority do they possess? |
23027 | who art thou so fast proceeding, Ne''er glancing back thine eyes of flame? |
14596 | Christ is lost, like the piece of money in the parable; but where? 14596 How can a man be just with God?" |
14596 | How can any external revelation help me,he asks,"unless it be verified by inner experience? |
14596 | Is he sick? 14596 Quid cælo dabimus? |
14596 | What if earth Be but the shadow of heaven, and things therein Each to other like, more than on earth is thought? |
14596 | What is heaven to a reasonable soul? 14596 What is the good of the dead bones of saints?" |
14596 | What more beautiful image of the Divine could there be,he asks,"than this world, except the world yonder?" |
14596 | Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? 14596 Whom should I find,"he asks,"to reconcile me to Thee? |
14596 | Why turn ye back to the weak and beggarly rudiments, whereunto ye desire to be in bondage again? 14596 _ Where_ is heaven?" |
14596 | ),"nonne mirandum est lavacro dilui mortem? |
14596 | 19), where"Simon Magus"is asked,"Can anyone be made wise to teach through a vision?"] |
14596 | A soul confined within the private and narrow cell of its own particular being? |
14596 | Amiel expresses exactly the same regret as Wordsworth:"Shall I ever enjoy again those marvellous reveries of past days?..." |
14596 | And Smith:"Who can tell the delights of those mysterious converses with the Deity, when reason is turned into sense, and faith becomes vision? |
14596 | And after describing a vision of the crucifixion, she says,"How might any pain be more than to see Him that is all my life and all my bliss suffer?" |
14596 | And again he says,[208]"What is this which flashes in upon me, and thrills my heart without wounding it? |
14596 | And what are the truths which contemplation revealed to him? |
14596 | And who is''He''? |
14596 | Besides, what sane man would wish to be deceived in such a matter?] |
14596 | But does not this conviction itself bring with it unspeakable comfort? |
14596 | But if evil is derived from God, how can God be good? |
14596 | But in what sense is the ideal world"subordinate"? |
14596 | But what is this knowledge? |
14596 | But what remains? |
14596 | Diogenes is reported to have asked,"What say you? |
14596 | Et alors n''y a- t- il pas au fond des symboles autant_ d''être_ que sous les phénomènes? |
14596 | Have I not myself distinguished two kinds of magic? |
14596 | Having thus hunted evil out of every corner of the universe, he asks-- Is evil, then, simply privation of good? |
14596 | He begins by asking,"What is the_ Wesen_ of Mysticism?" |
14596 | How could we be aware of that infinite distance, if there were not something within us which can span the infinite? |
14596 | How could we feel that God and man are incommensurable, if we had not the witness of a higher self immeasurably above our lower selves? |
14596 | How then should it be that thou shouldest not have thy beseeching?'' |
14596 | How was this"salvation"attained or conferred? |
14596 | IN THE WEST"Know ye not that ye are a temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?" |
14596 | If it be further asked, Which is our personality, the shifting_ moi_( as Fénelon calls it), or the ideal self, the end or the developing states? |
14596 | Is not this the Platonic doctrine of_ anamnesis_, Christianised in a most beautiful manner? |
14596 | Is this an integral part of the mystic''s"upward path"? |
14596 | It is, in the first instance, the resolution"to stand or fall by the noblest hypothesis"; that is( may we not say? |
14596 | Many a solitary ascetic has prayed in the words of the 73rd Psalm:"Whom have I in heaven but Thee? |
14596 | Of teaching founded upon the historical narrative, he says,"What better method could be devised to assist the masses?" |
14596 | PRACTICAL AND DEVOTIONAL MYSTICISM--_continued_"Whom have I in heaven but Thee? |
14596 | Quite in the spirit of St. John he asks,"How can that course be safe, which from the first produces carelessness to human love?" |
14596 | See the whole sermon, entitled,_ What is Religion?_ and many other parts of the book.] |
14596 | Should I approach the angels? |
14596 | The question is, which of the two sets of words best expresses the relation of the ransomed soul to its Redeemer? |
14596 | The question was naturally raised,"If man by putting on Christ''s life can get nothing more than he has already, what good will it do him?" |
14596 | We may invert it, What do you return within to see? |
14596 | What can it matter whether I say my prayers in church or at home, on my knees or in bed, in words or in thought only? |
14596 | What can it matter whether the Eucharistic bread and wine are consecrated or not? |
14596 | What then is our security against delusions? |
14596 | What then? |
14596 | Who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings? |
14596 | Why then do men take offence at the dispensation of the mystery taught by the Incarnation of God, who is not, even now, outside of mankind?... |
14596 | Will Patæcion the thief be happier in the next world than Epaminondas, because he has been initiated?" |
14596 | With what prayers, with what rites? |
14596 | [ 102]""Why do ye subject yourselves to ordinances, handle not, nor taste, nor touch, after the precepts and doctrines of men? |
14596 | [ 18] The purgative life necessarily includes self- discipline: does it necessarily include what is commonly known as asceticism? |
14596 | [ Footnote 44: J. Smith,_ Select Discourses_, v. So Bernard says(_ De Consid._ v. I),"quid opus est scalis tenenti iam solium?"] |
14596 | even very dark, and no brightness in it?" |
14596 | or who shall stand in His holy place? |
14596 | quantum est quo veneat omne? |
14596 | what art Thou about to do unto me? |
14596 | whether I actually eat and drink or not?" |
13433 | But, if our author disposes of the coincidences with the third Gospel in this way( proceeds Dr. Lightfoot),"what will he say to those with the Acts? |
13433 | May we not ventureto render it"the well of Sychar"? |
13433 | 1 as the beginning? |
13433 | 2,''They were entrusted with the oracles of God,''can he mean anything else but the Old Testament Scriptures, including the historical books?" |
13433 | 21_ sq._)? |
13433 | 34),''O Jerusalem, Jerusalem..._ how often_ would I have gathered thy children together''? |
13433 | 60, with which it coincides? |
13433 | ; can Oracles include narrative? |
13433 | ; on Simeon, 52 Hemphill, Professor, did Eusebius directly know Tatian''s_ Diatessaron_? |
13433 | ; was Eusebius directly acquainted with Tatian''s_ Diatessaron_? |
13433 | ; was Eusebius directly acquainted with Tatian''s_ Diatessaron_? |
13433 | ; was he mistaken? |
13433 | And what is the value of any evidence emanating from the Ignatian Epistles and martyrologies? |
13433 | Besides, if such a governor did pronounce so severe a sentence, why did he not execute it in Antioch? |
13433 | But I must ask upon what ground he limits my remark to those who absolutely admit the genuineness? |
13433 | But how can it prove that the Greek original of this supposed Syriac version is the genuine text, and not an interpolated and partially forged one?" |
13433 | But what does this amount to? |
13433 | But what more natural than this presentiment, when persecution was raging around him and fire was a common instrument of death? |
13433 | But what purpose was served by thus importing into his notes a mass of borrowed and unsorted references? |
13433 | Can Truth by any means be made less true? |
13433 | Can our second Gospel be considered a work composed"without recording in order what was either said or done by Christ"? |
13433 | Can reality be melted into thin air? |
13433 | Can we suppose that he meant anything else but the Old Testament Scriptures by this expression? |
13433 | Could there be more palpable evidence of the frivolous and superficial character of his objections? |
13433 | Did Eusebius intend to point out mere quotations of the books which he considered undisputed? |
13433 | If this doubt exist, however, of what value can the passage from Papias be as evidence? |
13433 | If this point be, for the sake of argument, set aside, what is the position? |
13433 | Is it not perfectly clear that no place of the name of Sychar can be reasonably identified? |
13433 | Now what has been the result of this minute and prejudiced attack upon my notes? |
13433 | Shall we one day discover that Victor was equally right about the reading_ Diapente_? |
13433 | Supposing that the use of Acts be held to be thus indicated, what does this prove? |
13433 | What means could there be of correcting it and positively ascertaining the truth? |
13433 | Whence this terrible blow but from the wrath of the Gods, who must be appeased by unusual sacrifices? |
13433 | Where, then, did he get his information? |
13433 | Whose fault is it that two and two do make four and not five? |
13433 | Whose folly is it that it should be more agreeable to think that two and two make five than to know that they only make four? |
13433 | Why does he not also state that I distinctly refer to Tischendorf''s denial that Hegesippus was opposed to Paul? |
13433 | Why send the prisoner to Rome? |
13433 | Why should Ignatius have been so exceptionally treated? |
13433 | Why was the punishment not| were in the days of Chrysostom and carried out at Antioch? |
13433 | [ 56:1] Now, interpreted even by the rules laid down by Dr. Lightfoot himself, what does this silence really mean? |
13433 | and the genealogies? |
13433 | depend more on the narrative of God''s dealings than His words? |
13433 | quid hac dignatione felicius? |
37230 | What, then, was the knowledge given to him in this? 37230 Who art thou, Eusebius?" |
37230 | And Polycarp himself replied to Marcion, who met him on one occasion and said,''Dost thou know me?'' |
37230 | Barney tells us that the world will last 6,000 years because it was made in six days, and the inference is doubtless as true as the fact(?) |
37230 | But is it likely they would quote loosely words which they believed to be written by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost? |
37230 | But the question naturally arises, if they considered them to be of Apostolic authority why did they not mention them by name? |
37230 | Did''st thou not sit with me in prison in the time of the tyrant? |
37230 | How didst thou escape?" |
37230 | Is it likely that God would allow his Holy Word to be tampered with? |
37230 | May it not have been a phoenix, instead of a dove, which descended on Jesus at Jordan? |
37230 | What, then, says He in the prophet? |
37230 | Wherefore? |
37230 | Wherefore? |
37230 | Wherefore? |
37282 | ( 1893); C. Güttler,"Gassend oder Gassendi?" |
37282 | 12:"who is their father? |
37282 | A curious ridge( spiral? |
37282 | GAU, JOHN( c. 1495-? |
37282 | Near the cathedral is a small 12th- century(?) |
37282 | [ 1]( b) Gaul proper first enters ancient history when the Greek colony of Massilia was founded(? |
37282 | [ 9] The arrival at Mahanaim("[ two?] |
37282 | e'', Visceral loop or commissure(?).] |
37282 | x, Filiform appendage(? |
35575 | A castle? |
35575 | Who can you be? |
35575 | ''How is that, Bob? |
35575 | At last I got out the question:--''Will you take the long path with me?'' |
35575 | Boston asks"How much do you know?" |
35575 | But who can hope for more than that, or hoping, can reasonably expect to find the wish realized? |
35575 | But who shall describe the terrible sinking of the heart-- the worse than sickness-- when hope is thus suddenly crushed and turned to certain despair? |
35575 | Compliments were passed by the latter, who saluted his friend with--"Well, old boy, where have you been all summer? |
35575 | Corn thus becomes incarnate, for what is a hog but fifteen or twenty bushels of corn on four legs?" |
35575 | Early next morning he laid the matter before the assembled chiefs at the Council House, who asked him whether he could recognize any whom he saw? |
35575 | How did she compare with Newark in the year of grace 1880? |
35575 | I reflected: what was Newark like in those far- away days, two hundred years ago? |
35575 | If there are any known remedial agents which can possibly be an improvement on pure air and sunshine, will you tell us what they are, Dr. Dio Lewis? |
35575 | New York,"How much are you worth?" |
35575 | Shall we never know more of them than Runic stones and mysterious mounds can unfold? |
35575 | Taking its past as a criterion, who shall dare to predict the future of Chicago? |
35575 | They are quick to take ideas concerning their labor; why not in other things? |
35575 | What a noble mission, to thus lead these children of silence from the prison darkness of ignorance into the beautiful light of knowledge? |
35575 | What she will have become when her tri- centennial comes around, who shall dare to predict? |
35575 | What were such disadvantages, however, compared to the satisfaction of standing by their party and ignoring the New Haven vote? |
35575 | What would that court have done with the spiritual manifestations rife in these parts to- day? |
35575 | Where are there such fat oxen, such sleek, self- satisfied cows, with such capacity for rich milk? |
35575 | Where are these peoples now, and where their unrevealed histories? |
35575 | Where, then, would have been the mighty commerce of the West, but for the timely invention of the steam engine, and its application to water craft? |
35575 | but in Philadelphia the question is,"Who was your grandfather?" |
39027 | How was it possible to resist such a force, and think of preventing it from disembarking? |
39027 | If under these circumstances they had been attacked, what might not have been expected from the gallantry of our troops? |
39027 | To what tribunal, it was well urged by the friar, could they cite him to answer for his conduct? |
38748 | Admiral Andres Lopez de[ word partly illegible; Nozadigui?] |
38748 | Casimiro Diaz; Manila[ 1718?]. |
38748 | Casimiro Diaz;[ 1718?]. |
38748 | The governor, Don Sebastian, gave Alférez Tornamira a suit of his own garments; and to the Sangley he granted an exemption[ from tributes?] |
38748 | This work( evidently intended for publication) is undated; but the conjectural date"1835?" |
38748 | [ Juan Lopez? |
38748 | [ Juan Lopez? |
38748 | [ i.e.,"What else is brotherhood but a divided soul?"] |
36438 | Remove the control of Religion, and what do you do? 36438 ''Will you show me the bone- pile?'' 36438 Can England point back to anything equal to it in the history of her own colonies? 36438 Could any clearer proof than this be found that the insurrection in the Philippines is the direct work of Freemasonry? 36438 Did England in the last century do anything for the material or spiritual advancement of the North American Indians? 36438 Did the United States do anything for them till within recent years? 36438 Even among the saintly(?) 36438 How could it be otherwise? 36438 I said to the attendant:''Suppose that at the end of any period of five years the friends of the deceased are unable to pay, what do you do?'' 36438 Is it not something to admire? 36438 Now, if this were the first time that these atrocious charges were made, we might say with horror,Can such things be?" |
36438 | On what grounds are the religious bodies persecuted? |
36438 | This emissary of the Bible Society writes:"The question now asked on all sides is-- Are the Philippines at last to be opened to missionary effort? |
36438 | We ask, in the first place, where are these abuses which are always the subject of their declamations in the clubs and lodges? |
36438 | What good is it for us to do our duty to the people when others are allowed to undo our work at the same time? |
36438 | What professor could teach successfully if his pupils were met outside the classroom by respectable persons who told them to despise his lessons? |
36438 | Who knows? |
36438 | Whom does he mean by people? |
36438 | Will such a happy state of things exist under new conditions? |
35363 | A Ghibelline is a Christian, a citizen, a neighbour; then, shall these great names, all joined, yield to that one word, Ghibelline? 35363 And might not Austria become heretic and secede from the papal rule? 35363 Arnolfo di Cambio( 1232- 1300?) 35363 But who is to direct them? 35363 But why do I do this? 35363 He was so dumbfounded that he dropped the dinner on the floor, and when Brunelleschi, coming in, said,Why, Donatello, what shall we have for dinner?" |
35363 | Here the great leader is Niccolò Pisano( 1206- 78?). |
35363 | How could the world, they said, believe in papal impartiality if the Papacy were under the thumb of the Italian government? |
35363 | How were such widespread territories and such diverse peoples to be united in permanent union? |
35363 | How will the future believe it, when we ourselves can hardly credit our eyes? |
35363 | In painting first came the famous Bellini family, Jacopo( 1400- 64?) |
35363 | May Jesus grant you His grace to get for me from Sebastiano di Pesaro[ her husband?] |
35363 | Niccolò''s son Giovanni( 1250- 1328?) |
35363 | Pius IX felt doubts; what right had the Vicar of Christ to take part in war? |
35363 | Poor Carlo Alberto was in a sad dilemma: should he obey his king and abandon his liberal friends, or cleave to them and be disloyal to the king? |
35363 | That holy Bethlehem should daily receive, as beggars, men and women who formerly were conspicuous for their wealth and luxury? |
35363 | Were not Austrians and Italians alike in the sight of God? |
35363 | What had the Universal Church to do with national divisions? |
35363 | Where was its substitute to be found? |
35363 | Why do I moan and groan for grief? |
35363 | ], O Jesus, Lord of the world, what has happened? |
35363 | | 964|Benedict V( Anti- pope?) |
35363 | |Benedict II|| 685|John V|Justinian II| 685 685? |
35363 | |||HENRY III}| 1039 1044|Silvester( Anti- pope)|}| 1045? |
35363 | |}| 965|John XIII|}| 972|Benedict VI|}|||Otto II}| 973 974|Boniface VII( Anti- pope?) |
13321 | It will not go far,thought he with a heavy sigh;"and where is the dollar to come from? |
13321 | What name? |
13321 | *****"_ And what is left? |
13321 | A MEMORY OF MONTEREY I"Old Monterey"? |
13321 | And the climate? |
13321 | And what of that? |
13321 | Are you hungry? |
13321 | As for the owl, I could not see him, but I heard him at startling intervals give the challenge,"Who are you?" |
13321 | Did not the trombone bray from beyond the meadow, where the cooper could not barrel his aspiring soul? |
13321 | Did you ever drive up the cattle at milking time? |
13321 | Do you know what sea- fog is? |
13321 | Do you like good long strips of baked squash? |
13321 | Do you think these days tiresome? |
13321 | Do you wonder at this? |
13321 | Does it tire you to look so long at a gigantic monument? |
13321 | For what, pray? |
13321 | Forever? |
13321 | Have you Ever seen this Australian emeu? |
13321 | Have you ever observed that there is no real pleasure in reviving the memory of something good to eat? |
13321 | He was asking himself if it paid-- this high- pressure happiness that knew no respite save temporary insensibility? |
13321 | How came I aware of that fact? |
13321 | How did a man kill time in those days? |
13321 | How do I pass the hours? |
13321 | How do you fancy bowls of warm milk-- milk that declares a creamy dividend before morning? |
13321 | How many generations, think you, are numbered in its ancestry? |
13321 | I nod back; and why should n''t I? |
13321 | I wonder what island it was? |
13321 | I wonder why some people are so very inconsiderate when they speak to children, especially to simple or sensitive children? |
13321 | If Robinson Crusoe had been cast ashore on this island, I wonder how he would have lived? |
13321 | Is there anything more galling than the surpassing impudence of country flies? |
13321 | It chanced that the family motto was Festina Lente; this also was appropriate; had he not all his life made haste slowly? |
13321 | It''s hungry work, is n''t it? |
13321 | Need I add that some of those pictures were such as our young and innocent eyes ought never to have been laid on? |
13321 | Or for Murillo, the Indian, impudent though harmless, full of fancies and fire- water? |
13321 | Or for the rains that poured their sudden and swift rivulets down the wooded slopes and filled the gorges that gutted some of the streets? |
13321 | Or for the return of the whale- boats, with their beautiful lateen- sails? |
13321 | The locusts and wild honey? |
13321 | The sky is obscured, night is declared at once, and the fowls go to roost at three P.M. How is the Fall in this weather? |
13321 | Then came a facetious sailor and whispered to him:"Do you want ever to get to New York?" |
13321 | This was certainly satisfactory as far as it went, but I added, by way of parenthesis,"and who else will be present?" |
13321 | Was this hard luck? |
13321 | We were so surprised we could not speak; or were we all speechless with joy, I wonder? |
13321 | What are your titles and estates beside this representative? |
13321 | What can I do this stormy afternoon? |
13321 | What could he do next to extricate himself from his dubious dilemma? |
13321 | What followed? |
13321 | What is its record? |
13321 | What is this key which seems for a time to unlock the gates of heaven and of hell? |
13321 | What then wer''t thou, and what art now, And wherefore hast thou striven? |
13321 | What then wert thou, and what art now, After the weary strife? |
13321 | What then wert thou, and what art now? |
13321 | What then wert thou, and what art now? |
13321 | What would that pious man have said could he have seen me, a few years later, strutting and fretting my hour upon the stage? |
13321 | Where are the fruits o''the mission? |
13321 | Where are they now, O, bells? |
13321 | Where do they come from, and on what do they feed? |
13321 | Where is the sacred dower That the bride of Christ was given? |
13321 | Where now can one look for the privacy of old? |
13321 | Who will interpret these hieroglyphics? |
13321 | Why is it that pleasure excursions seem to ravel out? |
13321 | Why not? |
13321 | Why should one turn a key in a bungalow whose hospitality is only limited by the boundary line of the county surveyor? |
13321 | Why should they not? |
13321 | With his poet friend, Thomas Walsh, well may we say:"Vain the laudation!--What are crowns and praise To thee whom Youth anointed on the eyes? |
13321 | Would I, could I, longer forbear to join the passionate and tumultuous_ miserere_? |
13321 | Yet who or what is happiness? |
13321 | and where else under heaven are we sunk forty fathoms deep in shadow? |
35976 | Are you a Real Man? 35976 Are you a gentile or Jew? 35976 Are you able and qualified to respond? 35976 Are you married, single or widower? 35976 Are you of the white race or of a colored race? 35976 Color of eyes? 35976 Do you believe in the principles of Pure Americanism? 35976 Do you believe in white supremacy? 35976 Do you honestly believe in the practice of Real fraternity? 35976 Do you owe any kind of allegiance to any foreign nation, government, institution, sect, people, ruler or person? 35976 Hair? 35976 Height? 35976 How long have you resided in your present locality? 35976 In a questionnaire that must be filled in by those who are initiated these questions are asked:Are you a gentile or a jew? |
35976 | Is the motive prompting your inquiry serious? |
35976 | Of what church are you a member( if any)? |
35976 | Of what church are you a member( if any)? |
35976 | Of what religious faith are your parents? |
35976 | Of what religious faith are your parents?" |
35976 | One of these documents is a card entitled"Do You Know?" |
35976 | The supply of literature contained 100 copies of a card bearing the heading"Do You Know?" |
35976 | Weight? |
35976 | Were your parents born in the United States of America? |
35976 | What educational advantages have you? |
35976 | What is you age? |
35976 | What is your occupation? |
35976 | What is your politics? |
35976 | What is your religious faith? |
35976 | What is your religious faith? |
35976 | What secret, fraternal orders are you a member of( if any)? |
35976 | Where where you born? |
37984 | 808- 867? |
37984 | But do our Gospels, or any of them, in the form in which we actually have them, belong to the number of those earliest records? |
37984 | GOSLICKI, WAWRZYNIEC(? |
37984 | How did government come into existence? |
37984 | Or, if not, what are the relations in which they severally stand to them? |
37984 | The 1st earl of Gowrie(? |
37984 | The more complex umbrella- shaped colonies of colonies( synrhabdosomes) described as provided with a common swimming bladder( pneumatophore?) |
37984 | The same process of transformation is still going on in English, where we can say indifferently,"What are you looking at?" |
37984 | The whole question of the sphere of government may be stated in these two questions: What should the state do for its citizens? |
37984 | What connexion can there be between a precious stone, a_ baetylus_, as Dr Hagen has convincingly shown, and Good Friday? |
37984 | Why does a sacred relic provide purely material food? |
37984 | Why should the vessel of the Last Supper, jealously guarded at Castle Corbenic, visit Arthur''s court independently? |
37984 | and How far should the state interfere with the action of its citizens? |
37984 | using"at"as an adverb, and governing the pronoun by the verb, and"At what are you looking?" |
13206 | Am I not your mother? 13206 Anthony,"says Athanasius,"became known not by worldly wisdom, nor by any art, but solely by piety, and that this was the gift of God who can deny?" |
13206 | Monk,fiercely demands Voltaire,"Monk, what is that profession of thine? |
13206 | Whence,he cried,"has this man come to us, wanting to destroy the rule of this monastery? |
13206 | Where is the town,cries Montalembert,"which has not been founded or enriched or protected by some religious community? |
13206 | Who can describe the carnage of that night? 13206 328 Was the Suppression Justifiable? 13206 : that King Henry was the Supreme Head of the Church? |
13206 | Am I to blame for this, That here come those that worship me? |
13206 | Are the flowers in the cup? |
13206 | Are the ignorance and the filth of the begging friars offensive? |
13206 | But does this truth lead the Christian to the monastic method? |
13206 | But what does such a conception involve? |
13206 | But what was the nature of the office as held by the saint? |
13206 | But what was the nature of this British monasticism? |
13206 | But, if it be admitted that the marks did appear, as it is not improbable, how shall the phenomenon be explained? |
13206 | Christians, will you ever repudiate Calvary? |
13206 | Did Rome never adorn men in garments of shame and parade them through streets to be mocked by the populace, and finally burned at the stake? |
13206 | Did the commissioners take a few altar- cloths and decorate their horses? |
13206 | Did the monastic institution command the unanimous approval of the church from the outset? |
13206 | Does the new age demand liberty? |
13206 | Does the new age reject monastic seclusion? |
13206 | For whom do we carry arms? |
13206 | How is this? |
13206 | How is your king called?" |
13206 | How long must we refrain from driving these detestable monks out of Rome? |
13206 | How long wilt thou remain in the shadow of roofs, and in the smoky dungeons of cities? |
13206 | If this be, Can I work miracles and not be saved?" |
13206 | Is Protestantism a curse or a blessing? |
13206 | Is dinner ready? |
13206 | Is it rational when danger is on every side, to remain where it is the greatest?" |
13206 | Is it shameful to follow them, and are we not rather disgraced by not following them?" |
13206 | Is the pavement swept? |
13206 | Is the sofa smooth? |
13206 | Loyalty? |
13206 | Patrick, St., 122; labors in Ireland, 123; was he a Romanist? |
13206 | Potitianus, a young officer of rank, read the life of Anthony, and cried to his fellow- soldier:"Tell me, I pray thee, whither all our labors tend? |
13206 | Richard Bagot, a Catholic, in a recent article on the question,"Will England become Catholic?" |
13206 | Tell me, pray, amid all this, is there room for the thought of God?" |
13206 | The churchmen argued:"If he plunders the monasteries, will not his next step be to plunder the churches?" |
13206 | The problem is reduced to this, Was the Reformation desirable? |
13206 | To her piteous entreaties, they said:"Why do you, who are already stricken with age, pour forth such cries and lamentations?" |
13206 | To what shall the development of the community system be attributed? |
13206 | Together they converse of things human and divine, Paul, close to the dust of the grave, asks, Are new houses springing up in ancient cities? |
13206 | Was the self- renunciation of Jesus like that of the ascetics, with their ecstasies and self- punishments? |
13206 | Were not the Bibles burned in France, in Germany, in Spain, in Holland, in England, dear to the hearts of the reformers? |
13206 | Were the altar- cloths dear to Catholic hearts? |
13206 | Were the charges against the monks true? |
13206 | What am I? |
13206 | What are harmful indulgences? |
13206 | What can be our greatest hope in the palace but to be friend to the Emperor? |
13206 | What do we seek? |
13206 | What dost thou in the world, my brother, with thy soul greater than the world? |
13206 | What government directs the world? |
13206 | What hast thou been hearing? |
13206 | What is it I can have done to merit this? |
13206 | What is it to keep the body in subjection? |
13206 | What is it to love the world? |
13206 | What is the name of your province?" |
13206 | What must one do to deny self? |
13206 | What tears are equal to its agony? |
13206 | What was the effect upon the mind of the thoughtful? |
13206 | What will you say now? |
13206 | When it was a pageant, a ritualism, an arm of the state, a vain philosophy, a superstition, a formula, how could it save, if ever so dominant? |
13206 | When shall this be?" |
13206 | Where is the church which owes not to them a patron, a relic, a pious and popular tradition? |
13206 | Why do we not stone them or hurl them into the Tiber? |
13206 | Will you be loyal to Beelzebub? |
13206 | Will you''make a covenant with Death and Hell''? |
13206 | Would England and the world be better off under the sway of medieval religion than under the influence of modern Protestantism? |
13206 | Writing to the king, he said:"Man is against you; God is against you; the universe is against you; what can you look for but destruction?" |
13206 | You welcome beasts, why not a man? |
13206 | _ Disorders and Oppositions_ But was there no protest against the progress of these ascetic teachings? |
13206 | _ Henry''s Disposal of Monastic Revenues_ What use did Henry make of the revenues that fell into his hands? |
13206 | is there any of you halt or maim''d? |
35682 | Have you not read that which was spoken_ by God_? |
35682 | To whom has the root of wisdom been revealed? |
35682 | Whence but from heaven could men, unskilled in arts, In several ages born, in several parts, Weave such agreeing truths? |
35682 | [ 1] What proof have we for such a claim? 35682 _ Behold, I am with you all days, even to the consummation of the world._"To the consummation of the world? |
35682 | 54)? |
35682 | And were they never to die? |
35682 | As to the rest, was it not for every Protestant an absolute, infallible rule of faith? |
35682 | But are the changes of language or expression all that the reviewers of this infallible text- book aim at? |
35682 | Dives will not object; but what will Protestants say?" |
35682 | Does the Church indorse the definition of Scriptural inspiration which has been given in the two preceding chapters? |
35682 | Expressions indicating this are to be found everywhere in the writings of the evangelists:"Have you never read in the Scriptures?" |
35682 | How does this inspiration act on the writer who ostensibly executes the divine work? |
35682 | How many corrections, think you, were made in the New Testament alone? |
35682 | How was it that he worded his rapid sketch with such scientific accuracy? |
35682 | If Luther and other reformers, so- called, threw out some portions of the sacred text, by what standard or criterion were they guided? |
35682 | If the fear of the Lord is the_ beginning_ of wisdom, is not charity or love its consummation? |
35682 | In other words, if verbal inspiration is not to be admitted, how far does inspiration actually extend in the formation of the written text? |
35682 | Is Moses a mere amanuensis, writing under dictation? |
35682 | Is there no remedy provided against the danger of oft going wrong in order to find the right? |
35682 | Perhaps you will say:"But is this not arguing in a circle-- a vicious circle, as philosophers say? |
35682 | The language was good, the truth still better; what need, then, was there to revise? |
35682 | Was not the King James version of 1611, for the most part, beautiful English? |
35682 | What authority have we, moreover, for believing the entire New Testament inspired, since it was written after the time of Christ? |
35682 | Whence did Moses get all this knowledge? |
35682 | Which is the safer to follow on such points as the pronunciation of proper names-- the Hebrew or the Greek? |
35682 | Why was this last revision made? |
35682 | Why? |
35682 | You will ask whence the difference, and which is right? |
17408 | Why grope about for the significant, when the obvious is at hand? 17408 _ Volto Santo di Luca_"(?). |
17408 | (?) |
17408 | (?). |
17408 | (?). |
17408 | (?). |
17408 | (?). |
17408 | 1466- 1524(?). |
17408 | Andrew and Catherine(?). |
17408 | Baroncelli Polyptych: Coronation of Virgin, Saints and Angels(?). |
17408 | Bust of Christ Blessing(?). |
17408 | Bust of Man(?). |
17408 | Bust of Young Woman(?). |
17408 | But how does Giotto accomplish this miracle? |
17408 | But where else in the whole world of art shall we receive such blasts of energy as from this giant''s dream, or, if you will, nightmare? |
17408 | Could a mere painter, or even a mere artist, have seen and felt as Leonardo? |
17408 | Crucifixion( in part?). |
17408 | Crucifixion(?). |
17408 | E. Portrait of Clarissa Orsini(?). |
17408 | Francis and Nicholas(?). |
17408 | Fresco: Paradise(?). |
17408 | Giotto we know already, but what were the new conditions, the new demands? |
17408 | Have London or New York or Berlin worse to show us than the jumble of buildings in his ideal of a great city, his picture of Babylon? |
17408 | L. Christ saving Man from drowning(?). |
17408 | Large Nativity with three Saints and three Donors(?). |
17408 | Lucretia(?). |
17408 | Lunette: God and Cherubim(?) |
17408 | Madonna adoring Child(?). |
17408 | Madonna adoring Child(?). |
17408 | Madonna and Saints(?). |
17408 | Madonna and infant John(?) |
17408 | Madonna and infant John(?). |
17408 | Madonna and infant John(?). |
17408 | Madonna and infant John(?). |
17408 | Madonna in Niche(?). |
17408 | Madonna seated in a Loggia looking down towards infant John(?). |
17408 | Madonna with St. Andrew and Baptist(?). |
17408 | Madonna with infant John and three Angels(?). |
17408 | Madonna with infant John(?). |
17408 | Madonna( Piero)(?). |
17408 | Madonna( from Ghirlandajo''s studio)(?). |
17408 | Madonna(?) |
17408 | Madonna(?) |
17408 | Madonna(?). |
17408 | Madonna(?). |
17408 | Madonna(?). |
17408 | Now in what way, we ask, can form in painting give me a sensation of pleasure which differs from the ordinary sensations I receive from form? |
17408 | Now what is back of this power of raising us to a higher plane of reality but a genius for grasping and communicating real significance? |
17408 | Portrait of Man in Armour with Dog(?). |
17408 | Portrait of Man(?). |
17408 | Portrait of"Caterina Sforza"(?). |
17408 | Procris and Cephalus(?). |
17408 | Profile of Lady(?). |
17408 | Profile of Lady(?). |
17408 | Profile of Young Woman(?). |
17408 | Resurrected Christ(?). |
17408 | Scene in Temple(?). |
17408 | Sebastian and Julian(?). |
17408 | St. Bartholomew and Angel(?). |
17408 | The four Evangelists( framed above Triptych ascribed to Spinello Aretino)(?). |
17408 | Triumph of Venus(?). |
17408 | VATICAN, MUSEO CRISTIANO, CASE P, V._ Predella_: Dormition(?). |
17408 | We thus have lost in quantity, but have we lost in quality? |
17408 | What chance is there, I ask, for this, artistically the only possible treatment, in the representation of a man crucified with his head downwards? |
17408 | What is it that makes us return to this sheet with ever renewed, ever increased pleasure? |
17408 | What is it to render the tactile values of an object but to communicate its material significance? |
17408 | What is the point at which ordinary pleasures pass over into the specific pleasures derived from each one of the arts? |
17408 | What more obvious symbol for_ the_ Church than_ a_ church? |
17408 | Wherein does his achievement differ in quality from a coloured map of a country? |
17408 | Who knows? |
17408 | Young Man with Letter(?). |
17408 | [ Page heading: NATURALISM IN ART] What is a Naturalist? |
17408 | _ Pietà_ in Landscape(?). |
17408 | _ Tondo_: Madonna and infant John(?). |
17408 | _ Tondo_: Madonna and infant John(?). |
36450 | We will keep you as long as we can, my poor fellow,answered Stokes;"but why for four days particularly?" |
36450 | Well,replied Sydenham,"are you better in health?" |
36450 | All this may be very true, but is it always easy to determine which of the sounds is the first, and which is the second? |
36450 | Are North Europeans only less degenerate? |
36450 | Are the Jews and the races inhabiting the South of Europe the most degenerate on earth? |
36450 | Birth- day or Earth- day, Which the true mirth- day? |
36450 | Calling the waiter to him, he said, pointing to the dish of meat with a questioning tone,"Quack, quack?" |
36450 | Death, AEschylus on, 622; After, What? |
36450 | Earth- day or birth- day, Which the well- worth day? |
36450 | Etiology of Deformities.--But if these curious deformities and markings are not due to maternal impressions, what, then, is their cause? |
36450 | He demanded"who''s there?" |
36450 | He says( p. 196): How, then, has alcohol affected the races that have used it? |
36450 | How did the tractors secure the vogue they enjoyed? |
36450 | How does this mutual influence of mind on body take place? |
36450 | In one of them the existence of cats is the bane of life, for before accepting an invitation she is obliged first to ask,"Is there a cat?" |
36450 | Lombroso in his book"After Death What?" |
36450 | Müller said to him:"But, Your Excellency, how much sleep, then, did you take when you were my age?" |
36450 | Pessimism.--Pessimism has been defined as sticking one''s nose in a dungheap and then asking,"How is it that it smells bad around here?" |
36450 | Since this will happen with a dental nerve, why should it not{ 444} happen to branches of the genital nerve? |
36450 | Than fly to others we know not of? |
36450 | The little poem,"Which?" |
36450 | WHICH? |
36450 | What principles underlie it? |
36450 | What, then, are we to say of the dreams that come true? |
36450 | Which? |
36450 | Why can one man pitch nearly every day all season and not suffer with his arm while another man can not? |
36450 | [ Footnote 57][ Footnote 57: Is life worth living? |
10139 | Again what can be said of love and hate if under given circumstances they can be transformed into one another by a magnet? |
10139 | Can any good come out of Trinity? |
10139 | If these things are not true, it might be said, then life is chaos; and if life be chaos, what does truth matter? 10139 What does Papias say? |
10139 | Am I to ascribe to it a rudimentary but arrested poetic faculty? |
10139 | And as to the fate of that restless soul, who shall dare to speak dogmatically? |
10139 | And how is it that the gold- fish make no difference in the weight of the globe of water? |
10139 | And if one may be a good moralist and a bad man, why_ à fortiori_ may one not be a good artist and a bad man? |
10139 | Are not hysteria, hypnotism, and thought- transference of the nature of epicycles? |
10139 | As for the corrupt lives of savages, if it proves their religion to be non- ethical, what should we have to think of Christianity? |
10139 | But how does it do so? |
10139 | But is not thought- transference itself lamentably unscientific? |
10139 | Can we hope for anything more than thus to retard the leakage? |
10139 | Can we show that it springs, co- ordinately with theism, from some conception prior to both? |
10139 | Does a child only begin to exist when it begins to think? |
10139 | Does he on waking look for the said scalps among his collection of trophies, and is he perplexed and incensed at not finding them? |
10139 | Even though the means involve a violation of taste rather than of morals, yet can they be justified by the goodness of the end? |
10139 | For how could the crowds see Christ save in a lowly spot? |
10139 | Given the dilemma, who shall blame his choice? |
10139 | I often ask myself the question, If he died during one of these trances, which would he be, Smith or Jones? |
10139 | If the fact that I am conscious of thinking proves the fact that I exist, is the converse true that whatever does not think does not exist?... |
10139 | If vice does not necessarily dim the eye to ethical beauty, why should it blind it to aesthetic beauty? |
10139 | In truth, he who ascribes to God a body does not know_ all_ about Him; but which of us knows_ all_ about God? |
10139 | Indeed, were it not so, how could they understand? |
10139 | Is it that science blindly refused even to weigh the evidence for abnormal facts till the same or similar had become matters of personal observation? |
10139 | Is not this very distinction of outside and inside in the matter of perceptions open to no slight ambiguity? |
10139 | It is much to know and feel that Christianity is good and useful and beautiful;"But some time or other the question must be asked:_ Is it true_?" |
10139 | Let us by all means read Manetho''s History; but where is it? |
10139 | Must a good artist be a good man? |
10139 | That a man may be a materialist or atheist and enjoy life thoroughly, who does not know? |
10139 | The sorrowing dyspeptic asks in despair:"Son of man, thinkest thou that these dry bones will live again?" |
10139 | What could be less important to Christian dogma than the date of the Deluge or of Adam''s creation? |
10139 | What indeed? |
10139 | What is a horse? |
10139 | What, then, is the force of this argument from Egyptology? |
10139 | Wherefore showed He it thee? |
10139 | Who can possibly conceive mere rottenness being cured by progress in rottenness; or a man drinking himself into temperance? |
10139 | Who or what arrested it? |
10139 | Who showed it thee? |
10139 | Why does it look"almost as pure,"and"often quite as lovely"? |
10139 | Why may not such useful illusions and self- deceptions be fostered? |
10139 | Why then is there not a more distinctly marked inferiority in the religious art of Lippi to that of Angelico? |
10139 | Yes, but what sort of convert is this who is so insensible to substantials, so morbidly sensitive about mere accidentals? |
10139 | Yet what is hysteria and what does it really explain? |
10139 | [ 18] Of moral principles, he says:"Why do we say that... they carry conviction with them and prove themselves?... |
10139 | [ 2][ Thankful to whom? |
10139 | [ 38] Can a man who makes such reckless travesties of a view which he manifestly has never studied, be credited with intellectual honesty? |
10139 | [ 76] Why does he not seek out the reason of this, or is he satisfied with the_ words_"arrested development"? |
10139 | [ How on earth do we know what it is trying to do?] |
10139 | but what do they mean? |
10139 | wouldst thou wit thy Lord''s meaning in this thing? |
35225 | Do you not know that the intervention of a lady''s hand is requisite to the finish of a young man''s education? |
35225 | Have we not found that fortune''s chase For glory or for treasure, Unlike the rolling circle''s race, Was pastime, without pleasure? 35225 Que faut- il donc faire sur la terre,"rejoined Kahawabash,"puisque l''un veut ce que l''autre ne veut pas?" |
35225 | Que faut- il faire? |
35225 | What can this be? 35225 What did Upper Canada gain,"Gourlay asks,"by my banishment; and what good is now to be seen in it? |
35225 | Would you break up the congregation? |
35225 | ''What is a civil engineer?'' |
35225 | A messenger, Thomas, speaks: List, oh, list-- the Queen hath sent A message to her Lords and trusty Commons-- All-- What message sent she? |
35225 | A young wit, by way of playing him off on the race course, asked him in a contemptuous tone,"Is that the same horse you had last year, Laird?" |
35225 | And if so, how long before it will become fashionable to have it greased and powdered?" |
35225 | At one place the query is put,"When will the beard be worn, and man allowed to appear with it in native dignity? |
35225 | Did he not belong to the Surveyor- General''s office? |
35225 | In the extract given above from what was styled Gourlay''s"Last Sketch"of Upper Canada, the query and rejoinder,"Schools and Colleges, where are they? |
35225 | La cime du chêne ou la tige du roseau de ployer, quand l''orage éclate? |
35225 | N''as- tu pas souvent vu couler les larmes des yeux du castor qui avait perdu sa femelle ou ses petits? |
35225 | Non: je suis homme, aussi bon chasseur, aussi brave guerrier que tes sachems: comment empêcher l''arc de s''étendre quand la corde casse? |
35225 | Passing down the hall of his hotel, he asks in a casual way of the book- keeper--"Can you tell me where Mr. So- and- so lives? |
35225 | Que de chances contre d''aussi frêles canots que les nôtres? |
35225 | Que de difficultés n''éprouvons- pas nous pour doubler les caps, pour sortir des baies dans lesquelles les vents nous forçent d''entrer? |
35225 | The very gravel- bed which caused me such turmoil might have made a turnpike, but what can be done by a single hand? |
35225 | The youth suddenly caught his Excellency''s eye, and was asked--"What business he had to be there? |
35225 | What are the local mutations that are to follow? |
35225 | Within its convenient circuit, what phantasies and dreams might not be realized? |
35225 | moi, suis- je inférieur à l''ours ou au castor? |
35225 | n''as- tu pas souvent entendu les cris plaintifs de l''ours, do nt la compagne avoit été tuée? |
35225 | or, as the fashion was of old, do men sit together on one side of the church, and women upon the other?" |
32573 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? 32573 They tell me that we are weak; but shall we gather strength by irresolution? |
32573 | When rattling thunder ran along the clouds, Did not the sailors poor and masters proud A terror feel, as struck with fear of God? 32573 And is it not as bad for our assembly to violate their own declaration of rights as for the British parliament to break our charter? |
32573 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
32573 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
32573 | Bacon demanded,"How it could be possible that the chief fort in Virginia should be threatened by the Indians?" |
32573 | Being seated, the chairman asked her"How many men she would lend the English for guides and allies?" |
32573 | But is not a confederacy of our states previously necessary?" |
32573 | But what avails his conquest? |
32573 | But what has been the consequence? |
32573 | Have we anything new to offer? |
32573 | Henry replied:"What has there been in the conduct of the British ministry for the last ten years to justify hope? |
32573 | How could they have been thus deprived, if, as was contended, all the people of England were still virtually represented? |
32573 | How many deserted or demolished houses and plantations? |
32573 | How many poor families obliged to fly in consternation and leave their all behind them? |
32573 | How was England to prevent this union? |
32573 | How wide an extent of country abandoned? |
32573 | If not, of what advantage was the appointment of a commander- in- chief at all? |
32573 | If the office of speaker of itself gave no influence, why had it been always sought for? |
32573 | Is the author a whig? |
32573 | May I venture to hope that you may think me so far worthy of your confidence as to preserve them for me? |
32573 | Mr. Henry, on his return home, being asked,"Who is the greatest man in congress?" |
32573 | Shall we resort to entreaty and supplication? |
32573 | Shall we try argument? |
32573 | The act had been denounced as treasonable; but were the legislature to sit with folded arms, silent and inactive, amid the miseries of the people? |
32573 | Was it by quartering armed soldiers in their families? |
32573 | Washington?" |
32573 | What breaches and separations between the nearest relations? |
32573 | What is that religion good for that leaves men cowards upon the appearance of danger? |
32573 | What painful ruptures of heart from heart? |
32573 | What shocking dispersions of those once united by the strongest and most endearing ties? |
32573 | Wherever I go the evil Manethoes pursue me;"and he earnestly enquired,"What shall I do?" |
32573 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
32573 | [ 480: C] The dying Braddock ejaculated in reference to the defeat,"Who would have thought it?" |
32573 | [ 549: A] In discussing the question,"Whether the colonies are represented in the British Parliament?" |
32573 | by depriving the colonists of legal trials in the courts of common law? |
32573 | is it proposed then to reclaim the spendthrift from his dissipation and extravagance by filling his pockets with money?" |
32573 | love you not me?" |
32573 | or by harassing them by tax- gatherers, and prerogative judges, and inquisitorial courts? |
39996 | Besides, would not his style almost invariably resemble that of Francia, at least in the works he produced at Bologna? |
39996 | R. Footnote 3:"Oh dissi lui non se''tu Oderisi, L''onor d''Agubbio, e l''onor di quell''arte Che alluminar è chiamata a Parisi? |
40929 | And what peculiar thing is it that the new creature, the Son of God intimates and teaches? |
40929 | The Procidians 160 A.D.(?) |
40929 | What is this? |
40929 | [ 28] Circa 200(?). |
15082 | O Paradise, O Paradise Who does not sigh for rest? |
15082 | The Scholar said to his Master: How may I come to the supersensual life, that I may see God and hear Him speak? 15082 The Scholar said: How can I hear when I stand still from thinking and willing? |
15082 | The Scholar said: Is that near at hand or far off? 15082 What fruits dost thou bring back from this thy vision?" |
15082 | Where,says Jacob Boehme,"will you seek for God? |
15082 | [ 28] Is it possible to state more plainly the indivisible identity of the Spirit of Life? 15082 [ 39] How many people do each of us know who work and will in quiet love, and thus participate in eternal life? |
15082 | [ 41] And what is worship but a reach- out of the finite spirit towards Infinite Life? 15082 [ 91] What happens in it? |
15082 | Again, we have to remember that the instinctive self, powerful though it be? |
15082 | And if in a group or church, what should the character of this society be? |
15082 | And last, if we ask as a summing up of the whole matter:_ Why_ man is thus to seek the Eternal, through, behind and within the ever- fleeting? |
15082 | And the next question-- a highly practical question-- is,"How_ both_?" |
15082 | And what is perfection of joy but grace complete? |
15082 | But the crucial question which religion asks must be, does fresh life flow in from those visions and contacts, that intercourse? |
15082 | Can we honestly say that young people reared in them are likely to acquire this temper of heaven? |
15082 | Do the masters, or the workers, work and will in quiet love? |
15082 | Do we always manage or even try to give it that enduring object, in a form it can accept? |
15082 | Do we take enough notice of it? |
15082 | Does it send them out equipped with the means of living a full and efficient spiritual life? |
15082 | Does it train them to regard humanity, and their own place in the human life- stream, from this point of view? |
15082 | First, does the average good education train our young people in spiritual self- preservation? |
15082 | How is he to be dealt with, and the opportunities which he presents used best? |
15082 | How is the traditional deposit of spiritual experience handed on, the individual drawn into the stream of spiritual history and held there? |
15082 | How is this done? |
15082 | How many politicians-- the people to whom we have confided the control of our national existence-- work and will in quiet love? |
15082 | If anyone who has followed these arguments, and now desires to bring them from idea into practice, asks:"What next?" |
15082 | If, then, it does achieve the social phase what stages may we expect it to pass through, and by what special characters will it be graced? |
15082 | Is nothing left out? |
15082 | Is such a view complete? |
15082 | Is transcendental feeling involved in them? |
15082 | Last, to what extent do we try to introduce our pupils into a full enjoyment of their spiritual inheritance, the culture and tradition of the past? |
15082 | Or after considering the inner nature of international diplomacy and finance? |
15082 | Or after reading the unvarnished record of our dealings with the problem of Indian immigration into Africa? |
15082 | Ought we not to introduce our pupils to them; not as stuffed specimens, but as vivid human beings? |
15082 | Secondly, does it give them a spiritual outlook in respect of their racial duties, fit them in due time to be parents of other souls? |
15082 | Secondly,_ Process._ What is the line of development by which the individual comes to acquire and exhibit these characters? |
15082 | This question, often put in the crucial form,"Did Jesus Christ intend to form a Church?" |
15082 | V.][ Footnote 98: Que frutti reducene de esta tua visione? |
15082 | What about industry? |
15082 | What about our English saints? |
15082 | What about the hurried, ugly and devitalizing existence of our big towns? |
15082 | What about the master and the worker in such a possibly regenerated social order? |
15082 | What are we to regard as the heart of spirituality? |
15082 | What is it, then, from which he must be saved? |
15082 | What is that supernal symphony of which this elusive music, with its three complementary strains, forms part? |
15082 | What next? |
15082 | What thing is grace but beginning of joy? |
15082 | What was this impulse and urge? |
15082 | What, then, are we doing about this? |
15082 | When the young man with great possessions asked Jesus,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
15082 | Where then would be our most heart- searching social problems? |
15082 | Wherein do its differentia consist? |
15082 | Would not this, at last, actualize the Pauline dream, of each single citizen as a member of the Body of Christ? |
15082 | Yet is there in this state of things nothing but food for congratulation? |
15082 | [ 56] What, then, is the character of the life which St. Benedict proposed as a remedy for the human failure and disharmony that he saw around him? |
15082 | that is to say with diligence and faithful purpose, without selfish anxiety, without selfish demands and hostilities? |
31278 | And who will deny,adds a Protestant classic,"that the fault was partly owing to them?" |
31278 | What boots it,he exclaimed,"to condemn errors that have been long condemned, and tempt no Catholic? |
31278 | What remains of Christianity,exclaimed Beza,"if we silently admit what this man has expectorated in his preface?... |
31278 | [ 313] Two generations later Salvianus exclaims:Quid est aliud paene omnis coetus Christianorum quam sentina vitiorum? |
31278 | 6):"Miramur si terrae... nostrorum omnium a Deo barbaris datae sunt, cum eas quae Romani polluerant fornicatione, nunc mundent barbari castitate? |
31278 | And for all this, what have they gained? |
31278 | But how can a view of policy constitute a philosophy? |
31278 | Connaissez- vous un roi qui mérite d''être libre, dans le sens implicite du mot?... |
31278 | Darf ich andre verurtheilen_ in eodem luto mecum haerentes_?" |
31278 | Depuis la révolution il semble que ces sortes de différences s''évanouissent.... Les Bostoniens ne sont- ils pas fort dévots?... |
31278 | Dr. Martineau attributes this doctrine to Mill:"Do we ask what determines the moral quality of actions? |
31278 | Et George IV., croyez- vous que je serais son ministre, s''il avait été libre de choisir?... |
31278 | Et non è questo peggio che heretica dottrina? |
31278 | For what is the Holy See in its relation to the masses of Catholics, and where does its strength lie? |
31278 | Has God gone to sleep and let the house be destroyed, or let in the enemy through want of watchfulness? |
31278 | How can the stranger understand where the children of the kingdom are deceived? |
31278 | How could these principles be favourable to them? |
31278 | If the end be not religion, is it morality, humanity, civilisation, knowledge? |
31278 | Is it a process of renovation or a process of dissolution in which European society is plunged? |
31278 | Is she therefore to deny or smother it? |
31278 | Is she therefore to say that his right is no right, or that all intolerance is necessarily wrong? |
31278 | Me déclarer contre l''Italie parce que ses chaînes tombent mal à propos? |
31278 | Numquid( Dominus) dormitando aedificium suum perdidit, aut non custodiendo hostes admisit?... |
31278 | Oubliez- vous que les rois ne doivent pas donner des institutions, mais que les institutions seules doivent donner des rois?... |
31278 | People used to know how often, or how seldom, Washington laughed during the war; but who has numbered the jokes of Lincoln? |
31278 | Quand un roi dénie au peuple les institutions do nt le peuple a besoin, quel est le procédé de l''Angleterre? |
31278 | Qui aurait pu même songer à un développement dogmatique?" |
31278 | Quid expavescis quia pereunt regna terrena? |
31278 | St. Augustine, after quoting Seneca, exclaims:"What more could a Christian say than this Pagan has said?" |
31278 | The question was not, what crimes has the prisoner committed? |
31278 | The religious world has been long divided upon this great question: Do we find principles in politics and in science? |
31278 | To a friend describing Herder as the one unprofitable classic, he replied,"Did you ever learn anything from Schleiermacher?" |
31278 | Was Rome herself tainted with Gallicanism, and in league with those who had conspired for her destruction? |
31278 | Welcher Entschluss, ich möchte sagen, welche Unverschämtheit ist es, nach Ihnen und bei Ihren Lebzeiten, Kirchengeschichte in München zu doziren? |
31278 | What but a schism could ensue from this inexplicable apathy? |
31278 | What is matter? |
31278 | Where was their liberality in one case, or their catholicity in the other? |
31278 | Why fearest thou when earthly kingdoms fall? |
31278 | [ Footnote 181: Crudelitatisne tu esse ac non clementiae potius, pietatisque putas? |
31278 | [ Footnote 189: Quo demum res evaderent, si Regibus non esset integrum, in rebelles, subditos, quietisque publicae turbatores animadvertere? |
31278 | [ Footnote 204:"Quid hoc ad me? |
31278 | [ Footnote 314:"What is well- nigh all Christendom but a sink of iniquity?" |
31278 | [ Footnote 387: Quid enim expedit damnare quae damnata jam sunt, quidve juvat errores proscribere quos novimus jam esse proscriptos?... |
31278 | but, does he belong to one of those classes whose existence the Republic can not tolerate? |
31278 | was in the hands of the Whigs? |
31278 | why wait for five months? |
28678 | Do not accuse us of being murderers, because of our attempts to take the life of His Most Sacred Majesty? 28678 A REVELATION OF THAT WHICH WAS NECESSARY? 28678 And was man entirely unable to provide for his own natural wants? 28678 And who is to blame? 28678 Are the preachers of the United States a dangerous element in our land? 28678 Are these powers so many empty buckets, never filled and never to be filled? 28678 Are we to conclude that such men as Generals Hancock and Garfield, along with a great many more, had, and have, no religion to be disturbed? 28678 Are you thus lost without remedy? 28678 But the question comes up for an answer, From whence came the eggs? 28678 But what can we do? 28678 But what is conversion? 28678 But when you saw those bricks made were there not several men engaged in their manufacture, as well as horses? 28678 But why bring up inborn corruption and helplessness? 28678 Can you imagine the depth of infamy and pollution that is possible in this case? 28678 Can you run it into nothing? 28678 Could he create an earth to move upon? 28678 Could he create the air for breathing? 28678 Could man create his own light? 28678 Did the author of all things make a mistake here by conferring upon us a power that would be of no use? 28678 Did they do it? 28678 Did you ever see worlds made, and, if so, does our earth resemble them? 28678 Do any but infidels take that view of the subject? 28678 Do you ask, what of all this? 28678 Do you not know that you will receive, in the great day, according to that which you have done, whether it be good or bad? 28678 Do you not know this? 28678 Do you not see that you give me nothing to grapple with? 28678 Do you say he has a conscience? 28678 Do you say it is a work begun upon them and accomplished by them? 28678 Do you say it is because of their great wickedness? 28678 Do you say it is of no use? 28678 Do you say such would be a grand failure? 28678 Does not the system that God interposes in the conversion of the sinner rest upon the idea that the sinner is helpless in respect to his conversion? 28678 Does the Lord mock you with commandments that you can not obey? 28678 Does the blessed Father command you to do what you can not? 28678 Does the power of vision make light a necessity? 28678 Have men power to cross the chasm backwards, and are not able, at the same time to cross it in a forward movement? 28678 How is this? 28678 How is this? 28678 How is this? 28678 How much influence could such a man in our own country exert over the American mind? 28678 How shall we get them out? 28678 IS THE SINNER A MORAL AGENT IN HIS CONVERSION? 28678 If the trouble is in his corruption, through inborn depravity, why are_ some converted_ and_ others not_? 28678 If there is anything necessary to conversion that is not in the power of the sinner, why should he be commanded to convert? 28678 If this be so, why is it that so many are left in an unconverted state? 28678 In the midst of this conflict and medley of contradictions what are we to do? 28678 In what does wickedness consist? 28678 Is it because the good Spirit prefers the existence of iniquity and crime? 28678 Is it the neglect of that which is not in their power? 28678 Is not the Spirit of God able for any task which is in its own line of work? 28678 Is the development of man''s religious nature necessary in order to a full, perfect and harmonious growth? 28678 Is this beginning the work of God wrought upon the sinner by a special operation of the Holy Spirit? 28678 Is this out of your power? 28678 Is this the reason of your rejection of religion? 28678 Now, what say you? 28678 Or do you say that the Great Creator and wise and merciful Provider forgot to give a supply just here? 28678 Or is there a double portion of sacrifice, the sacrifice of principle and liberty, demanded at the hands of ministers of the Gospel of Christ? 28678 Or, who is so foolish as to want all faces cast into one mould? 28678 Reader, is all of this demanded by the elements of our nature? 28678 The question, What is matter? 28678 Then who is to blame? 28678 Then why not obey the Gospel and enjoy its promises? 28678 Then why should the sinner he blamed? 28678 There lies a brick, pick it up and examine its surface closely; do you, from it, reach the idea of its maker? 28678 To what? 28678 Turn from what? 28678 WHERE SHALL WE TAKE INFIDELS TO GET THEM OUT OF UNBELIEF? 28678 Was the condition of those fellows unavoidable? 28678 We do not venture to assert that there are no bad men in our ranks, but are yours entirely free from them? 28678 Were these and all such matters necessities? 28678 What is the object of all this pious policy? 28678 What is the trouble? 28678 What more? 28678 Who would paint every flower of the same hue? 28678 Who would trim all the trees of the forest into one and the same shape? 28678 Why did the Master not say,And I should_ convert_ and heal them?" |
28678 | Why is it that he does not give us one general outpouring, one grand revival all over our country, and bring about the long prayed for millennial day? |
28678 | Why is it that_ all men_ are not_ saved_? |
28678 | Why should this be so? |
28678 | Will you, Mr. Christian, grapple with this? |
28678 | Will you? |
28678 | Would a knowledge, by revelation, of the power, intelligence, wisdom and goodness of God be sufficient in the absence of anything more? |
28678 | Would all the preachers in this country encourage such a work by speaking well of it? |
28678 | Would it not be enough, in addition to what you have named, to have a knowledge of our relation to and dependence upon him for all we enjoy? |
28678 | Would the simple idea of the existence of a first cause, or creator of all things, be sufficient? |
28678 | Would they say, Go on? |
28678 | You may reduce matter chemically to the invisible or underlying substance, but beyond this you can not cut? |
28678 | _ Poor Jews!_ Could they help themselves? |
28678 | _ Poor fellow!_ Is he thus doomed? |
34938 | Who''s there? |
34938 | You know old Farmer Simpson out on the Plank Road? |
34938 | ''Why not?'' |
34938 | ''Why,''he asks,''have they thus taken possession of the citadel?'' |
34938 | Ambassador Bryce was asked, two years ago, to deliver an address before Phi Beta Kappa at Harvard, and took for his subject"What is Progress?" |
34938 | And the brother pathologist on the left side:"Well, and what shall we say of intestinal auto- intoxication?" |
34938 | Are your blandishments more seductive in public than in private, and with other women''s husbands than your own?" |
34938 | But what concern, her opponent asks, can women have with war, who contribute nothing to its dangers and hardships? |
34938 | Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home? |
34938 | Do you agree with me thus far?" |
34938 | For reflect if women are not to have the education of men some other must be found for them, and what other can we propose?" |
34938 | For reflect-- if women are not to have the education of men some other must be found for them, and what other can we propose?" |
34938 | How is it actually? |
34938 | How is it that America was discovered at least twice, probably oftener, before Columbus''time, and yet his was a real discovery? |
34938 | How is it, indeed, that there are many discoveries and rediscoveries of the same principle in science? |
34938 | Is it any wonder that the ordinary non- New- England American"gets hot under the collar"for his countrymen under such circumstances? |
34938 | Is it any wonder that this breeds discontent? |
34938 | Is it possible that he knew something of the physical, or let us rather say, the pathological dangers of the vice? |
34938 | Is there anything that we know about them that will help us to account for them? |
34938 | Now it is with regard to this period that it is fair to ask the question, What was the attitude of the Church toward education? |
34938 | She puts the question, however, just as we have all seen it put by a modern actress,--''will this house agree to it?'' |
34938 | Stobaeus relates the story of a student who, having learned the first theorem, asked"but what shall I make by learning these things?" |
34938 | The dear old Mother Superior, who had known me for many years, ventured to ask me afterwards,"Did you say that she was young?" |
34938 | What about feminine education at the time of this great new awakening of educational purpose throughout Europe? |
34938 | What is it that hath been done? |
34938 | What is the reason for these waxings and wanings? |
34938 | What is to be said, then, of a nation that erects public buildings that are to be merely useful? |
34938 | What was the standard of admission to the medical schools, how many years of medical studies were required? |
34938 | What will they not attempt if they win this victory? |
34938 | What, then, must have been the hospital buildings of centuries ago? |
34938 | Whence, then, comes the idea of progress? |
34938 | Why, then, should he not have done things in the olden time just about as he does them now? |
34938 | Will you give the reins to their untractable nature and their uncontrolled passions? |
34938 | Will you remember that when you, too, have a puzzling case? |
34938 | and I said yes, according to the tradition;"and handsome?" |
34938 | { 60}{ 61} THE FIRST MODERN UNIVERSITY{ 62}"What is it that hath been? |
39882 | And what is the story of their hopes, their experiments, and their disappointments? |
39882 | But what is justice or mercy when the welfare of churches and the rescue of imperiled souls is to be considered? |
39882 | Cotton compares Jesuits and heretics to wolves, and says,"Is it not an acceptable service to the whole Country to cut off the ravening Wolves?" |
39882 | Ralegh says that Yucatan means merely"What say you?" |
39882 | Shall we say that when subjected to this great man''s influence the rustics of Scrooby and Bawtry and Austerfield were clowns no longer? |
39882 | Virginia had forests: why should she not produce these things? |
39882 | Was the colony of 1621 or its charter of 1623 intended to supply a refuge, if one should be needed, for Englishmen of the Catholic faith? |
39882 | What manner of men were their leaders? |
39882 | What more could one ask? |
39882 | What propulsions sent them for refuge to a wilderness? |
39882 | What visions beckoned them to undertake the founding of new states? |
39882 | Who can tell?" |
39882 | Who were the beginners of English life in America? |
39882 | Who will not stop in the street to hear one clown rail cleverly at another? |
39882 | Why should the historian linger thus over the story of this last surviving remnant of the"Brownists"? |
40009 | Shall I not take mine ease in mine Inn? |
40009 | What, then, is meant by the''Treasure of the Church''?... 40009 20, Adult colony; c, enclosed ciliated embryos; d, branching stolon; e, more minute reproductive(?) 40009 But suppose our champion slain, how are we to make head against the opposing champion? 40009 But when does the pope speak_ ex cathedra_, and how is it to be distinguished when he is exercising his infallibility? 40009 During November Russia became generally affected, and cases were noticed in Paris, Berlin, Vienna, London and Jamaica(?). 40009 FOOTNOTES:[ 1] Pierre de Beauvoisis(? 40009 How is it that the detective is able to understand the burglar''s plan of action?--the military commander to forecast the enemy''s plan of campaign? 40009 How then was the sense of duty to be created? 40009 In his undergraduate days he had written the well- known poemWho fears to speak of Ninety- eight?" |
40009 | They are symbiotic Algae, or possibly the resting state of a Chlamydomonadine Flagellate(_ Carteria_? |
40009 | What do we mean by the word''superfluous''? |
40009 | Wherein then lies the change which makes 1792 rather than 1740 the starting- point of modern tactics? |
30607 | Men, who ever bold have been, Are your long spears sharpened well? 30607 Well then, my good man, who are you?" |
30607 | What for do you, who have plenty to eat, and much money, walk so far away in the Bush? |
30607 | Will you take this, then? |
30607 | You are thin,continued the philosopher,"your shanks are long, your belly is small,--you had plenty to eat at home, why did you not stop there?" |
30607 | [ 214] Is not this, it may be asked, the very course which a mild and tolerant_ heathen_ government would pursue? 30607 21,) suggest to us our miserable divisions as a chief cause of this? 30607 5. WHO SHALL DECIDE? 30607 And now, only seventy years later, what has become of the grandchildren and descendants of those unfortunate natives? 30607 And what hast thou that thou didst not receive? |
30607 | And what right had England to cast these souls, as it were, beyond the reach of salvation? |
30607 | And what was the system which this wise manager of roads chose to substitute for the teaching of Christ''s ministers? |
30607 | And who can not read in holy Scripture the just doom of those that have acted, or are acting, thus? |
30607 | Can we wonder, under these circumstances, at the slow progress of the gospel? |
30607 | For if we inquire, who corrupt the natives? |
30607 | How often when the rest are sleeping must he be watchful? |
30607 | However, the reply to this was by asking the question, How came the child''s footmarks in the garden? |
30607 | I know how to stay at home, and not walk too far in the Bush: where is your fat?" |
30607 | Is it not rather wonderful that it should make any progress at all? |
30607 | Is not this a sufficient reason for earnestly endeavouring to increase the number of the labourers in the vineyard? |
30607 | Now the_ Boyl- yas_ storms and thunder make; Oh, wherefore would he eat the muscles?" |
30607 | Or, even if they did so, how were they to force their way back again to the remote dwelling- places of civilised man? |
30607 | There is a large and handsome Roman Catholic chapel,"a Scotch church, built after the_ neat and pleasing style_(?) |
30607 | There might be a vast inland sea,--and then how could they hope with their frail barks to navigate it in safety for the very first time? |
30607 | They come moving along in the sky,--cannot you let them alone? |
30607 | Well, but who officiated? |
30607 | What course could be more suitable to the principles of the English constitution? |
30607 | What is wanting in the ensuing picture but civilisation and religion, in order to make it as perfect as any earthly abode can be? |
30607 | What nation had within a single century more than doubled its population without having built or endowed a score of new churches? |
30607 | What was the Church of England doing in the now flourishing settlement of Australia? |
30607 | What white man would have been his brother? |
30607 | What white woman his sister? |
30607 | When will Christians learn, in their intercourse with heathens and savages, to abstain from such falsehood and deceitful dealing? |
30607 | Where was the Church all this time? |
30607 | Where would have been the hardship of this arrangement? |
30607 | Who were, in many instances, the passive, if not the active, corrupters of these very corrupters themselves? |
30607 | Why should not the efforts of our purer and more Scriptural Church be equally strenuous? |
30607 | Would not a bishop, to stand between the mighty major and the poor chaplain on this occasion, have been a guardian of"civil and religious liberty?" |
30607 | [ 92] Where was there ever a gold mine that was known to make a return so profitable as this to those that worked it? |
30607 | what for do you know so much, if you ca n''t keep fat? |
30607 | where is your fat? |
30607 | why did you not bring away the gins?" |
35095 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? 35095 Lord, when shall come the day I long to see, When by pure love I shall Be drawn to Thee? |
35095 | What shall I say? 35095 Because your neighbor I commend, And yet from you all praise withhold:{ 468} But say, why should I waste my time Praising your merits or your rhyme? 35095 But-- where are the last year''s snows? 35095 But-- where are the last year''s snows? |
35095 | Can anything be more acute, more profound, more refined, than the judgment of Linacre? |
35095 | Did praise ever come from men by whom one could more wish to be praised? |
35095 | Echo where? |
35095 | For me, in torture Thou resign''st Thy breath, Nailed to the cross, and sav''st me by Thy death: Say, can these sufferings fail my heart to move? |
35095 | Has nature ever moulded anything gentler, pleasanter, or happier, than the mind of Thomas More?" |
35095 | How could their presence be explained far from the sea and completely covered up? |
35095 | How did he become engaged on the expedition at this time? |
35095 | If the bishops and the clergy of the country were willing to accept the King as the head of the Church, why should a layman hesitate? |
35095 | If to take flight to an abode more dear, Well- feathered wings you on your shoulders sway? |
35095 | Is it significant that we in our time have found nothing better to put there than the outworn symbol of a statue to Diana? |
35095 | Midas treads a wearier measure: All he touches turns to gold: If there be no taste of pleasure, What''s the use of wealth untold? |
35095 | Nay, know ye any so great?" |
35095 | Of course it is literal common sense, but then what has common sense ever availed against fashion? |
35095 | Of her, what soul could weary be? |
35095 | Standing before Donatello''s statue of St. Mark, he cried out,''Mark, why do n''t you speak to me?'' |
35095 | The Queen indignantly demanded when she heard of it,"Who gave permission to Columbus to parcel out my vassals to anyone?" |
35095 | Was there ever a chorus of praise quite so harmonious? |
35095 | Was there ever a more confident genius? |
35095 | What but Thyself can now deserve my love? |
35095 | What now, Mother Eve? |
35095 | What''s the joy his fingers hold, When he''s forced to thirst for aye? |
35095 | Where are they, O Virgin Queen? |
35095 | Where is your mind now? |
35095 | Wherefore should he stick to swear? |
35095 | Who can fail to admire Grocyn, with all his encyclopaedic erudition? |
35095 | Why is it when men make their gods they make them worse than themselves? |
35095 | Why should we waste our vernal years In hoarding useless treasure? |
35095 | Why, before Cervantes came to laugh Spain''s chivalry away, should he not be a Spanish Bayard, a Spanish Gaston de Foix, or indeed both in one?" |
35095 | Will pity not be given For one short look so full thereof? |
35095 | tell of these two things the just degree, Great learning or great wealth; the better which? |
35095 | who back the same Voice from lake and river throws, Lovely beyond human frame: But-- where are the last year''s snows? |
35095 | { 448} How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free When my loved lord no longer smiles on me?" |
18879 | ''Think ye,''quoth she,''that subjects, having power, may resist their princes?'' 18879 If some dogmas are incomprehensible and some rites superstitious,"he seemed to say,"what does it matter? |
18879 | My dog,sneered one of them,"were you not at mass last Sunday? |
18879 | Vanity makes most humanists skeptics,wrote Ariosto,"why is it that learning and infidelity go hand in hand?" |
18879 | What if you should be a saint like Dominic or Francis? |
18879 | What is it to you,he apostrophizes the pontiff,"if our republic is crushed? |
18879 | ( English translation,_ What is Christianity_? |
18879 | All claim inspiration and who can tell which inspiration is right? |
18879 | And hast thou become so totally different from what thou wast, so cruel and contrary to thyself? |
18879 | And now I ask you whether it is not the same whether you enter Paradise by the door or by the window? |
18879 | And to all great men, her own and others, he puts but one inexorable question,"What did you do for the people?" |
18879 | And what do the stories amount to? |
18879 | And what means the smile? |
18879 | And yet there was a sprinkling of saintly parsons like him of whom Chancer[ Transcriber''s note: Chaucer?] |
18879 | Another Earl of Warwick had been a king- maker, why not the present one? |
18879 | But among all these fairly- tales[ Transcriber''s note: fairy- tales?] |
18879 | Can any man now readily understand the following definition of"pronoun,"taken from a book intended{ 664} for beginners, published in 1499? |
18879 | Can the same Spirit tell the Catholic that the books of Maccabees are canonical and tell Luther that they are not? |
18879 | Did he doubt anything? |
18879 | Did he think he wrote well? |
18879 | Did he{ 61} like anything? |
18879 | Do we not see that noble cities are erected by the people and destroyed by princes? |
18879 | Does not his Medusa chill us with the horror of death? |
18879 | Dürer while in the Netherlands paid a messenger 17 cents to deliver a{ 469} letter( or several letters? |
18879 | For what else would Satan do than burn those who call on the name of Christ? |
18879 | He blamed Brenz for his tolerance, asking why we should pity heretics more than does God, who sends them to eternal torment? |
18879 | He might have been supposed to be ready to support any enemy of such an institution, but what does he say? |
18879 | How much more natural and more likely do I find it that two men should lie than that one in twelve hours should pass from east to west? |
18879 | If our temples have been pillaged? |
18879 | If our virgins and matrons have been violated? |
18879 | If the city is innundated with the blood of citizens? |
18879 | Imagine that Christ, the judge of all, were present and himself pronounced sentence and lit the fire,--who would not take Christ for Satan? |
18879 | In short, truth is a near neighbor to falsehood, and the wise man can only repeat,"Que sais- je?" |
18879 | Indeed, in this enlightened era of the Renaissance, what porridge was handed to the common people? |
18879 | Is it not notable that in_ The Labyrinth_ the thread of Ariadne is not religion, but reason? |
18879 | Is n''t that maintaining the gospel? |
18879 | Is not Beatrice d''Este already doomed to waste away, when he paints her? |
18879 | Is not his portrait of himself a wizard? |
18879 | O Christ, creator of the world, dost thou see such things? |
18879 | Or what are you within this commonwealth?" |
18879 | Shall we choose the master of a ship and not choose him who is to have the care of so many cities and so many souls? |
18879 | T. C. Hall:"Was Calvin a Reformer or a Reactionary?" |
18879 | The Lord, however, objected and addressed the suppliant:"Hast thou never heard that I am the way and the door to life everlasting?" |
18879 | The doctor of the gentiles saith,"If an heathen come in and hear you speak with several tongues, will he not say that you are mad?" |
18879 | Thou hast freed us from the yoke of tradition, who is to free us from the more unbearable yoke of the letter? |
18879 | To take but one example out of many that might be given: what has modern criticism made of Calvin''s doctrine of the inerrancy of Scripture? |
18879 | W. Sombart:_ Der Moderne Kapitalismus?_ 2 vols. |
18879 | Was not Bayard, the captain in the army of Francis I a"knight without fear and without reproach"? |
18879 | What cause detached North Germany, Denmark, most of Switzerland, Holland, England, Scotland, and Ireland[ sic] from the Roman communion? |
18879 | What could a heresy trial do? |
18879 | What could art be in the life of a man who was fighting for his soul''s salvation? |
18879 | What did Leonardo make of it? |
18879 | What do you say to that? |
18879 | What family more holy, what home more pure?" |
18879 | What glory can compare with that of Homer?" |
18879 | What is the etiology of religious revolution? |
18879 | What mercy was shown to the Lollards or to Savonarola? |
18879 | What serious clergyman would now compare three of his friends to the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, as did Luther? |
18879 | What tolerance was extended to the Hussites? |
18879 | What was free, except dentistry, to the Jews, expelled from Spain and Portugal and persecuted everywhere else? |
18879 | What was he trying to express? |
18879 | What wealth or what scepters would I exchange for my tranquil reading?" |
18879 | What, indeed, are smoking, drinking, and other wooings of pure sensation at the sacrifice of power and reason, but a sort of pragmatized poetry? |
18879 | When Erasmus wrote:"Who ever heard orthodox bishops incite kings to slaughter heretics who were nothing else than heretics?" |
18879 | When Knox took the liberty of discussing it with her she burst out:"What have you to do with my marriage? |
18879 | When Sir David Lyndsay asked,[ Sidenote: 1528] Why are the Scots so poor? |
18879 | Who will finally bring us Christianity such as thou thyself would now teach, such as Christ himself would teach?" |
18879 | Who would not think that Christ were Moloch, or some such god, if he wished that men be immolated to him and burnt alive? |
18879 | Who would now name a ship"Jesus,"as Hawkins''s buccaneering slaver was named? |
18879 | Would he have thought so after 1919? |
18879 | [ 1] Could he have been David Borthwick or David Lyndsay? |
18879 | [ Sidenote: 1515] Was he already a Reformer? |
18879 | [ Sidenote: Browne, 1550?-1633?] |
18879 | [ Sidenote: Valla attacks the Pope] And if the legality of the pope''s rule was so slight, what was its practical effect? |
18879 | [ Transcriber''s note: 691?] |
18879 | do yet get so hard and so poor a living and live so wretched a life that the condition of the laboring beasts may seem much better and wealthier?" |
18879 | he asked himself,"ay, what if you should even surpass them in sanctity?" |
18879 | or opinion so strange,"he asked,"that custom hath not established and planted by laws in some region?" |
18879 | that a state grows rich by the industry of its citizens and is plundered by the rapacity of its princes? |
18879 | that good laws are enacted by elected magistrates and violated by kings? |
18879 | that the people love peace and the princes foment war? |
18879 | { 65}"What can I do,"he kept asking,"to win a gracious God?" |
18879 | { 717} To whom do I owe the power of publishing what I am now writing, save to this liberator of modern thought?" |
41979 | Did the horses swim ahead of them? |
41979 | Horse boats? |
41979 | ''Are you all crazy, to go to the Fort,''said he,''where that scoundrel lives who has so often murdered your friends?'' |
41979 | ''Who will go to meet them?'' |
41979 | He resented such conduct; and can you wonder at it? |
41979 | Turning to Milburne he said:"Why must you die? |
41979 | What could the Indians think of the gospel of Jesus Christ and the white man''s God? |
39388 | Well, well, Mr. Woods,demanded the autocrat,"who may this very rich uncle of yours be?" |
39388 | After having got through his fit, the happy(?) |
39388 | And how far have they journeyed since they parted? |
39388 | And meanwhile where has the Columbia itself been journeying? |
39388 | And now what to do with the carcass? |
39388 | And what healthy human being would exchange those for the feverish, pampered life of the modern house? |
39388 | And what manner of men were in charge of this expedition, thus filled with both interest and peril? |
39388 | And what were the claims of the United States? |
39388 | As quoted in Hazard Stevens''s_ Life of Governor Stevens_, he began his harangue thus:"My people, what have you done? |
39388 | But what was happening on the Walla Walla? |
39388 | For what do we see? |
39388 | Have we any organisation on which we can rely for mutual protection? |
39388 | Hot? |
39388 | How can I go back blind, to my blind people? |
39388 | If so, where will it cross? |
39388 | Jo Meek, famous as one of the Mountain Men, stepped out of the crowd and said,"Who is for a divide? |
39388 | Meanwhile what were the factors in the struggle for possession? |
39388 | The interesting question arises, Was the river the Columbia? |
39388 | To what use could we ever hope to put these great deserts or these great mountain ranges, impenetrable and covered to their base with eternal snow? |
39388 | What are these people doing with their accumulations? |
39388 | What banner? |
39388 | What can we ever hope to do with the western coast, a coast of three thousand miles, rock- bound, cheerless, and uninviting, and not a harbour on it? |
39388 | What had become of it? |
39388 | What is to be its part in the world commerce of the future? |
39388 | What of the Great River? |
39388 | What ship? |
39388 | What use have we of such a country? |
1827 | And what did he say? |
1827 | Brussels, 1842( May?). 1827 Do you know what soothsayers I would consult?" |
1827 | Do you want some one to help you with your bottle, sir? 1827 Have you forgotten the sea by this time, E.? |
1827 | Have you seen anything of Miss H. lately? 1827 Is he coming?" |
1827 | Is there any talk of your coming to Brussels? 1827 What is the matter?" |
1827 | What publishers would be most likely to receive favourably a proposal of this nature? 1827 What shall I do without you? |
1827 | Why do you smile? |
1827 | Why not? |
1827 | Why, only,''D- n him; what do I care?'' |
1827 | Would it suffice to_ write_ to a publisher on the subject, or would it be necessary to have recourse to a personal interview? 1827 You remember Mr. and Mrs.---? |
1827 | _ Tabby_.--''Who from?'' 1827 _ Tabby_.--''Who?'' |
1827 | ''Have you no doors in your country?'' |
1827 | ''Indeed; what is her name?'' |
1827 | ''Why are you so glum to- night, Tabby? |
1827 | *****"Do you know this place? |
1827 | An old man appeared, standing without, who accosted her thus:--"_ Old Man_.--''Does the parson live here?'' |
1827 | And yet what to do? |
1827 | Are you well? |
1827 | But how? |
1827 | CHARLOTTE BRONTE"De temps en temps, il parait sur la terre des hommes destines a etre les instruments[ predestines]{ Pourquoi cette suppression?} |
1827 | Can you give me a notion of the cost? |
1827 | Can you give me any hint as to the way in which these difficulties are best met? |
1827 | Cette faiblesse de vue est pour moi une terrible privation; sans cela, savez- vous ce que je ferais, Monsieur? |
1827 | Cities in the wilderness, like Tadmor, alias Palmyra-- are they not? |
1827 | Could I meet you at Leeds? |
1827 | Did I not once say you ought to be thankful for your independence? |
1827 | Did Pain''s keen dart, and Grief''s sharp sting Strive in his mangled breast? |
1827 | Did he feel what a man might feel, Friend- left, and sore distrest? |
1827 | Did longing for affection lost Barb every deadly dart; Love unrepaid, and Faith betrayed, Did these torment his heart? |
1827 | Did you chance, in your letter to Mr. H., to mention my spectacles? |
1827 | Did you not feel awed while gazing at St. Paul''s and Westminster Abbey? |
1827 | Do you remember whether there was any other school there besides that of Miss---? |
1827 | Entre son berceau et sa tombe qu''y a- t- il? |
1827 | For instance, in the present case, where a work of fiction is in question, in what form would a publisher be most likely to accept the MS.? |
1827 | Have I said enough to clear myself of so silly an imputation? |
1827 | His sight diminishes weekly; and can it be wondered at that, as he sees the most precious of his faculties leaving him, his spirits sometimes sink? |
1827 | How could the point be managed? |
1827 | How do you get on? |
1827 | How far is it from Leeds to Sheffield? |
1827 | How kind and affectionate that was? |
1827 | How long are we likely to be separated? |
1827 | I did not intend it, and have only one thing more to say-- if you do not go immediately to the sea, will you come to see us at Haworth? |
1827 | I do not mean, of course, to stay, but just for a call of an hour or two? |
1827 | I forget God, and will not God forget me? |
1827 | I have no doubt their advice is completely at your service; why then should I intrude mine? |
1827 | I longed to go to Brussels; but how could I get there? |
1827 | In March, 1835, she writes:"What do you think of the course politics are taking? |
1827 | In a postscript she adds:--"Will you be kind enough to inform me of the number of performers in the King''s military band?" |
1827 | In answer to her correspondent''s reply to this letter, she says:--"You thought I refused you coldly, did you? |
1827 | Is it age, or what else, that changes me so?" |
1827 | Is it grown dim in your mind? |
1827 | Is not this childish? |
1827 | Is papa well? |
1827 | Je n''ai pas de magnanimite, dit- on? |
1827 | Last Saturday night he had been sitting an hour in the parlour with Papa; and, as he went away, I heard Papa say to him''What is the matter with you? |
1827 | Leeds and Manchester-- where are they? |
1827 | M. thought you grown less, did she? |
1827 | Mais parler ainsi n''est- ce pas attribuer gratuitement a Napoleon une humaine faiblesse qu''il n''eprouva jamais? |
1827 | Meme que vous me perdiez( ose- je croire que mon depart vous etait un chagrin?) |
1827 | Mr.--- is going to be married, is he? |
1827 | Mrs. Bronte, whose sweet nature thought invariably of the bright side, would say,"Ought I not to be thankful that he never gave me an angry word?" |
1827 | Now to that flattering sentence must I tack on a list of her faults? |
1827 | Or can you still see it, dark, blue, and green, and foam- white, and hear it roaring roughly when the wind is high, or rushing softly when it is calm? |
1827 | Papa will, perhaps, think it a wild and ambitious scheme; but who ever rose in the world without ambition? |
1827 | Quand donc s''est- il laisse enchainer par un lien d''affection? |
1827 | She confessed it was not brilliant, but what could she do? |
1827 | So where he reigns in glory bright, Above those starry skies of night, Amid his Paradise of light Oh, why may I not be? |
1827 | The question was, to what trade or profession should Branwell be brought up? |
1827 | This is not like one of my adventures, is it? |
1827 | To be sure, my opinion will go but a very little way to decide his character; what of that? |
1827 | Under these circumstances how can I go visiting? |
1827 | What could she do to nurse and cherish up this little sister, the youngest of them all? |
1827 | What could they do? |
1827 | What think you? |
1827 | What to find there? |
1827 | What was to be done? |
1827 | When do you set off? |
1827 | When do you wish to go? |
1827 | Where am I going to reside? |
1827 | Where do you wish to go? |
1827 | Where were his comrades? |
1827 | Where''s the use of protestations? |
1827 | Whether offered as a work of three vols., or as tales which might be published in numbers, or as contributions to a periodical? |
1827 | Who that has read"Shirley"does not remember the few lines-- perhaps half a page-- of sad recollection? |
1827 | Why are we to be denied each other''s society? |
1827 | Why are we to be divided? |
1827 | Will you favour me with a line stating whether_ any_, or how many copies have yet been sold?" |
1827 | You ask me if I do not think that men are strange beings? |
1827 | You remember the letter she wrote me, when I was in England? |
1827 | You will ask me why? |
1827 | _ When will you come home_? |
1827 | and Tabby? |
1827 | is it not odd? |
1827 | que m''importe ce qu''on dit de moi? |
1827 | where his mate? |
30306 | [ 10] The fact is unquestionable, but the question remains, In what sense were these people exalted? 30306 [ 7] Granted; only one would like to know what reason there is for not deriving virtues as well as vices from the same source? |
30306 | And if not called into being then, from what other source could they have been derived? |
30306 | And, deeper enquiry still, may not the religious interpretation itself be a product of the special environment of the period? |
30306 | But is it true? |
30306 | But why are we to limit science to_ physical_ facts only? |
30306 | Did their exalted sensibility really bring them into touch with a form of existence hidden from persons of a coarser fibre? |
30306 | First, whether or no these children were bewitched? |
30306 | Has science the knowledge or the ability to deal with the extraordinary as well as with the ordinary facts of life? |
30306 | Have you no pity on the torments that I suffer? |
30306 | How can we discriminate between the two classes of cases? |
30306 | How comes it that this idea has not by now disappeared from civilised society? |
30306 | How far has the one been mistaken for the other? |
30306 | How far may religious experience be explained as a misinterpretation of normal non- religious life? |
30306 | If the former, how can we differentiate between the mystic and the admittedly hysterical patient? |
30306 | If the latter, what ground is there for placing the mystic in a category of his own? |
30306 | In that case, would the belief in the supernatural have ever existed? |
30306 | In what respect, then, do the favoured few differ from their fellows? |
30306 | Is it a fact that the non- religious explanation breaks down so completely? |
30306 | Is there anything in later scientific knowledge that would ever have suggested the supernatural? |
30306 | It certainly leaves unanswered the question_ Why_ should people have drawn together in the face of danger? |
30306 | One writer pertinently asks:--"What does the ordinary seminary graduate know of the histology, anatomy, and physiology of the soul? |
30306 | Or are we to seek a less romantic explanation with the aid of known tendencies and forces in human nature? |
30306 | Or did it belong to a class of cases which in a more violent form comes within the province of the physician? |
30306 | Secondly, whether the prisoners at the bar were guilty of it? |
30306 | Shall I think of a mother''s tears? |
30306 | The question is, therefore, why should the line of growth, general with all at adolescence, be, in the case of some, diverted into religious channels? |
30306 | To what causes are we to attribute the persistence of this belief in the supernatural? |
30306 | To what extent have pathological nervous states influenced the building up of the religious consciousness? |
30306 | To what extent have people accepted the outcome of pathological conditions as proofs of intercourse with an unseen spiritual world? |
30306 | Under what conditions did the hypothesis that supernatural beings control the life of man come into existence? |
30306 | What are the causes that have given it such a lengthy lease of life? |
30306 | What does the graduate know about sexuality, so closely allied with certain forms of religious manifestations? |
30306 | What does the ordinary graduate understand about doubt? |
30306 | What is the character of the force that binds the members of a group so closely together? |
30306 | What is the inevitable conclusion? |
30306 | What is the nature of this fact of sociability? |
30306 | What kind of evidence is it that throughout the ages religious people have accepted as conclusive? |
30306 | What kind of evidence is it, then, that has been accepted as proof of the supernatural? |
30306 | What possible scientific warranty is there for any such distinction? |
30306 | What, then, are we to make of those who experience a similar feeling, but who are without the certainty of eternal life? |
30306 | Whence did the pest of the Agapetà ¦ creep into the Church? |
30306 | Whence is this new title of wives without marriage rites? |
30306 | Whence these harlots cleaving to one man? |
30306 | Whence this new class of concubines? |
30306 | Who is there that may not love Thy lovely face? |
30306 | Whose heart is so hard that may not melt at the remembrance of Thee? |
30306 | Why do these facts not immediately present themselves in their true nature? |
30306 | Why do things happen? |
30306 | Why does the sun rise and set, why does rain fall, thunder crash, rivers flow? |
30306 | Why should the ordinary classification break down at this point? |
30306 | Why should this have been the case? |
30306 | Why should this normal change from childhood to maturity be the period during which_ religious_ conversion is experienced? |
30306 | Why, then, has not supernaturalism died out? |
30306 | With what else has religion always associated itself? |
30306 | With what else should a healthy religion associate itself but the ordinary motives or feelings of human life? |
30306 | Would Santa Teresa or Catherine of Sienna have used the language they did use to express their relations to Jesus had they been wives and mothers? |
30306 | Would it not have been like a tree divorced from the soil? |
30306 | Would not one be surprised if any other result than this had been achieved? |
30306 | Would the medieval monk have been tempted by Satan in the form of beautiful women had he been happily married? |
30306 | Would the religious idea have persisted in the way that it has done? |
30306 | Would the thousand and one''spiritual beings''of primitive society have ever had being? |
30306 | [ 103] Marie de L''Incarnation addresses Jesus as follows:--"Oh, my love, when shall I embrace you? |
30306 | and what had they exactly in their several individual minds, when they delivered their utterances? |
30306 | who may not love Thee, lovely Jesus? |
20420 | ''God be with us,''said he, turning to Donald,''what was that?'' 20420 ''Surely,''said I to him,''you do n''t mean to say that this man is dead?'' |
20420 | Adrienne, are you still angry? |
20420 | And Lucie? |
20420 | And now? |
20420 | And what about clothes? |
20420 | And what about the shawl? |
20420 | But that implies the possibility of a decaying ghost? |
20420 | But what is a Thought Body? |
20420 | But what is an astral body? |
20420 | But, my dear friend, do you actually mean to say that you have the faculty of----"Going about in my Thought Body? 20420 But,"said I to my fellow- passenger,"how do you know that the story is true?" |
20420 | But,said my friend, somewhat dubiously,"what paper are you going to?" |
20420 | Come, Martin,said the man of the house"are you not going to tell a story, I am sure you know many?" |
20420 | Do you hear me? |
20420 | Do you hear this? |
20420 | Excuse me, Mr. Morley,said I,"when will this new arrangement come into effect?" |
20420 | Had ever had any hallucinations? |
20420 | Had she ever seen a ghost? |
20420 | He said to me,''Are my photographs ready?'' 20420 How do you account,"said I to my hostess,"for the change in colour of the silk front from grey to amber?" |
20420 | How often? |
20420 | How? |
20420 | I asked him,''Were you here last night, John?'' 20420 I,"what am I? |
20420 | No; what? |
20420 | Nonsense,she said,"what made you think that?" |
20420 | Not even at the Murder Stone of the Devil''s Punch Bowl? |
20420 | Oh, some one else? 20420 Real Ghost Stories!--How can there be real ghost stories when there are no real ghosts?" |
20420 | Then how do you manage? |
20420 | Then the mummies in the Museum? |
20420 | Then when your thought body appears? |
20420 | Then you had no memory of where you had been? |
20420 | Well,said I,"when are you coming to be photographed?" |
20420 | What name will you have? |
20420 | What was it that happened? |
20420 | Who is it? |
20420 | With F."Why? |
20420 | With whom? |
20420 | You? 20420 ''Not going? 20420 ''Oh, who is talking to me like that? 20420 ''What is that you hear?'' 20420 ''Where are you then, and what is the date of to- day?'' 20420 ''Why did n''t you keep it?'' 20420 And was its bow coming unpinned?'' 20420 Anxious to retain his good- will, I shouted after him,''Can I post what may be done?'' 20420 Are you there, Georgie?'' 20420 As I have two hemispheres in my brain, have I two minds or two souls? 20420 But are there no real ghosts? 20420 But how many are there of us within each skin who can say? 20420 But was she quite sure; had nothing ever occurred to her which she could not explain? 20420 Catherine de Medicis saw, in a vision, the battle of Jarnac, and cried out,Do you not see the Prince of Condà © dead in the hedge?" |
20420 | Ghosts? |
20420 | Have you something on a horse?'' |
20420 | He also asks,''Art thou satisfied?'' |
20420 | He asks,''Do you feel anything?'' |
20420 | He started, and said,''Who told you?'' |
20420 | His son replied,''I will, father; what is it?'' |
20420 | How far was it capable of reasoning and judgment? |
20420 | How far was its attention alert? |
20420 | How many of us have seen the microbe that kills? |
20420 | How?" |
20420 | I asked''What negative?'' |
20420 | I met this gentleman in the street, nearly opposite his office; he shook hands, and said,''How are you? |
20420 | I pushed them very hard, and was led to say, without premeditation,''What hinders you? |
20420 | I said to Mr. S----,"You look different to your usual; what''s the matter with you?" |
20420 | I said,''Who are you? |
20420 | I was here then, was I? |
20420 | In other words, am I one personality or two? |
20420 | In what way, by the aid of what nervous mechanism, was the startling monition conveyed? |
20420 | Is my nature dual? |
20420 | Is there any possible truth in it? |
20420 | Mr. M. replied,''Father, I will; what is it?'' |
20420 | Mr. S---- said,"Do n''t you see I am in my_ deshabille_?"'' |
20420 | My friend looked at me in some amazement, and said,"And where are you going to?" |
20420 | Now, may it not be that this supplies a suggestion as to the cause of the phenomenon of clairvoyance? |
20420 | Now, what do you think of such a vision as that? |
20420 | Or,''_ Georgie_, are you in? |
20420 | Seeing that she did not seem to be attending to him, he went up to her and said,"Did you hear what I did just now?" |
20420 | Shall we call her Blanche?" |
20420 | She said,''Is there some trouble?'' |
20420 | She saw_ her_, and asked, When shall I be with you? |
20420 | Shelley, while in a state of trance, saw a figure wrapped in a cloak which beckoned to him and asked, Siete soddisfatto?--are you satisfied? |
20420 | Tell me, will you speak to me if I appear to you in my thought body?" |
20420 | The clerk said,''Where?'' |
20420 | We ask, in amazement, how many more personalities may there not be hidden in the human frame? |
20420 | What I want to know is whether you agree to the changes which I propose to make and which will somewhat affect your work in the office?" |
20420 | What can have brought her out at this time? |
20420 | What in the world do you mean, Angus?'' |
20420 | What is our Ego? |
20420 | What proof, it will be asked impatiently, is there for the splitting of our personality? |
20420 | When he was elected the question came as to what should be done? |
20420 | Why do you not yield yourself to Christ? |
20420 | Why should I always see something at three o''clock each day after the seance?''" |
20420 | Will you_ speak_ to Irwin?'' |
20420 | You said"died,"and the day you mentioned has not come yet?'' |
20420 | was so frightened?" |
31688 | But are there any such persons in the world? |
31688 | Know you not, that your members are the temple of the Holy Ghost, who is in you, whom you have from God; and you are not your own? |
31688 | What purity,says a Father of the Church,"what piety shall we require of a priest? |
31688 | Who distinguisheth thee? 31688 After all, what is a novitiate for, if not to discover whether the candidate has the requisite qualities? 31688 And can any sphere of action be more elevated, more grateful than this? 31688 And of all prayers and devotions, can any be more efficacious or salutary than the frequent reception of the Holy Eucharist? 31688 And whence arises, we may ask, this incomparable dignity of the priest? 31688 And why has not the other boy a vocation? 31688 And why is the exercise of these three counsels so excellent? 31688 Are we to be so enamored of benefiting others as to forego God''s special love, and to rest satisfied with a lower place in heaven? 31688 Are you willing to make the bargain? 31688 But because marriage has many cares and responsibilities, is that a prohibitive reason against embracing it? 31688 But could a life be better spent? 31688 But does not a person have to feel a special call before binding himself to perpetual chastity? 31688 But how are we to be perfect? 31688 But how does a young person act when he declines this proffered gift? 31688 CHAPTER IV WHO ARE INVITED? 31688 CHAPTER IX MUST I ACCEPT THE INVITATION? 31688 CHAPTER V DOES CHRIST WANT ME? 31688 CHAPTER VIISUPPOSE I MAKE A MISTAKE?" |
31688 | Could one do more than to give up everything he owns, and then complete the renunciation by dedicating his body, aye, his very soul, to Christ? |
31688 | Do you long to ride the ocean waves, and brave the tempest? |
31688 | Do you think our loving, gentle Redeemer would speak in this harsh way? |
31688 | Does He mean that the power of practicing virginal chastity is given only to the selected few or to the many? |
31688 | God will love you still; but can you be surprised if He cherish other generous souls more? |
31688 | How many children in that class- room, do you think, would joyfully hold up their hands, and beg Him to take them? |
31688 | How, then, would Christ really address the class? |
31688 | If Jesus Christ really stood before you, dear reader, and thus addressed you, what would be your reply? |
31688 | If the following of Christ were easy and agreeable to the senses, where would be the merit and reward of it? |
31688 | Is it better to err on the side of generosity to God, or on the side of pusillanimity? |
31688 | Is it open to all, or must one await the striking manifestation of the Divine Will inviting him to it? |
31688 | Is that a sign God destines you for worldly vanities? |
31688 | Is the invitation extended to all, or limited to the chosen few?" |
31688 | Is there anything of contempt in such a reply? |
31688 | Let us, however, grant that occasionally a novice leaves his order: is that such a disgrace? |
31688 | More than a million Chinese to- day are fervent Christians, and to whom do they owe their faith under God? |
31688 | Now, what says your heart? |
31688 | Or what hast thou that thou hast not received?" |
31688 | Said a boy one day,"How in the world does a person ever know he is to be a priest?" |
31688 | Selfishness, to a large extent, rules in the world, and how can you promise yourself that you will escape its grasp? |
31688 | Should he not say,"The priesthood is too exalted for my weakness and unworthiness"? |
31688 | Suppose Christ were to walk into your class- room, how would He act? |
31688 | The boy or girl who is deliberating on a future career will naturally ask,"Who are invited to the higher life? |
31688 | The child,"with wisdom beyond his years,"the chronicler tells us,"replied,''what, are you taking heaven for yourselves, and leaving earth to me? |
31688 | The thoughtful boy and girl then begin to ask the question,"What shall I be?" |
31688 | Then what of the soul which is daily nourished with the"Wheat of the Elect and the Wine that springeth forth Virgins?" |
31688 | This seems a hard doctrine, for who would be able to give up all he has, parents, home and possessions? |
31688 | V Does Christ Want Me? |
31688 | VI I Feel No Attraction VII Suppose I Make a Mistake? |
31688 | VIII The World Needs Me IX Must I Accept the Invitation? |
31688 | WHAT SHALL I BE? |
31688 | What better work, in the present time, can any of us do than foster vocations to our Brotherhoods and Sisterhoods, whose special mission is teaching?" |
31688 | What does he mean by this? |
31688 | What if they make a mistake by not entering religious life? |
31688 | What is this precious pearl that so charmed the merchant as to make him sacrifice all he had to gain possession of it? |
31688 | What makes the vocation in the one case? |
31688 | What more fitting monument could be left to posterity than a spiritual structure built on Christ and enduring as the foundation on which it rests? |
31688 | What more heroic predecessor would you have than the great"Admiral,"the navigator and discoverer, Columbus? |
31688 | Who could conceive, did not Faith teach it, that mortal man were capable of elevation to such a pitch of glory? |
31688 | Who, then, may aspire to the glorious career of the priesthood? |
31688 | Will he not rather ask himself whether this manner of life is practicable, and possibly even meant and intended for him? |
31688 | Will it reject the special love Christ offers? |
31688 | Will you be so irresponsive as to reply,"Give me the lesser gift; Thy best treasures and best love bestow on my companions"? |
31688 | Will you come to Him, your fresh young heart still sweet with the dew of innocence, and become His own forevermore? |
31688 | Would He pick out four or five pupils and say,"I wish you to be religious, the others I do not want, and I forbid them such aspirations?" |
31688 | Would you be a soldier? |
31688 | _ Creighton University, Omaha, Easter Sunday, 1914._ CONTENTS CHAPTER I Getting a Start II Aiming High III The State of Perfection IV Who Are Invited? |
31688 | or"What shall I do?" |
40156 | But by what means,he asks,"can experience and the senses give ideas? |
40156 | Thinkest thou not,said King Astyages,"that Bel is a living god? |
40156 | Are the latter a development of the former? |
40156 | Are they the genuine work of Ignatius, and, if so, at what date were they written? |
40156 | Has the soul windows? |
40156 | In the history of human religions can we trace, as it were, a law of transition from sacred stock and stone up to picture and image? |
40156 | Is it like a writing tablet? |
40156 | Is it like wax? |
40156 | Is it true to say that the latter is characteristic of a later and higher stage of religious development? |
40156 | It is formed of fibres connecting up the right and left sides of the tectum opticum(?). |
40156 | Or seest thou not how much he eateth and drinketh every day? |
40156 | Summed up in a word, therefore, the Ignatian problem is this: which of these three recensions( if any) represents the actual work of Ignatius? |
40156 | The question arises: must the stage of aniconic gods historically precede and lead up to that of pictures and images? |
40156 | This was extremely neat, but who is to say that James Smith had not polished it as he dressed for dinner? |
40156 | Thus we speak of a bright star, of the question-- When is Venus at its brightest? |
40156 | Whence this seeming blight and decay of art? |
40156 | Who is to be sure that, like Mascarille in_ Les Précieuses ridicules_, the impromptu- writer has not employed his leisure in sharpening his arrows? |
41070 | Are you not ashamed,say they,"to quarrel with your little brother?"'' |
41070 | Who are these that fly as a cloud,exclaims Esaias,"or as the doves to their windows?" |
41070 | ), Hohilpos( Flatheads? |
41070 | ), and the Euotalla( Touchet? |
41070 | All of which may be true; but, judged by this standard, has not every nation on earth incurred the death penalty? |
41070 | But is this sound reasoning? |
41070 | Colvilles cut down pines for their moss( alectoria?). |
41070 | For who can tell what may or may not be found out by inquiry? |
41070 | Giving him some_ muck- a- muck_,[499] I asked him,"What do you say when you talk over old Gesnip?" |
41070 | Nothing else will satisfy her.... Would money satisfy me for the death of my son? |
41070 | Ootlashoots, Micksucksealton( Pend d''Oreilles? |
41070 | The Sciatogas and Toustchipas live on Canoe River( Tukanon? |
41070 | What purpose did these peoples serve? |
41070 | Who are you? |
41070 | _ Ib._ Quathlapotle, between the Cowlits and Chahwahnahinooks( Cathlapootle?) |
42210 | Among the Scottish Highlands, or in the Swiss Alps, you would certainly do it, endure it, enjoy it, and subsequently boast of it; why not try it here? |
42210 | By D. S. Ericson, 1.50 Clean Your Boots, Sir? |
42210 | By Mary Dwinell Chellis, 1.50 Pleasant Pages and Bible Pictures, 20 illustrations; 1.50 Carl Bartlett or What can I do? |
42210 | Can I ever forget it? |
42210 | Certainly, why not? |
42210 | Did you ever see finer boulder- scenery in your life? |
42210 | Has the superior race the monopoly of lying? |
42210 | Now,_ when_ will you go? |
42210 | Well, why not a Chinaman as well as a white man? |
42210 | What could a bride be made of, Who would wear a veil like this? |
42210 | What else did you come to California for? |
42210 | What library is complete without the best English Dictionary? |
42210 | What would happen to our Melican merchants if that rule were rigidly applied? |
42210 | Who does not know it? |
43427 | A_ living_ body? |
43427 | Are_ you_ a body? |
43427 | Is a stone possessed of life? |
43427 | ( 1785- 1795? |
43427 | Again:"Is_ every_ body possessed of life?" |
43427 | But who is a good teacher of such a science? |
43427 | Napoleon was even reported to have said:"Qui m''empêche de laisser fusiller ce prince?" |
43427 | What is truth, and who are the right teachers of it? |
43427 | that of Homer and Hesiod) is included, and the question is asked, why the hearers of such stories are amused by them? |
43427 | that of a system of laws which governs the many things? |
42854 | --vain to ask"Wherein shall we return?" |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | It was in vain to complain, saying,"Every one that doeth evil is good in the eyes of Yahweh,"or"Where is the God of judgment?" |
42854 | MALLET( or MALLOCH), DAVID(? 1705- 1765), Scottish poet and dramatist, the son of a Perthshire farmer, was born in that county, probably in 1705. |
42854 | See_ Who was Sir Thomas Malory?_ G. L. Kittredge(_ Harvard Studies and Notes_, vol. |
42854 | Wives_:--*_Khadija_( Children:--Qasim;? |
42854 | _ Chronological Table of Chief Events in the Life of Mahomet._[2]? |
42854 | ` Affan, d. A.H. 9;*_ Fatimah_, m.` Ali, d. A.H. 11):*_ Saudah bint Zam`ah_,? |
18191 | ''Who does not know,''exclaims his own pupil Hippolytus,''the books of Irenæus and Melito and the rest, which declare Christ to be God and man?'' |
18191 | 21 sq)? |
18191 | 31, v. 24; Caius( Hippolytus?) |
18191 | 34),''O, Jerusalem, Jerusalem,..._ how often_ would I have gathered thy children together''? |
18191 | 60, with which it coincides? |
18191 | And what room, we are forced to ask, has he left for such a dogma? |
18191 | And when Judas the traitor did not believe, and asked,''How shall such growths be accomplished by the Lord?'' |
18191 | But if the Curetonian letters are the genuine work of Ignatius, what must we say of the Vossian? |
18191 | But if this be so, what becomes of the disparagement of written Gospels, which is confidently asserted by our author and others? |
18191 | But if this was the motive of the insertion, what was its source? |
18191 | But in this latter case, if they had the second treatise which bears the name of St Luke in their hands, why should they not have had the first also? |
18191 | But is it certain that he is not mentioned elsewhere? |
18191 | But is there anything really characteristic of Marcion in the description? |
18191 | But what purpose was served by thus importing into his notes a mass of borrowed and unsorted references? |
18191 | But what then? |
18191 | But what was its nature and purport? |
18191 | But what, if the comparison which Papias had in view was wholly different? |
18191 | But what, if the writer of these fragments was not an''isolated convert to the views of Victor,''but a Quartodeciman himself? |
18191 | But where did he find this false exegesis? |
18191 | But who could have supposed that this was our author''s meaning? |
18191 | But, if our author disposes of the coincidences with the Third Gospel in this way, what will he say to those with the Acts? |
18191 | But, if so, how came it to find a place in the copies of St John''s Gospel? |
18191 | But, if so, how came the name of Irenæus to be attached to it? |
18191 | Can we imagine that the documents which Irenæus regards in this light had been produced during his own lifetime? |
18191 | Can we suppose that he meant anything else but the Old Testament Scriptures by this expression? |
18191 | Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest''? |
18191 | Does it not occur to him that he is here cutting the throat of his own argument? |
18191 | How comes it then, that he was not set right by one or other of these many writers, even if he could not construe Credner''s German? |
18191 | How then can we explain the statement of Epiphanius? |
18191 | How, again, has our author learnt that Eusebius''knows nothing of his having composed such a work''? |
18191 | In an earlier part of this same fifth book Irenæus writes[ 198:2]:-- Where then was the first man placed? |
18191 | Is the historical position which the writer of this letter takes up at all like the invention of a forger? |
18191 | Is the language which I have used at all stronger than our author''s own on this point? |
18191 | Is there any reason to think that Papias did directly occupy himself with this subject? |
18191 | Is there reason to believe that the authority in these two passages is the same or different? |
18191 | Is this a true description of the world in the early Christian ages? |
18191 | Is this at all unnatural? |
18191 | Is this the language of one speaking of a book to which''he attached little or no value''? |
18191 | May not the two have been connected together in the context of Papias, as they are in the notice of Eusebius? |
18191 | May not this have been the same person? |
18191 | Must not anyone reading the apology to Dr Westcott, contained in the note quoted above, necessarily carry off a wholly false impression of the facts? |
18191 | Of what then? |
18191 | Shall we understand the word''exposition''to mean''enarration,''or''explanation''? |
18191 | This universal''brotherhood of man,''what is it but a''dogma''of the most comprehensive application? |
18191 | Was I altogether without ground for this belief? |
18191 | Was he, or was he not, as these critics affirm, a Judaic Christian of strongly Ebionite tendencies? |
18191 | Was the author''s main object to construct a new Evangelical narrative, or to interpret and explain one or more already in circulation? |
18191 | Was there then any possibility of a mistake here? |
18191 | Was this mere accident? |
18191 | What can this mean? |
18191 | What first did he write to you in the beginning of the Gospel? |
18191 | What ground is there then for the assumption that Clement did not mention Apollinaris, because Eusebius has not recorded the fact? |
18191 | What is the historical significance of this phenomenon? |
18191 | What is the meaning of all this coincidence of view? |
18191 | What then is the natural interpretation of the title''Exposition of Oracles of''( or''relating to'')''the Lord''? |
18191 | What then is the value of a principle which, when applied in a simple case, leads to conclusions diametrically opposed to historical facts? |
18191 | What wonder then that the Philippians should have asked him to write to them? |
18191 | What, if he adduced this testimony of the Presbyter to explain how St Mark''s Gospel differed not from another Synoptic narrative, but_ from St John_? |
18191 | What? |
18191 | Where did he learn this''certain''piece of information that Tatian thought lightly of St Paul? |
18191 | Who would think of throwing discredit on Lord Macaulay or Mr Freeman, because Robertson or Hume may be inaccurate? |
18191 | Why did Papias introduce this notice of the Hebrew original of St Matthew? |
18191 | Why may not Apollinaris have been included among these''certain others''whom Clement quoted? |
18191 | Would any one, without a preconceived theory, imagine that''exposition''here meant anything else but explanation or interpretation? |
18191 | Yea, and Polycarp himself also on one occasion, when Marcion confronted him and said,''Dost thou recognize me?'' |
18191 | Yes, but at what time? |
18191 | [ 127:2] Why then did he translate the oblique construction as if it were direct? |
18191 | [ 163:1] But, if Papias used written documents as the text for his''expositions,''can we identify these? |
18191 | [ 28:1] All this is well said, but is it consistent? |
18191 | and if he does know it, why has he left his readers entirely in the dark on this subject? |
18191 | and that they had taken their position at once by the side of the Law and the Psalmist and the Prophets, as the very voice of God? |
18191 | depend much more on the narrative of God''s dealings than of His words? |
18191 | that they had sprung up suddenly full- armed from the earth, no one could say how? |
18191 | that they never betray a consciousness that any Church or Churchman had ever questioned it? |
18191 | that they not only receive it, but assume its reception from the beginning? |
18191 | v. 13)? |
16700 | Certain philosophers of the Epicureans and of the Stoics encountered him; and some said-- What will this babbler say? 16700 Despise you the wild beasts?" |
16700 | For what else,says the writer,"could cover our sins but His righteousness? |
16700 | King Agrippa,he exclaimed,"believest thou the prophets? |
16700 | Latuit aliquid Petrum aedificandae ecclesiae petram dictum? |
16700 | Need we,says he to the Corinthians,"epistles of commendation to you, or letters of commendation from you? |
16700 | Petra haec.... Filius Dei est.... Quid est deinde haec turris? 16700 Then,"says the evangelist,"when Festus had conferred with the council, he answered, Hast thou appealed unto Caesar? |
16700 | What other step,says a noble author,"remains to stand between those who held those principles and Rome? |
16700 | While one saith, I am of Paul, and another, I am of Apollos, are ye,says he,"not carnal? |
16700 | Again, in another Montanist tract, he says--"Qualis es, evertens atque commutans manifestam domini intentionem personaliter hoc Petro conferentem? |
16700 | And how worthy is this of a faith which expects to have its converts gathered from all parts to Christ? |
16700 | And what was the virtue of the ordination here described? |
16700 | And yet, how could the crisis be averted? |
16700 | But he withstood them, saying--''Why, what evil am I doing in glorifying Christ?'' |
16700 | But what was meanwhile the real condition of the Church? |
16700 | But who, it may be asked, were Zosimus and Rufus here mentioned as fellow- sufferers with Ignatius? |
16700 | Can any man, who adopts the views of Dr Cureton, fairly answer such an inquiry? |
16700 | Could we desire clearer proof that Polycarp must here be speaking of another Ignatius, and another correspondence? |
16700 | Could we desire more convincing proof that he had never heard of the Ignatian correspondence? |
16700 | Did it furnish Paul and Barnabas with a title to the ministry? |
16700 | Did it necessarily add anything to the eloquence, or the prudence, or the knowledge, or the piety, of the missionaries? |
16700 | Did it not proclaim, trumpet- tongued, that He would surely punish their persecutors? |
16700 | Did not the earthquake indicate that He, whom the apostles served, was able to save and to destroy? |
16700 | Does he pretend to assert that the appearance of parents, as sponsors for their children, is an ecclesiastical innovation? |
16700 | Does he venture to say that it is contradicted by any other Scripture testimony? |
16700 | For what necessity is there that the sponsors be brought into danger? |
16700 | For what now could be more evident than that the apostles were the servants of the Most High God? |
16700 | For who is not incited by the contemplation of it to inquire what there is in the core of the matter? |
16700 | Had Pius believed that Justus had a divine right to rule over the presbyters, would he have tendered such an admonition? |
16700 | Having produced authorities from Paul and Peter, he exclaims--"Do the testimonies of such men seem small to you? |
16700 | How are we to account for the extraordinary circumstance that the Church of Rome can produce no copy of it in either Greek or Latin? |
16700 | How could a deputation from Philadelphia meet Ignatius in Troas, as some allege they did, if he did not stop a considerable time there? |
16700 | How could heresy be most effectually discountenanced? |
16700 | How could it contend most successfully against its subtle and restless disturbers? |
16700 | How could its unity be best conserved? |
16700 | How could the unity of the Church be best maintained? |
16700 | How did the friends of the Church proceed to grapple with these difficulties? |
16700 | How do they happen to possess the name they bear? |
16700 | How was the Church to be kept from going to pieces? |
16700 | How was the vacant place to be supplied? |
16700 | If a stranger brother come to her, what lodging in an alien''s house? |
16700 | In whom was it a possible that we, the lawless and the unholy, could be justified, save by the Son of God alone? |
16700 | Is Achaia near to you? |
16700 | Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house? |
16700 | Is it probable that a man of the mature faith and large experience of Ignatius would have thus addressed so youthful a minister? |
16700 | It might now be asked with no small amount of plausibility-- Is the presiding presbyter to have no special privileges? |
16700 | Men proceed more cautiously in worldly things; and he that is not trusted with earthly goods, why should he be trusted with divine? |
16700 | Now, therefore,_ why tempt ye God_, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers, nor we, were able to bear?" |
16700 | Some of the works of this writer have perished, and his only extant productions are a discourse entitled"What rich man shall be saved?" |
16700 | The wise men manifestly expected to see a_ newly born_ infant, and hence they asked--"where is he that_ is born_ King of the Jews?" |
16700 | Was an individual, who was himself not much advanced beyond boyhood, the most fitting person to give advice as to these matrimonial engagements? |
16700 | Was it extraordinary that individuals who were supposed to be entrusted with such tremendous influence soon began to be regarded with awful reverence? |
16700 | Was the senior presbyter, no matter how ill adapted for the crisis, to be allowed to take quiet possession? |
16700 | Was there love without dissimulation, and the keeping of the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace? |
16700 | Well might the Pharisees be perplexed by the inquiry--"How can a man that is a sinner do such miracles?" |
16700 | Were not these children baptized? |
16700 | What are we to understand by"the quietness of God?" |
16700 | What could be expected from those who honoured such deities? |
16700 | What then was its meaning? |
16700 | What then? |
16700 | What way shall we find to extricate ourselves out of this labyrinth?" |
16700 | What, then, can these angels be? |
16700 | When Paul asks the Corinthians--"How say some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead?" |
16700 | Where did he gather all this recondite lore? |
16700 | Who can tell how"the three mysteries of the shout"were"done by means of the star?" |
16700 | Who could believe that the bishop of Carthage held exactly the same official rank as every one of his episcopal auditors? |
16700 | Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed, even as the Lord gave to every man? |
16700 | Why are they gathered into the right hand of the Son of Man? |
16700 | Why should a letter from London to New York travel round by Palestine? |
16700 | Why should she have permitted it to be supplanted by an interpolated document? |
16700 | Why should their innocent age make haste to the remission of sins? |
16700 | With how much more truth do dumb animals, such as mice, swallows, and kites, judge of your gods? |
16700 | [ 144:2]"But what,"observes a modern writer,"are the soundings at this point? |
16700 | [ 401:2] But who can believe that Irenaeus describes Ignatius, when he speaks of"_ one of our people_?" |
16700 | [ 403:5] Is it at all probable that Polycarp, at the age of six and twenty, was in a position to warrant him to use such a style of address? |
16700 | [ 422:1] Well may the Christian reader exclaim, with indignation, as he peruses these words, Is the Holy Ghost then a mere rope? |
16700 | [ 423:1] Who can undertake to expound such jargon? |
16700 | [ 426:3] Do not all these circumstances combined supply abundant proof that these Epistles were written in the time of this Alexandrian father? |
16700 | [ 447:2]"Ubi fomenta fidei de scripturarum interjectione?" |
16700 | [ 476:1] It is to this arrangement that Tertullian refers when he says--"What necessity is there that_ the sponsors_ be brought into danger? |
16700 | [ 476:2] And how does Tertullian meet this argument? |
16700 | [ 490:2]"Nonne solemnior erit statio tua, si et ad aram Dei steteris?" |
16700 | [ 498:2]"Is not this the fast that I have chosen?" |
16700 | [ 519:3] May we not here distinctly recognize the close of one system, and the commencement of another? |
16700 | [ 520:2] What explanation can be given of this awkward circumstance? |
16700 | [ 545:2] How are we to account for this interregnum? |
16700 | [ 557:4] Why has it then been mentioned as an exhibition of the episcopal humility of Anicetus? |
16700 | [ 649:1]"Some indeed,"says Paul,"preach Christ even of envy and strife, and some also of good- will.... What then? |
16700 | [ 649:4]"When the Novatians say--''Dost thou believe remission of sins and eternal life by the Holy Church?'' |
16700 | and who, that has inquired, does not join us? |
16700 | and who, that joins us, does not long to suffer?" |
16700 | saith the Lord,"to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that ye break every yoke? |
16700 | when thou seest the naked, that thou cover him; and that thou hide not thyself from thine own flesh? |
43840 | For what purpose do you require it? |
43840 | ''What did you give him?'' |
43840 | ''What have you taken?'' |
43840 | But what rules the mind? |
43840 | He was at once asked,"What have you taken?" |
43840 | The coroner''s beadle went to the chemist and said:''How did you come to sell this man poison?'' |
43840 | The great point in the case was, did the tetanic symptoms, under which the deceased man died, depend on disease or poison? |
43840 | What magistrate would find or even venture to insinuate anything against this? |
29268 | Am I in this defending a cause proper to myself? 29268 In Rome are fulfilled the prophet''s words against Niniveh:''Where is the dwelling of the lions, and the feeding- place of the young lions? |
29268 | Lord Pope Silverius,said Antonina,"what have we done to thee and the Romans that thou wouldst deliver us into the hands of the Goths?" |
29268 | What shall I say of that most glorious solemnity of your regeneration? 29268 [ 212] But how were these prelates bound together in a firm alliance? |
29268 | ''[ 181] Were not its commanders and its princes lions who overran the whole world, and ravened, and slaughtered the prey? |
29268 | --_Month._ Which is the True Church? |
29268 | Am I an Eutychean, or do I defend Eutycheans, whose madness is the chief support[77] to the Manichean error? |
29268 | Am I resisting my own special injury? |
29268 | Am I to grieve over such things? |
29268 | And you, who accept the Alexandrian Peter, do you strive to tread under foot St. Peter the Apostle in the person of his successor, whoever he may be? |
29268 | And, thirdly, did not St. Leo, who confirmed the Council of Chalcedon, annul in it whatever was done beyond the Nicene canons? |
29268 | Asserters of the Church''s division are pioneers of infidelity, for who can believe in what has fallen? |
29268 | Because you are emperor, do you think there is no judgment of God? |
29268 | But how when it comes to a succession of men? |
29268 | But if that is contained in the letters which both your Father hopes and your piety agrees to, what has he done? |
29268 | But it must be added, if their confession was the truth, why not obey it? |
29268 | But where are those who once rejoiced in its glory? |
29268 | Can I preach to one now complete in faith, that faith which he recognised before his completion? |
29268 | Can any appeal be more touching than that which they made, and made in vain, to the"Christian king and Roman prince"? |
29268 | Can any family show four such? |
29268 | Can anyone calculate the power which maintains such a succession through centuries? |
29268 | Did not the emperor often hold his court at Ravenna, at Milan, at Sirmium, at Treves? |
29268 | Did the bishops of these cities ever claim to themselves a dignity beyond the measure of that which had descended to them from ancient times? |
29268 | Did the loss of its bishop''s prerogatives follow? |
29268 | Did they pass to Byzantium because it was become the imperial city, because the sole emperor dwelt there? |
29268 | Do we, then, not seek the glory of this name, even when offered to us, and does another catch at it for himself, when it is not offered? |
29268 | Does his language in the nineteenth century differ much from his language in the sixth? |
29268 | For where is the senate? |
29268 | How can one who is not allowed to live take pleasure in the mystical sense of Scripture? |
29268 | How can one whose daily chalice is bitterness present sweets for others to drink? |
29268 | How many families can show a continuous succession of three temporal rulers equally great? |
29268 | How, then, is it lawful to incriminate the Principate of the whole Church? |
29268 | If a bishop was the greater for being bishop of the imperial city, should he not be the more courageous in suggesting the right course? |
29268 | If he answer,''What do they contain?'' |
29268 | If he say,''In what order is that to take place?'' |
29268 | If he say,''What are those forms?'' |
29268 | If he say,''What mean you by that?'' |
29268 | If the attribution is so proved, what is there in the papal power which is not divinely conferred and guaranteed? |
29268 | If the emperor say,''Should my city remain without a bishop, is it your desire that where I am there should be no bishop?'' |
29268 | If the sailors turn against their captain, how will they escape? |
29268 | If there was such distinction of ranks even in the sinless, what man should hesitate to obey a disposition to which angels are subject? |
29268 | If those who subscribed this confession subscribed a falsehood, why pretend any longer to attribute authority to the Church? |
29268 | If we do not return to Christ, how can we call upon His aid in the struggle?" |
29268 | If we treat you ill in persuading you to quit heretics, do you treat us well who would throw us into their communion? |
29268 | Is there a heart of stone which would not be softened on hearing of so great a work into praises of Almighty God and affection for your Excellency? |
29268 | It cries: O Christian prince, why do you allow me to be interrupted in that course of charity which binds together the universal Church? |
29268 | It is a full acknowledgment; for how else was St. Leo entrusted by the Saviour with the guardianship of the Vine? |
29268 | O emperor, what will you do in the divine judgment? |
29268 | Of what metropolitan church was he the prelate? |
29268 | On what, then, did the Pope rely? |
29268 | Or humility to one who has long shown us devotion, which now his profession claims as a debt? |
29268 | Or, because you are emperor, do you struggle against the power of Peter? |
29268 | Shortly after his accession, preaching to his people in St. Peter''s, he said:[180]"Where, I pray you, is any delight to be found in this world? |
29268 | Should I be well elected if I favoured the Eutycheans? |
29268 | Should we sin against Him? |
29268 | Then may we say,''Where is the dwelling of the lions, and the feeding- place of the young lions?'' |
29268 | Thus, in his great letter[62] to all the Illyrian bishops, he asks:"Of what see was he bishop? |
29268 | Was it not of a church the suffragan of Heraclea? |
29268 | What did the Pope still possess in these populations? |
29268 | What excuse can we make who press down the people of God, over which we unworthily preside, with the burden of our sins? |
29268 | What is there in him blameworthy?'' |
29268 | What matters it whether it be a heathen or a so- called Christian who attempts to infringe the genuine tradition of the apostolic rule? |
29268 | What mortal could venture to decide which of the two great victories allowed by Gibbon to the Church is the greater? |
29268 | What pleasure, then, does life retain, my brethren? |
29268 | What result has all this but that, while we impose on men, we are made known to God? |
29268 | What was the answer which the eastern emperor made to this letter? |
29268 | What, you say, is the conduct of Acacius to me? |
29268 | Where is their pomp and pride, and those ecstasies of frequent transport? |
29268 | Who had made him first a patriarch and then ecumenical? |
29268 | Who is he who, in spite of the commands of the Gospel, in spite of the decrees of councils, presumes to usurp a new title for himself? |
29268 | Who preach with our tongues and kill by our examples? |
29268 | Who was to recover the Goth, the Vandal, the Burgundian, the Sueve, the Aleman, the Ruge, from that fatal error? |
29268 | Who was to restore it to them? |
29268 | Whose works teach iniquity, while their words make a show of justice? |
29268 | Why do not the bishops of the East agree?'' |
29268 | Why, in my person, do you break up the consent of the whole world? |
29268 | Will you plead before another judge? |
29268 | Will you stand by him as accuser? |
29268 | With what face will you ask of Him rewards_ there_ whose losses_ here_ you do not prevent? |
29268 | Would such a power not have repudiated his interference, had it not been convinced of an authority beyond its reach to deny? |
29268 | [ 215] What can a Pope claim more than the attribution to himself as Pope of the three great words of Christ spoken to Peter? |
29268 | if I held communion with the party of Acacius? |
29268 | or is the kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ a kingdom divided against itself? |
29268 | where any longer a people? |
42527 | ''Why did n''t you tell me?'' 42527 ''When did the Flint go by here?'' 42527 And may it be that within those shadowy gorges, remote from the sight and hearing of man, a wild, white horse goes bounding through the night? 42527 And who can be sure they do not? 42527 But who would go? 42527 How far have the missionaries succeeded? 42527 If completely, why does the Christian Indian still dance to the Sun? 42527 Was the Great Spirit revealing something to his children? 42527 What is it that is mystical, spiritual, if you will, in this colour of violet? 42527 What meant this frenzied dance of circling, whirling mystics who strained with wide eyes to look beyond the skies? 42527 Where is the subtle violet, the dim dream lavender? 42527 Who can say? 38354 What more could I do,"he exclaimed,"than accuse myself falsely? |
38354 | What motive had you for declaring things injurious to yourself, if they were false? |
38354 | By the death of the sufferer? |
38354 | He sent for them, and said,"Why do they endeavour to make this renegado a Christian by their tortures? |
38354 | His son then said to him,''_ What does your majesty want with me?_''''_ You will soon know_,''replied the king. |
38354 | If this execution was but the beginning of the torture, how was it to finish? |
38354 | Torralba said to him with a loud voice,_ What dost thou seek here?_ The phantom replied,_ A treasure_, and disappeared. |
38354 | What can justify the conduct of the Pope, the cardinal, and the judges? |
38354 | Who, indeed, can believe that Carranza would have spoken in that manner in the Council of Trent? |
38354 | Would he not have denounced him ten years before, if he had heard him speak in that manner? |
38354 | _ Q._ Are you a Christian, a Roman Catholic? |
38354 | _ Q._ Did you tell them the truth? |
38354 | _ Q._ Do you believe as a Catholic, that it is a sin of superstition to mingle holy and religious things with profane things? |
38354 | _ Q._ Have you attended the assemblies of freemasons? |
38354 | _ Q._ Have you attended them in Spain? |
38354 | _ Q._ How long have you been so? |
38354 | _ Q._ How, as a Christian, can you dare to attend masonic assemblies, when you know, or ought to know, that they are contrary to religion? |
38354 | _ Q._ If there were, should you attend them? |
38354 | _ Q._ Is it true that the festival of St. John is celebrated in the lodges, and that the masons have chosen him for their patron? |
38354 | _ Q._ Is it true that the sun, moon, and stars, are honoured in the lodges? |
38354 | _ Q._ Is it true that their images or symbols are exposed? |
38354 | _ Q._ Is this oath accompanied by execrations? |
38354 | _ Q._ Of what importance is this oath, since it is believed that such formidable execrations may be used without indecency? |
38354 | _ Q._ Of what use is the corpse? |
38354 | _ Q._ Of what use is the crucifix, if the reception of a freemason is not considered as a religious act? |
38354 | _ Q._ On what? |
38354 | _ Q._ That is not the question; say if it true that these ceremonies are observed in masonic lodges? |
38354 | _ Q._ Then the freemasons are an_ anti- religious_ body? |
38354 | _ Q._ Were they observed when you were initiated? |
38354 | _ Q._ What are they? |
38354 | _ Q._ What oath is it necessary to take on being received a freemason? |
38354 | _ Q._ What passes in these lodges which it might be inconvenient to publish? |
38354 | _ Q._ What worship is rendered him in celebrating his festival? |
38354 | _ Q._ Why are they so? |
38354 | _ Q._ Why do you suppose so? |
38354 | _ Q._ Why is the skull used? |
38354 | _ Q._ You are then a freemason? |
38354 | burn me? |
34478 | By what license does a newspaper use its news columns to assert false charges as true? 34478 What are you selling?" |
34478 | What manner of man was he who came into Atlanta for the_ World_ and wired back lies of the falsest and basest sort against an honest woman? 34478 Who are the real murderers before and after the fact in the case of the fair woman murdered? |
34478 | Whose hands are seen beneath the cover of this murderous and slanderous propaganda? 34478 Whose tremendous influences, with their serpentine poison, inflames the negro of the North and East against the whites? |
34478 | Why do we bother about trial by jury, if the evidence of an angry and impulsive mob is sufficient to convict? 34478 Why have we built up a complicated system of justice, except to protect indicted citizens? |
34478 | _ Fifth._ Are you opposed to negro equality, both social and political? 34478 _ Fourth._ Did you belong to the Federal Army during the late war, and fight against the South during the existence of the same? |
34478 | _ Seventh._ Are you in favor of Constitutional liberty and a Government of equitable laws instead of a Government of violence and oppression? 34478 _ Sixth._ Are you in favor of a white man''s government in this country? |
34478 | _ Tenth._ Do you believe in the inalienable right of self- preservation of the people against the exercise of arbitrary and unlicensed power? 34478 (_ Cave quid, dicis, quando, et cui._)_ Eighth._ Are you in favor of maintaining the constitutional rights of the South? |
34478 | And all of the$ 8, then, is used up in paying officers or agents of the Klan? |
34478 | Are you a native born, white, Gentile American citizen? |
34478 | Are you a native born, you ever been, a member white, Gentile American of the Radical Republican citizen? |
34478 | Behold, however, the great change that comes with elevation to the Imperial Throne:"Friends of''Colonel(?)'' |
34478 | CAPOWE, Countersign And Password Or Written Evidence? |
34478 | CHAPTER IV WHAT IS THE"INVISIBLE EMPIRE?" |
34478 | CYGNAR, Can You Give Number And Realm? |
34478 | Can you always be depended on?" |
34478 | Can you be always depended inalienable right of on?" |
34478 | Defenseless? |
34478 | Do you believe in and maintaining the will you faithfully strive constitutional rights of the for the eternal maintenance South? |
34478 | Do you believe in and will you faithfully strive for the eternal maintenance of white supremacy? |
34478 | Do you believe in clanishness and will you faithfully practice same toward Klansmen? |
34478 | Do you believe in the tenets Federal Army during the late of the Christian religion? |
34478 | Do you believe in the tenets of the Christian religion? |
34478 | Do you esteem the United States of America and its institutions above any other government, civil, political or ecclesiastical, in the whole world? |
34478 | Do you esteem the United equality, both social and States of America and its political? |
34478 | Has the"Invisible Empire"a program? |
34478 | How is that for one hundred per cent Americanism? |
34478 | I said alone? |
34478 | If the Klan is capable of sustaining the arms of the law, why has it not done so in the State of Georgia? |
34478 | If this condition was a true one, why were the authorities and their valuable aids and abettors, the Ku Klux Klan, not prepared to stop it? |
34478 | Is a man, having taken an oath, ever justified in breaking it? |
34478 | Is that correct? |
34478 | Is the motive prompting rejected, upon application your ambition to be a Klansman for membership in*** serious and unselfish? |
34478 | Is the motive prompting your ambition to be a Klansman serious and unselfish? |
34478 | It is purely a business proposition, so far as she is concerned? |
34478 | Mr. Gregory in summing up the whole Ku Klux movement said:"Did the end aimed at and accomplished by the Ku Klux Klan justify the movement? |
34478 | One of the first questions that presents itself is,"What is the necessity at the present time for such an organization?" |
34478 | Party, or either of the organizations known as the Loyal League and the Grand Army of the Republic? |
34478 | The following is a copy:"DO YOU KNOW?" |
34478 | The ritual of the order and the proclamation hold out the order as one for benevolent and high purposes? |
34478 | Then comes the further question: in whom does the title to the copyright rest? |
34478 | To whom has that been paid? |
34478 | WHAT IS THE"INVISIBLE EMPIRE?" |
34478 | What a marked contrast to the gallant Forrest is"Colonel"(?) |
34478 | What connection has it with the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan? |
34478 | What did you discover with respect to the use of money for beneficial purposes to the public? |
34478 | What is Mr. Simmons''salary, if you know? |
34478 | What is the amount that has been paid out for salaries of officers in Atlanta-- out of the money that has been collected, if you know? |
34478 | What kind of country would this be with no lines drawn between the Caucasian blood and the African race? |
34478 | What shall I tell them?" |
34478 | Where then did"His Majesty"get the right to use this military title? |
34478 | Where then, is the necessity either in the South or anywhere else in America for this modern Ku Klux monstrosity? |
34478 | Why did not the Klan rally to the support of the authorities and"enforce law and order?" |
34478 | Why was the riot not stopped? |
34478 | Will you faithfully obey our constitution and laws, and conform willingly to all our usages, requirements and regulations? |
34478 | Will you, without mental reservation, take a solemn oath to defend, preserve and enforce same? |
34478 | Will you, without mental white man''s government in reservation, take a solemn this country? |
34478 | _ Who owns the Gate City Manufacturing Company? |
34478 | does Simmons own it, or has it been assigned to the corporation? |
34478 | institutions above any other government, civil, political or ecclesiastical in the whole world? |
34478 | oath to defend, preserve and enforce same? |
34478 | of violence and oppression? |
34478 | of white supremacy? |
34478 | or have you ever been expelled from the same? |
34478 | rights, alike proprietary, civil and political? |
34478 | self- preservation of the people against the exercise of arbitrary and unlicensed power?" |
34478 | war, and fight against the South during the existence of the same? |
34478 | you are informed of the character and purposes of these organizations? |
45101 | Then, Sire, if the islands of Luçon do not contain the gold and pearls that one imagined, why are they preserved? |
45101 | Why did they not sacrifice them both? |
45101 | Why, if they were so importunate to govern the island and declared such to be their right, did they not fill it with ministers? |
45101 | Your Majesty will order what is most pleasing to you? |
45101 | [ 81] The class of serpents called in Tagálog olopong( Trimeresurus erythrurus-- Cant.?) |
14078 | ''Are we come to that?'' |
14078 | ''By- the- bye, what_ is_ this same constitution they are making such a noise about?'' |
14078 | ''Do you think it nothing?'' |
14078 | ''How could I have insisted upon sending Mazzini into exile when he has done so much for Italian unity?'' |
14078 | ''Is that all?'' |
14078 | ''Is that clear?'' |
14078 | ''It was the duty of us all to go,''Garibaldi said quickly,''else how could there have been one Italy?'' |
14078 | ''Never,''he said,''would he advise a_ coup d''état,_ nor would his master resort to one; but if the King abdicated, what then?'' |
14078 | ''Quali porte se gli serrerebbono? |
14078 | ''Shall_ we_ learn liberty of the Gauls,_ we_ who taught every lofty thing to others?'' |
14078 | ''Well, but it must be sent back immediately-- where is it?'' |
14078 | ''What on earth is the good of all this?'' |
14078 | ''What statesman,''wrote the Prince Consort in June 1859,''could adopt measures to force Austrian rule again upon delighted, free Italy?'' |
14078 | ''Why then,''persisted Vecchj, half in jest,''did you go to Marsala?'' |
14078 | A chance shot fired by some Royalist fanatic, and who could measure the result? |
14078 | Above all, what was the real truth about the Prince of Carignano? |
14078 | After all, where would the Princess find a more promising match? |
14078 | An unwelcome necessity, but whose was the fault? |
14078 | As Enrico Cairoli lay dying, the French Zouaves( was this the chivalry of France?) |
14078 | As he left the fortress- prison he wrote the words:''Farewell, Rome; farewell, Capitol; who knows who will think of thee, and when?'' |
14078 | Besides, if a miracle was sought, why should not a miracle happen? |
14078 | Bright careers, full of promise, cut short; lives renounced, not only voluntarily, but with joy, and to what end? |
14078 | But if Italy was to remain divided and enslaved, then, indeed, the indignant question went up to heaven, To what end had so much blood been shed? |
14078 | By Cavour? |
14078 | By''English bank- notes,''that useful factor in European politics that has every pleasing quality except reality? |
14078 | Could anything be imagined more aggravating? |
14078 | Could the Emperor, after such boasting, coolly throw the Pope overboard the first time it suited his convenience? |
14078 | Did Perrone not know of the defeat of yesterday? |
14078 | Did anyone beside the King believe that this army, which had lost faith in its cause, in its leaders and in itself, was going to beat Radetsky? |
14078 | Did anyone suppose that the Savoy princes were commonly saints? |
14078 | Exactly the same end as Arnold of Brescia and Cola di Rienzi-- who better could have described the scheme of Italian redemption? |
14078 | Finally, the Syndic of Salerno was asked if he had seen anything of the Garibaldian expeditions by sea? |
14078 | Had it never struck him that she was created for a glorious destiny? |
14078 | Had that scene vanished from his recollection in June 1870? |
14078 | Had they been happy? |
14078 | His friends answered:''What of Charles Albert, of 1821, of 1832?'' |
14078 | How then, with much superior numbers and a seemingly impregnable position, did they end in ignominious flight? |
14078 | If not, why should they do so in Piedmont? |
14078 | If this was true in June was it less true in November? |
14078 | In August 1865 Count Bismarck asked General La Marmora whether Italy would join Prussia in the contingency of a war with Austria? |
14078 | In Italy who has it, or, to speak more precisely, who has a little of it? |
14078 | In the evening he said to his generals:''We have still 40,000 men, can not we fall back on Alessandria and still make an honourable stand?'' |
14078 | It was the casting interposition of chance, or, shall it be said, of Providence? |
14078 | Persano asked Cavour what he was to do if by stress of storms Garibaldi were forced to come into port? |
14078 | Popes had dictated to sovereigns before now; was there not Canossa? |
14078 | Quale Italiano gli negherebbe l''ossequio?'' |
14078 | Quale invidia se gli opporrebbe? |
14078 | Quali popoli gli negherebbono la obbedienza? |
14078 | Such a fear existed at the time, and Rattazzi''s timid policy was the result; it is impossible not to ask now whether it was not exaggerated? |
14078 | The King is betrayed; at Turin they have proclaimed the republic''? |
14078 | The Triumvir awoke, sat up and asked if he had come to assassinate him? |
14078 | The question arose, What sort of pressure would be needed to turn that germ to account for Italy? |
14078 | The question is, Whether the political brigandage in South Italy had any real affinity with the wars of the Klephts, or even of the Carlists? |
14078 | The same words were on the lips of all: What would Italy do without him? |
14078 | The step was ill advised; what can documents tell us on the subject that we do not know? |
14078 | Their argument was not without force, risk or no risk, when would there be another opportunity as good as the present? |
14078 | There were, indeed, some who asked what was all this to them? |
14078 | Therefore you must use force; and where is it to be had? |
14078 | They came, and how many did not return? |
14078 | Was it easy to provide husbands for princesses? |
14078 | Was it ignorance or bad faith? |
14078 | Was it to be believed, therefore, that this mountain warfare, however long drawn out, could alter one iota the course of events? |
14078 | Well may a French writer inquire:''Was it insanity or treachery?'' |
14078 | Were not they generally extremely unhappy in marriage? |
14078 | What Italian would not do him honour? |
14078 | What did they behold? |
14078 | What doors would be closed against him? |
14078 | What further evidence was needed of the impossibility of an indefinite duration of this state within a state? |
14078 | What if eight years''labour were thrown away, and the movement of the State turned backward? |
14078 | What is it that you wish and I with you? |
14078 | What jealousy would oppose him? |
14078 | What people would deny him obedience? |
14078 | What soothsayer foretold Sédan? |
14078 | What was the cause of the slaughter of the Aigues Mortes? |
14078 | What was to be done? |
14078 | What were Savoy and Nice? |
14078 | What were the causes which led Garibaldi into the desperate venture that ended at Aspromonte? |
14078 | What were the''extraneous Austrian Emperor,''or the''old chimera of a Pope''( Carlyle''s designations) to the British taxpayer? |
14078 | What will Anarchy gain by the murder of Carnot? |
14078 | What would be their next act? |
14078 | Who could be a better guardian of our liberty? |
14078 | Who knows what might not have been the effect of the presence of their young Sovereign on the broken_ moral_ of the Neapolitan soldiers? |
14078 | Who more worthy of the faith of the nation? |
14078 | Who raised it first? |
14078 | Who was to feed and guard them? |
14078 | Why not, except that the world is not what it ought to be? |
14078 | With the bogey of Prussia vanquished before his eyes, he doubtless asked what the Italians would do at Vienna if they got there? |
14078 | Without this alliance Italy might, indeed, have acquired Venice, but would the German Empire have been founded? |
14078 | Would Confalonieri enlighten them? |
14078 | Would events have justified him again? |
14078 | You wish to have done with priestly rule, and to send the Teutons out of Italy? |
14078 | said Forbes;''you do n''t imagine they will be fools enough to believe it?'' |
14078 | supposed the insurrection to be the work of a virtuous peasantry, why did he allow them to rush to their destruction? |
14947 | And for what reason? |
14947 | And what do you imagine would become of you,said the holy man,"supposing you should be killed in this action, and in the condition you now are?" |
14947 | For the rest,said they,"what have we more to fear this day than we had yesterday? |
14947 | How, Father Francis,said the pilot,"are you fearful with so fair a wind? |
14947 | The devil, by his malicious suggestions, tempts the greatest part of those who have devoted themselves to God''s service:''What make you there?'' 14947 Where are those people,"said he,"who dare to confine the power of Almighty God, and have so mean an apprehension of our Saviour''s love and grace? |
14947 | Wretched creature,said the father to him,"what had become of thee, if thou hadst died of this fall?" |
14947 | A passenger, who shook with fear, demanded of him,"With what courage he could sing, when he was just upon the brink of death?" |
14947 | After all, what inconvenience or danger can it be to embrace their law? |
14947 | After mass was ended, he looked round him, and not seeing him for whom he searched,"What is become of my host?" |
14947 | After the ordinary embracements, which were more tender than ever, he enquired if none were sick within the college? |
14947 | Ah, what profits it a man to gain the universe, and lose his soul?" |
14947 | And after that, what will become of our families, whose only subsistence is from the offerings which are made to the pagods? |
14947 | And how could he imprint the principles of the divine law into their hearts, who had not the least sense of humanity? |
14947 | And what has been the merit of their descendants, that they should be more favourably treated than their predecessors?" |
14947 | And whither is he dragged by his unhappy destiny?" |
14947 | Are there any hearts hard enough to resist the influences of the Most High, when it pleases him to soften and to change them? |
14947 | Being answered, that he was already in open sea;"What could urge him,"continued he,"to so prompt a resolution? |
14947 | Being one day together with the Father, in a private part of the ship, Xavier asked him, to whom he had confessed himself before he went on shipboard? |
14947 | Being one day together, and talking familiarly, Xavier asked Annez, if the year had been good for the Portugal merchants? |
14947 | But what profits it to have escaped the sword, when, they must die of hunger? |
14947 | But what victory can truth obtain over souls which find their interest in following error, and who make profession of deceiving the common people? |
14947 | But what would not the neighbouring provinces attempt, to revenge the injury done to their divinities? |
14947 | But, on the other side, what hopes ought we not to conceive, under the auspices and promise of Father Francis?" |
14947 | But, what can the demons and their ministers do against me? |
14947 | For example, demand of them, what persons they have wronged? |
14947 | For, can there be a more cruel death, than to live without Jesus Christ, after once we have tasted of him? |
14947 | He sent for them before him, and asked them, in the face of all his nobles, of what country they were, and what business brought them to Japan? |
14947 | How shameful would it seem to behold an apostolical legate washing his own linen on the deck, and dressing his own victuals?" |
14947 | If I should happen to die by their hands, who knows but all of them might receive the faith? |
14947 | Is any thing more hard, than to abandon him, that we may satisfy our own inclinations? |
14947 | Let all the powers of hell break loose upon me, I despise them, provided God be on my side; for if he be for us, who shall be against us?" |
14947 | Might they not take occasion from it to violate their promises to God, when they should find me wanting to the duty of my ministry? |
14947 | Shall then the Isle del Moro be the only place, which shall receive no benefit of redemption? |
14947 | The saint walking one day through the streets, happened to meet a Portuguese of his acquaintance; and immediately asked him,"how he was in health?" |
14947 | The saint, who perceived whither the discourse tended, asked him, very civilly,"of what age he might be?" |
14947 | The sick man was told, that Father Francis was just arrived; and was asked if he should not be glad to see him? |
14947 | They added haughtily, that it is true he was a king; but what a kind of king was a profane man? |
14947 | They asked him the occasion of his outcry, and why he shook in that manner? |
14947 | This being done, I repeated the creed singly; and, insisting on every particular article, asked, if they certainly believed it? |
14947 | Thus our whole success being in the hands of God, what cause of distrust or fear is it possible for us to have? |
14947 | To what degree did those first men sin, to become unworthy of such a favour? |
14947 | Was it for him to be the arbiter of religion, and to judge the gods? |
14947 | Were you not advised to leave Malacca, and return to Portugal?" |
14947 | What justice was it to punish those who transgressed a law, which it was impossible to keep? |
14947 | What make you here, where all things are at quiet? |
14947 | What testimony do you desire from me, of those truths which I have declared to you?" |
14947 | What therefore will become of them, when they rise up against their sects, and reprehend their vices?" |
14947 | When he had recovered his senses, Xavier demanded of him, what thoughts he had, when he was at the point of perishing? |
14947 | Whensoever they present themselves before you in the sacred tribunal, interrogate that sort of people, by what means they grow so rich? |
14947 | Why did he not descend from heaven, and make himself man, to redeem human kind, by his death and sufferings, as soon as ever man was guilty? |
14947 | Why has he suffered us to live in blindness, and this Bonza of Portugal to receive these wonderful illuminations? |
14947 | Will neither his passion, his death, nor all his blood, suffice to soften the hardness of your heart?" |
14947 | Xavier went one day to visit him about dinner time:"Are you willing,"said the Father,"that we should begin an acquaintance by dining together?" |
14947 | Xavier, who knew nothing of this misfortune, asked him the reason of his sorrow? |
14947 | and how are you able to endure the sight of her?" |
14947 | and to whom can we have recourse besides him? |
14947 | answered Annez;"is it not because the Atoghia has once formerly sprung a leak? |
14947 | are our forefathers burning in hellfire, because they did not adore a God who was unknown to them, and observed not a law which never was declared?" |
14947 | are you so dejected for so slight an accident?" |
14947 | can you believe these things of such a wretch as I am?" |
14947 | he secretly whispers;''See you not that you do but lose your labour?'' |
14947 | what secret they have to make their offices and employments bring them in such mighty sums? |
14947 | why did he not expect the ship which comes from Canton? |
41156 | Who then is this,they whispered with awe,"that even the wind and the sea obey Him?" |
41156 | 626- 586 B.C.? |
41156 | Again,"Can history produce an instance of rebellion so honorably conducted?... |
41156 | And what is the result of his expedition? |
41156 | But what is this new name which is placed side by side with the Divine Name--"in God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ"? |
41156 | Do Japanese understand Persians or even Indians better than English or French? |
41156 | God forbid that we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion.... What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? |
41156 | How can a man like Jeremiah have advocated any such panacea? |
41156 | How did the Lord Jesus speak and act? |
41156 | In Jeremiah, as in Isaiah, we must constantly ask to what age do the phraseology, the ideas and the implied circumstances most naturally point? |
41156 | In fulfilment of this promise, who is it that has come? |
41156 | JEROME, ST( HIERONYMUS, in full EUSEBIUS SOPHRONIUS HIERONYMUS)( c. 340- 420), was born at Strido( modern Strigau? |
41156 | Pilate''s question,"Art Thou the King of the Jews?" |
41156 | To what lengths would this liberty go? |
41156 | Up to this point what have we seen? |
41156 | Was Korea within safe range of such enterprises? |
41156 | What is to be done? |
41156 | Which may these be? |
41156 | Who, then, he might well ask is this Jesus Christ who is lifted to this unexampled height? |
41156 | [ 27]_ Wo lag das Paradies?_( 1881), pp. |
41156 | _ A Patriot?_--Was Jeremiah really a patriot? |
41156 | and why did He arouse such malignant enmity amongst His own people? |
26439 | What do we want another shoemaker for,said she"when you and I are here already? |
26439 | ''Did not we find the bones of our brethren there, hard by the High Altar, when we were beautifying the same? |
26439 | ''Had they no other account to settle with England?'' |
26439 | ''On the usual question being asked,"Where shippy come?" |
26439 | ''What harm,''they asked,''is there in saying, Cæsar is Lord, and offering incense?'' |
26439 | ''What shall I read?'' |
26439 | ( 2) Has a dead level of ease and contentment been maintained? |
26439 | ( 4) Has no pauperism affected the taxation of landed property? |
26439 | 36, 37)? |
26439 | Again, what is''false''? |
26439 | Among all these discordant voices, who shall help us to detect the true ring? |
26439 | And do n''t you remember some twenty years ago, when there was only one smith? |
26439 | And how did Cromwell deal with his enemies at home? |
26439 | And what has wrought all these miracles? |
26439 | And what is his evidence? |
26439 | And who could be, as we shall prove, a warmer, or a falser friend to the enterprise of March 1655, than Cromwell? |
26439 | And why? |
26439 | And yet with two countries so united, what has been the effect? |
26439 | But if Cromwell could not claim that excuse, what then was his motive? |
26439 | But is this allegation of failure actually true? |
26439 | But was it true? |
26439 | But what is the English Radical party itself living under now? |
26439 | But what return, the Protector declares, has been made by the Malignants for the lenity thus extended to them? |
26439 | But what then? |
26439 | But what was Cromwell''s motive in the fabrication of this Insurrection of March, 1655? |
26439 | Can we doubt that the First Order and its electors would be straightway boycotted out of existence? |
26439 | Could he not die? |
26439 | Did he say so, the impious wretch? |
26439 | Did he teach the young novices French as well as writing? |
26439 | Did not Sir Adam Fitz William show the evil spirit that was in him when he sided against us time and again? |
26439 | Do they give no testimony to the development of monarchical episcopacy in the later years of the Apostolic Age? |
26439 | From what has been said, the reader may be presumed to have gained something like an answer to our first question:_ What_ was Brother Matthew? |
26439 | Granted that it is so, we may fairly ask even the Radicals whether they are quite sure that it is wise to think of giving up India? |
26439 | His most important question is not, what shall I read? |
26439 | How could the natives of all classes fail to look upon this as another evidence that the reins of power were dropping from our nerveless hands? |
26439 | How then can I blaspheme my King Who saved me?'' |
26439 | How was it that no one_ in those days_ accused them of being indolent drones? |
26439 | Is it not delightful? |
26439 | Is it not most truly French? |
26439 | Let us hear what Baron Hübner has to say upon this subject, for it is worth attention:--''Is there any public opinion in India? |
26439 | Mere burdens upon the earth, as they were called frequently enough, and loudly enough, and angrily enough, three centuries later? |
26439 | Now what is Ireland, and what indications has that portion of the population known as Nationalist given of a capacity to form itself into a nation? |
26439 | Now, what is this''Irish nationality''? |
26439 | These were all very well in their way, but where were their traditions? |
26439 | This must be revenged some day, if there are any men to do it; but how can they get men if we kill the women and children?"'' |
26439 | Very well; do n''t you remember when we had only one linendraper how dear shirts used to be? |
26439 | Was ever the''one man form of government''carried out in so relentless a fashion as we see it now in Parliament? |
26439 | Was he some''Frenchman''imported from sunny Champagne, where Thibaut, the mawkish singer was making verses which his people loved to listen to? |
26439 | Was he then yielding? |
26439 | Was it to make confusion worse confounded? |
26439 | We therefore intend to enquire:( 1) Has the system of land tenure in Norway prevented, as foretold by Mr. Laing, an excessive subdivision of land? |
26439 | Were they prepared to make these exertions? |
26439 | What answer were Liberals to give to this new embodiment of their great statesman''s theory? |
26439 | What are we coming to? |
26439 | What are we in comparison with them? |
26439 | What could schoolboys have done worthy of the guillotine, even in the eyes of the Jacobin Club? |
26439 | What did these fellows come for? |
26439 | What is the argument for the position? |
26439 | What is the text? |
26439 | What then? |
26439 | Who and what was Matthew Paris? |
26439 | Who ever heard of a candidate for honours taking Polybius into the schools? |
26439 | Who is it, we would ask in the first place, for whom this list is primarily intended? |
26439 | Who so likely to have had the ability to translate from a Greek version as Robert Grosseteste, one of the very few Greek scholars of his age? |
26439 | Who was he, this''foreigner,''who had come from across the sea to bring in his outlandish novelties into the great scriptorium? |
26439 | Who was it then that instructed those false prophets? |
26439 | Why should these expedients be adopted in Ireland? |
26439 | Why tell of their unrighteous deeds? |
26439 | Why? |
26439 | With what do they propose to replace our government? |
26439 | a year? |
26439 | but, what need I read? |
26439 | or, What shall we drink? |
26439 | or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?... |
26439 | the whole list, or the statement as regards Linus individually? |
41878 | Who,said he,"could but approve of such a scheme?" |
41878 | 325 APPENDIX WILL RUSSIA BE REPRESENTED ON THE MISSION FIELD? |
41878 | 337{ 3} CHINA IN TRANSITION CHAPTER I WHAT HAS AWAKENED CHINA? |
41878 | A foreigner, talking about Esperanto, remarked:"What would be the use of making an universal language? |
41878 | After we had talked some time the question was put plainly to them:"Would they support such a University?" |
41878 | At last he was asked,"Have you never allowed you were wrong in your whole life?" |
41878 | But why not accept the Chinese architecture as eminently fitted for the climate? |
41878 | Could any Western power hope to accomplish such a feat? |
41878 | Could any form of architecture be less suited to a country like China, where the sun is frequently oppressively hot, than Gothic architecture? |
41878 | Do they forbid both vices equally? |
41878 | He inquired,"If a University is started in China on such lines as you propose, will you guarantee that the teachers are efficient?" |
41878 | How can spiritual ministrations be performed by aliens, supported by alien money collected from a possibly hostile race? |
41878 | How is it possible that a mission like this can really solve the problem of making Christianity a national religion? |
41878 | Is it likely that they will be either able or willing to send into other countries efficient teachers of Western education? |
41878 | Is there any monument in the whole world that has more feeling of beauty about it? |
41878 | One may well ask what has accomplished this change, what has awakened China? |
41878 | The question is,"Will you become a materialist or a Christian?" |
41878 | The question put to the Chinaman is not,"Will you be Roman or Protestant?" |
41878 | They have intimate contact with the Chinese; they know both the recent origin of this vice and its terrible ravages; and what do they do? |
41878 | Those who have not realised the size of China will be perhaps inclined to ask why not unite the two schemes? |
41878 | WHAT HAS AWAKENED CHINA? |
41878 | We then changed the conversation to the question of"whether Confucius believed in God or not?" |
41878 | What will Chinese Christianity be? |
41878 | Who{ 24} can tell how we shall speak of China a few years hence? |
41878 | Why should there be any difference when another Oriental race comes in close proximity with Europe? |
41878 | Would any English parish like as its Rector a Chinaman, even if he were saintly and went so far as to cut off his queue? |
41878 | { 329} APPENDIX WILL RUSSIA BE REPRESENTED ON THE MISSION FIELD? |
19817 | By what condition, nature, or fell chance, In living death, dead life I live? |
19817 | And does he hunt through the operation of the will, by the act of which he converts himself into the object? |
19817 | And why to me eternal irksomeness Flames to my heart, darts to my breast and snares unto my soul? |
19817 | But how? |
19817 | But what perfection or satisfaction can man find in that knowledge which is not perfect? |
19817 | But what say I of Love? |
19817 | But what signifies that branch of palm, around which is the legend,"Cæsar adest?" |
19817 | But, prythee, tell me briefly what you mean about the soul of the world, if she can neither ascend nor descend? |
19817 | By what condition, nature, or fell chance, In living death, dead life I live? |
19817 | CIC.. How can our finite intellect follow after the infinite ideal? |
19817 | CIC.. How is breathing made to mean aspiring? |
19817 | Do you not make two contrary qualities where there are two opposite affections? |
19817 | Do you then think it is a thing to be desired, to bear shocks in order to prove that you are strong? |
19817 | F. Does he deny? |
19817 | F. Does he promise? |
19817 | F. Dost hope? |
19817 | F. For pity? |
19817 | F. From whom? |
19817 | F. Has he any? |
19817 | F. Is he silent? |
19817 | F. That rascal? |
19817 | F. Thee? |
19817 | F. What does he? |
19817 | F. What doest thou? |
19817 | F. Where is he? |
19817 | F. Wherefore? |
19817 | F. Who''s to blame? |
19817 | F. Who? |
19817 | F. With what? |
19817 | From looks, from accents, and from usages, Which faint and burn and keep thee bound, Where shall he that heals, that cools, and loosens thee be found? |
19817 | He who is without feeling-- who is dead? |
19817 | He who sleeps? |
19817 | How can I of this weight unburdened be, If pain the cure, and joy the sore give me? |
19817 | How can this be, seeing that there is no time so short that it can not be divided into seconds? |
19817 | How can this intelligence be signified by the moon which lights up the hemisphere? |
19817 | How is it that, not being really of one or the other extreme, it does not come to be in the conditions or terms of virtue? |
19817 | How then are the true poets to be known? |
19817 | How? |
19817 | How? |
19817 | I should like to know how, by circumambulating, one is to arrive at the centre? |
19817 | I understand it all; but what is the meaning of,"May I be happy in this governance and with these bonds, and may that light not cease?" |
19817 | If it be sweet in plaintiveness to droop, Why does that lofty splendour dazzle me? |
19817 | If the human intellect is finite in nature and in act, how can it have an infinite potency? |
19817 | If, then, the sight, which is an act, is not beautiful nor good, how can it fall into desire? |
19817 | In what manner do you mean that such a conversion takes place? |
19817 | Individual or Universal? |
19817 | Is Man alone gifted with Soul, or are all beings equally so? |
19817 | It is not then corporeal beauty which can allure such an one? |
19817 | Mortal or Eternal? |
19817 | Nothing is left to me but the sense of my poverty, my unhappiness and misery; why does not this too leave me? |
19817 | Now tell me what are the pricks, the lightnings, and the chains? |
19817 | Now what is that which is written on the tablet? |
19817 | Now, what is the meaning of the phrase"love endures as an instant?" |
19817 | Of these two which dost thou esteem higher? |
19817 | Ought not Nature to refuse to give you the other good, if that which she at present offers to you, you stupidly despise? |
19817 | Out on the air my heart''s voice do I hear:"Whither dost thou carry me, thou fearless one? |
19817 | Potentiality or Reality? |
19817 | S. How if such folly be pleasing to my soul? |
19817 | S. How so? |
19817 | Say, what do you mean by those who vaunt themselves of myrtle and laurel? |
19817 | Say, what does it mean? |
19817 | Seems it to you a natural thing that they should live divinely and not as animals and humanly, they being not gods, but men and animals? |
19817 | So that they are not two contrary existences, but one, subject to two contradictory terms? |
19817 | TANS.. What does Aristotle mean in his book on Time, when he says that eternity is an instant, and that all time is no more than an instant? |
19817 | Tell me why he says,"ever the same I''ll be?" |
19817 | The being less merry and the being less sad are not one virtue and one vice, but are two virtues? |
19817 | Then the body is not the habitation of the soul? |
19817 | Then there is no delight without the contrary? |
19817 | Then two beginnings and one opposite he reduces to one beginning and one result, exclaiming: But what do I say of Love? |
19817 | There are then many species of poets and crowns? |
19817 | To this consideration of his state he adds a tearful lament, and says:"Who will deliver me from war, and give me peace? |
19817 | To what use do I possess these natural powers if I be deprived of the use of them? |
19817 | To whom then are the rules of Aristotle useful? |
19817 | Well do I see, I shall fall dead to earth; But what life is there can compare with this my death? |
19817 | What are the looks, the accents, and the customs? |
19817 | What are those thoughts that call him back from the noble enterprise? |
19817 | What degrees are these? |
19817 | What difference is there between the infinity of the object and the infinity of the potentiality? |
19817 | What do you mean by this last saying? |
19817 | What do you say about that"Circuit?" |
19817 | What do you think that this means? |
19817 | What does that mean? |
19817 | What have they to do with it, that in no way can either help or favour it? |
19817 | What is meant by the meridian of the heart? |
19817 | What is the meaning of that butterfly which flutters round the flame, and almost burns itself? |
19817 | What relation has desire with the winds? |
19817 | What wilt thou say, if that other is not within the knowledge of the senses nor of the intellect? |
19817 | What wilt thou? |
19817 | When shall this ponderous mass of me dissolve? |
19817 | Whence comes it, oh Tansillo, that the soul in such progression delights in its own torments? |
19817 | Whence comes that spur which urges it ever beyond that which it possesses? |
19817 | Wherefore the sacred arrow sweetly wound? |
19817 | Wherefore these broken ruined powers, if not To make me subject and exemplar Of such heavy martyrdom, such lengthened pain? |
19817 | Who give to me the fruit of love in peace? |
19817 | Who will deliver me from war? |
19817 | Who, then, is wise, if foolish is he who is content, and foolish he who is sad? |
19817 | Who? |
19817 | Why do you say it? |
19817 | Why do you wish to make out that the instant is the whole of time? |
19817 | Why does he call him insane? |
19817 | Why does he put them under the title of a cross? |
19817 | Why does not death succour me, now that I am deprived of life? |
19817 | Why does the intellect trouble itself to give laws to the sense and yet deprive it of its food? |
19817 | Why in this knot is my desire involved? |
19817 | Why is Love called the"insensate boy"? |
19817 | Why is love symbolized by fire? |
19817 | Why should the sense remain? |
19817 | Why, I say, do you take as two virtues, and not as one vice and one virtue, the being less gay and the being less sad? |
19817 | Why, then, does he mention that conception as the object, if, as appears to me, the true object is the divinity itself? |
19817 | You would imply, then, that he who is sad is wise, and that other who is more sad is wiser? |
19817 | and what means that legend,"Hostis non hostis?" |
38391 | But who is not a doctrinaire? 38391 Can the Church Aid Therein, and What is Her Duty?" |
38391 | What are the Remedies at Her Disposal? |
38391 | ... in such case what will become of our protectorate over the Catholics of the East? |
38391 | And yet, had it been otherwise, had we possessed such covered ways-- what then? |
38391 | Are we going to permit Germany, Italy, and other nations to divide the debris, the remnants of our patrimony?" |
38391 | Are you bound to accept as Gospel truth, every idea that rises in the minds of men? |
38391 | Briand._--And what of that? |
38391 | But does that mean that I ought to close my eyes to what is taking place today? |
38391 | But, after all, does the fact of not recognizing the Organic Articles constitute a violation of the Concordat? |
38391 | But, after all, what did Hegel and his disciples mean by religion? |
38391 | Could we, without being false to our most cherished principles, affect sympathy with such a party? |
38391 | Do the affairs of the Catholic world concern heretics and schismatics? |
38391 | Does he suppose that the arms will fall from the hands of my soldiers?" |
38391 | Does not the Emperor perceive that they are a menace to his throne?" |
38391 | Had we not a right in view of what had occurred? |
38391 | He had hardly seen me than, with inflamed countenance, and in a loud voice, he said:''So, Monsieur Cardinal, you wish to break the negotiations? |
38391 | Hence, independently of the Concordat, is not such liberty of conscience demanded for all citizens by the Declaration of the Rights of Man?" |
38391 | Here the speaker began to be interrupted, thus:_ Voices from the Left:_"What new spirit?" |
38391 | If you ask me:''Do you believe that France in the relations of Church and State has arrived at definitive crisis?'' |
38391 | Is there anyone who does not profess some doctrine, either good or evil? |
38391 | Is this not the time when instead of deriding ourselves further, we ought if possible to bring back union to our country?" |
38391 | It is Republicans who make a republic, and who were these in Portugal? |
38391 | Ketteler spoke eloquently upon the questions,"Does the Social Question Exist in Germany?" |
38391 | Must you take every man as a Messiah who proclaims himself an apostle or a prophet? |
38391 | Rene Boblet:_"Whom are you accusing of carrying on this exasperating war?" |
38391 | Ribot._--"Never? |
38391 | Some have tried to do this, and why? |
38391 | Supposing this belief to be well- grounded, why should it make us criminals? |
38391 | Two years before, in July, 1807, the Emperor had asked scornfully:"What does the Pope mean by the threat of excommunicating me? |
38391 | What am I to say of our seminary fund, that, I mean, which is devoted to the education of young men in the society? |
38391 | What consideration ought he to have for you, when you have had none for him? |
38391 | What good reasons, political, historical or philosophical do you bring to support these theories? |
38391 | What, then, about our methods of acquiring inheritances? |
38391 | What, then, of the shots fired from our residence at Quelhas? |
38391 | Why does the Court of Rome allow itself to be influenced by these non- Catholic powers? |
38391 | Yet what else did we do? |
38391 | You are preaching social and economical emancipation to the masses; but what obstacle has the workman from performing his labors freely? |
38391 | You demand the restoration of the Legations? |
38391 | You wish to be rid of the troops? |
38391 | _ THE CHARGES AND THEIR ANSWERS._ It will naturally be asked, what were our crimes? |
38391 | the great question began to be asked: How and where shall the Conclave be held? |
37104 | Can Indulgences be applied also to the Souls in Purgatory? |
37104 | How do you conclude your confession? 37104 What must you do then? |
37104 | Why deprive ourselves of that merit? 37104 ... Do you think that I will ever get better? 37104 And why? 37104 And, if I talked in the language of the gutter, where do you think I learned it? 37104 Are the sisters in the convents American citizens and under the protection of the laws of the country, or are they not American citizens? 37104 But how many true Protestants have we today? 37104 But how? 37104 But nonsense apart, do write me what has happened in that house? 37104 But what? 37104 Can you not see the folly of allowing this one- man power to continue building these institutions all over this fair land of ours? 37104 Can you see how the sisters work to keep ahead of all the other sisters? 37104 Could anyone blame me for believing the terrible stories I had heard about Protestant people while I was in the convent? 37104 Dear Sister: What''s up? 37104 Does Roman Catholicism mean these great principles? 37104 Finally, Mother Nazareth said,What will we tell Archbishop Christie?" |
37104 | Had some of the"holy fathers"been to see him and demanded, and as a good"knight"he had to serve? |
37104 | Has justice no weight or meaning in the government of church organizations? |
37104 | How could I be after spending my life in the convents of the Roman Catholic system? |
37104 | I knew in a dreamy way that I was being cheated out of my right of education, but what was I to do? |
37104 | I looked at him in scorn and repeated,"The House of the Good Shepherd?" |
37104 | I said,"Why ca n''t you be honest? |
37104 | I told her that no one ever had any faults against me before, why all the reports and faults now? |
37104 | If she did not want me there, why did she not tell me? |
37104 | If the Christianity existed in the Roman Catholic Church that should be there, why is there so much rottenness connected with it? |
37104 | If the service of a nurse is worth that amount, why is a sister- nurse not worth just as much, if she does the work required or more? |
37104 | Is it any wonder that Rome can build such magnificent institutions? |
37104 | Is it not a public insult to the sisters of this country, that only French sisters are constantly kept in offices which have relation with seculars? |
37104 | Is it not breaking the law in one instance the same as the other? |
37104 | Is it not convenient to get into power and take advantage of another for all reports and remarks ever heard about you, years before they knew you? |
37104 | Is this Christianity? |
37104 | Must unfit and unscrupulous ones be left to have their own way entirely? |
37104 | Now what is this but making use of religion to play dirty politics? |
37104 | Oh, my American friends, can you not see the folly of it all? |
37104 | Or, was his name placed on the committee for show? |
37104 | Page 110, question 55:"How do you begin Confession? |
37104 | Should religion, if it was the right kind, make people wish and sigh for death to come and put an end to their misery? |
37104 | So you Protestants are each and every one heretics and the Roman Catholic church has no use for you, so why should you cater to them? |
37104 | So, the great question arises,"How are we going to better conditions?" |
37104 | Suppose, Sister O''Brien, if somebody would come and ask you,''Is Johnny Morgan here?'' |
37104 | The Word of God says,"If a woman have long hair, it is a glory to her,"but what does the church of Rome care what the Bible says? |
37104 | The question came to my mind,"Why do these people not advance?" |
37104 | Then, why such a radical change in the mind of such a highly educated man? |
37104 | Vincent''s?" |
37104 | Well qualified, was n''t she? |
37104 | What is the meaning of the word Protestant? |
37104 | What were we to do? |
37104 | What''s in the way? |
37104 | When asked what she was doing she just said,"Hell here or Hell hereafter, what is the difference?" |
37104 | When she saw that I was inside she asked,"How did you get in?" |
37104 | Whenever there is any scandal( this is a great Roman Catholic word) in the Protestant churches, is it hidden and tried to be kept down? |
37104 | Where do you suppose I went to do this un- Roman,"un- Christian"act of endeavoring to enlighten my mind? |
37104 | Who commands to abstain from eating meat but the Roman Catholic system on Fridays, ember days and during Lent? |
37104 | Who do you suppose gets this money? |
37104 | Who forbids to marry but the Roman Catholic system? |
37104 | Who is to blame for this condition? |
37104 | Why are we Protestants? |
37104 | Why not? |
37104 | Why should the postal authorities permit the continuous disregard for the laws? |
37104 | Why such national prejudice and jealousy? |
37104 | Why this discrimination? |
37104 | Will you please tell me what would be a good laxative to prevent all this trouble? |
37104 | You ask me what has happened this house? |
33836 | We are,says he,"at this hour,{ 85} on terms of amity with Russia; within how short a period was it otherwise?" |
33836 | And is he not then prostrate on the ground, gagged and muzzled beyond the possibility of barking? |
33836 | And what branch of human{ 241} science was banished from their schools? |
33836 | And why is the re- establishment of the society demanded? |
33836 | Are these the abodes of luxury and wealth? |
33836 | But the despotism of the general? |
33836 | But what does this signify? |
33836 | But who are the persons alarmed? |
33836 | But why was not Laicus equally trusted with the secrets of that state prison? |
33836 | But, say their enemies, how were these pursued? |
33836 | Can any thing be more reprehensible? |
33836 | Can sir John adduce a single instance of a Jesuit''s betraying the country, or the government, which protected him? |
33836 | Can this be a crime? |
33836 | Did Jesuits ever attempt to use this_ right_? |
33836 | Did it not become an inquirer into the truth of the accusations, to state the answer of Henry IV to the accusers of the Jesuits? |
33836 | Did secular sovereigns quietly acquiesce in such a glaring usurpation of their most undoubted right? |
33836 | From the pope? |
33836 | How can this be credited? |
33836 | How could a copy of it have escaped into England? |
33836 | How were these glorious prospects realized? |
33836 | I need not ask again, what is your aim? |
33836 | I say again, who are you? |
33836 | If any one had been accused, how came you to spare him? |
33836 | If you have written truth, why should you skulk{ 264} from the light? |
33836 | If, then, their testimony is to be admitted as irrefragable, in the present times, in one point, why not in another? |
33836 | In God''s name, Laicus, who are you, and what is your aim? |
33836 | In what bullarium then may the grant be found? |
33836 | In what chapter of the Institute did{ 282} Laicus discover the power or the practice of admitting men of all religions into the society? |
33836 | In what historian, or in what tradition, has Laicus found, that pope Innocent XIII was murdered, or murdered by_ Jesuits_? |
33836 | In what part of their Institute is this canon found? |
33836 | Is this not taking up the character of legislator for the happiness of men? |
33836 | It is said, that the king of Spain employs Jesuits; I tell you, that I am{ 79} determined to do the same; why should France fare worse than Spain? |
33836 | It is, in fact,_ all_ copied: why then did he not cite his authority? |
33836 | New personages in comedies are introduced to excite new interest; and was Coudrette ever before named in this island? |
33836 | Now what does the writer of the pamphlet before me say? |
33836 | Quere, from whom did he obtain it? |
33836 | Shall we then have recourse to the laity? |
33836 | Was he not contradicted, if I may use the expression, by anticipation? |
33836 | Was there no treason, was there no regicide doctrine in the following brutal speech, which he addressed to her? |
33836 | Well, what succeeds the_ imprimis_? |
33836 | Were there no room for favour amongst you, would you admit any, but what were worthy of being members, and of having a seat in your parliament? |
33836 | What do we learn from reason, and from fact? |
33836 | What does the pontiff next examine, weigh, and debate attentively, carefully, and wisely? |
33836 | What is the evident inference? |
33836 | What numerous body can be answerable for every individual of it? |
33836 | What was done? |
33836 | What was their conduct? |
33836 | What writer, valuing his own respectability, would cite such a creature as this? |
33836 | What{ 154} was their ambition? |
33836 | When did all this happen, and who was the grand duke? |
33836 | Where now is the horror of this obedience? |
33836 | Where now is"the formidable array of pontiffs,"which show that Ganganelli"is not the solitary impugner,"among popes, of the order of Jesuits? |
33836 | Who can believe, that_ protestant Jesuits_ would ever have submitted to persecute protestants? |
33836 | Who can imagine unanimity of mind, heart, and action among men, who disagreed in the fundamental principle? |
33836 | Who will be{ 316} surprised, that the heroic Alexander continues to distinguish them by fresh favours? |
33836 | Who will blame other princes for imitating his example? |
33836 | Who will cavil at Pius VII, in this new dawn of public tranquillity, for his endeavours to recover their services? |
33836 | Who, before Laicus, ever wrote,{ 283} that the assassin of Henry III of France was_ instigated_ by Jesuits? |
33836 | Why has it been omitted? |
33836 | Why was not Hume quoted by the writer of the pamphlet? |
33836 | With respect to missions, the Jesuits might truly apply to themselves the verse, Quæ regio in terris nostri non plena laboris? |
33836 | With such a speech in existence, is it not a disgrace to any man to cite against the society the remonstrance that gave occasion to it? |
33836 | Would you know, Sir, the origin of your despicable_ Monita_? |
33836 | and were they always the real objects? |
33836 | and, when he was copying, why did he omit to copy the passages that stared him in the face? |
33836 | croit- il l''immortalité de l''ame? |
33836 | how have they been requited? |
33836 | que croit- il donc? |
33836 | { 319} And what then can engage me to meddle with your final observations and inferences? |
11768 | Et cogar aeternum duplici servire tyranno? |
11768 | Quid dico? 11768 (Scilicet hunc natum dixisti cuncta regentem; Caelitibus regem cunctis, dominumque supremum") Huic ego sim supplex? |
11768 | --Who shall bear the guilt Of our great_ quell_? |
11768 | And have not we ourselves reason to fear, lest posterity should judge of Molière and his age, as we judge of Aristophanes? |
11768 | And have we not seen some like Timon the man hater, that have been successful in this way? |
11768 | And in what is all this to end? |
11768 | Are we now, therefore, to be told, that this law is--stamp''d upon th''unletter''d mind? |
11768 | But how is the right of patronage extinguished? |
11768 | But if he may warn each man singly, what shall forbid him to warn them altogether? |
11768 | But what makes a word obsolete, more than general agreement to forbear it? |
11768 | But who can regulate the seasons? |
11768 | But who comes here? |
11768 | But why should we suppose that the parish will make a wiser choice than the patron? |
11768 | But, if we condemn those ages for this, what age shall we spare? |
11768 | But, in the second place, over and above the subjects, may we not say something concerning the final purpose of comedy and tragedy? |
11768 | But, was the cause of religious sincerity benefited, by Molière''s representation of a sullen, sly, and sensual hypocrite? |
11768 | But, when is correction immoderate? |
11768 | But, why should we be tired with standing still at the true point of perfection, when it is attained? |
11768 | By what prudence or what diligence can he hope to conciliate the affections of that party, by whose defeat he has obtained his living? |
11768 | Can he that destroys the profit of many copies be less criminal than he that lessens the sale of one? |
11768 | Did he intend to banish honour, humanity and virtue, loyalty, courtesy and gentlemanly feeling from Spain? |
11768 | Did the French populace discriminate between such, and the sincere professor of christianity? |
11768 | Fallor? |
11768 | For instance, what could we add to his character of the absent man? |
11768 | Horace[35] proposes a question nearly of the same kind:"It has been inquired, whether a good poem be the work of art or nature? |
11768 | I was once, indeed, provoked to ask a lady of great eminence for genius,"Whether she knew of what bread is made?" |
11768 | If abridgments be condemned, as injurious to the proprietor of the copy, where will this argument end? |
11768 | If he had been kept a year in suspense, what redress could he have obtained? |
11768 | If it be taken from him, to whom shall it be given? |
11768 | If only those which are less known are to be mentioned, who shall fix the limits of the reader''s learning? |
11768 | If the changes, that we fear, be thus irresistible, what remains but to acquiesce with silence, as in the other insurmountable distresses of humanity? |
11768 | In what class of comedy must we place it? |
11768 | Is he not rather to acquiesce in the decision of authority, and conclude, that there are reasons which he can not comprehend? |
11768 | Is it for a poet to demand a licenser''s reason for his proceedings? |
11768 | It has been asked, on some occasions, who shall judge the judges? |
11768 | Me pressum leviore manu fortuna tenebit? |
11768 | Men''moveat cimex Pantilius? |
11768 | Mihi jus dabit ille, suum qui Dat caput alterius sub jus et vincula legum? |
11768 | Must not confutations be, likewise, prohibited for the same reason? |
11768 | Must the torrent continue to roll on, till it shall sweep us into the gulf of perdition? |
11768 | Of that which is to be made known to all, how is there any difference, whether it be communicated to each singly, or to all together? |
11768 | On what terms does he enter upon his ministry, but those of enmity with half his parish? |
11768 | Or how are such unreasonable expectations possibly to be satisfied? |
11768 | Or why should he wonder that the title of the rebel whom he has overthrown should be conferred upon him? |
11768 | Ought not Mr. Brooke to think himself happy that his play was not detained longer? |
11768 | Quod illud animal, tramite obliquo means, Ad me volutum flexili serpit via? |
11768 | Semideus reget iste polos? |
11768 | Shall this be the state of the English nation; and shall her lawgivers behold it without regard? |
11768 | Shall we put him in other circumstances? |
11768 | Sister, where thou? |
11768 | Tellus? |
11768 | The humour of Petruchio may be heightened by grimace; but what voice or what gesture can hope to add dignity or force to the soliloquy of Cato? |
11768 | The purpose of the one is to divert, and the other to move; and, of these two, which is the easier? |
11768 | The question is, therefore, whether an elliptical or semicircular arch is to be preferred? |
11768 | This objection is of no weight; for the same question still recurs, which is, whether of these two kinds of genius is more valuable, or more rare? |
11768 | This phrase, is indeed, not usual in this sense; but was it not its novelty that gave occasion to the present corruption? |
11768 | This position involves two questions: whether the present scarcity has been caused by the bounty? |
11768 | Was it ever known that a man exalted into a high station, dismissed a suppliant in the time limited by law? |
11768 | Was it to enable him to do what he has always done? |
11768 | What author of that age had the same easiness of expression and fluency of numbers? |
11768 | What can be more probable, than that he who copied that, would have copied more; but that those which were not translated were inaccessible? |
11768 | What haste looks through his eyes? |
11768 | What is power, but the liberty of acting without being accountable? |
11768 | What kind of personages are clouds, frogs, wasps, and birds? |
11768 | What more is to be hoped from any change of practice? |
11768 | What then is the fault with which this worthy minister is charged? |
11768 | What''s the boy Malcolm? |
11768 | When the radical idea branches out into parallel ramifications, how can a consecutive series be formed of senses in their nature collateral? |
11768 | Where hast thou been, sister? |
11768 | Where will the insolence of the malecontents end? |
11768 | Which way shall we come at the knowledge of the ancients''shows, but by comparing together all that is left of them? |
11768 | Who can read of the present distresses of the Genoese, whose only choice now remaining is, from what monarch they shall solicit protection? |
11768 | Who knows but, by deep thinking, another kind of comedy may be invented, wholly different from the three which I have mentioned? |
11768 | Why do you make such faces? |
11768 | Why then did we call in all our force to procure an act of parliament? |
11768 | _ Luc._ Quis non, relicta Tartari nigri domo, Veniret? |
11768 | _ Macbeth_.--Can such things be, And overcome us, like a summer''s cloud, Without our special wonder? |
11768 | _ Macbeth_.--Wherefore was that cry? |
11768 | _ Mic._ Cur hue procaci veneris cursu refer? |
11768 | an certe meo Concussa tellus tota trepidat pondere? |
11768 | and V. If we take these plays from Shakespeare, to whom shall they be given? |
11768 | and whether the bounty is likely to produce scarcity in future times? |
11768 | aut à ¦ vum exigam?" |
11768 | ego? |
11768 | in a bridge, which may facilitate the commerce of future generations? |
11768 | in a building, that is to attract the admiration of ages? |
11768 | in a work of any kind, which may stand as the model of beauty, or the pattern of virtue? |
11768 | reget avia terrae? |
11768 | to confirm an authority which no man attempted to impair, or pretended to dispute? |
46509 | Have those who established themselves in Spain, in virtue of the royal order of 1791, complied with the formalities which it prescribes? |
46509 | How many_ autillos públicos_ have been held with strangers since 1759 when Carlos III ascended the throne? |
46509 | It was easy to say that_ semiplena_ evidence suffices, but what was semiplena? |
46509 | Señor, put me on the ground-- have I not said that I did it all?" |
46509 | She said"Señor do you not see how these people are killing me? |
46509 | She said"Señores, why will you not tell me what I have to say? |
46509 | She said"What am I wanted to tell? |
46509 | Since the royal order, about how many non- Catholic strangers have established themselves, naming some of the principal ones and their nation or sect? |
46509 | The cords were ordered to be tightened when she said"Señores have you no pity on a sinful woman?" |
46509 | The tying of the arms was commenced; she said"I have told the truth; what have I to tell?" |
46509 | Whether they( non- Catholic foreigners) contract marriage with Catholics and, in that case, what is the religion of the children? |
46509 | [ 1390] A curious partial licence was one granted in 1614, to Padre Gullo Sabell( William Saville?) |
46251 | Now, what news on the Rialto? |
46251 | A wider space and ornamented grave? |
46251 | And in a brief enumeration of the buildings to be seen by the visitor, how can the unhappy writer avoid the charge of baldness and inefficiency? |
46251 | And where shall we find Julia and Lucetta, and Valentine, and smile at the pleasantries of Launce, with his dog, Crab, on a leash? |
46251 | But history''s purchas''d page to call them great? |
46251 | Do Romeo, Mercutio, and Benvolio no longer roam these twisted ancient streets? |
46251 | For what counted all this bloodshed? |
46251 | How shall the visitor know where to turn for those objects that appeal to him, amid such a wealth of treasures? |
46251 | How shall we separate myth and simple tradition from the veracious chronicles of the Roman people? |
46251 | Is there any other city that grips us in every sense like Venice? |
46251 | Shall we not see, leaning from one of the old balconies, the lovely Juliet? |
46251 | What can be said of the sunsets, the almost garish colouring of sea and sky, and the witchery of reflection upon tower and roof? |
46251 | What want these outlaws conquerors should have? |
46251 | What were the causes of the downfall of their proud city, and the decadence of the great race that invaded all quarters of Europe? |
46251 | Would he not have chosen to die in the Venice that he loved with such intense fervour? |
16309 | How can these be in a Society that is Divine? 16309 Why is not the religion of you Catholics more in accord with the happy world in which we live? |
16309 | Am I even within an appreciable distance of the saints who knew not Christ? |
16309 | And could religion possibly be made a more intimate, private, and personal matter between the soul and God than the Carthusian or Carmelite makes it? |
16309 | And what can the moderate, self- controlled, self- respecting man of the world know of either? |
16309 | And yet, after all, what is the Contemplative Life except precisely that which the world just now recommended? |
16309 | Are any kings remembered as is the beggar Labrà © who gnawed cabbage stalks in the gutters of Rome? |
16309 | Are there any criminals in history so monumental as Catholic criminals? |
16309 | But the Catholic system has the appearance of enslaving men? |
16309 | But the world does withhold its wealth sometimes? |
16309 | Can this, it is asked, be a follower of the Man of Sorrows? |
16309 | Can you explain away,_ reasonably_, on any other grounds than those which I state, the phenomena of My life?" |
16309 | Certainly human circumstances have developed her, yet what but Divine Providence ordered and developed those human circumstances? |
16309 | Certainly there have been appalling scandals, outrageous sinners, blaspheming apostates-- but what of her saints? |
16309 | Death is certain; is life as certain? |
16309 | Did He not call Himself_ a Door and a Vine_? |
16309 | Did He not speak in metaphors and images continually? |
16309 | Did Newman cease to think when he became a Catholic? |
16309 | Did Thomas Aquinas resign his intellect when he devoted himself to study? |
16309 | Did not Christ Himself sit in bodily form at the table as He spoke them? |
16309 | Earthly kings speak from their thrones and what happens? |
16309 | For how can God be weary by the wayside, labour in a shop, and die upon a cross? |
16309 | For what does the world know of such passions as these? |
16309 | For when is my hand most itself? |
16309 | Granted that one Pope has reversed the policy of his predecessor, then what has saved him from reversing his theology also? |
16309 | Has her policy, then, been so suicidal after all? |
16309 | Has my religion, that is to say, ever inspired me beyond the low elevation of joy into the august altitudes of pain? |
16309 | Have I done anything except hinder the growth of Christ''s Church, anything except drag down her standards, so far as I am able, to my own low level? |
16309 | Have I ever wrestled like Jacob or wept like David? |
16309 | Have your religious, careful, timid lives ever exhibited anything resembling that depth of self- abjection to which the Younger Son has attained? |
16309 | He echoes from the Gospel,"_ What manner of man is this that even the winds and the sea obey Him_? |
16309 | He was too worldly when He allowed His disciples to rub corn in their hands; for does not the Law of God forbid a man to make bread on the Sabbath? |
16309 | He was too worldly when He healed men on the Sabbath; for is not the Law of God of more value than a man''s bodily ease? |
16309 | How can Truth make men anything except more free? |
16309 | How can she modify what she believes to be her Divine Message? |
16309 | How can the Eternal Word be silent for thirty years? |
16309 | How can the Infinite lie in a manger? |
16309 | How can the Source of Life be subject to death? |
16309 | How is it conceivable, then, that she should be content with any standard short of perfection? |
16309 | How is it that she has preserved a unity of which all earthly unities are but shadows? |
16309 | How is it that tales are told of the iniquities of Catholicism such as are told of no other of the sects of Christendom? |
16309 | How should there be, since she is Divine? |
16309 | How then could He hold Himself in His hand? |
16309 | How, after all,"he asks himself,"could a man be born without a human father, how rise again from the dead upon the third day?" |
16309 | How, then, is this Paradox to be reconciled? |
16309 | If Christ be God, how can He proclaim that_ His Father is greater than He_? |
16309 | If Christ be Man, how can He say,_ Before Abraham was, I am_? |
16309 | If Christ be man, how can He say,_ My Father and I are one_? |
16309 | If a marble palace is fit for the President of the French Republic, by what right do men withhold it from the King of kings? |
16309 | If an earthly king wears vestments of cloth of gold, must not a heavenly King yet more wear them? |
16309 | If music is used by the world to destroy men''s souls, may not she use it to save their souls? |
16309 | If she is Divine, whence comes her obvious Humanity? |
16309 | If she is Human, why is she so evidently Divine? |
16309 | If she is merely European, how is it that she alone can deal with the Oriental on his own terms? |
16309 | If she is merely human, why do not the laws of all other human societies appear to affect her too? |
16309 | If she is merely mediaeval, how is it that she commands such allegiance as that which is paid to her in modern America? |
16309 | If this Man were man only, however perfect and sublime, how is it that His sanctity appears to run by other lines than those of other saints? |
16309 | In His Person and His teaching alike there seems no rest and no solution--_What think ye of Christ? |
16309 | Instead of this miserable past, then, what is to come? |
16309 | Instead, have you not had a kind of gentle pride in your religion or your virtue or your fastidiousness? |
16309 | Is Reason, then, to be silent henceforth? |
16309 | Is it any wonder that the world thinks both her Faith and Reason alike too extreme? |
16309 | Is it possible that with me the old is not put away, the_ old man_ is not yet dead, and the_ new man_ not yet_ put on_? |
16309 | Is that New Sacrifice the light of my daily life? |
16309 | Is there a single soul now in the world who owes, under God, her conversion to my efforts? |
16309 | Is there any nation with so fierce a patriotism as she who is Supernational? |
16309 | Is this the kind of talk that we hear from modern leaders of religious thought? |
16309 | Now is it not in accordance with Reason that you should grant My claims? |
16309 | Or,"How even could such marvels be related at all of one who was no more than other men?" |
16309 | She is human? |
16309 | So men ask now, If Christ be Man, how could He cast out devils and rise from the dead? |
16309 | So years ago men asked, If Christ be God, how could He be weary by the wayside and die upon the Cross? |
16309 | Was there ever anything more arrogant? |
16309 | Was there ever so mean a Procession as this? |
16309 | Was there ever such a Paradox, such perplexity, and such problems? |
16309 | Was there ever such meekness and charity? |
16309 | Were men less free when they learned that fact? |
16309 | What is it but Catholicism that lies at the heart of the divided allegiance of France, of the miseries of Portugal, and of the dissensions of Italy? |
16309 | What is that power that so often fills us with delights before we have begun to labour, and rewards our labour with the darkness of dereliction? |
16309 | What is the use of saying,_ Blessed are the Meek_, when the whole world knows that"Blessed are the Self- Assertive"? |
16309 | What is the use of speaking of Heavenly Bread when it is earthly food that men need first of all? |
16309 | What kind of life is that which must always be checked and stunted in this fashion? |
16309 | What kind of salvation can there be that can only be purchased by the sacrifice of so much that is noble and inspiring? |
16309 | What of that amazing scene when He threw the furniture about the temple courts? |
16309 | What, after all, can the sensualist know of joy, or the ruined financier of sorrow? |
16309 | What, then, is Religious Liberty? |
16309 | What, then, is the reconciliation of the Paradox? |
16309 | What, then, is the reconciliation of this Paradox? |
16309 | What, then, is this foolish cry about the slavery of dogma? |
16309 | When does He not? |
16309 | When separated from the body, by paralysis or amputation? |
16309 | Where is there, in me, the New Wine of the Gospel? |
16309 | Who that has suffered can ever doubt it again? |
16309 | Whose Son is He_? |
16309 | Why can He not wait till to- morrow? |
16309 | Why has not she too split up into the component parts of which she is welded? |
16309 | Why is it that she alone shows no incline towards dissolution and decay? |
16309 | Why, then, should your theologians seek to penetrate into regions which He did not reveal and to elaborate what He left unelaborated? |
16309 | Would such language as this be tolerated for a moment from the humanitarian Christian pulpits of to- day? |
16309 | Yet is there in me, up to the present, even one glimmer of what is meant by Sanctity? |
16309 | _ Which of you convinceth me of sin?... |
16309 | _ Whom do you say that I am?... |
44669 | And then what would be the use of so many such men over there at present, unless they wanted to devote themselves to the cultivation of the soil? |
44669 | And why shall I not hope that the time has come when this prophecy is to be fulfilled in these lands? |
44669 | But how could they be roasted in a small boat, so as to be eaten and kept? |
44669 | But with what difficulty has he labored in this cause up to the present time? |
44669 | Et pour quoy n''esperay- je que le temps est venu auquel cette prophetie doict estre accomplie en ces quartiers? |
44669 | Europæos rident, qui defluentem è naribus humorem candidis sudariis excipiant,&, Quo, inquiunt, rem adeo sordidam reservant isti? |
44669 | For what can one do with those who in word give agreement and assent to everything, but in reality give none? |
44669 | If that be so, what can there be so difficult that our Lord can not make it easy? |
44669 | Mais avec combien de travaux s''est- il employé jusques ici à cela? |
44669 | Mais quel moyen de les rôtir en une chaloupe, pour les manger et garder? |
44669 | Qu''arriva- t- il? |
44669 | Que faire? |
44669 | Que fera- on? |
44669 | Que si cela est, qu''y a- t- il de tant difficile que nostre Dieu ne puisse faciliter? |
44669 | Quid enim agas cum annuentibus verbo& concedentibus omnia; re nihil præstantibus? |
44669 | Voulez vous qu''il emporte la premiere gloire du monde par dessus vous,& que le triomphe de cet affaire luy demeure sans que vous y participiés? |
44669 | What happened? |
44669 | What was to be done? |
44669 | What were they to do? |
44669 | You who have the control of the most noble Empire here below, how can you see a Gentleman so full of good will, without employing and helping him? |
34979 | Then you would keep the trusts we have and welcome others? |
34979 | Well, but how would you deal with the harm? |
34979 | Would you pay for or just take them? |
34979 | ''"[ 37] But these few words beg the whole question: Need we abolish the competitive stimulus in the adoption of the Socialist cure? |
34979 | And how do these exceptions use their leisure? |
34979 | And of the 9,000,000 that remain, how many are economically free? |
34979 | And so we are led insensibly to a question of still wider importance: Is wealth money or is it happiness? |
34979 | Answering the question,"Do you believe in a State constabulary to coöperate with the railway police in prosecuting vagrants?" |
34979 | Are these the saints of the latter day? |
34979 | As bearing on the question of, literally,"Who pays the freight?" |
34979 | As to the rest, it is the dream of a young doctor to get a large practice; and when his dream is realized, how much leisure does he enjoy? |
34979 | But how is it when the law becomes the kidnapper, when the officers of the law, using its forms and exerting its power, become abductors? |
34979 | But how? |
34979 | But is the experience of the entire race during its entire history to be treated as of no importance in this connection? |
34979 | But to what does this freedom of contract between employee and employee lead? |
34979 | But what is the worst consequence that can result from failure? |
34979 | But why does he do this? |
34979 | But_ who had gold with which to buy these bills? |
34979 | CAN HUMAN NATURE BE CHANGED BY LAW? |
34979 | CHAPTER VII CAN THE EVILS OF CAPITALISM BE ELIMINATED BY COÖPERATION? |
34979 | Can anyone who knows the family life of Socialists assert that the divorce rate among them is greater than that of the community in which they live? |
34979 | Can our system of production be so modified as to assure this to him? |
34979 | Can we not confine ourselves to eliminating the gambling element in it? |
34979 | Can we not diminish the stakes without abandoning them altogether? |
34979 | Can we not take our arsenic in tonic instead of in fatal doses? |
34979 | Does this seem Utopian? |
34979 | Has he ever thought of the tyranny of the trust, or the tyranny of the market from which both inevitably spring? |
34979 | He then asks:"How then can the police execute the law, when there seems to be so much doubt as to what the law really is?" |
34979 | Here again we come up against the morality of man; will he continue to poison himself with absinthe or will he abstain? |
34979 | How long are we going to allow our opinions to be manufactured for us by water companies in London and gas companies in New York? |
34979 | How long can this last?" |
34979 | How otherwise is it possible for prizefights to be held in New York city, in spite of the earnest efforts of the police to prevent them? |
34979 | How, then, will they explain the extraordinary haste with which ships sought to reach this port before the new tariff came into effect? |
34979 | If, then, it turns out that both these assumptions are false, is it not time for him to revise his philosophy? |
34979 | In other words, is coöperation a practical cure for competition? |
34979 | Is it possible that with the record of these men before us, we can maintain the theory that gain is the only stimulus to invention? |
34979 | Is it, then, so fantastic to suppose that modern machinery, under a socialized system of production, could cut this day in two? |
34979 | Is the assumption that economic science is uninfluenced by morality true or false? |
34979 | Is there not a little loose thinking about this confusion of Socialism and Communism? |
34979 | Is this exaggeration? |
34979 | Now what is the difference between games and gambling? |
34979 | Or can they be enjoyed equally by all? |
34979 | Or is it that Mr. Roosevelt is just a century behindhand? |
34979 | Or is it that he has never read the works of Proudhon and Karl Marx, whom he groups together as propounding the same kind of Socialism? |
34979 | Science says:"Man is born with passions, but are these passions sinful? |
34979 | What are the facts in the case at bar as alleged in the petition, and which it is conceded must be assumed to be true? |
34979 | What avails it to a drunkard to know that drink is the cause of his misery, if he has not the power to refuse it? |
34979 | What is exactly the meaning of this sentence? |
34979 | What is the difference between reform and revolution? |
34979 | What restraint would you put upon yourselves? |
34979 | What stake have the majority of New York citizens in the government of the city? |
34979 | What then are they interested in? |
34979 | What under these circumstances would be the special functions of Congress? |
34979 | What would be your restraint?" |
34979 | What, then, would be the consequence if the suggestion were minimized by the absence of prostitution altogether? |
34979 | Who had been hoarding gold?_ What do these facts disclose? |
34979 | Who had been hoarding gold?_ What do these facts disclose? |
34979 | Who knows the name of the inventor of the slot machine so much in vogue to- day? |
34979 | Why should it not animate them all? |
34979 | Would such a system at the same time attain justice? |
34979 | [ 105] How far has experience justified these anticipations? |
34979 | [ 18] Or the lumber camps to which these men are driven where there is no employment for women? |
34979 | [ 190] Were these ships hurrying to port in order to escape the payment of a low tariff? |
34979 | [ 71] Is or is not the contention with which this chapter started, justified? |
34979 | _ Q._"And if it results in crushing him out?" |
34979 | _ Q._"Not the affair of the American Sugar Refining Company?" |
34979 | _ Q._"Then, if you had the power to charge or impose prices on the public, what would be your idea of the limit that the public could possibly stand?" |
34979 | _ Q._"Would it not be the utmost limit that the consumer would bear?" |
43630 | Is it a question of the end of the world in all this? 43630 45. Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his lord hath made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due season? 43630 And Jesus said unto them, See ye not all these things? 43630 And as he sat upon the Mount of Olives, the disciples came unto him privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? 43630 How then can it be supposed that Jesus Christ taught mysteries? 43630 In the treatise headed, Which rich man will be saved? 43630 Is not he who created the flesh mighty enough to bring it again to life? 43630 Is this not the Father, the Son, or wisdom, and the Spirit that creates and vivifies all? 43630 Julius Firmicus, who relates this, exclaims:Why do you exhort those unfortunate to rejoice? |
43630 | Lysandre answered him with this question,"Do you address me those questions in your own name, or in the name of the Deity?" |
43630 | On what does it rest? |
43630 | Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and come unto thee? |
43630 | Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee a hungered, and fed_ thee_? |
43630 | What has inspired the poet with this surprising fiction? |
43630 | When saw we thee a stranger, and took_ thee_ in? |
43630 | Whence does it originate, if not from the ancient belief that man was born in sin? |
43630 | Wherefrom, then, did the Church of Rome originate the dogma of endless hell? |
43630 | Which faults do those children, to whom their mothers had not smiled, expiate? |
43630 | Why do you deceive them with false promises? |
43630 | Why not? |
43630 | Why those tears, those cries of sufferings? |
43630 | _ Did the Christians of the First Centuries believe in Endless Hell?_ We emphatically answer, no. |
43630 | and what_ shall be_ the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world? |
43630 | or naked, and clothed_ thee_? |
43630 | or thirsty, and gave_ thee_ drink? |
18438 | WHAT is a miser? |
18438 | What hast thou, that thou hast not received? |
18438 | A miracle may save him, but nothing short of a miracle can do it, and who has a right to expect it? |
18438 | After all where would the merit be in the service of God, if there were no difficulty? |
18438 | And are there no sins of gluttony besides these? |
18438 | And how can I tell where one act ends and the other begins?" |
18438 | And how can he be taught, if he does not lay aside occupations that are incompatible with the acquisition of intellectual truths? |
18438 | And if she errs here, what assurance is there that she does not err there? |
18438 | And if we know nothing about it, how can we do either? |
18438 | And then what becomes of honesty, and the right of property? |
18438 | And what about the contract according to the terms of which you are to give your services and to receive in return a stipulated amount? |
18438 | And what makes it rash? |
18438 | And what security can anyone have against the private judgment of his neighbor? |
18438 | And whence comes the knowledge of such sufficiency or insufficiency of motive? |
18438 | And whether they believe it or not, will they, on your authority, have sufficient reason for giving credence to your words? |
18438 | And who are the persons thus guilty of a manifold guilt? |
18438 | And who is there that really thinks he is not worth more than he gets? |
18438 | And why is this? |
18438 | And why? |
18438 | Are Papists the only ones to add to the holy writings, or to go counter to them? |
18438 | Are there any motives capable of justifying these outbursts of passion? |
18438 | Are there not Catholic books and publications of various sorts? |
18438 | Are there reasons for this economy of salvation? |
18438 | Are they likely to receive it as truth, either because they are looking for just such reports, or because they know no better? |
18438 | Are we bound to keep our oaths? |
18438 | But if it is nothing more than this, how came it to get on the table of the Law? |
18438 | But is he bound to do this, morally? |
18438 | But must I impoverish myself? |
18438 | But suppose, being a Catholic, I can not see things in that true light, what then? |
18438 | But the question may be:"To do or not to do; which is right and which is wrong?" |
18438 | But what has that to do with the Communion of Saints? |
18438 | But what is a right? |
18438 | Can I not defend myself?" |
18438 | Can it not only rob us of the power to will, not only force us to act without consent, but also force the will, force us to consent? |
18438 | Can the will of God, unmistakably manifested, be thus disregarded and put aside by His creatures? |
18438 | Can violence and fear do more than this? |
18438 | Depravity? |
18438 | Do they signify a swearing, by God, either in their natural sense or in their general acceptation? |
18438 | Else why is fasting and abstinence-- two correctives of gluttony-- so much in honor and so universally recommended and commanded in the Church? |
18438 | Even in human affairs, can one admit that two and three are seven? |
18438 | First of all, what is a vow? |
18438 | Has a person in misfortune the right to strike down another who has had no part in making that misfortune? |
18438 | Has no one a right to differ from the Church? |
18438 | Holding to Catholic principles how can he do otherwise? |
18438 | How can a custodian of divine truth act otherwise? |
18438 | How can he consistently seek after truth when he is convinced that he holds it? |
18438 | How can he refuse to hear Catholic preaching and teaching, any more than Baptist, Methodist and Episcopalian doctrines? |
18438 | How can he say she is right on one occasion, and wrong on another? |
18438 | How long should the child be kept at school? |
18438 | How many sins do I commit if the act lasts, say, two hours? |
18438 | How then could He make intelligence the first principle of salvation and of faith? |
18438 | IS SUICIDE A SIN? |
18438 | If God made man, man belongs to Him; if from that possession flows a natural obligation to worship with heart and tongue, why not also of the body? |
18438 | If it is lawful for a short time, why not for a long time? |
18438 | If it is lawful to contract a solemn engagement with man, why not with God? |
18438 | If the Church is right in this, why should she not be right in defining the Immaculate Conception? |
18438 | If there are vocations in the natural life, why should there not be in the supernatural, which is just as truly a life? |
18438 | If variety of aptitudes and likes determine difference of calling, why should this not hold good for the soul as well as for the body and mind? |
18438 | If we can not assert, how can we deny? |
18438 | If we can not rejoice with the neighbor, why be pained at his felicity? |
18438 | In doubt the question may be:"To do; is it right or wrong? |
18438 | In other words, is there nothing but venial sin in thefts of little values, or is there only one big sin at the end? |
18438 | In this light we plead guilty; but is it simple bread? |
18438 | In this sense, is monastic poverty a bad and evil thing? |
18438 | In what does a man without prayer differ from such a being? |
18438 | Is Suicide a Sin? |
18438 | Is all killing prohibited? |
18438 | Is it because they are too poor? |
18438 | Is it enough to forgive sincerely from the heart? |
18438 | Is it enough, in order to qualify as a moral and responsible agent, to be in a position to respect or to violate the Law? |
18438 | Is it not sufficient to be honest men and women? |
18438 | Many a pure love has degenerated and many a virtue fallen, why? |
18438 | May I perform this act, or must I abstain therefrom?" |
18438 | May it not happen that the very fact of your mentioning what you did is a sufficient mark of credibility for others? |
18438 | Must I love, really love, that low rascal, that cantankerous fellow, that repugnant, repulsive being? |
18438 | Now, what kind of an intelligible thing could sin be in the mind of a blasphemous agnostic? |
18438 | On what authority was it done? |
18438 | One book may not at the same time be three books; but can one divine nature be at one and the same time three divine persons? |
18438 | One may wonder and say:"how can guilt attach to doing good?" |
18438 | Or is there an intention of giving them this signification? |
18438 | Or that proud, overbearing creature who looks down on me and despises me? |
18438 | Or this other who has wronged me so maliciously? |
18438 | SHOULD WE HELP OUR PARENTS? |
18438 | Should We Help Our Parents? |
18438 | Suppose this change can not be justified on Scriptural grounds, what then? |
18438 | The question is: Does the nature of our relations with God demand this sort of worship? |
18438 | To what then shall one have recourse? |
18438 | WHAT is an enemy? |
18438 | WHAT kind of obedience is that which makes religious"unwilling to acknowledge any superior but the Pope?" |
18438 | Was there any clause therein by which you are entitled to change the terms of said contract without consulting the other party interested? |
18438 | We are unable to resolve the difficulties, lay the doubt, and form a sure conscience, what must we do? |
18438 | What about the Sunday instructions and sermons? |
18438 | What about those who call upon, and desire death? |
18438 | What in the world could he do without her? |
18438 | What is a moral agent? |
18438 | What is superstition and what is a superstitious practice? |
18438 | What is there to justify it? |
18438 | What is yielding to any passion but weakness? |
18438 | What kind of nonsense is it that makes her truthful or erring according to one''s fancy and taste? |
18438 | What meaning could it have for any man who professes not to know, or to care, who or what God is? |
18438 | What takes the place of this hate? |
18438 | What then? |
18438 | What therefore is more natural than that some should choose to give themselves up heart, soul and body to the exclusive service of God? |
18438 | What''s the good of it? |
18438 | When parents, unworthy ones, do not appreciate their own dignity, how will others, their children, appreciate it? |
18438 | Where did you get your faith? |
18438 | Where is the advantage in leading such an impossible existence when a person can save his soul without it? |
18438 | Where is there a man, whatever his labor and pay, who could not come to the same conclusion? |
18438 | Where will he ever get this necessary information, if he is not taught? |
18438 | Where will our friend find a loop- hole to escape? |
18438 | Which is the more guilty? |
18438 | Which should have the preference of my assent? |
18438 | Who are bound to serve? |
18438 | Who can unravel the mysteries of religion? |
18438 | Who else can teach him religious truth when he believes that an infallible Church gives him God''s word and interprets it in the true and only sense? |
18438 | Who is to blame but themselves? |
18438 | Who may not consider himself ill- paid? |
18438 | Why are there seen so few children in the fashionable districts of our large cities? |
18438 | Why are there so few large families outside the Irish and Canadian elements? |
18438 | Why did He act thus? |
18438 | Why not give the poor full value for their share of the burden? |
18438 | Why not provide them with intellectual tools that suit their condition, just as the rich are being provided for in the present system? |
18438 | Why not respect the grave? |
18438 | Why should the poor be taxed to educate the rich? |
18438 | Why this blast of sterility with which the land is cursed? |
18438 | Why was it made? |
18438 | Why? |
18438 | Will God do this without being asked? |
18438 | Will they believe it, whether you do or not? |
18438 | Would they, or would they not, consider themselves injured by such revelations? |
18438 | or because they are both? |
18438 | or because they are too rich? |
43396 | O''er yonder lake the while, What bird about that wooded isle, With pendant feet and pinions slow, Is seen his ponderous length to row? 43396 Who is it,"says the Indian,"that causes the rain to rise in the high mountains, and to empty itself into the ocean? |
43396 | And France, without Pascal, Descartes, Diderot, and Montesquieu? |
43396 | And Germany, without Fichte, Hegel, Kant, and Schlegel? |
43396 | And first, why do life and fertility prevail elsewhere,--here, sterility and death? |
43396 | And what are these prairies? |
43396 | And what equality is there between the lordly Tiger of the rank Indian jungles, and the sleek, stealthy Jaguar of the American wilderness? |
43396 | And who knows if the volcanic crater, whose absence at first astonishes the observer, is not the Dead Sea itself? |
43396 | As Emerson says,[182]"It is race, is it not? |
43396 | But whence came the latter? |
43396 | Did our readers ever hear of the Pashiúba, or bulging- stemmed palm? |
43396 | He owes his characteristic epithet of_ syndactylus_ to the fact that the index and middle finger of his hind- feet( or shall I say, hands?) |
43396 | How has he merited so obscure a destiny? |
43396 | In whose favour, in this struggle of science against the elements, will the victory eventually be decided? |
43396 | Is this resemblance a sign of the close relationship existing between two peoples placed, as it were, at the two extremities of the world? |
43396 | Or Italy, without Galileo? |
43396 | This torpid condition, however, was it the effect of confinement or of natural apathy? |
43396 | What could avail against such a scourge? |
43396 | What of the lactiferous and resinous plants? |
43396 | What shall I say of the_ Loris_? |
43396 | What, then, is the origin of the Australians and the Papuans? |
43396 | Whence came these pebbles, which have evidently been''rolled''by the waters? |
43396 | Who among us has not eagerly followed them in their long journeys across the rolling savannahs and through the primeval forests? |
43396 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
43396 | Who has not listened eagerly, when, seated round the watch- fire, with the calumet to their lips, they have deliberated gravely on peace and war? |
43396 | Who is it that causes to blow the loud winds of winter, and that calms them again in the summer? |
43396 | Who is it that rears up the shade of those lofty forests, and blasts them with the quick lightning at his pleasure?" |
43396 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
43396 | Why does an irrevocable curse seem to weigh upon certain parts of the world, while others rejoice in Nature''s fairest gifts? |
43396 | Without Aristotle, Plato, and Socrates, what had been ancient Hellas? |
43396 | Without Bacon, Locke, Newton, and Stuart Mill, what were modern England? |
46018 | During the seven years,says Voltaire,"that I lived in the house of the Jesuits, what did I see among them? |
46018 | And what about the studies themselves? |
46018 | And where has it not done so? |
46018 | And, withal, what is more congenial to the young than letters, language, talk? |
46018 | But when both or all parties become heated, and wit becomes lively, the syllogism may suffer, and then, when will they finish? |
46018 | Does anything more seem necessary for the full idea of authority? |
46018 | For what is the object of any religious society whatsoever? |
46018 | Forsooth, what is more trivial than to ask whether God is in imaginary space? |
46018 | It is of these men and their work that Ranke writes:"Of what country were these, the first of their Order amongst us? |
46018 | Must they be told not to come while the dictation is going on, and to appear only afterwards when the matter is being explained? |
46018 | What did the answer come to, in the way of providing temporalities, necessary and sufficient? |
46018 | What kind of vacancy was left in the intellectual culture of Europe, when this intellectual system was suddenly swept away? |
46018 | What reasons does the noble author urge for this request? |
46018 | Where get the new masters?... |
46018 | [ 270] Possevino, in his_ Bibliotheca Selecta_, has a chapter on this question,"Whether mental culture suffers by the dictation of lectures?" |
39246 | Do you know what it is to be truly spiritual? 39246 Sin el vivo calor, sin el fecundo Rayo de la ilusión consoladora ¿ Que fuera de la vida y del mundo?" |
39246 | Again, if this small state were independent, where would she stand? |
39246 | And in what country but democratic Spain would a bishop stroll out with canons and grandees to while away a friendly hour with a miller? |
39246 | Are the stars not inhabited? |
39246 | At the church door the king met her and escorted her in honor, for was not her husband away fighting the infidel for his monarch? |
39246 | Could these enchanting little people belong to the same race, and live only a hundred and fifty miles away? |
39246 | Did not the Asturian lady, the duenna of the Duchess, remark to Don Quixote that her husband was_ hidalgo como el Rey porque era montañés_? |
39246 | Does he portray a degraded race, finger on lips whispering,"Hush, or you will be overheard"? |
39246 | Does not lack of comprehension of old usages often mean lack of the shaping power of the imagination? |
39246 | Does this not give the key to the Escorial? |
39246 | During the French invasion, Gerona stood a siege as terrific as any in history, yet who of us has heard of it? |
39246 | From whence, let me ask, have come this power of hers and these excessive riches except from the enchantment into which she threw all the world? |
39246 | Had he lived would Spain''s evil day have been averted? |
39246 | Had we met the archæologist of the province, a canon in the Cathedral? |
39246 | Had we seen the asylum near Santiago where the insane are treated with such success that noted cures had been obtained? |
39246 | He feels he is loyal to his God, to his King, and to himself,--what better standards can you have? |
39246 | If Alfonso XIII gives his intelligence and life- blood to his people, who can foresee to what heights this strong, uncontaminated race may climb? |
39246 | Is it any wonder Spain can win affection with her good and her evil lying close beside each other in a grand primitive way? |
39246 | Is that business?" |
39246 | Is the poetry of Juan de la Cruz, Luis de León and the prose of Teresa, the work of souls who feared to adore their God freely? |
39246 | Is there any wonder that a people who can claim two such heroines look at one with fearless eyes? |
39246 | Is this province, Spain''s richest and most progressive, to continue under the Spanish crown, to ally herself with France, or to be independent? |
39246 | It was so cluttered that I could hardly get oriented; where was the nave? |
39246 | Jerusalem, Rome, Santiago,--perhaps this claims too much for the Spanish pilgrimage shrine? |
39246 | Secure you ask: Does peace, Or restless seeking plaint come with your wealth''s increase? |
39246 | Should not a poet be judged by his best lines? |
39246 | Should not this act of farseeing wisdom, be set against his stern treatment of the Moors? |
39246 | So confusing was it I could not at first tell by what door we had entered, where was the east, where was the west end? |
39246 | The chatter and movement made me ask, could this be a Spanish church, where irreverence is unknown? |
39246 | Then the Retreat began,--did we know what"the Exercises"were? |
39246 | Two men from the northern mountains meet:"You too are from Asturias?" |
39246 | We began to ask ourselves if this noisy excitement commemorated a solemn time, what would the following week of the Fair be like? |
39246 | Were you asleep that you did not clap this independent thinker into your capacious dungeons? |
39246 | What is it about Spanish ways that makes most Englishmen so pessimistic over her? |
39246 | What were they doing, these cloistered people? |
39246 | When a race can produce in a short fifty years a Pereda, a Valera, a Menéndez y Pelayo, have we the right to call it spent and out of the running? |
39246 | Who was the soul of this indomitable fortitude? |
39246 | Whoever heard of going faster than twenty miles an hour and what more natural than to wait in a station between trains half a night? |
39246 | Why have so few to- day the old- time spaciousness of vision? |
39246 | Why is not their advice followed? |
39246 | Why must a different justice be meted out to Spain? |
39246 | Why must an image in wig and jewels blind one to the remarkable carved statues found side by side with it? |
39246 | Will not Mr. Gilbert Chesterton go there and study some day her untamable grand old qualities and describe her as she should be described? |
39246 | Will the young king of Spain to- day show the world that Isabella''s heritage is worth the claiming? |
39246 | Will"progress"unsettle it? |
39246 | Would Benedict Arnold be accepted as an authority on the American Revolution? |
39246 | Would Catalonia gain by any of the changes she dreams of? |
39246 | he assured us, too polite to ask the question that showed in his voice,--why were two ladies seeking a dismal spot such as Alcántara? |
39246 | we thought, after the strong old Gothic of Burgos, is Valladolid going to be just barren like its Cathedral and chaotic like its University? |
39246 | which were the transepts? |
33765 | But what was the cause of their coming and announcing that a Pseudo- Bishop had been made against the Bishops? 33765 For what are all your brethren, the Bishops of the Universal Church, but the stars of heaven? |
33765 | It is plain, then, that when the Lord asked the Apostles,''Whom say men that I, the Son of Man, am?'' 33765 [ 55] Had St. Chrysostom felt like a Roman Catholic could he have stopped there? |
33765 | After this, who will trust De Maistre''s facts without testing them? |
33765 | And a little after,"What doth the Catholic Christian, if any part hath cut itself off from the communion of the universal faith? |
33765 | And who then but will desire that the successor of St. Peter should hold St. Peter''s place? |
33765 | Are not all the Bishops clouds, who rain down the words of their preaching, and shine with the light of good works? |
33765 | But how can this dogma be imposed upon us as necessary to salvation, if St. Augustin, St. Chrysostom, and the Church of their day knew it not? |
33765 | But how much is the inference from this fact modified by the language of Cyprian himself? |
33765 | But if they were his deputies, as the present Roman claim would have it, who can express their rashness? |
33765 | But was this power in practice exercised in so unmodified a form? |
33765 | But what are we to say about the language of St. Gregory? |
33765 | But why? |
33765 | But you say, how is it that at Rome a priest is ordained upon the testimony of a deacon? |
33765 | Can a claim be true which is driven to shifts such as this for its maintenance? |
33765 | Could they be ignorant of the constitution of that Church of which they were Primates, Saints, and one a Martyr? |
33765 | Could we have any stronger witness to the antagonism between the Papal and Patriarchal or Episcopal System? |
33765 | Did Peter receive them, and John and James not receive them, and the rest of the Apostles? |
33765 | Did he then betray those rights of St. Peter, which he held dearer than his life? |
33765 | Did he who wrote these words mean to censure Constantine for granting a second hearing after the judgment of Pope Melchiades? |
33765 | Do you consent?'' |
33765 | Does the"obscene rout"of Ronge and Czerski, bursting forth from the bosom of the Roman Church, awake no misgiving? |
33765 | For how can the guilty party praise the judge by whose sentence he has been beaten? |
33765 | Have we gone through so much experience in vain? |
33765 | He says to the Empress:"But[103] what doth the prelate of the Church of Constantinople desire more than he hath obtained? |
33765 | How did this state of things arise? |
33765 | How has nearly the whole intellect of that country become infidel? |
33765 | How is it, then, that we seek not the glory of this name, though offered us, yet another presumes to claim it, though not offered?" |
33765 | How shall a divided Church meet and overcome the philosophical unbelief of these last times? |
33765 | If St. Gregory did not mean this by the terms''Solus Sacerdos,''''Universus Episcopus,''what did he mean? |
33765 | If his decision was final, must they not have known it? |
33765 | If his primacy involved their obedience, must they not have rendered it? |
33765 | If what he believed or taught was immediately the supreme and irrevocable law, why did he not himself pronounce sentence? |
33765 | Most fair and just: St. Cyprian and St. Firmilian may have innocently erred in such a matter; but what of the way in which they treated the Pope? |
33765 | Now, might it not be stated, that St. Cyprian wrote to Pope Stephen, to request him to depose Marcian, Bishop of Arles? |
33765 | Or are not those keys in the Church, where sins are daily remitted? |
33765 | Or are they who say such things wise defenders of the Church or promoters of unity? |
33765 | Or can any words be spoken more opposed in tone than these to the writings of Fathers and decrees of ancient Councils? |
33765 | Or can the truth of Christianity and the unity of the Church rest upon a falsehood? |
33765 | Or what will satisfy him, if the magnificence and glory of so great a city satisfy him not? |
33765 | Take away this foundation, how would she be infallible, since she exists no longer? |
33765 | That is the way of death: who is so mad as to enter on it? |
33765 | The Bishop Paschasinus said,''Again I ask, what is the pleasure of your blessedness?'' |
33765 | The Bishop Paschasinus said,''Does your piety command us to use Ecclesiastical punishment? |
33765 | Under appeal then to so great a judgment, expecting to hear the truth from his colleagues, should he offer them the first example of falsehood? |
33765 | What Roman Catholic would so speak now? |
33765 | What can be more gentle? |
33765 | What more humble? |
33765 | What surely, but prefer the soundness of the whole body to that pestilent and corrupted member? |
33765 | What then is our defence on her part against the charge of schism? |
33765 | What then is the view they present us with? |
33765 | What would St. Chrysostom say to Bellarmine''s doctrine? |
33765 | When Antichrist at his coming calls himself God, will it not be very frivolous, but yet cause great destruction? |
33765 | When the ship of the Church was in distress, whom should we expect to see at the rudder but St. Peter? |
33765 | Who but must view it as a token of that future blessing, that public prayers have been offered up in France and Italy for such a consummation? |
33765 | Who is he, who, in violation of the statutes of the Gospel, in violation of the decrees of Canons, presumes to usurp a new name to himself? |
33765 | Why allege to me_ the custom of a single city_? |
33765 | Why defend against the laws of the Church a fewness of number, which is the source of their pride? |
33765 | Will the Patriarch of Constantinople, or the Archbishop of Moscow, or the Primate of Canterbury, so much as think of assuming it? |
33765 | Would it not be a most miserable success to be able to deceive oneself, or others, as to whether one is or is not within the covenant of salvation? |
33765 | Would not this be fruitless? |
33765 | did Peter receive those keys, and Paul not receive them? |
33765 | is it a private injury that I pursue? |
33765 | or have stated that she was more remarkable for possessing even the bodies of the blessed Apostles than for all other things together? |
33765 | or were ye baptized in the name of Paul? |
33765 | or, the one condition to which victory is attached being broken, crush the deadliest attack of the old enemy? |
33765 | you will say, with no distinction, and with minds equally inclined to both parties? |
10058 | Art thou one of His disciples? |
10058 | At the ninth hour, Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying''Eloi, Eloi, lamma sabacthani?'' 10058 Behold Jesus sayeth to her( Magdalen)''Woman, why weepest thou?''" |
10058 | May clerics follow the legal time in reciting the Divine Office? |
10058 | My God, my God, why has Thou forsaken me? |
10058 | Shall I crucify your King?,( St. John, 19). |
10058 | ( 1073- 1086), labour for liturgical reform? |
10058 | ( 2) To whom do we speak in our daily service of prayer? |
10058 | ( 3) In whose name do we speak? |
10058 | ( Psalm 49, v.16)? |
10058 | And I, that I may pray, have found the heart of my King and my Brother, of my sweet Saviour; shall I not then also pray? |
10058 | Are priests bound to follow the Proper in their own diocese? |
10058 | Are priests bound to recite Matins and Lauds before Mass? |
10058 | Are priests bound to recite Matins and Lauds before Mass? |
10058 | At what time should the little hours be said? |
10058 | At what times should the small hours be recited? |
10058 | But is it a sin to change wilfully the order of the office? |
10058 | But the question arises, when did Rome introduce hymns into her liturgy? |
10058 | But what effect has sin on the recitation of the Office? |
10058 | But what intention ought we to have? |
10058 | But what is to be done in offices where a commemoration prayer and the prayer of the office is from the common? |
10058 | But, was the rhymed, tonic accented lyric, which was to be sung by all sorts and conditions of men, in public, such an outrageous literary sin? |
10058 | Can a priest fulfil his obligation by reciting the office with a companion? |
10058 | Do double offices differ specifically from each other? |
10058 | Do we articulate every word, not adopting a careless or too speedy pronunciation? |
10058 | Do we look on ourselves as instruments which need to be animated with God''s holy spirit in order to bless His holy name? |
10058 | Do we love this holy exercise? |
10058 | Do we say our Hours without interruption? |
10058 | Does a person reciting the Hours sin if he have distractions? |
10058 | Does a person reciting the hours sin, if he have distractions? |
10058 | Does a person, who recites by mistake, an office other than that prescribed fulfil his obligation? |
10058 | Does not our Lord know, that when we perform this duty we would wish to do it with the greatest possible attention?" |
10058 | Does the loss of all the lights and graces and blessings of the Office compensate for the time gained? |
10058 | For what is more worthy of respect than the word of God? |
10058 | For, who has not seen the nervous, pious, anxious cleric, stupidly labouring to acquire even a sufficient intention before beginning his hours? |
10058 | Has it an indulgence attached to it at all? |
10058 | Has not negligence in these matters caused innumerable distractions? |
10058 | Have we adopted some pious thought prior to our reading, so that distractions may be excluded and fervour fostered during our recitation? |
10058 | Have we always formed intentions general and particular, not forgetting to form intentions embracing the intentions of Christ and His Church? |
10058 | Have we chosen suitable time and place to pray? |
10058 | Have we considered well that God is present and that we speak to Him? |
10058 | Have we piously dwelt on these, or on some other subject proper to the Church''s season or according to our needs? |
10058 | Have we rejected even good thoughts which were unsuitable for the time of recitation, and above all have we banished idle or indifferent ones? |
10058 | Have we said our Hours piously, with all the modesty and all the reverence which so holy an action demands? |
10058 | Have we said the Office with all the respect and all the veneration which His almighty majesty calls for? |
10058 | Have we taken pains to mark the places in the Breviary and looked over the rubrics? |
10058 | Have we united ourselves in spirit to the Church, in whose name we are going to praise God? |
10058 | Have we united ourselves to Jesus Christ, Who is the perfect praise of God, the Father? |
10058 | How should a confessor deal with scruples about intention? |
10058 | If a person say the same Hour( e.g., Terce) twice, may he compensate for extra labour by the omission of an equivalent part( e.g., None)? |
10058 | If in the beginning of the prayer mention is made of God the Son, the ending should be_ Per eundem, e.g.,_ Domine Deus noster? |
10058 | If the recital of the office for any canonical hour be interrupted, should the whole hour be repeated? |
10058 | In order to say it attentively have we taken great pains to put away all kinds of distractions? |
10058 | In the hurried reading of the Office, time, a few minutes perhaps, is gained, but what is lost? |
10058 | Is attention required? |
10058 | Is he bound to make assurance doubly sure by reciting the part of which he doubts? |
10058 | Is intention required in reading the hours? |
10058 | Is it a sin to say Matins for following day before finishing office of current day? |
10058 | Is it a sin to say Matins of following day before finishing Compline of the current day? |
10058 | Is such internal attention, such deliberate application or mental advertence necessary for the valid recitation of the office? |
10058 | Is there an obligation to repeat the Hours in the order fixed in the Breviary? |
10058 | Is this prayer merely a sacramental? |
10058 | May Matins be said separately from Lauds without any excusing cause? |
10058 | May Matins be separated from Lauds without cause? |
10058 | May the recitation be interrupted? |
10058 | Mindful of His presence and majesty should we not try earnestly to bless His Holy name and to free our hearts from vain, evil and wandering thoughts? |
10058 | Must every holder of a benefice read the Divine Office? |
10058 | Must every holder of a benefice read the office? |
10058 | Must the person know the meaning of the words read? |
10058 | Now, what sort of intention is best and what sort of intention is necessary? |
10058 | Or do we easily interrupt our prayer on any trifling pretext, and on the first opportunity? |
10058 | Quae conventio Christi el Belial?_ The second means of procuring fervent prayer is the mortification of the passions. |
10058 | Quare sonuerunt nisi ut audiantur? |
10058 | St. Augustine wrote,"_ Et quare dicta sunt, nisi ut sciantur? |
10058 | The old writers on liturgy ask the question:"Why has the Church reckoned seven hours only?" |
10058 | They ask the questions, why did the early Christians pray at dawn and why is the practice continued? |
10058 | They said to one another,"Who shall roll us back the stone from the door of the sepulchre?" |
10058 | Thus St. Gregory''s(?) |
10058 | Was it ignorance or prudence that guided the early hymn writers in their adoption of popular poetic form? |
10058 | What are the divisions or kinds of internal attention? |
10058 | What are the ends for which the Office is said? |
10058 | What causes justify an inversion of the hours? |
10058 | What form did the public prayers, which we may call the divine office, take in the time of the Apostles? |
10058 | What is a person bound to do who forgets part of an Hour-- is he obliged to repeat the full Hour? |
10058 | What is a priest bound to do, who from a grave cause can not find time to recite the whole Office but only a part of it? |
10058 | What is it then? |
10058 | What is the time fixed for recitation of the Office? |
10058 | What is to be done when the office of the feast is of a virgin not a martyr, and a commemoration of a virgin not a martyr is to be made? |
10058 | What is true time as regards recitation of the office? |
10058 | What kind of pronunciation is to be attended to in the recitation of the Divine Office? |
10058 | What kind of verbal pronunciation should be attended to? |
10058 | What knowledge is needed for the valid and for the licit recitation of the Hours? |
10058 | What means should be used to promote pious recitation? |
10058 | What must a person do who has a doubt about omissions? |
10058 | What must a person do who has a doubt that he has omitted something in his recitation of the office? |
10058 | What must be done where the feast is the feast of a Doctor and a commemoration of a Doctor is to be made? |
10058 | What sin is committed by the omission of a notable part of the daily office? |
10058 | What sin is committed by the omission of a notable part? |
10058 | What sins are committed by the omission of the whole office? |
10058 | What then is the difference between doubles of different classes? |
10058 | When may a priest begin the recitation of Matins and Lauds for the following day? |
10058 | When may a priest begin the recitation of Matins and Lauds for the following day? |
10058 | When were vigils held? |
10058 | Where can such sublime forms of prayer and praise be found as in Psalms, 8, 9, 17, 18, 21, 23, 28, 29, 33, 45, 46, 49, 54--to name but a few? |
10058 | Where should the Divine Office be recited? |
10058 | Where should the office be recited? |
10058 | Which attitude is the best? |
10058 | Which books were employed in olden times in reciting the Office? |
10058 | Which causes justify an inversion of the Hours? |
10058 | Which kind of internal attention is required in the reading of the Office? |
10058 | Who amongst priests leads the life of ceaseless toil which the Cure d''Ars led? |
10058 | Who are Beneficed Clergy? |
10058 | Who are a priest''s associates in this work? |
10058 | Who are bound to recite the Divine Office? |
10058 | Who are bound to say the office? |
10058 | Why did the Church adopt the word_ feriae_? |
10058 | Why do priests wish to save time? |
10058 | Why do we offer up public prayer in the evening? |
10058 | Why does the Church desire prayer at the ninth hour? |
10058 | Why does the Church wish us to pray at the sixth hour of the day? |
10058 | Why does the Church wish us to pray at the third hour? |
10058 | Why is prayer offered at this first hour of the day? |
10058 | Why was the change made? |
10058 | With becoming attitude, not lying prone, not crossing our legs; without saluting or speaking to those passing by? |
10058 | _ Distincte_, Do we recite distinctly, observing the ordinary pause at the middle and at the end of each verse, not hurrying the one on the other? |
10058 | _ Divisions of the Divine Office_.--How is the daily Office divided? |
10058 | _ Parts or Hours of the Office_.--How many parts or hours go to make up the Office? |
10058 | _ Quae participatio, quae societas lucis ad tenebras? |
10058 | but_ Domine ad festinandum me adjuva_--"O God, help me to hasten?" |
10058 | external? |
10058 | internal? |
10058 | superficial attention, literal attention? |
10058 | which is, being interpreted,''My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?''" |
2976 | ''What can you do?'' 2976 And after you have been to confession will you love me as you love me now?" |
2976 | And if the father and mother refused? |
2976 | And turn Capuchin, I suppose? |
2976 | And why not to- night? |
2976 | And you told him the truth? |
2976 | Are they mad? |
2976 | Are you a little crazy? |
2976 | Are you sure of this? |
2976 | But how shall I convince you that I am actuated by love and not by complaisance? |
2976 | But what will he say if I do not go? |
2976 | But will you go another day? |
2976 | But,I remarked,"does not the Inquisition object to this dance?" |
2976 | Can you tell me why the owner objects to the stone being taken out and put in at my expense? |
2976 | Certainly,I answered,"but what shall I say to prevent his taking offence?" |
2976 | Certainly,said I,"but what can you mean by wishing you had been Raphael? |
2976 | Did he not bring you to my box? |
2976 | Do you know the niece? |
2976 | Do you only sell hats? |
2976 | Do you tell him all your sins without reserve? |
2976 | Do you think I am taken in by all that? |
2976 | Does he ask you questions? |
2976 | Does he know it? |
2976 | Does she know that we love each other? |
2976 | Does she know, that your revenue is fed solely by the purses of dupes? |
2976 | Has your case been heard yet? |
2976 | Have you had this confessor for long? |
2976 | Have you weighed it? |
2976 | Her house? |
2976 | How about his wife? |
2976 | How about the furniture and the linen? |
2976 | How can I dare to ask him? |
2976 | How did you get that angel? |
2976 | How is it that you are wearing the sling after all these months? |
2976 | How is the prince? |
2976 | How much am I to pay? |
2976 | I am glad to hear it; but what is this, you seem to be making new boots? |
2976 | I am very sorry to hear all this; but tell me what has become of Gertrude? |
2976 | I have committed no crime,I said;"what compensation am I to have when I am released from this filthy and abominable place? |
2976 | I will not follow you,I replied;"the matter can be settled here?" |
2976 | If not, I shall leave; for what can I do in a town where I can only drive, and where the Government keeps assassins in its pay? |
2976 | Indeed I will, sweetheart; but why should we talk of that now? |
2976 | Is he rich? |
2976 | Is she gallant? |
2976 | Is she pretty still? |
2976 | Is she the same with all men? |
2976 | Is the reason known? |
2976 | Is your confessor a young man? |
2976 | Like that? |
2976 | Mine? |
2976 | No remedy? |
2976 | She is like that, is she? |
2976 | Tell me what it is? |
2976 | Then he is not a hard man, as some say? |
2976 | Then she is in love, too? |
2976 | Then they ask impossibilities? |
2976 | Then whom do you think that I am descended from? |
2976 | Then you can lend the money on it? |
2976 | Then you deceived him, and told a lie? |
2976 | Then you do n''t know that you are going to a ball at her house to- night? |
2976 | Then you know this gentleman? |
2976 | Then you lied just now? |
2976 | Then, will you mend me these boots? |
2976 | Very good; but what must I do? |
2976 | Well, I certainly am in the duke''s service, but how did you find it out? |
2976 | Well, what can the Holy Inquisition want to know? |
2976 | What can you ask, and what can I offer, since I must keep myself pure for my husband? |
2976 | What could I claim? |
2976 | What do they want your excellency to do? |
2976 | What do you mean? 2976 What do you think she should do to attract customers?" |
2976 | What do you want in Spain? |
2976 | What do you want to take the cousin for? |
2976 | What have I said? |
2976 | What is he saying? |
2976 | What is his name? |
2976 | What is this? |
2976 | What kind of questions did they ask you? |
2976 | What questions were these? |
2976 | What victory? |
2976 | What? 2976 Where have I seen him?" |
2976 | Where is he? |
2976 | Where is my landlord? |
2976 | Where is this letter? |
2976 | Where shall I send it? |
2976 | Who allowed you to commit this mutilation? 2976 Who obliged you to look at it?" |
2976 | Why did n''t they meet me, then? |
2976 | Why did n''t you give him his ring? |
2976 | Why do you give me such an unjust order? |
2976 | Why do you go to confession so often? |
2976 | Why not? |
2976 | Why not? |
2976 | Why should I read them again? 2976 Why so?" |
2976 | Why unhappy? |
2976 | Why? 2976 Why?" |
2976 | Will you allow me to arrange your shirt so as to obviate it? |
2976 | Will you go and see the duchess? |
2976 | Would you like to come with me to our Lady of Atocha? |
2976 | Would you like to have my companionship? |
2976 | Wrong? 2976 You have been to confession, I suppose?" |
2976 | ''What do you want?'' |
2976 | ?" |
2976 | Are you sure I do n''t love him?" |
2976 | At last I took courage and walked in, and, on my ringing a bell, I heard a voice,"Who is there?" |
2976 | But tell me which I shall do stay or go? |
2976 | But who could help it? |
2976 | Did you come to hear me say this? |
2976 | Do n''t you think it is natural that I should desire to eat the hearts of the scoundrels who have placed me here? |
2976 | Do you recognize that purse and these cards?" |
2976 | Has my husband done so? |
2976 | How and when did you see me?" |
2976 | I also thought of getting a mistress, for what is life without love? |
2976 | I never thought it would be possible to do what you have done; but I suppose it was very difficult?" |
2976 | If it is a burden on you, it is your enemy, and if it is your enemy why do you suffer it thus lightly to gain the victory? |
2976 | If so, do you think it is necessary to apologize for the performance of duty?" |
2976 | In this way I have not to put them on, nor need I trouble myself whether they fit well or ill.""How much do you get?" |
2976 | May I hope?" |
2976 | Petersburg?" |
2976 | She is pretty enough, do n''t you think so?" |
2976 | Such were my castles in Spain; who has not built such? |
2976 | Tell me, my angel, whence comes this unexpected happiness?" |
2976 | The girl stood still and began to laugh, and I was about to turn angrily away when she said,--"I see you do not remember me?" |
2976 | There was no good in talking; I must write; but where was I to find writing materials? |
2976 | This speech had made Soderini blush, and he replied,--"Why do n''t you write a letter to the ambassador, with the arguments you have just used to me?" |
2976 | Undoubtedly, every man worthy of the name longs to be free, but who is really free in this world? |
2976 | Unhappy pride how many forms it assumes, and who is without his own peculiar form of it? |
2976 | Was it the Croce I knew? |
2976 | Was the duke an old man?" |
2976 | What is a servant who does not warn his master under such circumstances but a rascal? |
2976 | What man would expose himself, for the pleasure he enjoys, to the pains of pregnancy and the dangers of childbed? |
2976 | What will come of it?" |
2976 | You dare to tell me that you will not obey?" |
2976 | shall I be obliged to leave Vienna to- morrow?" |
2976 | you are going to Madrid with a letter from Squillace, and you dare to skew it?" |
31311 | Who is the man that can understand his own way? |
31311 | Are children obliged to obey their parents in the choice of a state of life? |
31311 | Are mixed marriages vocations? |
31311 | Are not conversions often brought about by mixed marriages? |
31311 | Are not great talents necessary in order to enter the priesthood? |
31311 | Are not some parents to be blamed for their indifference or their opposition with regard to higher vocations in their children? |
31311 | Are not some parents unjust towards children that wish to enter the religious state? |
31311 | Are religious useful to others as well as to themselves? |
31311 | Are we obliged to follow the vocation which God gives us? |
31311 | At what age may children enter the religious state? |
31311 | But how are we to recognize this voice of conscience? |
31311 | By what other mark may a person recognize a vocation to the religious state? |
31311 | Can this doctrine be explained by a comparison? |
31311 | Can you give a Scripture example illustrating this doctrine more forcibly? |
31311 | Can you give some examples showing the effects of this interior voice? |
31311 | Can you illustrate this principle by particular instances? |
31311 | Can you quote other reliable authority on this matter of uncertain vocations? |
31311 | Can you quote reliable authority for this doctrine? |
31311 | Commenting on these words of the Gospel, St. John Chrysostom says:"If children are driven from Christ, who will deserve to go near Him? |
31311 | DO VOCATIONS TO THE PRIESTHOOD COME DIRECTLY FROM GOD? |
31311 | Did all the other apostles receive their vocations directly from Our Lord? |
31311 | Do not a larger percentage persevere when subjects enter the religious state late in life? |
31311 | Do parents commit sin in preventing their children from entering the religious state? |
31311 | Do the Fathers of the Church recommend virginity? |
31311 | Does God, even in this life, punish parents for having prevented the higher vocations of their children? |
31311 | Does Our Lord manifest any special preference for the young? |
31311 | Does St. Augustine teach the same doctrine? |
31311 | Does not the Holy Ghost diffuse such special graces with equal liberality later in life? |
31311 | For do we not see children put early to those avocations, arts, or trades which they are to follow in after life? |
31311 | For what fellowship hath light with darkness, or what part hath the faithful with the unbeliever?" |
31311 | Has any one of the Popes given his views on this subject? |
31311 | Has every person a vocation? |
31311 | He was converted directly, but to his question:"Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?" |
31311 | How do you prove that matrimony is a vocation? |
31311 | How do you prove that virginity is more pleasing to God? |
31311 | How is it proved that the state of virginity is a vocation? |
31311 | How is this doctrine proved? |
31311 | How is this proved? |
31311 | How is this unjust and unreasonable conduct of parents more clearly shown? |
31311 | How may a person know that this desire comes from God, even indirectly? |
31311 | How may this desire be obtained? |
31311 | How, then, can they be excepted from the class of persons of whom the Holy Ghost says:"Over them the devil hath power"? |
31311 | If matrimony is a vocation from God, why are many married people unhappy? |
31311 | In what other way do religious contribute to the salvation of souls? |
31311 | In what other way do you explain the happiness enjoyed by religious? |
31311 | Is a firm will the only mark of a vocation to the religious state? |
31311 | Is a special vocation necessary in order to secure salvation in the marriage state? |
31311 | Is entrance into the religious state more important for some than for others? |
31311 | Is it a sin to prevent a person from following a vocation to the priesthood? |
31311 | Is it allowable for priests, parents, teachers, and others to foster and encourage vocations to the priesthood in the youth committed to their care? |
31311 | Is it allowable to encourage those who give signs of a vocation to enter the religious state? |
31311 | Is it necessary that vocations to the priesthood should come directly from God? |
31311 | Is it necessary to have a special vocation in order to enter the priesthood? |
31311 | Is it not beneath God''s notice to give a particular vocation to each person? |
31311 | Is it right to pray for the grace of a vocation to the priesthood? |
31311 | Is not long deliberation as well as the advice of many friends necessary in order to avoid mistakes? |
31311 | Is there any special blessing promised to those who follow this counsel? |
31311 | Is this counsel given to all? |
31311 | Is this counsel of chastity recommended to all? |
31311 | Is this counsel recommended in the Sacred Scriptures and in the Fathers? |
31311 | Is this doctrine of St. Ignatius supported by Sacred Scripture? |
31311 | MATRIMONY-- IS IT A VOCATION? |
31311 | MATRIMONY-- IS IT A VOCATION? |
31311 | May this desire be acquired by external means? |
31311 | Nathanael saith to Him: Whence knowest Thou me? |
31311 | The oldest brother embraced him, saying:"My little brother Nivard, do you see this castle and these lands? |
31311 | This thought is certainly very startling, but how can the matter be explained? |
31311 | What Scripture warrant have we for this counsel? |
31311 | What are the evangelical counsels? |
31311 | What are the means of preserving a vocation whilst preparing to enter the religious state? |
31311 | What are you doing under the paternal roof? |
31311 | What do Father Faber and St. Alphonsus say on this subject? |
31311 | What do the Fathers of the Church say of parents who oppose children that wish to enter the religious state? |
31311 | What do the Sacred Scriptures say of mixed marriages? |
31311 | What does St. Augustine teach concerning special vocations? |
31311 | What does St. Bernard teach about this question? |
31311 | What does St. Francis de Sales say about expecting direct proofs from God? |
31311 | What does St. Francis de Sales teach on this point? |
31311 | What does St. Vincent de Paul say on this point? |
31311 | What does the Council of Trent teach on this point? |
31311 | What does the venerable Louis de Ponte teach on the subject of matrimony? |
31311 | What if one should exhort people in general to choose matrimony as a state preferable to perpetual chastity? |
31311 | What if this divine call should change to coldness and repugnance? |
31311 | What is a vocation? |
31311 | What is meant by a pure intention? |
31311 | What is meant by the desire to become a priest? |
31311 | What is the advantage of this counsel? |
31311 | What is the best remedy for these evils? |
31311 | What is the doctrine of St Basil on this subject? |
31311 | What is the doctrine of St. Thomas with regard to religious vocations in the young? |
31311 | What is the exact teaching of the Church on the comparative merits of matrimony and virginity? |
31311 | What is the exact teaching of theology with regard to parents preventing their children from entering the religious state? |
31311 | What is the fundamental principle or essence of the religious state? |
31311 | What is the proverb, or"saying,"among the old folks about marriage? |
31311 | What is the remarkable saying of St. Gregory Nazianzen on this subject? |
31311 | What is to be done when subjects can not enter religion at an early age? |
31311 | What is to be said of those that know nothing about vocations? |
31311 | What is to be said of those who, having opportunities, give this subject little or no thought? |
31311 | What other reason may be given why a religious vocation should be followed promptly? |
31311 | What parent would not prefer to see a child sick than dead? |
31311 | What practical conclusion may drawn from these words of Our Lord? |
31311 | What should be done by a person who thinks of entering the religious state, but fears that he may not be called to it by Almighty God? |
31311 | What, then, is the principal difference in the feelings or emotions of those called to the religious state? |
31311 | When a young man ascertains that he is called to the priesthood, is his vocation fully decided? |
31311 | Which are the impediments to entrance into religion? |
31311 | Which are the marks of a vocation to the priesthood? |
31311 | Which are the marks of a vocation to the religious state? |
31311 | Which are the principal states of life? |
31311 | Which are the proper motives for entering the religious state? |
31311 | Which is the first of the evangelical counsels? |
31311 | Which is the second evangelical counsel? |
31311 | Which is the third evangelical counsel? |
31311 | Why are religious happier and more cheerful than others? |
31311 | Why are they called counsels? |
31311 | Why are they called"evangelical"counsels? |
31311 | Why do so many people enter the religious state? |
31311 | Why is a virtuous life necessary in one who aspires to the priesthood? |
31311 | Why is retirement, or seclusion from the world, necessary in order to preserve the grace of a religious vocation? |
31311 | Why is virginity to be preferred to the marriage state? |
31311 | Why should a vocation to the religious state be followed promptly? |
31311 | Why so? |
31311 | Why, then, does the Church grant dispensations in this matter? |
31311 | Why, then, should a rule so well observed in other spheres be neglected in the case of a religious life? |
31311 | replied the child with more than a child''s thoughtfulness,"are you going to take heaven for yourselves and leave earth for me? |
50151 | But qui sunt hi, et laudavimus eos? |
50151 | But what assiduity does not the obstinate perversity of men frustrate? |
50151 | But what can this be? |
50151 | But what soil is free from darnel and tares? |
50151 | But what[ a task] will that be? |
50151 | In what garden do the roses, magnificent and fragrant, surpass[ the other flowers], without the thorns that surround them? |
50151 | One would rather expect a subjunctive with ut, making it read,"Who are they, that we may praise them?" |
50151 | The matter is carried to the Audiencia, the decision of which is unfavorable to the bishop; he dies soon afterward( early in 1714? |
50151 | The places which are noted as villages[ i.e., on an accompanying map?] |
50151 | What greater praise[ than this] can be given them? |
50151 | Who will have courage to weave them, or hunt for them, when he knows that he must lose on them? |
50151 | [ 31] Where are lilies found without having nettles near them? |
54041 | [ And there are] Francia and Inglaterra; do they bring much less[ to Europa]? |
54041 | As for revenues, it had three and a half residence lots and two lots occupied by shops, which yielded twenty- six pesos and[ word omitted?] |
54041 | Grainfields in Bonga.--By purchase made of six quiñons of land,[ irrigated?] |
54041 | Have I heard some one argue that España has[ 78] need of preventing thus the exportation of silver? |
54041 | It is well known that España consumes more cinnamon than all the other nations; can there, then, be greater folly? |
54041 | Licentiate Manuel Suarez de Olivera and Doña Maria Gomez del Castillo( his wife?) |
54041 | People will say,"Where would we consume so much pepper?" |
54041 | The Dutch maintain Ceilon? |
54041 | Then where does Olanda consume it, I would like to know? |
61774 | Lived ever a man or a people on an island, however insignificant and bleak and bare, without feeling for it pride and love? 61774 A long time? 50111 For what purpose, Father? |
50111 | Have you had any words or quarreled with any person? |
50111 | How many years,I asked him,"have you been a Christian?" |
50111 | Then for the love of God, will you give me at least a little of that hot water? |
50111 | Are not the murders that thou committest at night enough, without trying to kill in daylight, and in sight of all?" |
50111 | But what good end could so mistaken and pernicious a decision have? |
50111 | He immediately answered:"Is it possible? |
50111 | He repeated in great astonishment:"So great, so great is God?" |
50111 | I asked him"Juan, have you ever sworn or told a lie?" |
50111 | Is not your Reverence of my opinion that we should cross on Saturday morning?" |
50111 | Thereupon I asked him further:"Who baptized you, and how?" |
50111 | They must have thought or suspected that I had arms; for who would risk his own life?" |
50111 | Was it not better then to attack? |
50111 | What blame could be attached to Don Sabiniano because the ship in which Don Pedro de Villaroel was commander was wrecked? |
50111 | Where did Don Sabiniano sin because another ship was lost in which the commander Ugalde and Thomàs Ramos were so interested? |
50111 | Who can understand that philosophy?... |
50111 | Who doubts that Don Luis de Aduna, already informed of the multitude of those whom he was going to seek, had carefully considered the hazard? |
50111 | Who has ever grown rich through war? |
50111 | Who would believe such a thing here? |
50111 | and who has not lost in war that which in peace he held secure? |
50111 | is God so great that He could do that?" |
50111 | or why should I swear or tell a lie?" |
31007 | ''"May n''t I come home with my brothers after the morning church is done?" |
31007 | ''Anne, what does she mean?'' |
31007 | ''Anne,''I whispered,''are you awake? |
31007 | ''Are there places you could hide in, in this church,''said Serry,''like in the old church at Furzely? |
31007 | ''Are they back?'' |
31007 | ''Are you all there, dears?'' |
31007 | ''Are you cold, dear?'' |
31007 | ''Barstow will be back immediately, no doubt?'' |
31007 | ''Bury-- was that the name?'' |
31007 | ''But how did you get the address without going to the Barrys for it?'' |
31007 | ''But,''said a little voice,''wo n''t the getting- well children catch the whooping- cough?'' |
31007 | ''But-- what about the possibility of lodgings?'' |
31007 | ''Ca n''t you leave a message?'' |
31007 | ''Ca n''t you let us come in and wait, if Lady Nearn will be in soon?'' |
31007 | ''Could they have gone to get cakes for tea, for a surprise,''she said suddenly,''and have lost their way coming back? |
31007 | ''Curfew?'' |
31007 | ''Did you ever hear such a little prig as Maud?'' |
31007 | ''Do you know the number of the Barrys''house in Rodney Square?'' |
31007 | ''Do you know?'' |
31007 | ''Do you mean the one with the deep purplish flowers?'' |
31007 | ''Does Mrs. Barry live here?'' |
31007 | ''Has n''t it?'' |
31007 | ''Have they taken off their hats and jackets?'' |
31007 | ''How many rooms are there?'' |
31007 | ''I like being in Mrs. Parsley''s kitchen for a while in the evening very much, do n''t you, Serry?'' |
31007 | ''If I do,''she wrote,''do you think I can trust you and Jack to take care of the two little ones? |
31007 | ''Is Lady Nearn at home? |
31007 | ''Is n''t it dreadful to have lost it? |
31007 | ''Is n''t there any one you could ask about those places?'' |
31007 | ''Is she waking?'' |
31007 | ''Is there a railway station there?'' |
31007 | ''Is to- morrow Sunday?'' |
31007 | ''It looks so dull,''and she ran out of the room and down the passage to nurse''s own room, calling out,''Nurse, nurse, where are you? |
31007 | ''It would n''t suit my name if I did; would it, mums? |
31007 | ''It''s come undone,''she said,''yet how could it have done? |
31007 | ''Jock''seems a better short for it than''Jack,''does n''t it? |
31007 | ''Let''s see, how can we wrap you up? |
31007 | ''Listen; what is it?'' |
31007 | ''May I run in to see her?'' |
31007 | ''Might n''t we perhaps get lodgings at a farmhouse, where it would n''t be at all dear? |
31007 | ''Miss_ what_, Jack?'' |
31007 | ''Mother,''she said,''you do n''t think it could_ mean_ anything-- my dream, I mean? |
31007 | ''Mums, if you do go down one day to see the farm, you''ll take me with you, wo n''t you?'' |
31007 | ''Mums,''I said,''why have you taken out gran''s diamond thing? |
31007 | ''Newmens,''said Anne,''what_ do_ you mean?'' |
31007 | ''Now, my dears, why did n''t you say so before?'' |
31007 | ''Nurse, where are you?'' |
31007 | ''Oh, Jack,''she said,''are you sure?'' |
31007 | ''Oh,''said Anne-- she and I were first at the toilet- table,--''are you going to wear gran''s ornament, mother?'' |
31007 | ''Oh-- is mums''brooch broken? |
31007 | ''Suppose we got a railway guide and looked at some names?'' |
31007 | ''That nice woman,''I said,''the one who gave you the cup, is it bracing where she lives?'' |
31007 | ''That would n''t cost much, would it?'' |
31007 | ''The very moment nurse''s back is turned you begin disobeying her?'' |
31007 | ''Was she your nurse?'' |
31007 | ''Well, why should n''t Maud and I have a simple pleasure too?'' |
31007 | ''Were you playing with mother''s jewels?'' |
31007 | ''What are you going to wear, my dear Valeria?'' |
31007 | ''What do you mean, Maudie?'' |
31007 | ''What do you mean? |
31007 | ''What do you mean?'' |
31007 | ''What is it like-- the brooch, I mean-- didn''t you say it was a brooch?'' |
31007 | ''What is it?'' |
31007 | ''What is it?'' |
31007 | ''What is it?'' |
31007 | ''What is the brooch like, that your cousins have found? |
31007 | ''What''s that?'' |
31007 | ''What''s the meaning of this?'' |
31007 | ''When did you touch it? |
31007 | ''Where_ have_ you been?'' |
31007 | ''Which way shall we go, Jack?'' |
31007 | ''Who are they, Linny?'' |
31007 | ''Why ca n''t we go to Furzely?'' |
31007 | ''Why is n''t the gas lighted?'' |
31007 | ''Wo n''t you come and take your things off, Anne?'' |
31007 | ''Wo n''t you come in here?'' |
31007 | ''Wo n''t you sit down and rest a bit, ma''am,''she said,''before I show you the rooms?'' |
31007 | ''Would you know it if you heard it?'' |
31007 | ''You could take down a few sofa rugs, and two or three folding chairs and so on, I daresay?'' |
31007 | ''_ Gone out_, Master Jack? |
31007 | ---- AUTHORISED OR REVISED? |
31007 | ---- DISESTABLISHMENT AND DISENDOWMENT; WHAT ARE THEY? |
31007 | ---- RHYME? |
31007 | ---- THE PREVAILING TYPES OF PHILOSOPHY: CAN THEY LOGICALLY REACH REALITY? |
31007 | A very valuable thing, I suppose it is?'' |
31007 | AND REASON? |
31007 | And her name sounds steady and neat, does n''t it? |
31007 | And just fancy what I did? |
31007 | And no sooner did Serry catch sight of it than she tugged my arm, and said quite loud--''Is that the red- eared boy, Jack?'' |
31007 | And would mother come to see her? |
31007 | And you do n''t know the other family''s name?'' |
31007 | Anne opened her mouth in a silly way she has, just enough to make him say,''What are you gaping at, Miss Anne, may I ask?'' |
31007 | Are n''t you, Hebe?'' |
31007 | Are you to drive us?'' |
31007 | BLACKIE( Prof. John Stuart).--WHAT DOES HISTORY TEACH? |
31007 | But how_ can_ it have come undone?'' |
31007 | But what in the world were you all doing here?'' |
31007 | But what was the new one you were going to tell me about, dear Valeria?'' |
31007 | But what were_ we_ to do? |
31007 | But where are Miss Warwick and Miss Serry?'' |
31007 | But who was it that was ill? |
31007 | Can I see her?'' |
31007 | Did n''t they go to the dancing with the rest of you?'' |
31007 | Did n''t you know? |
31007 | Do n''t you think Lady Nearn will be in soon?'' |
31007 | He was under- bailiff to Lord Uxfort up in the north, and then an uncle died and left him a small farm near-- oh, where is it near? |
31007 | Hepland,''and the one or two everything shops( do n''t you_ love_''everything''shops? |
31007 | How ever are we to wait here till to- morrow morning? |
31007 | How long does it take by train, and how far is the farm-- what''s the name of it, by the bye?--from the station?'' |
31007 | I could see that nurse thought mums very funny, as she went on asking ever so many questions about Maud-- above all, was she coughing? |
31007 | I think my first words would have been,''Oh, Anne, how_ could_ you go out and frighten us so?'' |
31007 | I''d a good deal to tell the girls about when we got home, had n''t I? |
31007 | Is it diamonds?'' |
31007 | It was a pity to start so grumpily on our first walk, but things never do go quite right for long in this world, do they? |
31007 | It''s just a nice little walk by the road from here-- you''d like that, would n''t you, Anne?'' |
31007 | Jack, can you say that verse about the shadows or the darkness? |
31007 | Jack, what do Anne and Maud mean?'' |
31007 | Jack,_ do_ you think Anne and Serry can have gone out by themselves?'' |
31007 | Mrs. Parsley was the farmer''s wife who used to be''Homer''--rather a come- down from''Homer''to''Parsley,''was n''t it? |
31007 | My life would be a very different affair if I had four sisters all like Hebe and Maud-- wouldn''t it just? |
31007 | Now, I hope that''s not rude? |
31007 | Now, is n''t that rather trying? |
31007 | Often and often I go to her room when she''s dressing, and tap at the door and say--''Have you lost something, mums?'' |
31007 | Oh, Alan''--Alan is father--''don''t you think gran would let us refurnish even the third drawing- room? |
31007 | P.).--ARE THE EFFECTS OF USE AND DISUSE INHERITED? |
31007 | Parsley?'' |
31007 | Parsley?'' |
31007 | Real May weather, is n''t it, ma''am?'' |
31007 | She was still only playing,_ luckily_, when, what_ do_ you think happened? |
31007 | That was something to be proud of, now, was n''t it? |
31007 | Then I began,''One, two, three, four''--was it fancy, or did I hear a little smothered laugh just as I was going to say''five?'' |
31007 | Valeria is mums''name; is n''t it pretty? |
31007 | WHAT ARE THEY? |
31007 | WHAT ARE THEY? |
31007 | Was n''t it queer? |
31007 | Was n''t it sweet of her? |
31007 | Was n''t it too bad? |
31007 | Was n''t it? |
31007 | Was that her reason for following us, that she thought it would be a good chance for playing us this trick? |
31007 | Was that what she had been after? |
31007 | We''d lead old Jack a dance would n''t we, Maud? |
31007 | What can it be? |
31007 | What do you want to know about it for?'' |
31007 | What does it matter?'' |
31007 | What should we do? |
31007 | Where had I seen that rather frowning, eager look in a face before? |
31007 | Where_ could_ they be? |
31007 | You see it was a good thing for the girls that I''d been there before, and knew all the ins and outs of the place, was n''t it? |
31007 | does n''t it just? |
31007 | is it a punishment to me for having made too much of the loss of that unlucky brooch? |
21615 | And do you account as nothing, sir, the liberty of addressing me thus? |
21615 | Are these then my judges? |
21615 | B.--Pray, Sir, is the''Turkish Spy''a genuine book? 21615 Can I see this Petronius? |
21615 | Do n''t you perceive,said Madame Tencin,"that they are_ nonsense verses_?" |
21615 | Do you ask why Leo did not take the sacrament on his death- bed?--How could he? 21615 Do you hear, madman?" |
21615 | Heretofore money was given to poets that they might sing: how much will you give me, Paul, to be silent? |
21615 | Is it, in heaven, a crime to love too well? |
21615 | Some Roman senators examined the Jews in this manner:--If God hath no delight in the worship of idols, why did he not destroy them? 21615 The earl, when he kissed his hand, the king hung about his neck, slabbering his cheeks, saying--''For God''s sake, when shall I see thee again? |
21615 | Thou dear_ Will Shoestring_, how shall I draw thee? 21615 Why should he speak of what he did not understand?" |
21615 | [ 19] Who will pursue important labours when they read these anecdotes? 21615 ''For God''s sake let me,''said the king:--''Shall I, shall I?'' 21615 ''s grounds? 21615 A furious foe, unconscious, proves a friend; On MILTON''S VERSE does BENTLEY comment? 21615 A later catholic theologist, the famous Tillemont, condemns_ all the illustrious pagans_ to the_ eternal torments of Hell_? 21615 Am I considered in nowise resembling him? 21615 And for what was this unhappy Jesuit condemned? 21615 And from whence did the Arabian fabulists borrow it? 21615 And if angels know things more clearly in a morning? 21615 And if she escaped, of what use was it? 21615 And when I asked him if it would be the religion of Jesus Christ, or that of Mahomet? 21615 And when the midwife said,Madam, cry out, that will give you ease,"she answered in_ good Spanish_,"How dare you give me such advice? |
21615 | And you really trouble yourself about this? |
21615 | Another is sarcastic-- Ut canerent data multa olim sunt Vatibus à ¦ ra: Ut taceam, quantum tu mihi, Paule, dabis? |
21615 | Are there persons who value_ books_ by the length of their titles, as formerly the ability of a physician was judged by the dimensions of his wig? |
21615 | Are they deficient in figures? |
21615 | Are we not to class among_ literary follies_ the strange researches which writers, even of the present day, have made in_ Antediluvian_ times? |
21615 | But how has it happened that this_ vicar_ should be so notorious, and one in much higher rank, acting the same part, should have escaped notice? |
21615 | But what has produced this general and expanding taste for literary research in the world, and especially in England? |
21615 | But where did the Greeks find it? |
21615 | Dacier, a poetical pedant after all, was asked who was the greater poet, Homer or Virgil? |
21615 | Did he appear in the morning, noon, or evening? |
21615 | Did he seem to be young or old? |
21615 | Did not your eminence perceive that not only they knew not their parts, but that they were all_ drunk_?" |
21615 | Did the wise and grave senate dread those inconveniences which attend its indiscriminate use? |
21615 | Do I resemble Symmachus? |
21615 | Does it conceal it? |
21615 | Does it discover the genius of the writer? |
21615 | Does the English Turkish Spy differ from the French one? |
21615 | Even Aquinas could gravely debate, Whether Christ was not an hermaphrodite? |
21615 | From a soil so arid what can be expected but insipid fruits? |
21615 | Had she a thorough knowledge of the Book of Sentences, and all it contains? |
21615 | Had she perished, what would have become of the epitaph? |
21615 | He acquaints us with the following circumstances of the immorality of that age:"Who has not got a mistress besides his wife? |
21615 | He inquires if it were true that they had at Bologna_ an entire Petronius_? |
21615 | He says,"To read the pamphlets of a Perizonius and a Kuster on the à � s grave of the ancients, who would not renounce all commerce with antiquity? |
21615 | He thus describes himself in one of his letters; and who could be in better humour? |
21615 | How is it possible, that with such a name he could be right concerning the à � s grave? |
21615 | How long from Art''s reflected hues Shalt thou a mimic charm receive? |
21615 | How many angels can dance on the point of a very fine needle, without jostling one another? |
21615 | How, said Alexander, did we not separate_ yesterday_ from each other? |
21615 | If genius has too often complained of its patrons, has it not also often over- valued their protection? |
21615 | If the followers of Hippocrates formed the majority, was it not very unorthodox in the Gnidians to prefer taking physic their own way? |
21615 | In God''s name, said Gadiffer, what means your majesty? |
21615 | In the first scene of the following act, when he was asked"Why did you not keep your children with you? |
21615 | In what dress was he? |
21615 | In youth he was luxurious; In manhood he was cruel; In old age he was avaricious: What could be hoped from him? |
21615 | Is another full of figures? |
21615 | Is it any where said that we must believe your old prophets( with whom your memory seems overburdened) to be more perfect than our gods? |
21615 | Is it obscure? |
21615 | Is my style too perspicuous? |
21615 | Is this true? |
21615 | Jackson of Exeter, in reply to a question of Dryden,"What passion can not music raise or quell?" |
21615 | Laboured? |
21615 | Must we suppose that men of letters are exempt from the human passions? |
21615 | N''es- tu pas Barrabas, Busiris, Phalaris, Ganelon, Le Felon? |
21615 | Negligent? |
21615 | Nous nous aimons un peu, c''est notre foible à tous; Le prix que nous valons que le sçait mieux que nous? |
21615 | Now listen to me: Is it possible that a virgin can bring forth a child without ceasing to be a virgin? |
21615 | One asked the other,"Why do you want two cushions, when I have only one?" |
21615 | Or is it too grave? |
21615 | Others again debated-- Whether the angel Gabriel appeared to the Virgin Mary in the shape of a serpent, of a dove, of a man, or of a woman? |
21615 | Our eyes only behold manna: are you desirous of knowing the reason? |
21615 | Pere Bohours seriously asks if a German_ can be a_ BEL ESPRIT? |
21615 | Pere Bouhours observes, that the Spanish poets display an extravagant imagination, which is by no means destitute of_ esprit_--shall we say_ wit_? |
21615 | Self- love prevails too much in every state; Who, like ourselves, our secret worth can rate? |
21615 | Shall one letter be found not sufficiently serious? |
21615 | She then asked why M. Menage was not there? |
21615 | She then inquired aside of the chancellor whether the academicians were to sit or stand before her? |
21615 | She, dissembling, asked him if he had the gout? |
21615 | Sire( said Floridas), it is true; but one thing surprises me:--how is it that our wounds have healed in one night? |
21615 | So men are valued; their labours vilified by fellowes of no worth themselves, as things of nought: Who could not have done as much? |
21615 | So that all this, opposed to the gravity, the sobriety, the majesty of Virgil, what is it but tinsel compared with gold?" |
21615 | The old countess of Mar rushed into the room, and taking the king in her arms, asked how he dared to lay his hands on the Lord''s anointed? |
21615 | Then said I to them, shall we have part of you in the other world when the Messiah shall come? |
21615 | Then they sent to the queens, to ask if the king came into their apartments? |
21615 | Then, said the king, some of us are enchanted; Floridas, didst thou not think we separated_ yesterday_? |
21615 | There are five novels in prose of Lopes de Vega; the first without A, the second without E, the third without I,& c. Who will attempt to verify them? |
21615 | They asked the chamberlain, if the king frequently saw him? |
21615 | Thou dear outside, will you be_ combing your wig_, playing with your_ box_, or picking your teeth?" |
21615 | Was his garment white or of two colours? |
21615 | Was his linen clean or foul? |
21615 | Was she acquainted with the mechanic and liberal arts? |
21615 | Was this a mere stroke of humour, or designed to insinuate that the freedom of criticism could only be allowed to his lacquey? |
21615 | Well, said the king, have ye news of the king of England? |
21615 | What are we to understand? |
21615 | What could Racine do? |
21615 | What greater plague can hell itself devise, Than to be willing thus to tantalise? |
21615 | What is more agreeable to the curiosity of the mind and the eye than the portraits of great characters? |
21615 | What murder, or what war, has ever been occasioned for a virgin? |
21615 | What spot on earth could you find, which, like this, can so interest your vanity and gratify your taste?" |
21615 | What therefore must we think of an unhappy marriage, since a happy one is exposed to such evils? |
21615 | What was the colour of the Virgin Mary''s hair? |
21615 | What was the consequence? |
21615 | What were the intentions of Pletho? |
21615 | When a poem was shown to him which had been highly commended, he sarcastically asked if it would"lower the price of bread?" |
21615 | When he was introduced to Pelisson, who wished to be serviceable to him, the minister said,"In what can he be employed? |
21615 | Where is TRUTH? |
21615 | Whether the pious at the resurrection will rise with their bowels? |
21615 | Whether there are excrements in Paradise? |
21615 | Who can read his history of Chidiock Titchbourne unmoved? |
21615 | Who can refrain from laughter, when one of these commentators even points his attacks at the very name of his adversary? |
21615 | Who does not regret the loss of the Anticato of CÃ ¦ sar? |
21615 | Who is gratified by"the mad Cornarus,"or"the flayed Fox?" |
21615 | Who is not charmed with that fine expression of her poetical sensibility? |
21615 | Why d----e what would you be at? |
21615 | Why did Plato so severely condemn the great bard, and imitate him? |
21615 | Why do you buy so many books? |
21615 | Why rage, then? |
21615 | Will my letters be condemned for their length? |
21615 | Will some of them be criticised for their brevity? |
21615 | Will you not change these foolish sentiments? |
21615 | Will you not convert yourself? |
21615 | Would not a savage, who had never listened to a musical instrument, feel certain emotions at listening to one for the first time? |
21615 | Would you pervert us? |
21615 | _ Quid vides festucam in_ OCULO_ fratris tui, et trabem in_ OCULO_ tuo non vides_? |
21615 | _ Religion_ rendered cheerful the abrupt night of futurity; and what can_ philosophy_ do more, or rather, can philosophy do as much? |
21615 | and when she was told that he did not belong to the Academy, she asked why he did not? |
21615 | at the same time, he generally finishes a period with--"Do you hear, you dog?" |
21615 | or can refuse to sympathise with his account of the painful difficulties of the English Monarchs with their loyal subjects of the old faith? |
21615 | returned Arnauld,"have we not all Eternity to rest in?" |
21615 | sarcastically returns,"What passion_ can_ music raise or quell?" |
21615 | thy death defend? |
21615 | who inquires if angels pass from one extreme to another without going through the_ middle_? |
21615 | who of those who believed in you have I ever treated so cruelly? |
47169 | Can any one wonder that it takes cold and dies? |
47169 | Have they been rolled hither by a general deluge, or by some later partial revolution of nature? |
47169 | How long would the Jesuits themselves have preserved their influence with them? |
47169 | How, he says, could these masses of granite have been deposited here? |
47169 | I am tempted here to go further, and to ask, who enables him to purchase those articles? |
47169 | Is it then reasonable that we should expect it to be more successful in such infant states as these new republics? |
47169 | May it not have been the crab- apple? |
47169 | Take his whole equipment-- examine everything about him-- and what is there not of raw hide that is not British? |
47169 | This to your Excellency, to the King, and to God,--we shall go to the Devil!--and at the hour of our death where will be our help? |
47169 | What would have been the consequences of the opposite system? |
47169 | What, then, is the conclusion we must draw from this fact? |
47169 | Who would have supposed that the Indians of Araucania could have known or cared whether England and Spain were at war or not? |
47169 | _ Mactra_? |
47169 | marângatu terehendu àngà oreneê poriahu imbo àyeucabo àngà? |
47169 | who but the foreign trader? |
47169 | who buys his master''s hides, and enables that master to employ and pay him? |
47577 | Are not beginnings necessary everywhere? |
47577 | Are not preparations needed for the attainment of every object? |
47577 | But is that any reason why all should be abandoned? |
47577 | But who could make up his mind to do this? |
47577 | Do you[ 319 i.e., 321] know whether he was obeyed or not? |
47577 | Est- ce là tout le profit quant à l''auancement du culte de Dieu? |
47577 | Est- ce peu que d''auoir ce si bon fondement de Iustice en nos peuplades,& ce tant[ 309 i.e., 311] asseuré gage de bon succez? |
47577 | Et sçauez[ 319 i.e., 321] vous, s''il fut obey? |
47577 | Have you run, only to thus weary yourselves? |
47577 | Hereupon the English Captain changed his mien and his voice, and, frowning in the most proper manner,"How now( said he), are you imposing on us? |
47577 | Icy le Capitaine Anglois chãgea de mine,& de ton,& se refroignant comm''il falloit, quoy donc( dit- il) vous nous imposez icy? |
47577 | Is it a small thing to have such a foundation of Justice in our colonies, and this so[ 309 i.e., 311] sure pledge of great success? |
47577 | Le Pere respondit, Mais mõsieur, m''aués- vous iamais ouy mesdire d''eux? |
47577 | Mais est ce à dire pourtãt qu''il faille tout quitter là? |
47577 | N''auez- vous couru que pour ainsi vous lasser? |
47577 | Ne faut- il pas des cõmencemens par tout? |
47577 | Ne faut- il pas des dispositions pour arriuer où on pretend? |
47577 | Quel droict y ont- ils plus que nous? |
47577 | The Father answers,"But, Sir, have you ever heard me slander them?" |
47577 | Vous donnés à entendre qu''auez commission de vostre Roy,& n''en pouuez produire aucun tesmoignage? |
47577 | What fruit then do you bring us from your labors?" |
47577 | What greater rights have they than we? |
47577 | _ Quæritur_: can they conscientiously go thither under these circumstances? |
47577 | despendu que pour consumer, paty sinon pour encores par dessus en estre diffamez en France? |
47577 | endured suffering, only to be abused for it in France? |
47577 | expended, only for the sake of consuming? |
34257 | If I buy thee,asked one of a Spartan captive,"and treat thee well, wilt thou be good?" |
34257 | Why trouble ourselves,asks Professor Huxley,"about matters of which, however important they may be, we do know nothing and can know nothing? |
34257 | Above all, where is the Catholic whose heart is not enlarged by such contemplation? |
34257 | And are not intellectual delights akin to those religion brings? |
34257 | And does not this make the world lean to the side of those who would eliminate God from nature? |
34257 | And in what way shall we best accomplish this task? |
34257 | And is not religion itself a kind of celestial education, which trains the soul to godlike life? |
34257 | And is not the Bible God''s word? |
34257 | And is not the Blessed Saviour the Eternal Word? |
34257 | And is not the Gospel the Word, which, like an electric thrill, runs to the ends of the world? |
34257 | And what has been the issue of all their disputes but hatreds and sects, persecutions and wars? |
34257 | And what passion gives better promise of blessings to one''s self and to one''s fellow- men? |
34257 | And who shall so clothe it, if not he who has the freest, the most flexible, the clearest, the best disciplined mind? |
34257 | And yet, since man''s heart is the home of contradictions, is it not also true to say that he is naturally religious? |
34257 | Are corn and beef and iron the only good and useful things? |
34257 | Are not the primal virtues, those which make life good and fair and which are a woman''s glory,--are they not humble and quiet and unobtrusive? |
34257 | Are we but cattle to be stalled and fed? |
34257 | Are we not human because we think and admire, and are exalted in the presence of what is infinitely true and divinely fair? |
34257 | But is it feasible? |
34257 | But what true believer thinks himself excused from effort, because Christ has declared that the gates of hell shall not prevail against His Church? |
34257 | Can the worm at thy feet recognize thy superiority? |
34257 | Could it by any chance make them as bad as it makes men? |
34257 | Do not public men, like public women, sell themselves, though in a different way? |
34257 | Do women themselves, those, at least, in whom the woman soul, which draws us on and upward, is most itself, desire that the vote be given them? |
34257 | Does not political life, as it exists in our democracy, tend to corrupt both voters and office- seekers? |
34257 | Does this system include moral training? |
34257 | Had none of them lived, how should we see and understand that man is Godlike and that God is truth and love? |
34257 | Have not those who mistake their crotchets for Nature''s laws invaded our schools? |
34257 | How often in the history of nations and of religions is not outward splendor the mark of inward decay? |
34257 | How shall he who cares not for his better self care for his country? |
34257 | How shall we find the secret from which hope of such success will spring? |
34257 | How then is it possible to look with complacency on a world in which multitudes of human beings are condemned to the work of the ox and the ass? |
34257 | If I am not pleased with myself, but should wish to be other than I am, why should I think highly of the influences which have made me what I am? |
34257 | If all sufferings, sorrows, and disappointments had been left out of thy life, wouldst thou be more or less than thou art? |
34257 | If men could be persuaded that the unconscious is the beginning and the end of all things, what good would have been gained? |
34257 | If they rush into the arena of noisy and vulgar strife, will not the evil be increased? |
34257 | Is it conceivable that a thinker, or a believer, or a scholar, or an investigator should wrangle in the spirit of a pothouse politician? |
34257 | Is it not always the same story? |
34257 | Is it not easy to believe that to a loving soul in an all- chaste body the unseen world may lie open to view? |
34257 | Is it not enough that thou hast truth and justice? |
34257 | Is it not largely a life of ca nt, pretence, and hypocrisy, of venality, corruption, and selfishness, of lying, abuse, and vulgarity? |
34257 | Is it not the very bloom and fragrance, not only of the highest religious faith, but also of the best culture? |
34257 | Is it right? |
34257 | Is it true? |
34257 | Is not his father a divine man, whose mere word drives away all fear and fills him with confidence? |
34257 | Is not reverence a part of all the sweetest and purest feelings which bind us to father and mother, to friends and home and country? |
34257 | Is not the love of excellence, which is the scholar''s love, a part of the love of goodness which makes the saint? |
34257 | Is not this the glory of the founders of religions, of the discoverers of new worlds? |
34257 | Is the professional politician, the professional caucus- manipulator, the professional voter, the type of man we can admire or respect even? |
34257 | Is there need of stronger evidence that the power within, which is our real self, is spiritual? |
34257 | Is this our ideal? |
34257 | May not the meanest flower that blows bring thoughts that lie too deep for tears? |
34257 | May we not take this for a principle,--to believe that God does everything, and then to act as though He left everything for us to do? |
34257 | Now, if this is the attitude of wise and strong men, how much more should it not be that of a wise and strong people? |
34257 | Or this: Since grace supposes nature, the growth and strength of the Church is not wholly independent of the natural endowments of her ministers? |
34257 | Read the history of controversy and ask thyself whether there is in it the spirit of Christ, the meek and lowly One? |
34257 | Reason and conscience are God''s most precious gifts; and what does He ask but that we make use of them? |
34257 | Shall our Chautauquas and summer schools help to foster this superstition? |
34257 | Shall we abandon God because His world is full of evil, or Christ because there is corruption in the church? |
34257 | Shall we profess to believe in Him, and yet forbid His name to be spoken in the houses where we seek to train the little ones whom He loved? |
34257 | Should women vote? |
34257 | They have taken upon themselves the office of teacher, and yet what have they taught that is worth knowing and loving? |
34257 | To what better use can we put life than to employ it in ameliorating life? |
34257 | What converts the meaningless babbling of the child into the stately march of oratoric phrase or the rhythmic flow of poetic language? |
34257 | What could be more delightfully human? |
34257 | What does truth need but to be known? |
34257 | What gain would self- delusion bring him or her he loves? |
34257 | What has developed the rude stone and bronze implements of savage and barbarous hordes into the miraculous machinery which we use? |
34257 | What has she the right to do? |
34257 | What hast thou learned to admire, to long for, to love, genuinely to hope for and believe? |
34257 | What is forbidden her? |
34257 | What is her work? |
34257 | What is history but examples of success through knowledge and righteousness, and of failure through lack of understanding and of virtue? |
34257 | What is our Christian faith but the revelation of the supreme and infinite worth of love, as being of the essence of God himself? |
34257 | What is the best education for woman? |
34257 | What is the great aim of the primary school, if it is not the nutrition of feeling? |
34257 | What is the pulpit but the holiest teacher''s chair that has been placed upon the earth? |
34257 | What need is there of a hollow phrase when the appeal to truth is obvious? |
34257 | What passion can be more innocent than the passion for knowledge? |
34257 | Whence do we derive strength of soul but from the uplifting of the mind and heart to God which we call prayer? |
34257 | Where is the man who does not feel a kind of religious gratitude as he looks upon the rise and progress of this nation? |
34257 | Wherein lies the superiority of civilized races over barbarians if not in their greater knowledge and superior strength of character? |
34257 | Which were the greater loss for England, to be without Wellington and Nelson, or to be without Shakspeare and Milton? |
34257 | Who in such a presence, can abate hope, or give heed to despondent counsel, or send regretful thoughts to other days and lands? |
34257 | Who shall speak ill of bodily health and vigor? |
34257 | Why desire to have force and numbers on thy side? |
34257 | Why is it remembered? |
34257 | Why should the flowers and the fields, the hills and the heavens, be beautiful, and man hideous, and the cities where he abides dismal? |
34257 | Why should the sorrow or the sin or the loss of any human being give me pleasure? |
34257 | Will not the political woman lose something of the sacred power of the wife and mother? |
34257 | Would you have an ox admire the sunrise or the pearly dew, when all he feels the need of is grass? |
34257 | _ Numquid omnes doctores?_ asks St. Paul. |
45362 | And how did you get in? |
45362 | Are you? |
45362 | D''ye say so? 45362 Had he any clothes on? |
45362 | Pretty well, thank ye,says he,"but pray, how do you know my name?" |
45362 | What''s that? |
45362 | Wo n''t ye? 45362 ''What ails thee, sepulchre? 45362 --Charles, what would thou do with me?'' 45362 A voice was then heard in the gloom asking in a strange intonation,What is wanted?" |
45362 | An amusing anecdote illustrative of this belief was related by the daughter of''the celebrated Mrs. S.''[ Siddons?] |
45362 | And I replied,''Why?'' |
45362 | And I said,''Father, shall I pray for you?'' |
45362 | Doth the earth press, or the black stone weigh on thee heavily?'' |
45362 | Elizabeth of Hungary, being on the point of expiring, said to those around him,"Do you see those doves more white than snow?" |
45362 | He also asks,"Art thou satisfied?" |
45362 | Mr. and Mrs. S---- coming in suddenly one day, heard her cry out,''Are you there again? |
45362 | Says the ghost,"Well, Tommy, how are ye?" |
45362 | The last point the old man quoted as at once settling the question,''How could I be mistaken? |
45362 | The late Charles Kingsley, in his''Yeast,''asks,''Who are the knockers?'' |
45362 | Then I said,''Where are all our fathers who did like to him?'' |
45362 | What sound is that comes from afar? |
45362 | Whence comes it? |
45362 | Who comes here? |
45362 | Who knoweth whether God will permit the persons, who have thus confederated, to appear in the world again after their death? |
45362 | Why thus so deeply groan and sigh? |
45362 | and if so, what were they like?" |
45362 | are ye sleeping, Margaret?'' |
45362 | he says,''Or are ye waking presentlie? |
45362 | what is that?" |
45362 | who comes here?'' |
57189 | How can they deny this, when it is so public? |
57189 | If that be not so, how dare they discredit the clerics with the strange, not to say unjust, censure of their being unfit and incompetent?") |
57189 | If the clerics are incapable, how can the ministers in conscience allow and entrust to them the spiritual administration of their villages? |
57189 | In view of this disclosure, what father will spend and what son will work without even a remote hope of reward? |
57189 | Is it possible that the latter can deserve so little that he is not indeed equal to the Chinese? |
57189 | Who will believe that when I was in Manila there were not more than three advocates who had graduated from those universities? |
57189 | Why do they not cry out against the negro, mulatto, and mestizo who are such consummate rogues, but discharge all their spite upon the Castila? |
55405 | ''Could not I have done that as well?'' |
55405 | ''Do you think,''said Clarendon,''you shall be rid of him by it? |
55405 | ''Is the King so cock- sure of his army?'' |
55405 | ''What, gentlemen, are you for another''41?'' |
55405 | ''What,''he said,''shall I do with the sword? |
55405 | FOOTNOTES:[ 296]_ Or_(?) |
55405 | He put himself at the head of the Enniskillen cavalry, saying,''What will you do for me?'' |
55405 | His whole career is a comment on Wellington''s question-- How is the King''s government to be carried on? |
55405 | If otherwise, he concluded,''who am I? |
55405 | Shall I throw it into the kennel?'' |
55405 | Were they, he asked, all to be cast out for one fault? |
55405 | What shall we say unto these things? |
55405 | Why should they breed more cattle since it was penal to import them into England? |
55405 | but why does he stay behind? |
55405 | what can it be farther up in the country?'' |
39966 | And what is your own opinion? |
39966 | And when do you think, my child, that you will succeed in this great design? |
39966 | Are you dreaming now? |
39966 | How came that goodly plant here, brother? |
39966 | How is it, then, that you see me? |
39966 | So be it,said Sylvester;"and if this comes to life again at the name of Christ, will ye believe?" |
39966 | What are you doing, my pretty child? |
39966 | Where is your body at this moment? |
39966 | Who is there? |
39966 | Would it not be good for my soul? |
39966 | Your eyes, then, are closed and bound in sleep? |
39966 | ''And how can I endure patiently,''rejoined the leper,''since my pains are without intermission night and day? |
39966 | ''What peace,''exclaimed the leper,''can I have who am utterly diseased?'' |
39966 | ''Who art thou,''said the lion,''who darest to bite me?'' |
39966 | ''You may if you like; but what can you do more than the rest?'' |
39966 | 22, 23, where Jesus said to Peter,"If I will that he[ John] tarry till I come, what is that to thee? |
39966 | And for what worshipful reason would the wretch do such villainy to the cross of Christ? |
39966 | And they asked him again,''How long is it since?'' |
39966 | And yet who will credit this? |
39966 | But on another night the same youth came again, and asked,"Do you remember me?" |
39966 | Can he persuade himself to utterly destroy so great and populous a city?'' |
39966 | Can not the corpses of the rich decay save in silk? |
39966 | Do you think it troublesome to be asked any more questions?'' |
39966 | For when sudden destruction comes upon us, how can we be carried to a stable if it be far off? |
39966 | Gregory said nothing more, but at the end of the meal he called to the thirteenth and unbidden guest,"Who art thou?" |
39966 | Has any one appeased him? |
39966 | Have we not many horses less valuable that would have suited the man just as well?" |
39966 | He at once awoke, and they called out,"Why do you alone lie snoring here, while all your brethren are watching in the church?" |
39966 | His lips seem to be parting with the question,"Whose is this image and superscription?" |
39966 | How, then, can I speak evil of my King, who saved me?" |
39966 | Is he incensed? |
39966 | Is it not better that you should do this honourable action and receive the reward yourself?" |
39966 | Is not this an high reason? |
39966 | Moses has not told us precisely what tree it was: why should we wish to know what the Holy Scriptures have concealed?" |
39966 | Our Saviour taught people only to excel in love and patience: why should priests grasp the sword for the temporal and perishable things of earth?" |
39966 | Ruffinus says that Macarius once went to visit Antony in the mountain, and, knocking at the door, Antony opened to him and asked,"Who art thou?" |
39966 | She burst into tears at this coldness, and at last exclaimed,"And what if I am a sinner? |
39966 | She then retorted,"But what will it signify to you, Emperor, if it is left to some other person to do me justice? |
39966 | Sylvester, with some shrewdness, observed,"As he who whispered the name must be well acquainted with it, why does not he fall dead in like manner?" |
39966 | The King heard of this, and next day at dinner said,"How was it, lord bishop, that you gave away that fine horse to a beggar man? |
39966 | The King hearing of this, asked Aidan why he did such a thing, and the answer was,"Surely a mare is nothing to compare with that son of God?" |
39966 | The astonished apostle said,"Lord, whither goest Thou?" |
39966 | The bishop''s answer was,"Surely, King, the foal of a mare can not be dearer to you than that son of God?" |
39966 | The cardinals ironically whispered to each other,"Only look; can that be the Holy Ghost in the shape of an owl?" |
39966 | The monk said,"But, father, how if I were to die without Sacraments in the wild waste?" |
39966 | The obedient hermit arrived, and was joyfully welcomed; but the Pope, raising him up, said,"What garment is this, Jerome? |
39966 | The widow then exclaimed,"But, sire, if you are killed in battle, who then is to do me justice?" |
39966 | To this Poemen answered,"Do you think God would not receive you, coming from the battle- field?" |
39966 | WAS ST. PAUL EVER IN GREAT BRITAIN? |
39966 | Was it rational, when danger is on every side, to choose to remain where the danger is greatest?" |
39966 | What more shall I say? |
39966 | What sentence has he pronounced? |
39966 | What was to be done with this intolerable nuisance? |
39966 | When challenged for these constantly repeated exercises, he would say,"If I spent twice as much time in dice and hawking, should I be so rebuked?" |
39966 | When his end drew near, he was seen to weep, which made the other monks ask,"Are_ you_ then, father, afraid?" |
39966 | Why do you wrap even your dead in golden vestments? |
39966 | Why does not ambition stop amid grief and tears? |
39966 | Why for my sake omit your duty, your law, or your religion? |
39966 | Why should this queen be so anxious to see a man disfigured by fasting and toil, and as brown as a chameleon? |
39966 | or what their Maker, whose hand created them, or by whose will they are all governed? |
6883 | What shall I prepare it with? |
6883 | ''That is all very well,''he said,''but what are you going to_ subsist_ on?'' |
6883 | All these things being of the earth earthy, shall pass away; nay, may become the civilized(?) |
6883 | And what means did she possess to surmount these difficulties? |
6883 | Had she any available human support? |
6883 | Had she credit? |
6883 | Had she wealth at her disposal? |
6883 | Was she high- born or powerful? |
61779 | Did or did not Callistus embezzle the money? |
61779 | Had the Church lost its foundation when Peter died? |
61779 | He used to observe, in his grim, meditative way:"Who are these men who make us bow our heads at the mention of their name?" |
61779 | If he did not, how comes his sainted rival to call him, as he does, a fraud and impostor? |
61779 | If he did, how came he to be elected bishop? |
61779 | Is it possible to give a useful and informing account of the_ essential_ history of the Papacy in a small volume? |
61779 | Moreover, if defendants were to be judged only by their equals, who was to judge the Bishop of Rome? |
61779 | Mönch?_, 1891, and_ Gregor VII._, 2 vols. |
61779 | Were the keys buried beside the bones of Peter in that marble tomb at the foot of the Vatican? |
61779 | Why not make Europe the United States of the Church, governed despotically by the one man on earth who was"inspired by God"? |
61779 | Would the new Pope prove subtle enough to grasp that opportunity and save the Church? |
61779 | [ 251]"Who does he think he is?" |
19942 | And from what part of Germany do you come? |
19942 | And how happened it, my dear Baron, that I did not kill you? 19942 And it is true that my dear sister is in this country?" |
19942 | And so, sir, you have a rendezvous at Venice? |
19942 | And the_ Mélanges_ of Archdeacon Trublet,[27] what do you say of that? |
19942 | And where is the reverend Father Provincial? |
19942 | And why are you in Portugal? 19942 And why,"said Candide,"should all foreigners be arrested?" |
19942 | And your brother? |
19942 | But do you believe,said Candide,"that the earth was originally a sea, as we find it asserted in that large book belonging to the captain?" |
19942 | But do you not see,answered Martin,"that he is disgusted with all he possesses? |
19942 | But for what end, then, has this world been formed? |
19942 | But is it indeed possible that my sister can be in Turkey? |
19942 | But is there not a pleasure,said Candide,"in criticising everything, in pointing out faults where others see nothing but beauties?" |
19942 | But pray, sir, where are you going to carry us? |
19942 | But were your father and mother killed? |
19942 | But you, Mr. Martin,said he to the philosopher,"what do you think of all this? |
19942 | But you, my dear Pangloss,said Candide,"how can it be that I behold you again?" |
19942 | But your Excellency does not think thus of Virgil? |
19942 | But, Mr. Martin, have you seen Paris? |
19942 | Can there be two religions? |
19942 | Cunegonde is here, without doubt; where is she? 19942 Do I dream?" |
19942 | Do you believe,said Martin,"that hawks have always eaten pigeons when they have found them?" |
19942 | Do you worship but one God? |
19942 | Gentlemen,said he,"this is a very good joke indeed, but why should you all be kings? |
19942 | Have you seen,said the Perigordian Abbé,"the romance of Sieur Gauchat, doctor of divinity? |
19942 | How can you ask me to eat ham,said Candide,"after killing the Baron''s son, and being doomed never more to see the beautiful Cunegonde? |
19942 | How go back? |
19942 | How many good? |
19942 | How much will you charge,said he to this man,"to carry me straight to Venice-- me, my servants, my baggage, and these two sheep?" |
19942 | How shall we live? 19942 How then,"said he,"can you doubt it? |
19942 | How, probable? |
19942 | I believe,said the Abbé,"that Miss Cunegonde has a great deal of wit, and that she writes charming letters?" |
19942 | Is it really you? |
19942 | Is it true that they always laugh in Paris? |
19942 | Love you not deeply? |
19942 | May I presume to ask you, sir,said Candide,"whether you do not receive a great deal of pleasure from reading Horace?" |
19942 | My dear Cunegonde,said Candide, weeping,"how are you? |
19942 | My friend,said the orator to him,"do you believe the Pope to be Anti- Christ?" |
19942 | No,said one of the gentlemen,"we ask you if you do not deeply love the King of the Bulgarians?" |
19942 | Oh, sir,said one of the blues to him,"people of your appearance and of your merit never pay anything: are you not five feet five inches high?" |
19942 | Sir,said the Familiar,"you do not then believe in liberty?" |
19942 | Was it Mynheer Vanderdendur,said Candide,"that treated thee thus?" |
19942 | Well, then,said Martin,"if hawks have always had the same character why should you imagine that men may have changed theirs?" |
19942 | Well,said he,"have I not won the whole wager?" |
19942 | Well,said he,"what news of Cunegonde? |
19942 | What can be the_ sufficient reason_ of this phenomenon? |
19942 | What do I hear? 19942 What is a_ folliculaire_?" |
19942 | What is all this? |
19942 | What is it to me whether he pleads for Rabirius or Cluentius? 19942 What is this optimism?" |
19942 | What signifies it,said the Dervish,"whether there be evil or good? |
19942 | What then must we do? |
19942 | What would you have? |
19942 | What, is it you, reverend Father? 19942 What, is it you?" |
19942 | What, then, must we do? |
19942 | Where are we? |
19942 | Where? |
19942 | Whither art thou carrying me? 19942 Who are you?" |
19942 | Who can this private person be,said the five kings to one another,"who is able to give, and really has given, a hundred times as much as any of us?" |
19942 | Who was it that robbed me of my money and jewels? |
19942 | Who,said Candide,"is that great pig who spoke so ill of the piece at which I wept, and of the actors who gave me so much pleasure?" |
19942 | Who? |
19942 | With what meddlest thou? |
19942 | Yes,said Martin;"but why should the passengers be doomed also to destruction? |
19942 | You are, then, a German? |
19942 | You have before been in Paraguay, then? |
19942 | You know England? 19942 You see those gondoliers,"said Candide,"are they not perpetually singing?" |
19942 | [ 22]How many dramas have you in France, sir?" |
19942 | Ah, best of worlds, where art thou? |
19942 | Ah, my dear Cunegonde, what sort of a world is this?" |
19942 | And did not a corsair bravely rob us of all the rest? |
19942 | And what will the_ Journal of Trevoux_[17] say?" |
19942 | And why are you both in a Turkish galley?" |
19942 | And, my dear Pangloss, how came you to life again after being hanged? |
19942 | Are they as foolish there as in France?" |
19942 | Are you for the good cause?" |
19942 | As soon as Pangloss had refreshed himself a little:"Well,"said Candide,"Cunegonde?" |
19942 | But do you not feel the pity and sympathy of the painter? |
19942 | But how came she to be reduced to so abject a state with the five or six millions that you took to her?" |
19942 | But how can I resolve to quit a part of the world where my dear Cunegonde resides?" |
19942 | But is it, indeed, true that my dear sister Cunegonde is in the neighbourhood, with the Governor of Buenos Ayres?" |
19942 | But of what illness did she die? |
19942 | But the orator, looking askew, said:"What are you doing here? |
19942 | Cacambo humbly asked,"What was the religion in El Dorado?" |
19942 | Candide, terrified, amazed, desperate, all bloody, all palpitating, said to himself:"If this is the best of possible worlds, what then are the others? |
19942 | Cunegonde, brought to such a distance what will become of you?" |
19942 | Did not this corsair carry us to Cape Matapan, to Milo, to Nicaria, to Samos, to Petra, to the Dardanelles, to Marmora, to Scutari? |
19942 | Do you know that you cost me the tip of my nose, an eye, and an ear, as you may see? |
19942 | Do you not know that these people always have the devil in their bodies? |
19942 | Do you take us for ungrateful wretches?" |
19942 | Does she love me still? |
19942 | Have you nothing at all left, my dear Cunegonde?" |
19942 | How could this beautiful cause produce in you an effect so abominable?" |
19942 | How could you do it? |
19942 | How is she? |
19942 | I find you again in Portugal? |
19942 | Is it for you to pique yourself upon inviolable fidelity? |
19942 | Is it possible? |
19942 | Is not the Devil the original stock of it?" |
19942 | Is she still a prodigy of beauty? |
19942 | Is there no way of getting quickly out of this country where monkeys provoke tigers? |
19942 | Is this Master Pangloss whom I saw hanged?" |
19942 | Is this the Baron whom I killed? |
19942 | Martin?" |
19942 | Must this rascal also share with me?" |
19942 | The Bulgarians and the Abares are slaying all; to Portugal? |
19942 | Then, turning towards Martin:"Who do you think,"said he,"is most to be pitied-- the Sultan Achmet, the Emperor Ivan, King Charles Edward, or I?" |
19942 | There was not a moment to lose; but how could he part from Cunegonde, and where could he flee for shelter? |
19942 | Thou hast doubtless bought her a palace at Constantinople?" |
19942 | Was it not for grief, upon seeing her father kick me out of his magnificent castle?" |
19942 | What has become of Miss Cunegonde, the pearl of girls, and nature''s masterpiece?" |
19942 | What misfortune has happened to you? |
19942 | What return can I make you?" |
19942 | What shall we do without Cunegonde?" |
19942 | What shall we do? |
19942 | What will it avail me to spin out my wretched days and drag them far from her in remorse and despair? |
19942 | When his highness sends a ship to Egypt, does he trouble his head whether the mice on board are at their ease or not?" |
19942 | When they came to themselves a little, I heard the wife say to her husband:''My dear, how could you take it into your head to dissect a heretic? |
19942 | Where find Inquisitors or Jews who will give me more?" |
19942 | Where shall we go? |
19942 | Why are you no longer in the most magnificent of castles? |
19942 | Will you bear me company?" |
19942 | You have seen earthquakes; but pray, miss, have you ever had the plague?" |
19942 | [ 32]"And why kill this Admiral?" |
19942 | and by what strange adventure did you contrive to bring me to this house?" |
19942 | and how did you know of my being here? |
19942 | can you be that young princess whom I brought up until the age of six years, and who promised so early to be as beautiful as you?'' |
19942 | cried Candide;"am I awake? |
19942 | cried she,"what will become of us? |
19942 | have you no monks who teach, who dispute, who govern, who cabal, and who burn people that are not of their opinion?" |
19942 | he believes he beholds Miss Cunegonde? |
19942 | how can I?" |
19942 | in brief, to caress the serpent which devours us, till he has eaten our very heart? |
19942 | is it possible?" |
19942 | is this the great philosopher?" |
19942 | must I leave you just at a time when the Governor was going to sanction our nuptials? |
19942 | or am I on board a galley? |
19942 | said Candide in Dutch,"what art thou doing there, friend, in that shocking condition?" |
19942 | said Candide,"and where shall we go? |
19942 | said Candide,"you live? |
19942 | said Candide;"and what demon is it that exercises his empire in this country?" |
19942 | said Candide;"who has inspired you with so much goodness? |
19942 | said he,"my poor child, it is you who reduced Doctor Pangloss to the beautiful condition in which I saw him?" |
19942 | said he,"thou bitch of a Galilean, was not the Inquisitor enough for thee? |
19942 | said one wretch to the other,"do you no longer know your dear Pangloss?" |
19942 | said she to him,"you love desperately Miss Cunegonde of Thunder- ten- Tronckh?" |
19942 | said the Dervish;"is it thy business?" |
19942 | then they did not rip open your belly as Doctor Pangloss informed me?" |
19942 | then you have not been ravished? |
19942 | to detest existence and yet to cling to one''s existence? |
19942 | to my own country? |
19942 | what are your ideas on moral and natural evil?" |
19942 | what would Master Pangloss say, were he to see how pure nature is formed? |
46807 | ''Who then, my friends, have produced this change? 46807 Are any of the planets of these glowing orbs inhabited by intelligent beings?" |
46807 | If not, why do they exist at all? |
46807 | ''What if I should miserably fail?'' |
46807 | ''What if the meeting should fail on my hands?'' |
46807 | ''What if this was not God''s plan?'' |
46807 | And are we to treat those who have been the cause of this happy change with ingratitude? |
46807 | Are you one of those who has profited by the helpful books on salesmanship, bees, advertising, poultry, etc.? |
46807 | But if the present reigns here proudly triumphant over the past, what must we say of the future? |
46807 | But is there more heart, soul and energy now than then?" |
46807 | But what was happening on the Walla Walla? |
46807 | But what was the history of this church before Walla Walla became civilized? |
46807 | Do any of you fellows want to go along?" |
46807 | Do we yet comprehend what this may mean to us and our descendants in this vast and productive land? |
46807 | Has the white man any rights here in Kittitas that the Indian has any right to respect? |
46807 | How to pickle olives? |
46807 | I say they acted right in killing the robbers; and who among you will dare to contradict me?'' |
46807 | Is such the case today? |
46807 | It would require$ 4,000 to lay the system of water pipes through forty acres; the Council gasped, and said''dare we do it?'' |
46807 | Mr. Aram(?) |
46807 | Needless to say, he smashed it into bits and then careening up to the bar, he simply asked:"How much do I owe?" |
46807 | Someone that was walking dipped up a cup of water and said,"Will you have a drink?" |
46807 | The first thing I have to say is, will you send Cyrus here to school this winter in case we have one, which we expect we may? |
46807 | The question of controversy is, what did he make such a journey for? |
46807 | The white people have never robbed us; and, I ask, why should we attempt to rob them? |
46807 | Then Mother Whitman came and raised the wagon cover and says,''What is the matter with you, my brother?'' |
46807 | Then the old chief spoke:''If we are all brothers, why has the white man taken our lands from us? |
46807 | Then would come the thought,"Why all this stupendous illimitable, incomprehensible aggregation of worlds?" |
46807 | We hitched our horses to the fence of a man by the name of Aram(?) |
46807 | We said,"Why do so many men out West wear revolvers on their belts and big knives in their boot legs?" |
46807 | What are those conditions? |
46807 | What is the high jump record of a horse? |
46807 | What is the lure of this far western land, When she beckons to all with her welcoming hand? |
46807 | What will be the state of medical science forty or fifty years from now? |
46807 | Where are the crags whence the glaciers flow, And the forests of fir where the south winds blow? |
46807 | Where is Matzos? |
46807 | Where is the home of the apple and rose, Where the wild currant blooms and the hazel- nut grows? |
46807 | Where sleep the old heroes who liberty sought, And where live their free sons whom they liberty taught? |
46807 | Why should I have a bad heart-- after I am showed and taught how to live? |
46807 | Will physicians make their country calls in airplanes, soaring over hills and plains high in air? |
46807 | Will you accept license and go to work?'' |
46807 | Would we return to the old conditions and times were we given our choice? |
46807 | You ask me if the priests did not encourage us to kill Doctor Whitman? |
6804 | Were you not a noble? |
6804 | What need is there for discussion,exclaimed a delegate,"where all are agreed? |
6804 | ( 3800? |
6804 | (?-606 B.C. |
6804 | ? |
6804 | ASSHUR- BANI- PAL( 668- 626? |
6804 | As early as the times of Jeremiah, the permanency of physical characteristics had passed into the proverb,"Can the Ethiopian change his skin?" |
6804 | As the slave advanced, Marius shouted,"Man, do you dare to kill Caius Marius?" |
6804 | If the French people should be allowed to overturn the throne of their hereditary sovereign, who would then respect the divine rights of kings? |
6804 | Indeed, who is strong enough to rule the world? |
6804 | It is related that Caius had a dream in which the spirit of his brother seemed to address him thus:"Caius, why do you linger? |
6804 | It was begun in 214(?) |
6804 | Many thoughtful minds were hopelessly asking,"What is truth?" |
6804 | The most noted of these form what is known as the Epic of Izdubar( Nimrod? |
6804 | The state came to be known as Russia, probably from the word_ Ruotsi_( corsairs? |
6804 | and finished in 204(?) |
28046 | But was there ever,he cried,"such stuff as great part of Shakespeare? |
28046 | But what,proceeded Barère,"is not permitted to the hatred of a republican against aristocracy? |
28046 | Doest thou well to be angry? |
28046 | Is it possible,said a great French lady to the Doctor,"that your daughter is in a situation where she is never allowed a holiday?" |
28046 | Is it,he cried,"because we have too long forgotten the crimes of the Austrian woman? |
28046 | Ken ye,said a shrewd Scotch lord, who was asked his opinion of James the First,--"ken ye a John Ape? |
28046 | My dear ma''am, why do you stay? 28046 Virtue, I grant you, is an empty boast; But shall the dignity of vice be lost?" |
28046 | Was there ever such avarice? 28046 Which of you,"exclaimed one of the members,"would sit by the side of such a monster?" |
28046 | Why,asked Collier,"should the man laugh at the mischief of the boy, and make the disorders of his nonage his own, by an after approbation?" |
28046 | A deanery for her brother in the church? |
28046 | A peerage in her own right? |
28046 | A pension of two thousand a year for life? |
28046 | A seventy- four for her brother in the navy? |
28046 | And did he think amiss? |
28046 | And if Addison''s advice was bad, does it necessarily follow that it was given from bad motives? |
28046 | And this prince, for whom France had suffered so much, was he a grateful, was he even an honest ally? |
28046 | And what conclusion, after all, can be drawn from mere inferiority? |
28046 | And what hope was there that these designs would fail? |
28046 | And what was he likely to gain by appealing to Sudbury and Old Sarum against the venality of their representatives? |
28046 | And what was my reward? |
28046 | And what was the consideration for which she was to sell herself to this slavery? |
28046 | And what was there to prevent Pitt from allying himself with Lord Rockingham? |
28046 | And where was other aid to be found? |
28046 | And who can blame them? |
28046 | And who can think otherwise? |
28046 | And why should we look for any other explanation of Burke''s conduct than that which we find on the surface? |
28046 | But Barère-- was it possible that he would submit to such a degradation? |
28046 | But could he secure both? |
28046 | But does it necessarily follow that Addison''s advice was bad? |
28046 | But had it been bad, why should we pronounce it dishonest? |
28046 | But how many passions have amalgamated to form that hatred? |
28046 | But what is life worth when it is only one long agony of remorse and shame? |
28046 | But what produced the reaction? |
28046 | But what shall we say of him who parts with his birthright, and does not get even the pottage in return? |
28046 | But what think you? |
28046 | By what means? |
28046 | Byng, Admiral, was he a martyr to political party? |
28046 | Can it be necessary for us to add anything for the purpose of assisting their judgment of his character? |
28046 | Could Grenville do this? |
28046 | Could he attain that renown without sullying what he valued quite as much, his character for gentility? |
28046 | Could he forego the renown of being the first wit of his age? |
28046 | Did it lie in their mouths to contend that a foreign settler who establishes an empire in India is a_ caput lupinum_? |
28046 | Did the Governor stipulate that it should be so conducted? |
28046 | Do we believe that Erasmus and Fracastorius wrote Latin as well as Dr. Robertson and Sir Walter Scott wrote English? |
28046 | For what are the means by which a government can effect its ends? |
28046 | France had made great efforts, had added largely to her military glory, and largely to her public burdens; and for what end? |
28046 | Frederic William entered the room, and broke out in his usual kingly style:--"Rascal, what are you at there?" |
28046 | Had he not been as false to the Court of Versailles as to the Court of Vienna? |
28046 | Has any modern scholar understood Latin better than Frederic the Great understood French? |
28046 | Has not the experience of centuries confirmed his opinion? |
28046 | Have I, then, two lives, that, after I have wasted one in the service of others, there may yet remain to me a second, which I may live unto myself?" |
28046 | He had sense enough to be conscious of his unfitness for the high situation which he held, and exclaimed in a comical fit of despair,"What shall I do? |
28046 | He was a pamphleteer: have not his good nature and generosity been acknowledged by Swift, his rival in fame and his adversary in politics? |
28046 | He was a writer of comedy: had he not done ample justice to Congreve, and given valuable help to Steele? |
28046 | He was a writer of tragedy: had he ever injured Rowe? |
28046 | How long would this continue to be the case, if the slaying of prisoners were a part of the daily duty of the warrior? |
28046 | How many generous sentiments atone for what may perhaps seem acrimonious in the prosecution of public enemies? |
28046 | How many prisoners should you guess that we have made? |
28046 | How many serious charges, then, are here refuted? |
28046 | How shall we express the feelings with which his memory is cherished by those who were honored with his friendship? |
28046 | How sweet were once thy prospects fresh and fair, Thy sloping walks and unpolluted air? |
28046 | How, indeed, should it have been otherwise? |
28046 | If he had allied himself closely with Lord Rockingham, what could the court have done? |
28046 | In England, what would be thought of a Parliament which did not contain one single person who had ever sat in Parliament before? |
28046 | Interdicting himself from the use of corrupt influence, what motive was he to address to the Dodingtons and Winningtons? |
28046 | Is he so eager for money as to be indifferent to revenge? |
28046 | Is it because we have shown so strange an indulgence to the race of our ancient tyrants? |
28046 | Is it strange that a man whose kindness is thus abused should send sheriff''s officers to reclaim what is due to him? |
28046 | Is there any external evidence to support this grave accusation? |
28046 | Is there anything in the character of the accused persons which makes the accusation probable? |
28046 | Is there not sad stuff? |
28046 | Now, who was the person who made this speech and this motion? |
28046 | Or Benedick''s? |
28046 | Or Harry the Fifth''s? |
28046 | Or Lear''s? |
28046 | Or Macbeth''s? |
28046 | Or Othello''s? |
28046 | Or Shylock''s? |
28046 | Or Wolsey''s? |
28046 | Or how Withstand his wide- destroying sword?" |
28046 | Or so bent on both together as to be indifferent to the honor of his nation and the law of Moses? |
28046 | Or so eager for revenge as to be indifferent to money? |
28046 | Or that of Cassius? |
28046 | Or that of Falconbridge? |
28046 | Or was the patriot King to carry the House of Commons with him in his upright designs? |
28046 | Romans of great abilities wrote Greek verses; but how many of those verses have deserved to live? |
28046 | The rebels are conquered; but are they all exterminated? |
28046 | Then, again, she exclaims,"Ah, Mr. Windham, how came you ever engaged in so cruel, so unjust a cause?" |
28046 | Was anybody called in question for it? |
28046 | Was anybody punished for it? |
28046 | Was cupidity, strengthened by habit, to be laid asleep by a few fine sentences about virtue and union? |
28046 | Was he the author of the Letters of Junius? |
28046 | Was he to dissolve the Parliament? |
28046 | Was he to levy ship- money? |
28046 | Was he to send out privy seals? |
28046 | Was it a work which Tickell was incapable of producing? |
28046 | Was it for them to proclaim a crusade for the expulsion of all intruders from the countries watered by the Ganges? |
28046 | Was it not consistent with Frederic''s character? |
28046 | Was it not of a piece with his conduct on other similar occasions? |
28046 | Was it not possible that he might become a formidable rival in the cabinet? |
28046 | Was the Rohilla war likely to be so conducted? |
28046 | Was there any internal evidence which proved Addison to be the author of this version? |
28046 | Was there no way by which I might have enjoyed in freedom comforts even greater than those which I now earn by servitude? |
28046 | Was there not something vulgar in letters, something inconsistent with the easy apathetic graces of a man of the mode? |
28046 | We allude to the fragment which begins:--"Quid numeris iterum me balbutire Latinis, Longe Alpes citra natum de patre Sicambro, Musa, jubes?" |
28046 | What can they do? |
28046 | What had become of that fair fellowship, so closely bound together by public and private ties, so resplendent with every talent and accomplishment? |
28046 | What is Hamlet''s ruling passion? |
28046 | What is life without liberty? |
28046 | What is the First Consul but a king under a new name? |
28046 | What is this Legion of Honor but a new aristocracy? |
28046 | What is this moral pestilence which has introduced into our armies false ideas of humanity? |
28046 | What man of kind and generous nature would, under such a system, willingly bear arms? |
28046 | What modern scholar can honestly declare that he sees the smallest impurity in the style of Livy? |
28046 | What terrors has death to the true patriot? |
28046 | What then was there to divide Pitt from the Whigs? |
28046 | What was it to her whether the House of Hapsburg or the House of Brandenburg ruled in Silesia? |
28046 | What were the English themselves? |
28046 | What would they have said if any other power had, on such a ground, attacked Madras or Calcutta, without the slightest provocation? |
28046 | What? |
28046 | What? |
28046 | What?" |
28046 | When he was told of the disaffection of one of his subjects, he merely asked,"How many thousand men can he bring into the field?" |
28046 | Which of these celebrated men would now be remembered as an orator, if he had died two years after he first took his seat in the House of Commons? |
28046 | Who can wonder that princes should be under such a delusion, when they are encouraged in it by the very persons who suffer from it most cruelly? |
28046 | Who could hear unmoved of the fall of that which had been so great, and which had stood so long? |
28046 | Who then must decide? |
28046 | Who was to foresee that Pope would, once in his life, be able to do what he could not himself do twice, and what nobody else has ever done? |
28046 | Who would not have expected them to be insipid likenesses of each other? |
28046 | Who, that was compelled to bear arms, would long continue kind and generous? |
28046 | Whoever blamed Brutus for dissembling with Tarquin?" |
28046 | Why should we believe that he would have been more scrupulous with regard to Voltaire? |
28046 | Why were the Prussian battalions paid with English gold? |
28046 | Why were the best English regiments fighting on the Main? |
28046 | Will Mr. Gleig seriously maintain this opinion? |
28046 | Will it be pretended that it was from public spirit that he murdered the Girondists? |
28046 | Will it be pretended that it was from public spirit that he raved for the head of the Austrian woman? |
28046 | With what object, then, did he undertake so long a journey? |
28046 | Would Miss Burney bring utter destruction on herself and her family? |
28046 | Would he do it? |
28046 | Would he like to be appointed governor of Canada? |
28046 | Would he, therefore, be justified in marching with an army on Brussels? |
28046 | Would she part with privileges which, once relinquished, could never be regained? |
28046 | Would she throw away the inestimable advantage of royal protection? |
28046 | Yet why not? |
28046 | [ 15] Who, then, was the person who really did propose that the Capet family should be banished, and that Marie Antoinette should be tried? |
28046 | for what? |
28046 | what? |
28046 | what?" |
28046 | who can count the evils which a false compassion may produce?" |
43792 | Do n''t you believe it was so? 43792 Has Terborg or Mieris or Meissonier done the greater work?" |
43792 | Is not Tasso''s life most interesting? |
43792 | What does it matter,writes Hallman,"if we lack all joyous, independent national feeling? |
43792 | Who represents the Holy Ghost with more dignity? 43792 Your portrait?" |
43792 | And even if they had remained fresh, would they yet appeal to the present generation, so much more discriminating in their appreciation of colour? |
43792 | Are they beautiful? |
43792 | But how can he guard himself from that? |
43792 | But how much of it belongs to the nineteenth century? |
43792 | But how was it possible that the German painters stood before them as if struck by lightning? |
43792 | But what must art be in order to produce truth? |
43792 | But where are the virtues to be found? |
43792 | But would anyone dare to mention Mengs and Carstens in the same breath with these giants? |
43792 | Cruelty and death have a poetry of their own: why should Art prudishly abstain from depicting them? |
43792 | Have men grown different, then, or does the painter see further? |
43792 | Is a painter not to be a painter? |
43792 | Is he to turn statues with his brush, and fiddle with his colours, just as it may please their antique taste? |
43792 | Is the sense of the beautiful that impression which is made upon us by a picture by Velasquez, an etching by Rembrandt, or a scene out of Shakespeare? |
43792 | Might it not be possible, with the help of education, for that to be overcome? |
43792 | Of what value is that in comparison with a single real presentation of character? |
43792 | Once on the road to execute statues in paint, the question ensued, Ought we to paint our statues? |
43792 | Que fit la bonne mère? |
43792 | Suddenly a voice was heard to cry:"_ Où es tu, David? |
43792 | To them will he be pioneer or imitator, forerunner or continuator? |
43792 | To what extent has the painter stood independent and on his own peculiar ground? |
43792 | Was ist denn so grosses Neues in der Neuen Kunst geschehen? |
43792 | Was it at all possible to make works of art out of such material? |
43792 | What are the new forms which it has found, the new sentiments to which it has given expression? |
43792 | What does it matter? |
43792 | What imagination was ever peopled with figures more dreadful than those conceived by Shakespeare? |
43792 | What though we do not even try to resuscitate this feeling with wars and battles? |
43792 | Where was that rich colouring in the Italian classics which he had been led to expect from English mezzotints? |
43792 | Who has ever seen such a painter? |
43792 | Who was to give him the easy knightly bearing to play his part suitably to the occasion? |
43792 | Who, pray, wanted to learn fresco painting by hard labour, and swallow the chalk- dust? |
43792 | Who, she will cry, was better fitted to paint Themistocles? |
43792 | Will a different judgment be pronounced in the lapse of time upon the artistic creations of King Ludwig I? |
43792 | Will he take his place by Boecklin and Watts, or by Couture and Ingres? |
43792 | Will they be seen? |
43792 | Would he be a painter? |
43792 | [ Illustration: WHEN WILL GENIUS AWAKE? |
43792 | and had thought it his duty to address to one of the younger painters the question:"Are we then an academy of the Fine or of the Ugly Arts?" |
43792 | asked Prudhon,"with features so troubled and sad?" |
50125 | And how about Carlos,asked the King,"is he in any better hands?" |
50125 | Are not the French and the Portuguese the enemies both of the Parliament and of King Philip? |
50125 | Had Fischer any authority to negotiate an alliance? |
50125 | How goes it,he asked,"in the Prince''s chamber?" |
50125 | How so, Conde? |
50125 | Is he waiting for us to use force? |
50125 | Is it possible,exclaimed Buckingham,"that you have a King who can walk like that? |
50125 | Shall I write that to my principals? |
50125 | What is it? |
50125 | Who are you? |
50125 | Who says so? |
50125 | Why should you put this slight upon us? |
50125 | ''Why do they give keys?'' |
50125 | ''Why do they give titles?'' |
50125 | ''Why do they not give money?'' |
50125 | An English priest named Wallsfort(?) |
50125 | But why make Luther rich, and leave Spain poor? |
50125 | Did we, he asked, receive the blessed Virgin? |
50125 | How can we restore the Palatinate? |
50125 | How could Spain face half Europe in arms, and force orthodoxy on unwilling princes and populations with the resources of ruined Castile alone? |
50125 | How, they asked him, could they obey the command without sacrificing the marriage? |
50125 | The Infanta cried out in a very clear voice:''Why have you not put his clothes on? |
50125 | The feeling in Madrid was, of course, strongly in favour of them; for was it not a virtue to kill an unrepentant heretic and rebel regicide? |
50125 | Was the King of England going to throw them over after all? |
50125 | What could be done? |
50125 | What was the meaning of it? |
50125 | What was their religion? |
50125 | When Philip entered the palace, he turned to Don Luis de Haro and asked,"Has he gone?" |
50125 | When he went to kiss Philip''s hand, the King, immovable as a statue, drily asked,"When are you leaving?" |
50125 | Where, they asked, was the actual money to come from? |
50125 | Whether he hath commission to set down in particular those conveniences that his father told Arundel the King of Spain would insist upon? |
50125 | Why do you give him to me so undressed?'' |
50125 | Why had they come to Spain? |
50125 | Why were they Archers, he wondered, and what were they paid for?" |
50125 | [ 23][ Sidenote: Charles and Buckingham] What was to be done? |
50125 | do n''t you know who I am?" |
50125 | what brings you here at such an hour as this? |
56414 | Are there no able men amongst you except Spaniards? |
56414 | How many Spanish Generals have you had? |
56414 | How many votes have the Spaniards amongst you? |
56414 | What does it matter to me whether I enter heaven by water or land? |
56414 | And had not every order that had yet been founded fallen into evil ways within fifty years? |
56414 | Could a valet who considered himself underpaid help himself to his masters goods to the extent of the deficiency? |
56414 | Marks,_ Who Killed Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey?_ 1905.] |
56414 | Of the fifteen thousand living Jesuits, and their predecessors for a century, who has won even secondary rank in letters, history, or philosophy? |
56414 | Ought not a regiment of light horse, ready to fly at a moment''s notice to any part of the Pope''s dominions, to have special characters? |
56414 | Should he fuse it with the Theatines, or merely clip its outrageous privileges, and bring it nearer the common level of the religious orders? |
56414 | Sixtus used to mutter, as he meditatively stroked his long white beard;"Who are these men whom we must not name without bowing our heads? |
56414 | Was Ignatius more holy than Benedict, or Bruno, or Francis, or Dominic? |
56414 | Was he a hypocrite, or a fool, or a saint? |
56414 | Was not Charles of Spain deluded by a sceptical minister in collusion with Pombal and Choiseul? |
56414 | Was not Joseph I. of Portugal an unprincipled voluptuary, an irresolute pupil of a minister who could stoop to forgery? |
56414 | What did even the Catholics of France and Spain say of them? |
56414 | What is a Jesuit? |
56414 | What should be the next step? |
56414 | What was her exact relationship to the Duke? |
56414 | What was this but another form of chivalry? |
56414 | Why abandon their precious work at the University for an unknown world? |
56414 | Why should such a man seek to do the work of a Catholic fanatic at the risk of his life? |
56414 | Would the benefactors who had built their homes and chapels be indifferent to the changes? |
56414 | Would those hundreds of men who had joined the Society in its actual form not have ground to complain if it were made more onerous? |
56414 | Yet who would suppose that within twenty years these men would be intriguing for the control of the universities and shaping the counsels of kings? |
56414 | an immoral and unscrupulous ruler, and had not liberalism pervaded every stratum of higher French society? |
56414 | was she the mother of the famous"Pamela"whom Lord Edward Fitzgerald married? |
56414 | what was her share in the astounding affair of"Maria Stella"? |
13349 | Could they think,he asked,"that youths, initiated under such oaths as theirs, were fit to be made soldiers? |
13349 | Like the slain that lie in the grave, whom thou rememberest no more.... Wilt thou shew wonders to the dead? 13349 Tsze- Kung asked,''Is there one word which may serve as a rule for one''s whole life?'' |
13349 | We have forsaken all and followed thee:_ what shall we have therefore_?... 13349 What, then, does this stationary condition of the population mean? |
13349 | What, then, is the position of the so- called Ignatian epistles? 13349 Would this questioning[ on the triumphal entry] have taken place if Jesus had often made visits to Jerusalem, and been well known there? |
13349 | _ What shall we have_, therefore?... 13349 ''Blessed are ye that hunger now, for ye shall be filled''... Craven in spirit, with an empty purse and hungry mouth-- what next? 13349 ):Pilate saith unto him, What is truth? |
13349 | 12]--but the people of Jerusalem knew him not, and, therefore, asked''Who is this?''" |
13349 | 24- 27) sends Peter to catch a fish with money in its mouth( why not, by the way, have fished directly for the coin? |
13349 | 30), answered to the question,"What is thy name?" |
13349 | A metaphor must mean_ something_: what does this metaphor mean? |
13349 | A natural reluctance to take up such a notion might prompt the question, Why were the Magi brought to Jerusalem at all? |
13349 | And he continued,''Covetousness, passion, ignorance, the destruction of life, theft, adultery, and lying, are these good or bad, right or wrong? |
13349 | And if you lend what new thing do ye? |
13349 | And suppose he were, what then? |
13349 | And the governor, becoming afraid, said to all the multitude of the Jews, Why will ye shed innocent blood?" |
13349 | And the people, what of them? |
13349 | And what does Jesus teach? |
13349 | And what does that point out? |
13349 | And what was the date of Philo? |
13349 | Are these three Gospels based upon a common document? |
13349 | Are they not unprofitable, and causes of sorrow?'' |
13349 | Are you poor in spirit, and are you smitten; in such case what did Jesus teach? |
13349 | As magnetic? |
13349 | Besides, even if such judicial duties were"the rule,"what of the exceptions? |
13349 | Besides, why should they do so? |
13349 | But how could this Being which was veiled from the world be brought to bear upon it? |
13349 | But the Jews answered, and said to Pilate, Did we not tell thee that he is a magician? |
13349 | Confucius answered,''Is not reciprocity such a word? |
13349 | Confucius said,''In carrying out your government, why use killing at all? |
13349 | Could Eusebius have written that Tatian formed this,_ I know not how_, if it had been a harmony of the Gospels recognised by the Church when he wrote? |
13349 | Could he have any other purpose than that of determining the age under which no infants in the neighbourhood of Bethlehem should be allowed to live? |
13349 | Did Jesus and the Devil go flying through the air together, till the Devil put Jesus down? |
13349 | Did so unusual an occurrence cause no astonishment in the city? |
13349 | Do the contents of the books themselves commend them as credible to our intelligence? |
13349 | Do they also suppose his Greek Gospel to have been intended for the same class? |
13349 | Do wise men praise or blame them? |
13349 | Does the external evidence suffice to prove their authenticity? |
13349 | For if ye should love And of our love to all, he them which love you, what reward taught this: If ye love them have ye? |
13349 | For what shall a man be profited if he shall gain the whole world, but lose his soul? |
13349 | For who is better able either to rule my hesitation, or to instruct my ignorance? |
13349 | How can men who can not rectify themselves, rectify others?" |
13349 | How can that be a revelation from God which was well known in the world long before God revealed it? |
13349 | How far are such harsh expressions consonant with fact? |
13349 | How is this a proof of the religion called Christianity? |
13349 | How long did the ministry of Jesus last? |
13349 | How much may fairly be included under the title"Christian Morality"? |
13349 | If Moses be a type of Christ, must not Bacchus be admitted to the same honour? |
13349 | If Pagan historians are thus curiously silent, what deduction shall we draw from the similar silence of the great Jewish annalist? |
13349 | If so, how could they be proved to be contemporary? |
13349 | If so, is not Justin Martyr''s citation drawn from the same anonymous document, rather than from the three Gospels, seeing he does not name them? |
13349 | If so, why is it said that the powers are"ordained of God"? |
13349 | If these had been taken from Gospels written by Apostles, is it conceivable that Justin would not have used their authority to support himself? |
13349 | If, on the other hand, Justin has cited them accurately in this instance, why has he failed to do so in the others? |
13349 | In this they are, in a certain sense, consistent; for contemporary writings[? |
13349 | Is Paley joking with his readers, or only trading on their ignorance? |
13349 | Is it credible that Josephus should thus have ignored Jesus Christ, if one tithe of the marvels related in the Gospels really took place? |
13349 | Is it credible that such duplicity passes to- day for argument? |
13349 | Is it for that they contain accounts of supernatural events? |
13349 | Is it true that the Devil gives power to whom he will? |
13349 | Is not this through having no selfishness? |
13349 | Is poverty of spirit a virtue at all? |
13349 | It is true that many of the tales related are absurd, but are they more absurd than the tales related in the canonical Gospels? |
13349 | Ke K''ang asked,''What do you say about killing the unprincipled for the good of the principled?'' |
13349 | Mark?" |
13349 | Now I ask you, Alopho, absence of covetousness, Athoso, absence of passion, Amoho, absence of folly, are these profitable or not?'' |
13349 | Or do they believe that the second edition of it was designed for Gentile Christians? |
13349 | Or shall we turn to Irenæus, so invaluable a witness, since he knew Polycarp, who knew John, who knew Jesus? |
13349 | Or, lastly, as psychical? |
13349 | Pilate said to those who said that demons were subject to him, Why were your teachers not also subject to him? |
13349 | Pilate saith, Is truth not upon earth? |
13349 | Seeing that all sleep, deposited together in the earth, why do men foolishly seek to treat each other injuriously? |
13349 | Shall the dead arise and praise thee? |
13349 | Shall thy lovingkindness be declared in the grave? |
13349 | Shall thy wonders be known in the dark? |
13349 | Shall we say, then, that bareness is natural to the mountain? |
13349 | Suppose, however, that we allow that the passage is to be taken metaphorically, what then? |
13349 | Supposing, however, that the most exaggerated accounts of Church historians were correct, how would that support Paley''s argument? |
13349 | Surely, then, there was"prospect"enough of"honour and advantage"? |
13349 | That wretches brought out of the temple of obscenity could be trusted with arms? |
13349 | The Jews said, Did we not tell thee so? |
13349 | The Sage replied,''With what, then, will you recompense kindness? |
13349 | The early Jews had clearly no idea of life after death;"for in death there is no remembrance of thee; in the grave who shall give thee thanks?" |
13349 | The rulers in heaven were commanded to admit the King of Glory, but seeing him uncomely and dishonoured they asked,"Who is this King of Glory?" |
13349 | These three, like foul diseases, spread quickly wherever humanity is stagnant and content with wrong"("What Did Jesus Teach?" |
13349 | They were writing the story of a Jew; why should they translate all his sayings instead of writing them down as they fell from his lips? |
13349 | Throughout the New Testament what word is there of patriotism? |
13349 | To which of the Gospels is such an announcement prefixed? |
13349 | Well argued, Dr. Paley; and in the man who sat outside the beautiful gate of the Temple, who examined the limb, or questioned the patient? |
13349 | What appeal to self- reverence? |
13349 | What cry against injustice and oppression? |
13349 | What did the people in the courts below think of the Devil and a man standing on a point of the temple in the full sight of Jerusalem? |
13349 | What does it all, this"evidence,"amount to? |
13349 | What effect would obedience to these injunctions have upon a State? |
13349 | What incitement to heroism? |
13349 | What is this but to say, in polite language, that Jesus was very effeminate? |
13349 | What reliance can be placed on historians(?) |
13349 | What was this motive? |
13349 | What, then, was the knowledge given to him in this? |
13349 | Where is the high mountain from which Jesus and the Devil saw all round the globe? |
13349 | Wherefore? |
13349 | Wherefore? |
13349 | Which of the Evangelists has related for us his own life, so that we may judge of his opportunities of knowing what he tells? |
13349 | Who can reckon the millions of human lives that have been spilt in obedience to them? |
13349 | Why blame a Legree, when he only acts on the permission given by God from Mount Sinai? |
13349 | Why did the star desert them after its first appearance, not to be seen again till they issued from Jerusalem? |
13349 | Why does not Paley explain to us how Jesus came to be leading Jews at Rome during the reign of Claudius, and why he incited them to riot? |
13349 | Why not finish the passage? |
13349 | Why not wash our hands in their blood?" |
13349 | Why should we accept Ignatius''testimony to the star, and reject his testimony to the sun and moon and stars singing to it? |
13349 | Why, then, may we not refer the quotation of Christ''s words, occurring in the Apostolical Fathers, to an origin of this kind? |
13349 | and how is it that Paley knows all about it, though Eusebius did not? |
13349 | and thy righteousness in the land of forgetfulness?" |
13349 | as purely miraculous and magical? |
13349 | do not even the that love ye, what new things publicans the same? |
13349 | do ye? |
13349 | expelled, banished, returning and murdering the reigning pope: what avails it to chronicle these monsters? |
13349 | on chastity), separates the quotations by an emphatic"And,"marking the quotation taken from another place? |
13349 | or thy faithfulness in destruction? |
13349 | or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
13349 | or what shall he thieves do not break through give in exchange for it? |
13349 | that on the Sabbath he healeth and casteth out demons? |
4243 | Are you superstitious? |
4243 | Do you notice this as ominous, or merely as remarkable? |
4243 | In the name of God,I exclaimed,"who are you, and wherefore are you come?" |
4243 | Offer these truths to Power, will she obey? 4243 And now what test do you require? 4243 And they ask upon what principle, with what equity, or under what pretence of public good they are subjected to this injurious enactment? 4243 Are their bodily wants better, or more easily supplied? 4243 Are they subject to fewer calamities? 4243 But in what condition were the labouring classes? 4243 Can any cause be assigned why it is not as likely to break out in the nineteenth century as in the fifteenth? 4243 Do you believe that good or evil principles predominate at this time? 4243 Have these travellers yet obtained for you the secret of the Psylli? 4243 I? 4243 In what state do you suppose the people of this island to have been when they were invaded by the Romans? 4243 Is it from a trust in your own deserts, or a reliance upon the forbearance and long- suffering of the Almighty, that this vain confidence arises? |
4243 | Is it grateful to the memory of those who are the pride and boast of their country? |
4243 | Is it not so, Piscator? |
4243 | Is it upon the Apocalypse that you rest them? |
4243 | Is there any government upon earth that will bear this test? |
4243 | Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? |
4243 | Is this just to these individuals? |
4243 | None of your travellers have reached Utopia, and brought from thence a fuller account of its institutions? |
4243 | On public opinion? |
4243 | On the Parliament? |
4243 | On the government? |
4243 | On the laws? |
4243 | On the people? |
4243 | On the progress of knowledge? |
4243 | On what do you rely for security against these dangers? |
4243 | Upon what do you found this belief? |
4243 | What if the sweating- sickness, emphatically called the English disease, were to show itself again? |
4243 | Why was this? |
4243 | Why, Montesinos, with these books, and the delight you take in their constant society, what have you to covet or desire? |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--"Fish, fish, are you in your duty?" |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--And is this all? |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--I am to understand, then, that you can not see into the ways of futurity? |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--I remember your description( for indeed who can forget it?) |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--I should rather ask of you, will there ever be one? |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--Is such an event to be apprehended? |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--What remedy is that? |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--What, then, may doubt and anxiety consist with the happiness of heaven? |
4243 | _ Montesinos_.--You have well said that there is nothing comfortable in this view of the case: but what is there consolatory in it? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--And what has been imported by such travellers for the good of their country? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--And what was your own state of mind? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Are you, then, Montesinos, so much the dupe of words as to account among their grievances a mere practice of convenience? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Has it proved to you"vexation of spirit"also? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Has the age in return done its duty to them? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Is there no message to him from Walter Landor''s friend? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Is there not a danger that these principles may bear down everything before them? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Is this a salutary or an injurious fashion? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Wherefore precious? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--Who may this political Achilles be whom you have called in to your assistance? |
4243 | _ Sir Thomas More_.--You were at one time near enough that pestilence to feel as if you were within its reach? |
4243 | _ Stranger_.--But if it were the spirit of one with whom you had no near ties of relationship or love, how then would it affect you? |
4243 | _ Stranger_.--Do you extend this to a belief in witchcraft? |
4243 | _ Stranger_.--If a ghost, then, were disposed to pay you a visit, you would be in a proper state of mind for receiving such a visitor? |
4243 | _ Stranger_.--Should you like to have an opportunity afforded you? |
4243 | and is not that danger obvious, palpable, imminent? |
15838 | And is each of these different? |
15838 | And what is that worth,said she, stamping her foot,"which does not recognize a soul at all? |
15838 | And why did n''t she have them, pray? |
15838 | And you say Lewis happened to be in Mobile at the time? |
15838 | But are there no solitudes out of the cave and the desert? 15838 But how satisfy or control these crazy people who begin by ignoring the creeping pace of Time? |
15838 | But why am I here? |
15838 | But, my dear Sir, surely you mean to go under the Juggernaut handsomely, and not squirm in the process? |
15838 | Dear bird,I said,"what is thy name?" |
15838 | Have you the courage to see, Sir Priest? |
15838 | How long have you known these two persons? |
15838 | How?--you saw him, then? |
15838 | Is the parish register nothing? 15838 Now I suppose you would dress up in a blue bag, if your husband liked to see you in it?" |
15838 | Oh, dear, dear, what can I do for you? |
15838 | That is a love worth having, is it not, which will continue, though the cheek be white and furrowed, and the eye dim? |
15838 | The question is, Shall we put you upon our Order of Exercises? |
15838 | Were you well- informed? 15838 What do I contend for? |
15838 | What do they here, with neither cross nor holy symbol? |
15838 | What mean you, Ignacio? |
15838 | What was that you were reading last night in Plato''s Dialogues? 15838 What, then, is that which is able to conduct a man? |
15838 | Who are these swaggering Ishmaelites? |
15838 | Will she never mature? |
15838 | [ 35]Man, thou hast been a citizen in this great state[ the world]; what difference does it make to thee whether for five years or three? |
15838 | A pretty present to make to me, is it not? |
15838 | Am I but the plume in his cap? |
15838 | And have all the precepts in all the Bibles taught men only this? |
15838 | And here the question occurs, How shall this rightful jurisdiction be established in the vacated States? |
15838 | Are You verily the mechanic who is engaged in veneering these out- houses of hell with rosewood? |
15838 | Are not the ardors of the imagination better working- powers than the cold judgments of the reason? |
15838 | Because,--you do n''t want me to be a living lie, do you? |
15838 | But do you profess that belief during the ceremony? |
15838 | But do you take upon you to say, in the view of the gospel it would be none? |
15838 | But how do I know what their religion is, and when I am near to or far from it? |
15838 | But if this can be done in four States, where is the limit? |
15838 | But what are the"artificial wants"to be encouraged? |
15838 | But when a gentleman is robbed of his identity, where is he? |
15838 | But why go to California for a text? |
15838 | But, then, what pirates, what thieves, and what harlots is_ the thief, the harlot_, and_ the pirate_ of De Foe? |
15838 | Dastick?" |
15838 | Did God direct us so to get our living, digging where we never planted,--and He would, perchance, reward us with lumps of gold? |
15838 | Did he seem to prevail over some of them merely by indifference, or by assuming grand airs? |
15838 | Do n''t I see that every day? |
15838 | Do n''t you know that recent scholarship has demonstrated Homer to be nobody in particular? |
15838 | Do we call this the land of the free? |
15838 | Does Wisdom work in a tread- mill? |
15838 | Does not a stream from the golden mountains flow through our native valley? |
15838 | Have you not budged an inch, then? |
15838 | Having got the machinery well to work, might it not be twitched and pulled to effect a wider purification? |
15838 | Heart too soft and will too weak To front the fate that crouches near,-- Dove beneath the vulture''s beak;-- Will song dissuade the thirsty spear? |
15838 | Here is Miss Hurribattle,--who will not acknowledge her noble contempt for the accidental and the transitory? |
15838 | How can one be a wise man, if he does not know any better how to live than other men?--if he is only more cunning and intellectually subtle? |
15838 | How does it appear that no favorable answer is likely to be given to our petitions? |
15838 | I do not hesitate, in such a case, to suggest work, or the almshouse; or why not keep its castle in silence, as I do commonly? |
15838 | If I did, what do you think the underwriters would say? |
15838 | Instead of attempting to pull these hopeful people back into the church, can not you urge the church forward to comprehend their position? |
15838 | Is Montalli dead?" |
15838 | Is it a freedom to be slaves, or a freedom to be free, of which we boast? |
15838 | Is it done in his clerical capacity? |
15838 | Is it not some Devil''s subtlety that deludes you? |
15838 | Is it that men are too much disgusted with their experience to speak of it? |
15838 | Is not our_ native_ soil auriferous? |
15838 | Is not the sea- brine, is not shipwreck, bitter enough to make the cup of life go down here? |
15838 | Is not your conception of human existence nearly this: a perpetual waste deluge, and here and there some Noah in his ark above it? |
15838 | Is she merely the miller who grinds the finest logic? |
15838 | Is the house in Princes Street, Cavendish Square, where we saw the light six- and- forty years ago, nothing? |
15838 | Is there any such thing as wisdom not applied to life? |
15838 | Is there no satire in these names? |
15838 | Is this the ground on which Orientals and Occidentals meet? |
15838 | No- Hire+ Dehumanization of the Laborer= Life- Hire? |
15838 | Of what consequence, though our planet explode, if there is no character involved in the explosion? |
15838 | Or shall it be a quarter of heaven itself,--an hypæthral temple, consecrated to the service of the gods? |
15838 | Or what ill planet crossed his prime? |
15838 | Or, strayed from Eden, desolate, Some Feri calling to her mate, Whom nevermore her mate would cheer? |
15838 | Ordinarily, the inquiry is, Where did you come from? |
15838 | Our democracy has somewhat to learn; it_ knows_ that it has somewhat to learn, and says cheerfully,"What is the use of living without learning?" |
15838 | Pray, admitting that an insignificant minority is to organize the new government, how shall it be done? |
15838 | SHALL CONGRESS ASSUME JURISDICTION OF THE REBEL STATES? |
15838 | Shall I try to tell you why you can have no right to judge us and our affairs? |
15838 | Shall our institutions be like those chestnut- burs which contain abortive nuts, perfect only to prick the fingers? |
15838 | Shall the mind be a public arena, where the affairs of the street and the gossip of the tea- table chiefly are discussed? |
15838 | Shall we ever hear the last of Maréchal Soult''s Murillos? |
15838 | She heard me through, and then said, dryly,--"How old were you when you were married?" |
15838 | She turned away abruptly from the fire, saying,--"Do you know I do n''t love William a particle,--not the smallest atom?" |
15838 | Should we ever be carping at controlling principles, when much of their present manifestation seems full of active worthiness? |
15838 | Suppose you were to submit the question to any son of God,--and has He no children in the nineteenth century? |
15838 | That our children are not legally_ Filii Nullius_,--is this nothing? |
15838 | That was a more pertinent question which I overheard one of my auditors put to another once.--"What does he lecture for?" |
15838 | The singing- school was to hold its semiannual meeting at her house on Thursday next; would I not come down for a day and meet many old friends? |
15838 | There are well- known words which ask and answer the question,"What constitutes_ a State_?" |
15838 | They make one think of fern- leaves and the deep woods, do n''t they?" |
15838 | Thinkest thou to buy me with thy sordid treasure? |
15838 | This impulse,--fanatical as some of its manifestations doubtless are,--might it not be constrained, or at least directed?" |
15838 | Was not the last noticeable publication in post- classical literature the"Rasselas"of Dr. Johnson? |
15838 | Was the goodly scion of our name, transplanted into England in the reign of the seventh Henry, nothing? |
15838 | We have both travelled far since then; but whither have you been travelling? |
15838 | What are nations? |
15838 | What are your timid devices, compared with this of benumbing your adversary at the start by an outright electric shock of untruth? |
15838 | What can we do but meet the future with an open intelligence and a stout heart? |
15838 | What difference does it make, whether you shake dirt or shake dice? |
15838 | What does he say is real love? |
15838 | What ground is there for patriotism in such a State? |
15838 | What have divine legislators to do with the exportation or the importation of tobacco? |
15838 | What his fault, or what his crime? |
15838 | What is it to Congress how justice is administered? |
15838 | What is it to be born free and not to live free? |
15838 | What is it to be free from King George and continue the slaves of King Prejudice? |
15838 | What is the value of any political freedom, but as a means to moral freedom? |
15838 | What shall a State like Virginia say for itself at the last day, in which these have been the principal, the staple productions? |
15838 | What stuff is the man made of who is not coexistent in our thought with the purest and subtilest truth? |
15838 | What would the Colonel take, and close the transaction? |
15838 | What"others,"pray? |
15838 | Where is the hardship, then, if no tyrant or unjust judge sends thee away from the state, but Nature who brought thee into it? |
15838 | Where was the procession? |
15838 | Who is more practical than the idealist? |
15838 | Why is this become a dead letter? |
15838 | Why must we daub the heavens as well as the earth? |
15838 | Why this man''s yearning after intellectual satisfaction, when we only want a little fragment of truth to hang our sentiments upon?" |
15838 | Would it not be an intellectual and moral suicide? |
15838 | Would it not be necessary to omit the triumphal progress through the town, and come to the hill at once? |
15838 | Would you know their extent? |
15838 | Would your own people, at least, look upon a couple so paired to be none? |
15838 | Yes? |
15838 | You? |
15838 | [ Footnote 2:"Clearly a fictitious appellation; for, if we admit the latter of these names to be in a manner English, what is_ Leigh_? |
15838 | _ There_ is a Ballarat, a Bendigo for you,--what though it were a sulky- gully? |
15838 | and by whom shall it be set in motion? |
15838 | and has not this for more than geologic ages been bringing down the shining particles and forming the nuggets for us? |
15838 | and is the last and most admirable invention of the human race only an improved muck- rake? |
15838 | are not the words a mockery? |
15838 | but the jewel in his linen? |
15838 | but the lace on his sleeve? |
15838 | could they ever have applied to those printed petrifactions? |
15838 | for the body or the soul?" |
15838 | had you read a great deal?" |
15838 | is it a family which is extinct?--in what condition would you get it again? |
15838 | or are you only called upon for the profession, but do not make it? |
15838 | or can not the heart in the midst of crowds feel frightfully alone? |
15838 | or does she teach how to succeed_ by her example_? |
15838 | or find it easier to live, because his aunt remembered him in her will? |
15838 | or of what sort are his associates? |
15838 | or, Where are you going? |
15838 | what humane ones with the breeding of slaves? |
15838 | where did they come from?" |
15838 | wouldst thou bribe me,--me, a brother of the Sacred Society of the Holy Jesus, Licentiate of Cordova and Inquisitor of Guadalaxara? |
33596 | How can this man give us his flesh to eat? |
33596 | What hast thou that thou hast not received? 33596 11 Why remain sad and idle? 33596 20 What is it that renders death terrible? 33596 27 Wouldst thou know what thou art? 33596 And does it not appear to you most fitting that God, the Holy Ghost, should preserve His spouse, and God, the Son, His Mother, from sin of every kind? 33596 And if she crosses the sea of death will she forget you? 33596 And if thou hast received, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received? |
33596 | And is anything too good, too beautiful, too precious, for Him? |
33596 | And is it contrary to reason? |
33596 | And the bread which we break, is it not the partaking of the body of the Lord?" |
33596 | And we find it difficult to return this love? |
33596 | And what else could we wish? |
33596 | And who can seriously contemplate those sufferings, borne for us so patiently, without being moved to pity and to repentance? |
33596 | And why should it not be right and useful to invoke the_ intercession_ of the saints? |
33596 | And why? |
33596 | Are not good Catholics more attentive, more devout at Mass than others at their prayer- meetings? |
33596 | Are not these sufficient reasons for the use of the Latin language? |
33596 | Are these words not a sufficient warning to encourage us to persevere in our good resolves? |
33596 | Are you in distress? |
33596 | Are you quite sure of it? |
33596 | Are you to her an honor or a disgrace, a joy or a sorrow? |
33596 | But in the world, in what condition do we behold her? |
33596 | But is it not also a martyrdom to suffer for years the pains of a lingering illness? |
33596 | But is the life of celibacy unscriptural? |
33596 | But should we not go directly to God, since God alone has power to justify us? |
33596 | But what return can I make Thee, being of myself insolvent, indigent, and miserable? |
33596 | Can the altar on which He dwells be too richly adorned? |
33596 | Can we do too much in His honor? |
33596 | Can we doubt the willingness of the saints to aid us by their intercession? |
33596 | Could a course like hers have terminated more appropriately than with so beautiful, painless, and tranquil a passing away? |
33596 | Could language be clearer? |
33596 | Dear reader, did the consummate puerility, silliness, foolishness of such an objection ever present itself to you? |
33596 | Did not God love us first? |
33596 | Did we not oppose them by yielding to our evil inclinations and passions? |
33596 | Do we make void the Gospel? |
33596 | Do we show it in our actions and conduct? |
33596 | Do you shun the company of the wicked? |
33596 | Do you think they would have done so had they families depending upon them? |
33596 | Do you understand any mystery? |
33596 | Do you understand how Jesus Christ is both God and man? |
33596 | Do you understand the Blessed Trinity? |
33596 | Do you wonder, then, that Catholics love and revere their priests? |
33596 | Does religion exert this powerful influence on us? |
33596 | Does this thought not banish all the difficulties of perseverance? |
33596 | For whom, then, shall I henceforth live, if not for Thee, my Lord? |
33596 | Have I not compelled Thee often to dwell in my heart, full of sin and impurity as it was? |
33596 | Have we corresponded with God''s designs? |
33596 | Have you, during your past life, always been a good child of this loving Mother? |
33596 | How can a man sacrifice to idols, when he adores the true God alone? |
33596 | How can the clouds have a voice?" |
33596 | How do I act in suffering and affliction? |
33596 | How do you act in this regard? |
33596 | How must I regard the world and its vanities, when I behold Thee hanging on the cross, covered with wounds? |
33596 | How shall we justify our unfeeling hardness of heart, by which we seek every trifling pretense to exempt us from the duty of aiding the unfortunate? |
33596 | How, then, can it be wrong or superfluous to invoke the intercession of the saints in heaven? |
33596 | How, then, could such a highly privileged body, a pure and virginal body, be permitted to pass through corruption and decay? |
33596 | How, then, shall He feel moved to grant us new benefits? |
33596 | How, then, shall I extol Thee, immortal King of glory? |
33596 | However, is there any reasonable doubt that the saints are able to render us such a service? |
33596 | I have frequently resolved to amend, and yet where do I remain but in the midst of sin and vice? |
33596 | If He had the power to choose her did He not also have the power to preserve her from original sin? |
33596 | If the Son of God said of Himself:"Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and so to enter into His glory?" |
33596 | If they, with the aid of God''s grace, achieved such victories, why should not we, by the same aid, be able to accomplish the little desired of us? |
33596 | If we honor the good and virtuous, where can we find a nobler example of virtue than Mary? |
33596 | If, then, Christ is the author, is not the Catholic practice reasonable? |
33596 | Is it in vain that the keys have been given to the Church? |
33596 | Is it love of truth to believe in the abasement of Christ and to reject His glorification, when both are related in the selfsame book?" |
33596 | Is it not reasonable as well as scriptural to forbid it? |
33596 | Is it not reasonable thus to praise God in psalms and hymns and spiritual canticles? |
33596 | Is it not reasonable to believe and practise that which the Christian Church of every age believed and practised? |
33596 | Is it not reasonable, then, to honor Mary, to love her, and to believe that she loves us? |
33596 | Is it not, then, a reasonable, a beneficial practice? |
33596 | Is it on account of their intrinsic merit? |
33596 | Is it then in vain that Christ hath said:''Whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven''? |
33596 | Is not this a reasonable practice? |
33596 | June 1 CAN WE, amongst all hearts, find one more amiable than that of Jesus? |
33596 | MEDITATION WHO can describe Mary''s sorrow when, returning from Jerusalem, she missed her divine Son? |
33596 | Margaret asked him,"How do you know that we worship a crucified God?" |
33596 | Margaret continued:"Why did you not read further on? |
33596 | Now, dear reader, since Jesus Christ is really present, is not the Catholic practice regarding the Blessed Sacrament reasonable? |
33596 | Of whom have we to expect greater benefits or to fear greater evils-- from God or man? |
33596 | On whom shall we call for aid? |
33596 | Or is there any one that doubts the_ efficacy_ of the saints''prayer with God? |
33596 | Or is there anything in her example that we are unable to imitate? |
33596 | Ought the opinion and ridicule of the world influence us to prevent our pleasing God? |
33596 | Ought this not be sufficient inducement for us to serve Him zealously and gratefully? |
33596 | PRACTICE DURING this second great sorrow, what was Mary''s behavior? |
33596 | PRACTICE"HOW shall this be done, because I know not man?" |
33596 | Reprobus rejoined:"So thou fearest the power of Satan? |
33596 | Shall a Christian be less careful as to their virtue? |
33596 | Should I, then, not bear in union with Thee my easy burden of suffering and accept the sweet yoke of Thy commandments? |
33596 | Should we not adore Him as really present in the Blessed Sacrament? |
33596 | Should we not frequently receive Him with pure and contrite hearts? |
33596 | Should we not honor Our Lord and Our God? |
33596 | Should we not show Him every mark of respect and devotion? |
33596 | Should we not, when we enter the church, genuflect, bend the knee in His honor? |
33596 | The Last Sacraments"Is any man sick among you? |
33596 | The cowardly fear,"What will people say?" |
33596 | The soldiers of the guard were terrified and asked each other,"What is this? |
33596 | Then his body is anointed, and thus is fulfilled what stands written:''Is any man sick among you? |
33596 | They can be made heirs of property, of a kingdom on earth without their consent; why not also of the kingdom of heaven? |
33596 | Thou hast created me for heaven; what, then, have I to do with the world? |
33596 | Was it any more difficult for God to sanctify Mary at the moment of her conception, at the moment of the union of her soul with her body? |
33596 | Were you never ashamed of your Catholic name? |
33596 | What better evidence could we have of the beneficial effects of our ceremonies in raising the heart to God? |
33596 | What else but the intercession of the saint whom he had befriended obtained for this heathen the grace of the Faith and martyrdom? |
33596 | What homage can I give in proportion to Thy greatness? |
33596 | What is more capable of raising the heart and mind of man to God than a priest celebrating Mass? |
33596 | What more inspiring than some of our sacred music? |
33596 | What pledge can I give as an earnest of the gratitude I owe to Thee? |
33596 | What prompts such sacrifices? |
33596 | What return do you make to your Saviour for His great and manifold benefits? |
33596 | What return shall I make for all the benefits Thou didst bestow on me? |
33596 | What would be the necessity of this power if they could not exercise it in confession? |
33596 | When she appeared before him he thus addressed her:"What is your name and condition?" |
33596 | Where will you find charity practised in reality except in the Catholic Church? |
33596 | Who am I, O God, that Thou shouldst work such wonders for my sake? |
33596 | Who can describe this affecting meeting? |
33596 | Who can look upon the crucifix or upon a picture of the Crucifixion without being reminded of all the sufferings of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ? |
33596 | Who will grant me that I may die for love of Thee? |
33596 | Who will say that this practice is not reasonable? |
33596 | Who, for example, can behold the cross on the chasuble the priest wears without thinking of all Christ suffered for us on the cross? |
33596 | Why exhaust thyself in the anguish of melancholy? |
33596 | Witnessing this, how can I continue to sin? |
33596 | Would not Gamaliel''s proposition, to judge whether Christ''s religion be divine or human from its effects, result in its disfavor?" |
33596 | _ Devotion._--What is meant by devotion in prayer? |
33596 | _ Prayer_ O JESUS, Thou hast set me apart from the world; what, then, shall I seek therein? |
33596 | _ Prayer_ O JESUS, who shall give to my eyes a torrent of tears, that day and night I may weep for my sins? |
33596 | void the words of Christ?" |
6417 | Is this reasonable? |
6417 | What has it been hitherto in the political order? 6417 What is Europe?" |
6417 | What is the Third Estate? |
6417 | ( 4) How far might the pope, as universally acknowledged head of the Church, interfere in the internal affairs of particular states? |
6417 | But why did this great institution exist? |
6417 | How might this or that royal family obtain wider territories and richer towns? |
6417 | In other words, what are the great distinguishing achievements of modern times? |
6417 | In the first place, how would the Assembly be assured of National freedom from the intrigues and armed force of the court? |
6417 | In the second place, what direction would the reforms of the Assembly take? |
6417 | Meanwhile, the answer to the other question which we propounded above,"What direction would the reforms of the Assembly take?" |
6417 | On what basis should the new be erected? |
6417 | Scotland] In the eighteenth century, what was the British monarchy? |
6417 | Should Dupleix, wily diplomat as he was, be allowed to make India a French empire? |
6417 | The"old régime"was for old needs; did it satisfy new requirements? |
6417 | What are the duties of Christians toward those who govern them, and what in particular are our duties towards Napoleon I, our emperor? |
6417 | What does it desire? |
6417 | What must we think of those who are wanting in their duties towards our emperor? |
6417 | What was the good of being a clergyman or a noble, if one had no privileges and was obliged to pay taxes like the rest? |
6417 | What was the weak king to do under the circumstances? |
6417 | What would the king do under these circumstances? |
6417 | Why are we subject to all these duties toward our emperor? |
6417 | Why not stir up all the European peoples against their monarchs? |
6417 | Why was it loved, venerated, and well served? |
6417 | [ Sidenote: Government of the Holy Roman Empire] What was the nature of this slight tie that nominally held the Germanies together? |
6417 | exclaimed the emotional tsar:"Where is it, if it is not you and I?" |
6417 | they asked, or,"Is that rational?" |
22329 | A rough pile o''brick like that? |
22329 | Am I not making in my small way the same sort of historical record of the west that Whittier and Holmes secured for New England? |
22329 | Am I not worthy of an occasional friendly word, a message of encouragement? |
22329 | Are n''t you a little hard on me? |
22329 | Are those the mountains? |
22329 | Are we really going up there? |
22329 | Are you gold- hunting? |
22329 | But how did you_ get here_? |
22329 | But when-- how long ago? |
22329 | But-- my sewing? |
22329 | Ca n''t you build a thing like this? |
22329 | Can I combine the two activities? 22329 Can I pick the flowers? |
22329 | Can science find no check upon these recurrent forms of disease? |
22329 | Comfortable? 22329 Common red brick?" |
22329 | Did Sitting Bull take part in this? |
22329 | Did n''t they_ ever_ see her any more? |
22329 | Did your father live to see his grandchildren? |
22329 | Did your mother get her new daughter? |
22329 | Do n''t they have rainbows in the city? |
22329 | Do they really milk their cows in that way? |
22329 | Do you expect it to heat the house? |
22329 | Do you think it will ever be finished? 22329 Has any individual a right to such a privilege?" |
22329 | How can he go skittering about all over the world in this way? |
22329 | How can they shelter and clothe and feed three million men? |
22329 | How long did she live to enjoy the peace of her Homestead? |
22329 | How much do you want for him? |
22329 | I am perfectly contented,she said to me,"except----""Except what, mother?" |
22329 | I can see you are bound to do it,she said,"but where can it be built?" |
22329 | Is Local Color essential to fiction? |
22329 | Is it all made new? |
22329 | Is it worth while to rebuild? |
22329 | It is true an author can make himself felt from any place, but why do it at a disadvantage? 22329 Must humanity forever suffer the agonies of diphtheria and pneumonia? |
22329 | Think of being proprietor of one- half of Sierra Blanca? |
22329 | This compensates for the humble scene of our wedding, does n''t it? |
22329 | Was I cute, Daddy? 22329 Well, Father, what do you think about the European situation?" |
22329 | Well, why do n''t you do it? |
22329 | What about my new daughter? 22329 What are stars? |
22329 | What became of David and Burton? |
22329 | What did you do it for? |
22329 | What do you do it for? |
22329 | What do you intend to do with your experiences? |
22329 | What do you think of it? |
22329 | What do you think you''re doing-- exploring? |
22329 | What is he doing? |
22329 | What is the reason for this literary sterility? |
22329 | What of that? 22329 What shall I do now? |
22329 | What shall I do now? |
22329 | What will they say of you in Wisconsin, when they hear of your appearance at an English dinner wearing''the livery of the oppressor''? |
22329 | What would Dr. Brander Matthews, Colonel Church and Howells, who had warmly commended the book, think of me at this moment? |
22329 | When can you come? |
22329 | When shall we see you? |
22329 | When will you come again? |
22329 | Where can I keep a wife? 22329 Where did_ you_ come from?" |
22329 | Where is the manuscript? 22329 Where shall we spend the night?" |
22329 | Where''s my new daughter? 22329 Why concern yourself with forestry?" |
22329 | Why did n''t Mrs. Garland come? |
22329 | Why not do something with it yourself? |
22329 | Why not stay right here and study modeling with your brother? 22329 Why should not these powerful cities produce authors? |
22329 | Why, Poppie? 22329 Will she ever speak again? |
22329 | Will the Queen ever come to Chicago again? |
22329 | Would you like me to bring my bed and tent? |
22329 | You little witch,he said,"what do you mean by beating your granddad?" |
22329 | _ Why_ are the children calling? |
22329 | _ Why_ did they take her away? |
22329 | Almost at once he asked,"Where is your wife? |
22329 | And the breakfast was-- well it was like one of your stories-- Do you_ always_ have steak and doughnuts for breakfast?" |
22329 | Are n''t you glad you are here in this lovely valley and not out on the bleak Dakota plain?" |
22329 | Are they carrying us to higher grounds in fiction and in other arts, or are they descending to lower levels of motive and workmanship?] |
22329 | As the last horseman of the procession was passing, she asked faintly--"Will it come again, Poppie?" |
22329 | At last she whispered,"Is this the Queen''s room?" |
22329 | At that moment I asked myself,"What right have men and women to bring exquisite souls like this into a world of disease and death? |
22329 | Ca n''t you come now?" |
22329 | Can I walk on the grass?" |
22329 | Can it be, as some have said, that you are only an automaton, a physical reaction?" |
22329 | Can we come now, papa?" |
22329 | Did I say calm? |
22329 | Did n''t you see that little shining thing?" |
22329 | Did not the proof of it lie in the fact that I was pushing my building with desperate haste? |
22329 | Did that deter me? |
22329 | Did you like me then?" |
22329 | Did you look upon us from the dusky corners, adding your faint voices to the chorus of our songs? |
22329 | Do n''t you like our house? |
22329 | Do n''t you want me?" |
22329 | Do you wonder that I hesitated? |
22329 | Enough to feed all the Eagle''s Nest campers.--How many are coming to dinner?" |
22329 | From what dusky night rose your starry eyes? |
22329 | Greeting me pleasantly he asked,"Has the ceremony begun?" |
22329 | Has the life of man any more significance than that of an insect? |
22329 | Have I heard her voice for the last time?" |
22329 | He made no complaint in his short infrequent letters although as spring came on he once or twice asked,"Why do n''t you come up? |
22329 | He pointed toward a woman crouching over a fire in the corral,"You see him-- my wife? |
22329 | How do people make wall paper?" |
22329 | How had I, whose youth had been so full of penury and toil, earned a share in such leisure, such luxury? |
22329 | How would she like some Hopi jars?" |
22329 | I exclaimed,"not Henry M. Stanley of Africa?" |
22329 | I hated to admit my poverty, but what was the use of making any concealment? |
22329 | I withdraw in favor of a better and richer man"--instead of uttering these noble words, what did I do? |
22329 | I wonder if by any chance he is for sale?" |
22329 | If so why bring children into the world?" |
22329 | In the peaceful intervals when she was in her bed, her mother and I discussed the question,"Where shall we make our winter home?" |
22329 | Is it complete?" |
22329 | Is n''t it fun to have it all to ourselves?" |
22329 | Is she here?" |
22329 | It all seemed very foolish to some people and my only explanation was suggested by a brake- man who said,"He''s a runnin''horse, ai n''t he?" |
22329 | Keeping close hold upon my hand she whispered with excitement,"What was that, Poppie? |
22329 | Little Connie, five years old, with chattering teeth, joined her pleading cry,"_ Ca n''t_ you put it out, papa?" |
22329 | My joy in my daughter was an agony of fear and remorse-- why had I not acted sooner? |
22329 | Now here, in her own home, was she to remain without the witchery of crackling flame? |
22329 | Oh, Mother and David, were you with us at that moment? |
22329 | Or shall I go on?" |
22329 | Out of what unillumined void flowered your fairy face? |
22329 | Over and over again as I met her deep serene glance, I asked( as other parents have done),"Whence came you? |
22329 | Several times each day he came into the house to say,"Well, how is my granddaughter getting on?" |
22329 | Shall I go back to Chicago? |
22329 | Shane said,"Remember the time I''bushed''you over in Dunlap''s meadow?" |
22329 | She could model, she could paint and she could draw,--but-- to whom did Mary Isabel turn when she wanted a picture? |
22329 | Suppose France did that? |
22329 | The foreman who came in a few minutes later to see that we were getting fed politely inquired,"Is there anything else I can get you, miss?" |
22329 | The idea of the dinner allured me but I shuffled,"Ca n''t I go as I am?" |
22329 | Then she asked,"Will it ever be home for us again?" |
22329 | To her artist mother? |
22329 | To the conductor I put an anxious question,"Is there a decent hotel in Reno?" |
22329 | Turning to him suddenly I asked,"Sir Henry, how do you pronounce the name of that poisonous African fly-- is it Teetsie or Tettsie?" |
22329 | Was her soul merely the automatic reaction of a material organism against a material environment? |
22329 | Was her spirit dependent on the life of its little body or could it live on independent of the flesh? |
22329 | Was it a gnome?" |
22329 | Was it right for me to give myself up to the enjoyment of it? |
22329 | We like to be bossed, do n''t we, Belle?" |
22329 | What do you say to that?" |
22329 | What does iron come from? |
22329 | What does it matter if the''pussley''does cover the ground?" |
22329 | What does it? |
22329 | What had she to do with elderly folk? |
22329 | What have you to show me?" |
22329 | What makes the moon spotted? |
22329 | What purpose is subserved by keeping the endless chain of human misery lengthening on?" |
22329 | What was it all about? |
22329 | What was that noise? |
22329 | What was that noise?" |
22329 | What was the value of their efforts or my own? |
22329 | When am I to see her? |
22329 | When at last she and I were alone in my study I began,"Well, how do you like West Salem and the Garlands?" |
22329 | Whence came these people, these dances, these ceremonials? |
22329 | Where did that personality come from? |
22329 | Why did n''t you bring her?" |
22329 | Why do n''t you celebrate Eagle''s Nest? |
22329 | Why do you do it?" |
22329 | Why go on? |
22329 | Why maintain the race? |
22329 | Why not all come down together?" |
22329 | Why not fifty dollars? |
22329 | Why not put our wedding a week earlier and let me take you into the mountains? |
22329 | Why should I not feel this? |
22329 | Why spend more time and money on a vain attempt to dispose of this manuscript?" |
22329 | Why travel, when your wife, your babe, and your hearthstone are here?" |
22329 | Will being a husband and a householder cramp and defeat me as a novelist?" |
22329 | Would my humble home content my artist bride? |
22329 | Would you let a gown come between you and a chance to see the Needle Peak? |
22329 | Yes, but what Thanksgiving could there be for him or for me, now? |
22329 | You understand?" |
22329 | Zulime was disheartened by all this, but Mary Isabel climbed to my knee as if to say,"Boppa, where is my fireplace?" |
22329 | she asked; then, with a look of dismay, she added,"What am I going to do with you in Hanover?" |
22329 | when any of us asked"How are you to- day?" |
37231 | ( 1) He then proceeds to meet possible objections:But does not( it may be asked) the very statement of the proposition imply a contradiction? |
37231 | ( 1) In thathigher and purer nature"can a grain of wheat issue in a loaf of bread? |
37231 | ( 2) Now, interpreted even by the rules laid down( xxiii) by Dr. Lightfoot himself, what does this silence really mean? 37231 ( 2) What was the writers authority for this statement? |
37231 | ( 3) Dr. Mansel asks:Is matter or mind the truer image of God? |
37231 | ( 3) Paley states the case with equal clearness:In what way can a revelation be made but by miracles? |
37231 | ( 4) Why, then, does he call it an assumption? 37231 For if he had not come in the flesh, how could men have been saved by beholding him? |
37231 | If I by Beelzebub cast out the demons[--Greek--] by whom do your sons cast them out? 37231 If ye love them which love you, what_ new_ thing do ye? |
37231 | ( 1)"Why, then, say they, do these miracles which you declare to have taken place formerly, not occur now- a- days?" |
37231 | ( 2) What reply, for instance, can reason give to any appeal to it regarding the doctrine of the Trinity or of the Incarnation? |
37231 | ( 3)"Again, he refers to the Cross of Christ in another prophet saying:''And when shall these things come to pass? |
37231 | 13,"For I came not to call the righteous but sinners"? |
37231 | 41. ff, before them, and does not such a supposition likewise infer the actual authority of Matthew''s Gospel? |
37231 | And what is the value of any evidence emanating from the Ignatian Epistles and martyrologies? |
37231 | And what more shall I say? |
37231 | Are we to believe ignorance and superstition or science and unvarying experience? |
37231 | As Justin introduces them deliberately as quotations, why should they be excluded simply because they are combined with a historical statement? |
37231 | At this starting- point of nature what would a man know of its future course? |
37231 | Because it has not happened before? |
37231 | Because we can not explain its cause? |
37231 | But I must ask upon what ground he limits my remark to those who absolutely admit the genuineness? |
37231 | But how do we know that that communication of what is undiscoverable by human reason is true? |
37231 | But what is there to show the existence of a permanent cause? |
37231 | But what purpose was served by thus importing into his notes a mass of borrowed and unsorted references? |
37231 | Can the doctrine of His justification of us and intercession for us, be disjoined from another?... |
37231 | Can the doctrine of our Lord''s Incarnation be disjoined from one physical miracle? |
37231 | Could it with any reason be affirmed that he was acquainted with Matthew and not with Mark? |
37231 | Did Eusebius intend to point out mere quotations of the books which he considered undisputed"? |
37231 | Did they ever really take place? |
37231 | Does the agreement of the quotation with a passage which is equally found in the three Gospels prove the existence of all of them? |
37231 | Does the word Xoyta, however, mean strictly Oracles or discourses alone, or does it include within its fair signification also historical narrative? |
37231 | Dr. Mozley then asks:"What would be the inevitable conclusion of sober reason respecting that person? |
37231 | Had the quotation agreed with our Gospels, would it not have been claimed as a professedly accurate quotation from them? |
37231 | He inquires:"Is the suspension of physical and material laws by a Spiritual Being inconceivable? |
37231 | How can I place any reliance upon it in the other? |
37231 | How can we have a right to declare the induction complete, while facts, supported by credible evidence, present themselves in opposition to it? |
37231 | How, then, according to divines, does it attain any potentiality? |
37231 | If there be a moral at all to the parable, it is the justification of the master:"Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own?" |
37231 | If this point be, for the sake of argument, set aside, what is the position? |
37231 | In how many more may not the same passage have been found? |
37231 | Is it legitimate to accept its evidence when we please, and reject it when we please?" |
37231 | Is it not, then, a_ petitio principii_ to say, that the fact ought to be disbelieved because the induction to it is complete? |
37231 | Is the order of nature, which it is asserted is under the personal control of God, at the same time at the mercy of the Devil? |
37231 | Jesus replies,"In what way have I sinned that I should go and be baptized by him? |
37231 | Justin likewise mentions the cry of Jesus on the Cross,"O God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
37231 | Mark has the expression:"Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary? |
37231 | Moreover, the expression:"What new thing do ye?" |
37231 | Notwithstanding all this persistent and unanimous confirmation, we ask again: What has now become of the belief in demoniacal possession and sorcery? |
37231 | Now what has been the result of this minute and prejudiced attack upon my notes? |
37231 | Now, unless there be an actual order of nature, how can there be any exception to it? |
37231 | Now, what has become of this theory of disease? |
37231 | The first of these is the reply which James is said to have given to the Scribes and Pharisees:"Why do ye ask me concerning Jesus the Son of Man? |
37231 | We would ask, however, what verification of the death have we in the case of the widow''s son which we have not here? |
37231 | What, then, is the position of the so- called Ignatian Epistles? |
37231 | Whence this terrible blow but from the wrath of the Gods, who must be appeased by unusual sacrifices? |
37231 | Who knows of the miraculous cure of cancer, he continues, in a lady of rank in the same city? |
37231 | Who knows of the next case he mentions in his list? |
37231 | Who would believe, or would be justified in believing, the great facts which constitute its substance on the_ ipse dixit_ of an unaccredited teacher? |
37231 | Why send the prisoner to Rome? |
37231 | Why should Ignatius have been so exceptionally treated? |
37231 | Why should the whole phrase not be equally an interpolation? |
37231 | and Mk.)? |
37231 | and how, except by miracles, could the first teacher be accredited? |
37231 | and if not, how is the Gospel from which it was actually taken to be distinguished? |
37231 | and in thy name cast out devils? |
37231 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
37231 | for even,"& c. Here, in the same verse, we have:"If ye lend to them from whom ye hope to receive, what_ new_ thing do ye? |
37231 | or do the fanatical believers who cast themselves under the wheels of the car of Jagganath establish the soundness of their creed? |
37231 | or with Mark and not with Matthew and Luke? |
37231 | or with the third Gospel and{ 281} not with either of the other two? |
853 | Do ye not know that they which minister about holy things live of the things of the temple? 853 For what have I to do to judge them that are without?" |
853 | O Lord of hosts,said the angels,"how long wilt thou not have mercy on Jerusalem and on the cities of Judah, against which thou hast had indignation? |
853 | 15:3 says:"Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition?" |
853 | But how will crimes lie open if they are not disclosed to the priest by confession? |
853 | But to what eunuchs does God make these promises? |
853 | Does not this most exactly display the three parts of repentance? |
853 | God said to Cain:"If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? |
853 | If works were not meritorious why would the wise man say:"God will render a reward of the labors of his saints"? |
853 | If, therefore, God honors saints, why do not we, insignificant men, honor them? |
853 | Of the righteous the wise man says:"Who might offend, and hath not offended? |
853 | Paul also displays his coercitive disposition when he says:"What will ye? |
853 | Shall I come unto you with a rod, or in love and in the spirit of meekness?" |
853 | So too the Lord to Cain:"If thou doest well shalt thou not be accepted?" |
853 | Why would St. Paul have said:"God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labor of love, which ye have showed towards his name"? |
853 | Why, then, would we deny this of the saints? |
853 | Why, therefore, do they not observe this express divine law? |
853 | Why, therefore, would not God, the most pious, who gave assent to Job, do the same to the Blessed Virgin when she intercedes? |
853 | Why? |
853 | and they which wait at the altar are partakers with the altar?" |
853 | or done evil, and hath not done it?" |
39615 | ''What do you do here?'' 39615 And do they allow you to kiss their hands?" |
39615 | And how long have you been travelling about? |
39615 | And if you behave ill,said Bruce,"what do you think you will deserve?" |
39615 | And was it sport, sir,said Bruce,"when you said you would send me the flesh of elephants to eat? |
39615 | Are the women handsome in your country? |
39615 | Are you really sincere in what you say,said I,"and will you have no after excuses?" |
39615 | But do you know,said Sittina,"that no man ever kissed my hand but you?" |
39615 | Christian,said he, taking him by the hand,"what dost thou at such a time in such a country?" |
39615 | Confound Sidi Ali el Genowi,said Bruce,"you beast, can not you give me a rational answer?" |
39615 | Do you think I shall read all these letters? 39615 Have you companions,"says the soldier,"from such a country?" |
39615 | I apprehend, sir,said Bruce, with great firmness, and at the same time drawing away his hand,"you do not know me?" |
39615 | Sir,said Bruce( who had a very important object which he was desirous to gain),"may I beg leave to say two words to you? |
39615 | This being so,said the bey, with great looks of complacency,"what is it in my power to do for you? |
39615 | What are the monks? |
39615 | ''And so you know Sacala and Geesh?'' |
39615 | ''And why did you say this?'' |
39615 | ''Are those before us Ababdé?'' |
39615 | ''Are you wanting a passage to India?'' |
39615 | ''How is it, then,''says she,''that you do not believe in miracles?'' |
39615 | ''I believe so,''says she, smiling;''but is there any harm in believing too much, and is not there great danger in believing too little?'' |
39615 | ''Sir,''says he,''are you an Englishman?'' |
39615 | ''Tell me first,''said I,''who is that you have before?'' |
39615 | ''What is the matter?'' |
39615 | ''You surely are sick, you should be in your bed; have you been long sick?'' |
39615 | ( How do you do, merchant?) |
39615 | After he had taken two whiffs of his pipe, and when the slave had left the room,"Are you prepared?" |
39615 | Again the bey asked,"Whether Constantinople would be burned or taken?" |
39615 | Again, if anything was to befall you, what should I answer to the king and the iteghe? |
39615 | And who is Waragna Fasil? |
39615 | Are you not afraid, so thinly attended, to venture upon these long and dangerous voyages?" |
39615 | But how has it fared with the body, that frail companion of the mind, during this weary journey? |
39615 | But who are you?'' |
39615 | But you want payment, do you?" |
39615 | Did you ever know a Christian eat any sort of flesh that a Mohammedan killed?" |
39615 | Does your highness imagine it difficult for a party to reach the Nile( Niger) through the dominions of your friend the King of Bornou? |
39615 | From whence is he come?'' |
39615 | He asked,''How?'' |
39615 | He had time, wind, water, a vessel, and provisions, and what could he have asked for more? |
39615 | He laughed, and said,''Ay, why not? |
39615 | He looked steadfastly at me, saying, half under his breath,''Endet nawi? |
39615 | He offered them the salute of"Salum Alicum,"with which at first they were offended, asking him what, as a Turk, he had to do there? |
39615 | How can that be?" |
39615 | How does the Nimmer? |
39615 | However, I pricked up courage, and, putting on the best appearance I could, said to them steadily, without trepidation,''What men are these before?'' |
39615 | I answered,''Is this the order in which your majesty means to engage?'' |
39615 | I ask you, where is Ibrahim, your sheikh''s son?'' |
39615 | I was perfectly silent when he cried,''Well, what do you say to us now, Yagoube?'' |
39615 | In a most violent passion, the man threw away his pipe, and, seizing a stick, exclaimed,"Who am I, then? |
39615 | In short, had not human curiosity been pushed too far, and had it made any other discovery than of its own weakness? |
39615 | Is there anything surprising in all this?" |
39615 | Now a question naturally arises, Which of these two rivers is the principal stream? |
39615 | Now, pray, shum, tell me what is your business with me; and why have you followed me beyond your government, which is bounded by that river?'' |
39615 | Should we fight?" |
39615 | Tell me how my cruisers are to know all these different writings and seals?" |
39615 | The answer, after some pause, was,''They are men;''and they looked very queerly, as if they meant to ask each other''What sort of spark is this?'' |
39615 | The first question which the naybe asked Bruce was,"What the comet meant, and why it had appeared?" |
39615 | The king asked him, in a condoling tone,"What ailed him?" |
39615 | They answered me, two or three of them at once,''that it was all very well; what should they do? |
39615 | Upon my coming near them, the eldest put her hand to her mouth, and kissed it, saying, at the same time, in very vulgar Arabic,''Kifhalek howaja?'' |
39615 | What have you to do with the comet?" |
39615 | When he was asked,"What could he do against so many?" |
39615 | When will you see this tried?'' |
39615 | When will you set out? |
39615 | Where are your piastres?" |
39615 | Where is Ibrahim?'' |
39615 | Who are those of my people that have authority to murder and take prisoners while I am here? |
39615 | Who commands you here? |
39615 | Who is that? |
39615 | Who knows, at this moment, if the king is in safety, or how long I shall be so? |
39615 | Whose heart has ne''er within him burn''d, As HOME his footsteps he has turn''d, From wandering on a foreign strand?" |
39615 | Why, then, should"a Briton"insist on carrying his fleecy hosiery to the Line? |
39615 | Will Metical call this safety? |
39615 | Will he not be subject to much troublesome inquiry on that head? |
39615 | Will you come to see me? |
39615 | Will your highness grant protection to a party wishing to proceed that way? |
39615 | You are a stranger now where I command; you are my father''s stranger likewise, and this is a double obligation upon me: what shall I do?" |
39615 | You are come hither by a thousand miracles, and after this, will you tempt God and go back? |
39615 | You did not learn that language in Habesh?'' |
39615 | a girl, a woman, a pagan dog, like yourselves? |
39615 | are you not his slaves? |
39615 | are you raving?'' |
39615 | are you very well?'' |
39615 | bogo nawi?'' |
39615 | did I not tell you this would happen for murdering the aga?''" |
39615 | do you imagine that I came this journey alone?" |
39615 | exclaimed Bruce,"I can not speak for surprise; what is the meaning of your having left Gondar to come into this wilderness?" |
39615 | exclaimed he, with a pretended surprise;''do you know what you are saying? |
39615 | exclaimed one of the company, putting his hand to his knife,"if the naybe wished to murder you, could he not do it here this minute?" |
39615 | he said;"have you brought the money along with you?" |
39615 | repeats he again:''are you to get there, do you think, in a twelvemonth, or more, or when?'' |
39615 | said I;''are they from Sheikh Amner?'' |
39615 | said the king;''you will not persuade me that with a tallow candle you can kill a man or a horse?'' |
39615 | said they,''are you Yagoube, our physician and our friend? |
39615 | should they give themselves up to the Bishareen, and be murdered? |
39615 | this in the king''s presence?'' |
39615 | to- morrow?" |
39615 | was there any other way of escaping?'' |
39615 | where is that to be found? |
39615 | which, in Amharic, is,''How do you do? |
59396 | ''Do you sweeten it as you do Chinese tea?'' 59396 ''Why do you quarrel about such trash as this?'' |
59396 | And does it make cream like the milk of a living cow? |
59396 | And please tell us what jiggers are? |
59396 | And this poisonous plant is used as an article of food? |
59396 | And what do you suppose was once on the site of the great Cathedral of Cuzco? 59396 And what is a guariba?" |
59396 | And why is it called_ rubber_? |
59396 | But can they kill large animals in this way? |
59396 | But do they have no holidays? |
59396 | But why do n''t they raise corn or wheat instead of coffee? |
59396 | Did they all die of famine? |
59396 | Did they build it? |
59396 | Do they make it here or export the bean to other countries? |
59396 | Does this condition of dryness extend all along the western coast to the end of the continent? |
59396 | How can they kill game with guns like these? |
59396 | How could they do that? |
59396 | How does the system of gradual emancipation affect the slaves at the present time? |
59396 | How many pairs of boots will be wanted for each of us? |
59396 | Is everything ready? |
59396 | Is the tradition correct that the people were sunk in barbarism when Manco Capac came on earth? |
59396 | Quinine is produced from this bark, is it not? |
59396 | That was the end of the jaguar, I suppose? |
59396 | Then we have some falls to pass, have we? |
59396 | Was it brought to Europe in Humboldt''s time? |
59396 | What happened to the monkey? |
59396 | What is that? |
59396 | What is that? |
59396 | What was the difference between Old Callao and the present one? |
59396 | When was it made? |
59396 | Who eats the nuts? |
59396 | Why was the city moved from its former position? |
59396 | Why was the country named Tierra del Fuego? |
59396 | You remember the great stones of Baalbec, and how much we wondered at them? |
59396 | And what do you suppose a birlocha is? |
59396 | But if the youth suffered from the rarity of the atmosphere while making no exertions, what must it have been with the animal he rode? |
59396 | Do you know how much is represented by twenty- five million cubic metres?" |
59396 | Do you wonder that while looking at the city our thoughts are drawn towards the mountains in whose midst it is built?" |
59396 | Frank asked what was the mortality in consequence of this famine? |
59396 | Is there anything of the kind here?" |
59396 | The cow- tree is a South American production, is it not?" |
59396 | WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON? |
59396 | Who shall say hereafter that there''s nothing in a name? |
59396 | _ Quien sabe?_"Never mind,"said the Doctor;"what ca n''t be cured must be endured. |
59396 | how can that be?" |
59396 | what more could be required for an excellent meal? |
30236 | And how shall I avoid talking foolishly when the spirit of evil possesses me? |
30236 | And if it were predestined, if it be decreed,said Pepita,"why not submit to Fate, why still resist? |
30236 | And what if persuasion be not enough? |
30236 | And what is this something else? |
30236 | And what would be gained by such a visit? 30236 And why except me? |
30236 | And why should it be to tempt God? 30236 And with whom, then?" |
30236 | Are you sure of your vocation? 30236 But, no; why should I complain? |
30236 | Can this be love? |
30236 | Did I not tell you already that I was very wicked? |
30236 | Do you then persist in your purpose? |
30236 | Do you think it would be amiss to re- enforce argument with a few good blows of a cudgel? |
30236 | Does she know you have come to see me? |
30236 | Have you come to preach me another sermon? |
30236 | How can I deny that what you have pictured in your imagination is, in truth, more beautiful than what exists in reality? 30236 How is this, child? |
30236 | How is this? 30236 How shall I explain,"asked Don Luis,"that I wish to stake on one card all that I have here, against what there is in the bank?" |
30236 | Well, then, why should we remain here all night? 30236 What are you saying about sins and hardness of heart? |
30236 | What if the youngster should pluck me? |
30236 | What is the meaning of all this? |
30236 | What should have happened? 30236 What would I have you do?" |
30236 | When do you wish me to go? |
30236 | Where do you come from, little priest? |
30236 | Will you fight with sabers? |
30236 | With whose son should it be? 30236 With whose son?" |
30236 | You think it would be amusing, eh? 30236 Am I not now sacrificing my pride, my decorum, my reserve, in supplicating you thus, in making this effort to overcome your scorn? 30236 Am I of bronze? 30236 And how can you avoid fearing for her, if you abandon her? 30236 And how will it be when they shall have given me a couple of grandchildren? 30236 And of whom, indeed, should the reverend vicar speak to me? 30236 And, if you have, what harm is there in that? 30236 Are they all capable of this? 30236 Are they, in Spain, equal to their mission? 30236 Are you not afraid of being a bad priest? 30236 Are you not free? 30236 Are you not saintly? 30236 Besides, what could I say to him? 30236 But how undertake her defense? 30236 But she-- what claim has she on you that she should offer you up as a sacrifice? 30236 But what and where are my merits? 30236 But what is to be done? 30236 Can I do more than ask thee this, O my God? 30236 Can not a pure and clean soul rejoice in the cleanliness and purity of the body also? 30236 Can these evil doctrines be in the air, like a miasma or an epidemic? 30236 Can this be the result of a ridiculous vanity, inspired by the arch- fiend himself? 30236 Could I be more humbled or more resigned than I am now? 30236 Do they go among the people, teaching and preaching to them? 30236 Do you imagine that the sacrifice I make will not be-- is not already-- a tremendous one? 30236 Do you know, count, that it would be amusing if I should break your bank? |
30236 | Do you want to back out?" |
30236 | Do you want to go away already? |
30236 | Does it look well that the son should turn out now to be the rival of his father? |
30236 | Does it not exist in the Divine Mind? |
30236 | Does it not tyrannize over and subjugate the beloved object irresistibly? |
30236 | Don Luis, tell me frankly, has Heaven been deaf to this last prayer also? |
30236 | For, when a love is great, elevated, and passionate, does it ever fail to make its power felt? |
30236 | Had he abandoned Don Luis as already lost, or, deeming that he ran no risk, did he make no effort to turn him from his purpose? |
30236 | Have I not the passions of youth?" |
30236 | Have not I sacrificed much? |
30236 | Have those who consecrate themselves to a religious life and to the salvation of souls a true vocation for their calling? |
30236 | Have you by chance fallen in love? |
30236 | Have you not discovered the cause of my suffering?" |
30236 | Have you something of importance to tell me?" |
30236 | Have you taken leave of your senses? |
30236 | How are we to understand otherwise the saying that the beauty of woman, this perfect work of God, is always the cause of perdition? |
30236 | How are we to understand that he who touches a woman, on whatever occasion or with whatsoever thought, shall not be without stain? |
30236 | How dare you delay, as if you had no interest in the matter, when the salt of the earth is melting for you, and the sum of beauty awaits you?" |
30236 | How do I know what passes in the soul of this woman that I should censure her? |
30236 | How is she going to give to God what she does not possess? |
30236 | How say to her that she was not destined for me, nor I for her; that we must part forever? |
30236 | How should you feel well, when you have not slept for days? |
30236 | How, then, should she bestow her hand upon any of the rustics who, up to the present time, have been her suitors? |
30236 | How, without attaining to its purity, how, without beholding its light, can I hope to enjoy the delights of divine love? |
30236 | However unworthy she may be, if she has inspired this great passion, do you not suppose that she will share it, and be the victim of it? |
30236 | I know not what passed within me-- and how describe it, even if I knew? |
30236 | If God had not willed that you should approach at that moment, what would have become of me?" |
30236 | If he is so holy, if he is so virtuous, why did he, with his glance, promise me everything? |
30236 | If he loves God so much, why does he seek to hurt one of God''s poor creatures? |
30236 | If these ladies answered thus, what answer will not Heaven give to those who hope to gain it without merit, and in the twinkling of an eye? |
30236 | In the bottom of my heart have I been able to pardon him his conduct toward my poor mother, the victim of his errors? |
30236 | Is it not so, count?" |
30236 | Is it only necessary to present one''s self in order to triumph? |
30236 | Is not this frightful? |
30236 | Is the virtue of love, I ask myself at times, always the same, even when applied to diverse objects; or are there two species and qualities of love? |
30236 | Is there not something reprehensible in the displeasure with which I regard the neatness and purity of Pepita? |
30236 | Is this charity? |
30236 | Is this displeasure, perchance, because she is to be my step- mother? |
30236 | Is this religion? |
30236 | Is this woman, then, worth more in my eyes than all the kingdoms of the earth? |
30236 | It would be shameful-- would it not?--that Don Luis should be able to control and conquer himself, and that I should not be able to do so? |
30236 | May it not be woman in general, and not I, solely and exclusively, that has awakened this idea?" |
30236 | May not this be an illusion of mine? |
30236 | More than fame, honor, power, and dominion? |
30236 | Must holiness be unclean? |
30236 | Once perceived and known by me, shall it not continue to live in my soul, triumphing over age and even over death? |
30236 | Or how are we to understand, in a universal and invariable sense, that woman is more bitter than death? |
30236 | Otherwise how are you going to spend your time, unhappy boy?" |
30236 | Ought you not to fly to her to deliver her from despair, and bring her back to the right path? |
30236 | Pepita began her answer to this series of affectionate inquiries with a deep sigh; she then said:"Do you not divine my malady? |
30236 | Quite the contrary.--Currito, tell me, in this heap of gold here, is there not already more than there is in the bank?" |
30236 | Sha n''t I bring you a cup of linden tea?" |
30236 | Shall I say to him that it is I who am in love with Pepita; that I covet the treasure he already regards as his own? |
30236 | She-- who has treated so many others with disdain-- why should she be attracted by me? |
30236 | Tell me, wretch, why did you not stay where you were, with your uncle, instead of coming here? |
30236 | That once or twice I fancy Pepita has looked at me in a way different from that in which she usually does? |
30236 | This is not the truth; and, above all, how could I tell this to my father, even if, to my misfortune and through my fault, it were the truth? |
30236 | To what, on the other hand, does this woman aspire, and what are her hopes? |
30236 | Well, then, this being so, how would you have me act, in order to avoid seeing Pepita Ximenez? |
30236 | What diabolical notion has entered into your mind? |
30236 | What do I say-- like any other? |
30236 | What do you mean by saying I am very much to blame?" |
30236 | What has the vicar said to you?" |
30236 | What have I done, O my God, that thou shouldst favor me? |
30236 | What is it that ails you? |
30236 | What is the natural consequence? |
30236 | What is the precious jewel she is going to renounce, what the beautiful ornament she is going to cast into the flames, but an ill- requited love? |
30236 | What is the use of sitting here longer, gazing into vacancy, as if you were waiting to catch flies?" |
30236 | What sins can you have committed, you who are so good?" |
30236 | What would I not do for Don Luis? |
30236 | What would the dean think? |
30236 | What would you have me do?" |
30236 | What would you have? |
30236 | What, then, could I tell my father? |
30236 | Where have you been, imbecile? |
30236 | Where is the money for your new bank?" |
30236 | Where the mortifications, the extended prayers, and the fasting? |
30236 | Where was now his guardian angel? |
30236 | Who can say? |
30236 | Who could have imagined it?" |
30236 | Who would not forget and scorn every other love for the love of God? |
30236 | Why did I basely deceive her? |
30236 | Why did I make her believe I loved her? |
30236 | Why did I return her glances of fire? |
30236 | Why did he love me, why did he encourage me, why did he deceive me? |
30236 | Why did my vile lips seek hers with ardor, and communicate the ardor of an unholy love to hers? |
30236 | Why should I not say it without fearing to offend you? |
30236 | Why should I return insult for insult? |
30236 | Why should I seek to deny what the apostle and so many holy fathers and doctors of the Church have said? |
30236 | Why should I, who desire to die, fear death? |
30236 | Why should we not love each other then without shame, and without sin, and without dishonor? |
30236 | Will not the father be displeased with the son for loving you? |
30236 | Yet, after all, I say to myself at times, Is the thought so absurd, so incredible, that this illusion should have an existence in reality? |
30236 | You promise me to come?" |
30236 | are the favors of Heaven thus obtained all at once? |
30236 | but who will deny, either, that the real possesses a more seductive charm than that which exists only in the imagination? |
30236 | if thou dost take my part, who shall prevail against me?" |
30236 | must virtue be slovenly? |
30236 | or"What are you about to do?" |
30236 | she said;"do you want to make me take out my handkerchief and begin to bellow like a calf? |
41687 | Ah,cried the lad,"you would leave me the earthly reward while you gain the eternal? |
41687 | And if I stay, will you stay? |
41687 | And why did you make that offering? |
41687 | Know you when you will die, Jeanne? |
41687 | Why,asked her judges,"was your banner carried into the church of Rheims to the consecration rather than those of the other captains?" |
41687 | [ 2] CHAPTER I What Is Gothic Architecture? 41687 *** Cessez: qu''espérez- vous de vos incertitudes, Vains pensers, vains efforts, inutiles études? 41687 A hazard, such juxtaposition? 41687 Abîmés de cette mer profonde, Pendant qu''à l''infini ta clarté nous inonde, Pouvons- nous seulement ouvrir nos faibles yeux? 41687 Ah, gentil duc,''me dit- elle quelques instants après,''aurais- tu peur? 41687 Alas for the_ bons et loyaulx Franxois de la cité de Rains!_ Has Jehanne la Purcelle forgotten her promise never to abandon you? 41687 And what are they doing there? |
41687 | Architecturally Avignon does not fit into our category, but who can close a chapter on the Midi and not mention, among gems, this diamond? |
41687 | Are personalities lacking? |
41687 | Are there not millions of good Christian folk in India to- day? |
41687 | Are we not men even as they?" |
41687 | But the sadness which the early- Gothic churches of France rouse in the soul, is it not the stumbling name we give to an eternal Hope? |
41687 | But what would be Chartres, his spot of election for prayer, were it unsoftened by its"storied windows richly dight"? |
41687 | But who that appreciates this great man would tone down his splendid vehemence? |
41687 | But why judge a system by its extremes? |
41687 | Can a living limb be called a crutch? |
41687 | Can churches be the creation of rebellion and hate when into their very stones passed the clamorous vibrant faith of those crusading generations? |
41687 | Can that intangible quality which is sheer inevitable beauty be dissected? |
41687 | Can the Norman be said to have discerned in diagonals their immense possibilities any clearer than had the Lombard? |
41687 | Does not art fill in the intellectual life the same place that hope does in the moral? |
41687 | Does such history seem too remote to be of emotional value? |
41687 | Does the power of that beauty transcend the senses, that the eye sees what it sees not?... |
41687 | Et cela voulait dire: la vie la mort? |
41687 | Fire? |
41687 | For how, they asked, can a churchman rebuke lay injustices if he owes his position to the very culprits he should censure? |
41687 | Had he not denied thrice? |
41687 | Had not another of the selected twelve betrayed for paltry lucre? |
41687 | Had not everyone of them run away in the hour of need? |
41687 | Has your last word of sophistry been said, O cult of slaves? |
41687 | How explain why, even when enveloped in night, this cathedral loses nothing of its beauty? |
41687 | How is it to be prevented again? |
41687 | I would know if you still think of one whom you loved, if, in God''s presence, you can lean toward our distress? |
41687 | Ici le plus pauvre homme s''élève au rang des grands intellectuels, des poètes, que dis- je? |
41687 | If jealous love should go in search of virtue, Where shall he find it purer than in Blanche? |
41687 | If love ambitious sought a match of birth, Whose veins bound richer blood than Lady Blanche? |
41687 | If lusty love should go in search of beauty, Where shall he find it fairer than in Blanche? |
41687 | In Normandy? |
41687 | In Troyes there were so many churches that the old saying ran:"You arrived from Troyes? |
41687 | In our own day has the cry of the underman, voiced by the old Norman poet, been silenced? |
41687 | In the Roman Breviary, he is thus recorded:"Thou hast written well of me, Thomas, what recompense do you ask of me?" |
41687 | Is it fanciful to feel that in the grave forest stillness of Chartres''interior lingers much of the theocratic nostalgia that forever haunts the Celt? |
41687 | Mais ne l''a- t- il pas déjà décidé, puisqu''il vous a envoyée?" |
41687 | Might not a mocking grotesque beside an angel be taken as emblem of the external antagonism of the animal and the spirit in man? |
41687 | Moses was sorcerer and thief( and the Ten Commandments?). |
41687 | Ne sait- tu pas que j''ai promis à ta femme de te ramener sain et sauf? |
41687 | Now, of us two, whom will the king most honor for guarding his fortresses?" |
41687 | Que dirai- je? |
41687 | Remi?" |
41687 | SAINT BERNARD, AND CISTERCIAN INFLUENCE IN GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE[310] What is genius? |
41687 | ST. URBAIN AND OTHER CHURCHES AT TROYES[147] Madame, je vous le demande, Pensez- vous ne soit péché D''occire son vrai amant? |
41687 | Surely not in Lombardy was conceived the new system of construction? |
41687 | Surely those enlightened men mused with spiritual benefit before the_ Ecce ancilla Domini_ at Moissac? |
41687 | Tell me, you think I would do wrong in leaving?" |
41687 | That he should overstress the fall of man and original sin, what wonder? |
41687 | The dear words of mock reproach:"What you, the youngest, dare advise me against all the great and the wise men of France? |
41687 | The poet voiced the indignant outcry:"Hath not God called us all, bond or free, to his service?" |
41687 | WHAT IS GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE? |
41687 | Was man meant for the superlative on earth? |
41687 | Was not the fate of Spain close at hand to prove the possibility of Oriental invasion? |
41687 | Was the last word said? |
41687 | What cry from a stricken heart is more moving than Bernard''s lament for his brother Gerard? |
41687 | What remains to- day of the XII- century abbatial built by Suger of St. Denis? |
41687 | What were Bernard''s thoughts as he gazed at their haunting rendering of the Incarnation? |
41687 | What would our critics of Wittemberg and Geneva say? |
41687 | What, then, killed Gothic art? |
41687 | Where in Burgundy is found the earliest Gothic? |
41687 | Where in England are there to be found the earlier trials? |
41687 | Who has not watched the widening ripples of water spread from a center? |
41687 | Who remembers that he is in a Gothic church when in the somber cathedral of Florence? |
41687 | Why has not Tours named her chief square and residential street for Balzac, her own son, instead of for Emile Zola? |
41687 | Why? |
41687 | Why? |
41687 | Would the civic halls of Noyon, Arras, St. Quentin, and Ypres lie in ruins if Frankfort and Lübeck had remembered? |
41687 | Yet who, of its devotees, would have it different? |
41687 | [ 176] Is it not better to dwell a little sadly far from the world, under the hand of God? |
41687 | [ 35] R. de Lasteyrie,"La déviation de l''axe des églises est- elle symbolique?" |
41687 | must Thou char the wood e''er Thou canst limn with it? |
41687 | must we then risk our lives to save these bombarders of hospitals, these incendiaries of cathedrals?" |
41687 | what found she there? |
6486 | But are you not going farther? |
6486 | How can you praise such work, dear Mother? |
6486 | It seems strange that we rebel against trials, since everything that God sends is good and desirable? |
6486 | Should you not have known me better? |
6486 | What has become of your illness, Madam? |
6486 | Why can not I love Thee infinitely? 6486 And was he then really destined for nothing better than the slavery of the world? 6486 And what do I desire of Thee, O my All? 6486 Another time, the same interior monitor asked,If you had a costly pearl or diamond, would you like to have it thrown into the mud?" |
6486 | Are you, indeed, happily chosen to spread in that far- off region the heavenly flame of His love? |
6486 | Awed and bewildered by the solemnity of the address, the child could only say,"But I shall never see you again?" |
6486 | But how could she? |
6486 | But where, meantime, was the heavenly Star, to whose guidance they had confided themselves so lovingly and so implicitly? |
6486 | Can it rest on an Altar of fire and not be set on fire?" |
6486 | Could it be true that that worthless world was one day to boast of having thrown its shackles round the heart of the son of Marie Guyart? |
6486 | Had she perished,--she, the soul, the living model, the cherished Mother of the community? |
6486 | Had the remembrance of her teaching utterly vanished, and the last trace of her maternal influence quite faded away? |
6486 | Have I a chance of getting any of it? |
6486 | How could a feeble woman arrest an impetuous torrent? |
6486 | How long shall I be banished from Thy presence, O Lord? |
6486 | How shall the mother summon courage to bid him adieu? |
6486 | I have eight children dependent for support on my work; if one of them fell sick, what should I do? |
6486 | Knowest Thou not that I love but Thee? |
6486 | Must she not have attracted the complacency of the angels''Lord? |
6486 | She had never refused Him one gift He craved; withheld one sacrifice He asked; was He to be outdone in generosity? |
6486 | That, already deprived by death of one parent, he was now by her own voluntary act to lose the second too? |
6486 | The most lovely above the sons of men, beautiful and attractive beyond description, lovingly embraced me, and then He asked,''Wilt thou be mine?'' |
6486 | The projected work could not go on without the help of religious Sisters, and none had been engaged; where were they to be sought? |
6486 | This being so, will you not give me leave to obey God, who commands me to go away?" |
6486 | Was this magnificent harvest to be thus prematurely blighted? |
6486 | What can I fear while shielded by protection at once so loving and so powerful?" |
6486 | When would it become a reality? |
6486 | Where could an efficacious barrier be found to its farther progress? |
6486 | Where find words to say that although he should ever dwell in her heart, her home and his could be one no longer? |
6486 | Who will give me wings to fly to Thee, the only Object of my love? |
6486 | Why not then seek in the latter, the happiness which he had vainly dreamed of finding in the former? |
6486 | Why, O Lord, can not we burn like them with silent love? |
6486 | Will you, then, accept me as the companion of your voyage and a co- operatrix in your future labours? |
6486 | Wilt Thou suffer that they should not live for Him who died for all? |
6486 | and fainted for His courts, now that their portals were about to be thrown open for her admission? |
6486 | of angels? |
6486 | she would say;"for Thyself who art Love; why then should I not speak of love? |
6486 | what can I say of it? |
6486 | what return shall I make Thee for Thine excessive charity towards me? |
6486 | wilt Thou permit them to remain in ignorance of my Jesus? |
38375 | Canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons? |
38375 | Suppose ye that I came to send peace on earth? 38375 * Why should not the Jews have one also? 38375 *Christos being strictly a Greek epithet, would the Jewish populace give a Greek name to a Jew by birth?" |
38375 | ** Did he not also spare the ten or more Christian soldiers of his own army, who were proved to have conspired against his life? |
38375 | ** Did not Cicero, when he travelled in Greece, find inscriptions on monuments to many Christs? |
38375 | ** How could Photius, in the 9th century, find that in Josephus which Origen, in the 3rd century, had declared was not in him? |
38375 | ; and why should not the Jews be armed with a god as well as their neighbors? |
38375 | And who is to blame for all this? |
38375 | But as it is only upon hearsay that I judge of your opinions, pray let me know from yourself your notions respecting the deity? |
38375 | Can anything match the stupidity and monstrous credulity of calling such a book the word of God? |
38375 | Can they make right wrong, or wrong right? |
38375 | Canst thou bring forth the twelve signs in the season?" |
38375 | Could this have been possible if these gospels had been written when these"authentic"writers lived? |
38375 | Did the Emperor Julian punish these Antiochians in any way whatever, when they heaped upon him every kind of abuse and indignity? |
38375 | Has any such thing happened in his own, his father''s, his grandfather''s, or his great grandfather''s time? |
38375 | Have the majority of mankind, who are thus victimised, no remedy against this horrid order of things? |
38375 | Hence the few who knew Aught worth recording, and were fools enough To vent their free opinions, what has been Their recompense and their reward? |
38375 | Here the difference is in distinction of terms:--"Reason and instinct, how can ye divide? |
38375 | How could Moses know anything of this? |
38375 | How could he speak of the sceptre of Judah? |
38375 | How does he incur the implacable vengeance of the theologians? |
38375 | If it is asked,"can not a law that is made by the Supreme Power be suspended by its author?" |
38375 | In Isaiah lxv., 16, is not the"God Ammon"mentioned in the original, and suppressed by the English translators? |
38375 | In Luke i, 85, is not this word pneuma translated"Ghost"? |
38375 | Infidelity-- we say; but to what? |
38375 | It is most true that the working man wants rest; but is not he the best judge when recreation or rest becomes necessary? |
38375 | MOD.--Are not the words creator and creation used in the Bible? |
38375 | MOD.--The absolute sway which Brahminism has over the mind of the Hindus, is perhaps attributable to its being the oldest of all known religions? |
38375 | MOD.--What proof have we that this globe has been in being longer than the period assigned for it by the Jewish and Christian priesthoods? |
38375 | Matthew and John were said to be present-- how came they to omit even the slightest notice of this vital root of Christianity? |
38375 | Neither Philo nor Josephus deny that the Jews borrowed circumcision from the Egyptians; why, then, might they not borrow a god also? |
38375 | Pray how does immateriality think?" |
38375 | Previous to what you call its creation by your immaterial artificer, was he a vacuum living in a vacuum? |
38375 | Priests, have these things taken place? |
38375 | Putting aside the monstrosity of this story, in relation to number, could this offence arise from looking into an_ empty_ box? |
38375 | So true is the Spanish proverb, that"Man is an ass that kicks those? |
38375 | Were not these holy ministers prompted by their superior learning and humanity, to endeavor to save people? |
38375 | What does the Atheist less? |
38375 | What does the pampered Oxonian professor of theology know more of it than the meanest cow- boy in England? |
38375 | What had become of them when Xenophon wrote of the eastern nations, which was only 150 years after their alleged return from Babylon? |
38375 | What is it that most generally sets the father''s heart against the son, and makes the son abhor the presence of his father? |
38375 | What then does the record of the past discover to have been the effects of Christianity upon men and nations? |
38375 | What was his fate afterwards? |
38375 | What was it that first occasioned the shedding of human blood, on account of supernatural speculations, and imaginary existence? |
38375 | Where is such a government to be found? |
38375 | Where is there another of all the New Testament predictions that has been so literally fulfilled? |
38375 | Where is this to be found in Jeremiah? |
38375 | Where then, O Rome, were your Brutus'', your Cincinnatus'', your Catos, your Marcus Aurelius'', your Julians? |
38375 | Why did not the Goshenites( who had their usual light) avail themselves of so good an opportunity to run away? |
38375 | Why did the Christians, in after times destroy the work above- mentioned, and leave his"Natural History?" |
38375 | Why do the aristocracy and the rich of the land persecute and pursue him to ruin? |
38375 | Why is the second crucifixion, as narrated by this tell- tale, John, said to have happened, not upon a mount, but in or near a garden? |
38375 | Why, then, should not similar means be used in the nineteenth century to answer the same purpose? |
38375 | Why? |
38375 | Why? |
38375 | Why? |
38375 | With these heavenly matters upon their hands, how could these holy men find time to resist the invasion of their country? |
38375 | Would the law relating to asses and he- goats have been made if the unnatural crime which it was intended to prevent had not been in practice? |
38375 | You ask, how came man into existence? |
38375 | are these merely chance coincidences? |
38375 | what do they mean? |
41766 | Are there any abuses in the Order? |
41766 | Are you married? |
41766 | Are you waiting for someone else? |
41766 | Do you pray to the Blessed Virgin? |
41766 | Do you take the discipline? |
41766 | For what is that peace which is incompatible with this Society? 41766 Have you a Pope?" |
41766 | Have you made any changes in the government of the Order? |
41766 | How could we be conspirators? |
41766 | O man of little faith, why did you doubt? |
41766 | They were to have come last year,continues the writer;"Will they come this year? |
41766 | What authority would you have if, instead of abolishing the Society, the Pope had done something else? |
41766 | What do you mean by a Jesuit? |
41766 | What does this mean? |
41766 | What is that for? |
41766 | What party or group or club or lodge,says a sometime unfriendly paper, the"Italia,""can claim a similar distinction?" |
41766 | What shall I say, Brethren,he asks,"to let you know what I think of the religious society which is now so fiercely assailed? |
41766 | Where are you going? |
41766 | Where are your moneys? |
41766 | Who are you, and what do you come here for? |
41766 | Who are you? |
41766 | Who is their superior? |
41766 | Why did God permit me to meet you,said one of them,"if I am going to suffer both here and hereafter?" |
41766 | After reciting these facts, Boero asks why the ex- General was kept in such a long and severe confinement? |
41766 | But what do I hear? |
41766 | But what progress has it made? |
41766 | But, even if it were true, Sire, why not punish the guilty without making the innocent suffer? |
41766 | Can I do so, even if a number of innocent persons are killed?" |
41766 | Choiseul''s varnish of courtesy had been all rubbed off by the incident, and he wanted to know"who were going to win in the fight? |
41766 | Do you not think he ought to have allowed the Jesuits to justify themselves, especially as every one is sure they could not? |
41766 | Father Faure inquired of one of his judges:"For what crime am I in jail?" |
41766 | Finally, does it not seem to you that he could act with more common sense in carrying out what after all, is a reasonable measure?" |
41766 | Finally, let all endeavor to acquire that true wisdom of which St. James speaks( iii, 13):''Who is a wise man and indued with knowledge among you? |
41766 | For what have we taught, however you may qualify it with the odious name of treason, that they did not uniformly teach? |
41766 | For, was it not a justification of all the hatred they had invariably heaped on the Society wherever it happened to be? |
41766 | Go to the Flathead Reservation in Montana, and look at the work of the Jesuits and what do you find? |
41766 | Had he perhaps received some divine intimation of what Borgia was yet to be? |
41766 | He saw there an immense building on whose façade were cut the letters I. H. S."What is that?" |
41766 | Hence he is told to ask himself:"Who is Christ? |
41766 | His name was O''Reilly, but what could he do with 14,000 people? |
41766 | How could he have been otherwise? |
41766 | How could the enormous success of their performances be otherwise explained? |
41766 | How does the Society survive all these disasters? |
41766 | How long were they there? |
41766 | How were the rest to be reached? |
41766 | I ask then, which is true morality and which of the two books is more useful to mankind? |
41766 | If none of the kings and diplomats had blamed Clement for acting as he did, why should they blame Pius VI for using his own right in the premises? |
41766 | If they were condemned, how would the decision affect de Britto''s canonization? |
41766 | In the disturbances of 1847, he was on his way to Switzerland when he was halted by a squad of furious soldiers who asked him"Are you a Jesuit?" |
41766 | Indeed, is it likely that Pope Clement XIV would have omitted to note the defection in his Brief of Suppression, if they had been guilty? |
41766 | It meant the loss of his position, perhaps, but what did he care? |
41766 | It might be asked, however, why did they not foresee the possible failure of their request and provide otherwise for priests? |
41766 | It was on this occasion that Campion answered the question:"Do you believe Elizabeth to be the lawful queen?" |
41766 | Might they not then have thought that, in view of what the bishop had already done both in civil and ecclesiastical matters, he was mentally deranged? |
41766 | Should he disband his communities which were performing very effective work in France or wait for developments? |
41766 | Should you not have pity on our lot and grant us a pension? |
41766 | Should you not rather ask, Sire, what will God say? |
41766 | The prospects seemed fair for the moment, for had not the French and Turks been companions in arms in the Crimea? |
41766 | This angered the Pope, and he asked Laínez, who put the case before him:"Do you want to join the schism of that heretic Philip?" |
41766 | This was a most amazing mask; for Palgrave would have escaped notice, whereas everyone would immediately ask, who is this Jesuit Jew? |
41766 | Thus for instance, he was asked,"Do you think you have any authority since the suppression of the Society?" |
41766 | Thus, on May 4, 1767, D''Alembert wrote to Voltaire:"What do you think of the edict of Charles III, who expels the Jesuits so abruptly? |
41766 | Was it legitimate? |
41766 | What became of the scattered Jesuits? |
41766 | What do His commands and example suppose or suggest?" |
41766 | What had the Jesuits to do with all this? |
41766 | What happened to the Jesuits in France in the meantime? |
41766 | What is to come who knows? |
41766 | What kind of people was he pursuing? |
41766 | What the future has in store, who can tell? |
41766 | What was he to do? |
41766 | What will become of our flourishing congregations with you and those cultivated by the German Fathers? |
41766 | When the conventional answer was given, he angrily demanded"Do you take me for a scoundrel?" |
41766 | Where is there anything heroic in being merely the messenger between the General and the Pope? |
41766 | Where was Kino all this time? |
41766 | Who shall say that the faith of the cultivated individual is firmer than the faith of the common people? |
41766 | Who shall say that the many are fickle; that the chief is firm? |
41766 | Who slew Henry III? |
41766 | Who was Ricci? |
41766 | Why does He avoid that? |
41766 | Why does He do this? |
41766 | Why should he be sent to France where he had no friends? |
41766 | Why should such a man be cited as the representative of a body from which he was ordered to be expelled and which he had attempted to destroy? |
41766 | Why then should we object to Company of Jesus?" |
41766 | Why was he not compelled to study philosophy first like everyone else? |
41766 | You may tell me that it is now an accomplished fact; that the royal edict has been promulgated and you may ask what will the world say if I retract? |
41766 | the kings or the Jesuits? |
21859 | But what if I want more? |
21859 | Do you not hear,he said,"that we were overcome by guns? |
21859 | In what respect was my answer other than respectful? 21859 Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall"[missing a"."?] |
21859 | What contumacy, then, was there in my answer? 21859 When was it you ever heard, most gracious Emperor, that in a question of faith laymen should be judges of a bishop? |
21859 | Why, then, are you thus disturbed? 21859 ''[ 369] What meaneth this that he saith,''But although we?'' 21859 ***** Does it give any sanction to Protestantism and its adherents? 21859 5. Who''s to Blame? 21859 AND WHAT SAY JOVINIAN AND HIS COMPANIONS? 21859 Aerius was an Arian; does this mend matters? 21859 Ambrose is not here; he is above; do you wish to see him?'' 21859 And how does the fact of their living in the fourth century prove there were Protestants in the first? 21859 And what is meant by its being a matter of history? 21859 And, to say truth, what heresy hath ever burst forth, but under the name of some certain man, in some certain place, and at some certain time? 21859 Are there any traces of Luther before Luther? 21859 But now supposing the question is asked, are Ambrose, Leo, and Gregory right? 21859 But what is meant by the words_ barbarous_ and_ civilized_, as applied to political bodies? 21859 But why? 21859 By what channels, then, had the divine philosophy descended down from the Great Teacher through three centuries of persecution? 21859 CHAPTER V. AND WHAT DO THE APOSTOLICAL CANONS SAY? 21859 Can imagination invent a more intolerable punishment upon pride? 21859 Do they seek my gold? 21859 Does he require our lands? 21859 Does the Emperor wish to tax us? 21859 First, can a civilized state become barbarian in course of years? 21859 First, let him consider what is conveyed in the very idea of Ecclesiastical Canons? 21859 For can any strain have more of influence than the confession of the Holy Trinity, which is proclaimed day by day by the voice of the whole people? 21859 For how is it possible, in much speaking, to escape sin? |
21859 | For the devil said,''Jesus, Son of the living Son, why hast Thou come to torment us before the time?'' |
21859 | Granting that Catholicism be a corruption, is it possible that it should be a corruption springing up everywhere at once? |
21859 | Here then is room for endless doubt; for why may they not deceive us in cases in which we can not detect the deception? |
21859 | How could it be otherwise with those who may be called the outlaws of the human race? |
21859 | How is it we see them in such distress when the hand is laid on them? |
21859 | If Aerius is an authority against bishops, or against set fasts, why is he not an authority against the Creed of St. Athanasius? |
21859 | If so, what does it do for them, and whence is it supplied? |
21859 | If that time can not be pointed out, is not"the Religion of Protestants"a matter, not of past historical fact, but of modern private judgment? |
21859 | If the Church system be not Apostolic, it must, some time or other, have been introduced, and then comes the question, when? |
21859 | Is a man to be allowed to say what he will, and bring no reasons for it? |
21859 | Is it not possible that an error has got the place of the truth, and has destroyed all the evidence but what witnesses on its side? |
21859 | Is it possible to conceive, under such circumstances, that there would be no anachronisms or other means of detection? |
21859 | Is none better than some? |
21859 | Is there any agreement at all between him and Luther here? |
21859 | Is there any family likeness in it to Protestantism? |
21859 | Is there anything to show that what they call the religion of the Bible was ever professed by any persons, Christians, Jews, or heathen? |
21859 | It is certain they_ often_ act irregularly; is there any consistency_ at all_ in their operations, any law to which these varieties may be referred? |
21859 | May they not be taken as a fair portrait, as far as they go, of the doctrines and customs of Primitive Christianity? |
21859 | Might we not as cogently argue that no martyrdoms took place then, because no martyrdoms take place now? |
21859 | Nam si singulas disciplinas percipere magnum est, quanto majus omnes? |
21859 | Nay, he had undergone banishment for not submitting to the Arians;--but why enlarge on it? |
21859 | No sooner is a slave enfranchised, than he aspires to the principal employments; and who is to oppose his pretensions? |
21859 | Now you may ask me, what were Christians doing in Europe all this while? |
21859 | Now you may say,"What can we require more than this? |
21859 | Now, have the writers in question any leaning or tenderness for the theology of Luther and Calvin? |
21859 | Now, is it possible to trace this attribute of barbarism among the Turks? |
21859 | On the whole, then, are we not in the following dilemma? |
21859 | Or, again, do we wish to fix upon what_ can_ be detected in their creed of a positive character, and distinct from their protests? |
21859 | PARLEZ- VOUS FRANÃ � AIS? |
21859 | Primum cur? |
21859 | Protestants answer,"Where were you this morning before you washed your face?" |
21859 | QUICK AND DEAD? |
21859 | Shall he refuse his own vineyard, and we surrender the Church of Christ? |
21859 | Shall we side with the first age of Christianity, or with the last? |
21859 | She was a power pre- eminently military; yet what is her history but the most remarkable instance of a political development and progress? |
21859 | Such was the influence of Sogdiana on the Huns; is it wonderful that it exerted some influence on the Turks, when they in turn got possession of it? |
21859 | The Bishop made answer by an interpreter:"What will you do to me?" |
21859 | The Sultan asked again:"But what if I require your whole forces?" |
21859 | Their power then came to an end; what was the consequence of their fall? |
21859 | Then,"_ profane_:"--"''Profane novelties of words''( quoth he); what is_ profane_? |
21859 | They took fire to their aid; fire is one of the elements; what is man that he should resist their shock?" |
21859 | This being the case, imperfect as is the condition of barbarous states, still what is there to overthrow them? |
21859 | WHAT DOES ST. AMBROSE SAY ABOUT IT? |
21859 | WHAT DOES ST. AMBROSE SAY ABOUT IT? |
21859 | WHAT SAY JOVINIAN AND HIS COMPANIONS? |
21859 | WHAT SAY THE APOSTOLICAL CANONS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS THE HISTORY OF APOLLINARIS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS THE HISTORY OF APOLLINARIS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS VINCENT OF LERINS? |
21859 | WHAT SAYS VINCENT OF LERINS? |
21859 | Was it like the Wesleyans? |
21859 | Well, then, if they thus differ from the Church of the Fathers, how can they fancy that the early Church was Protestant? |
21859 | What are Aerius and Jovinian to me as individuals? |
21859 | What can be the reason of this? |
21859 | What could be made of them? |
21859 | What could be said to such a people? |
21859 | What importeth this_ avoid_? |
21859 | What indeed can do him higher honour than to style him a son of the Church? |
21859 | What indeed have the shepherds of the desert, in the most ambitious effort of their civilization, to do with the cultivation of the soil? |
21859 | What is meant by this deposit? |
21859 | What is meant by_ avoid_? |
21859 | What is meant by_ keep the deposit_? |
21859 | What is this but to say in one word that we find them barbarians? |
21859 | What limit is to be assigned to this disorder? |
21859 | What madness shall tempt the South to undergo extreme risks without the prospect or chance of a return? |
21859 | What room is here for fraud? |
21859 | What stronger testimony can we have of a past fact? |
21859 | What then? |
21859 | What was his answer? |
21859 | What was his treatment of such? |
21859 | What was the first consequence of this? |
21859 | What was the necessary consequence? |
21859 | What was to be the end? |
21859 | What would pleasure them but blasphemies against Him? |
21859 | When we ask,"Where was your Church before Luther?" |
21859 | Where, then, is primitive Protestantism to be found? |
21859 | Which among modern religious bodies was it like? |
21859 | Which of these parties is the rather correct? |
21859 | Who at first sight does not dislike the thoughts of gentlemen and clergymen depending for their maintenance and their reputation on their flocks? |
21859 | Who ever before cruel Novatian affirmed God to be merciless, in that He had rather the death of a sinner than that he should return and live? |
21859 | Who ever before his monstrous disciple Celestius denied all mankind to be bound with the guilt of Adam''s transgression? |
21859 | Who ever before sacrilegious Arius durst rend in pieces the Unity of Trinity? |
21859 | Who ever before wicked Sabellius durst confound the Trinity of Unity? |
21859 | Who ever set up any heresy, but first divided himself from the consent of the universality and antiquity of the Catholic Church? |
21859 | Who indeed was his superior in acumen, in long practice, in view of doctrine? |
21859 | Why should protesters in century four be more entitled to a hearing than protesters in century three? |
21859 | Will any one show that those monarchs can be fairly called specimens of the nation, any more than Zingis was the specimen of the Tartars? |
21859 | Would you take to prison or to death? |
21859 | Yet their repeated protests and efforts were all about what? |
21859 | Yet what, I say, was the reception which the cowardly suppliants had given to their avengers and protectors? |
21859 | You will ask perhaps how he gained this immense power; did he inherit it? |
21859 | and concerning the six days of the Pascha, why do they order us to take nothing at all but bread, salt, and water?... |
21859 | and how has he been the enduring enemy of the Turk, if he acquiesced in the Turk''s long course of victories? |
21859 | and secondly, can a barbarian state ever become civilized? |
21859 | and what is to be done with the great principle,"Unity, not Uniformity,"if Canons are to be recognized, which command uniformity as well as unity? |
21859 | and what room was there for private judgment, if they had to obey the bidding of certain fallible men? |
21859 | did they take refuge in the mountains or deserts? |
21859 | did you fear that I would desert the Church, and, for fear of my life, abandon you? |
21859 | do I see my wife I just now buried?" |
21859 | is it his own Christianity? |
21859 | is it not wonderful that the victim of it was able to live as many as nine months under such a visitation? |
21859 | rather has it not been an injury, as causing hatred and dissension? |
21859 | shall we accept it or not? |
21859 | shall we give up our knowledge of times past altogether, or endure to gain a knowledge which we think we have already-- the knowledge of divine truth? |
21859 | shall we relapse into scepticism upon all subjects, or sacrifice our deep- rooted prejudices? |
21859 | shall we retreat, or shall we advance? |
21859 | they asked;"was he not an old man, five hundred years of age? |
21859 | was it like any Protestant denomination at all? |
21859 | was it like the Scotch Kirk? |
21859 | was it like the Society of Friends? |
21859 | were they driven out of Sogdiana again? |
21859 | were they massacred? |
21859 | were they reduced to slavery? |
21859 | what answer is to be given? |
21859 | what suspicion of imposture? |
21859 | why did he not rather say,''But although I?'' |
21859 | yet what and where are they without the Koran? |
49316 | And what is freedom? 49316 Is there a state more blessed,"he asked,"than that of a woman with child?... |
49316 | Strauss,he said,"utterly evades the question, What is the meaning of life? |
49316 | What does a philosopher firstly and lastly require of himself? |
49316 | Whom do I hate most among the rabble of today? 49316 [ 5] Kant''s proposal that the morality of every contemplated action be tested by the question,"Suppose everyone did as I propose to do?" |
49316 | 570?-500?) |
49316 | And what is the mission of the lion? |
49316 | And what is this king of all axioms and emperor of all fallacies? |
49316 | And what was the goal that the philosopher had in mind for his immoralist? |
49316 | And when do we approve his choice? |
49316 | And why was this done? |
49316 | And why? |
49316 | And why? |
49316 | And why? |
49316 | But a gap remains and it may be expressed in the question: How is a man to define and determine his own welfare and that of the race after him? |
49316 | But how do fear and foresight operate to make one man concede rights to another man? |
49316 | But how will he know when he has attained this end? |
49316 | But there still remained a problem and it was this: When the superman at last appears on earth, what then? |
49316 | But what is its nature and what is its origin? |
49316 | But what will be the effect of eternal recurrence upon the superman? |
49316 | But what, then, is conscience? |
49316 | But why did the Greeks regard life as a conflict? |
49316 | By what standard was his immoralist to separate the good-- or beneficial-- things of the world from the bad-- or damaging-- things? |
49316 | Did he believe the human race would progress until men became gods and controlled the sun and stars as they now control the flow of great rivers? |
49316 | Dr. Mügge quotes a few of them:"What is good and what is evil? |
49316 | Has not the future gained by your failure? |
49316 | He holds that before anything is put forward as a thing worth teaching it should be tested by two questions: Is it a fact? |
49316 | He who can command, he who is a master by nature, he who, in deed and gesture, behaves violently-- what need has he for agreements? |
49316 | How are we to explain it away? |
49316 | How will he avoid going mad with doubts about his own knowledge? |
49316 | How, then, are we to determine which of these men has drawn the proper conclusion? |
49316 | If it is not the regret which follows punishment, what is it? |
49316 | If so, must he not suffer agonies on seeing his creatures, in their struggle for knowledge of him, submit to tortures for all eternity? |
49316 | If this is so, why should any man bother about moral rules and regulations? |
49316 | In the end, will man become the equal of the creator of the universe, whoever or whatever He may be? |
49316 | Interesting discussions of various Nietzschean ideas are in"The Revival of Aristocracy,"by Dr. Oscar Levy;"Who is to be Master of the World?" |
49316 | Is he not a cruel god if he knows the truth and yet looks down upon millions miserably searching for it? |
49316 | It was first voiced by that high priest who"rent his clothes"and cried"What need have we of any further witnesses? |
49316 | Let your labor be fighting and your peace victory.... You say that a good cause will hallow even war? |
49316 | Must it not strike him with grief to realize that he can not advise them or help them, except by uncertain and ambiguous signs?... |
49316 | Or did he believe that the end of it all would be annihilation? |
49316 | Practically and in plain language, what does all this mean? |
49316 | Suppose you have failed? |
49316 | That which does not live, he argued, can not exercise a will to live, and when a thing is already in existence, how can it strive after existence? |
49316 | The free man is a warrior.... How is freedom to be measured? |
49316 | Therefore he seeketh woman as the most dangerous toy within his reach.... Thou goest to women? |
49316 | Therefore, why deny it? |
49316 | To all the test of fundamental truth was applied: of everything Nietzsche asked, not, Is it respectable or lawful? |
49316 | Wagner was his friend of old? |
49316 | Was it because the ruling class was possessed by a boundless love for humanity and so yearned to lavish upon it a wealth of Christian devotion? |
49316 | Was there ever a more hideous old woman among all the old women? |
49316 | What are his burdens? |
49316 | What are many years worth? |
49316 | What child has not reason to weep over its parents?" |
49316 | What had Nietzsche to offer in place of these things? |
49316 | What is your fatherland? |
49316 | What sounder test of a creed''s essential value can we imagine than that of its visible influence upon the men who subscribe to it? |
49316 | What was the goal Nietzsche had in mind for his immoralist? |
49316 | What was to be the final outcome of his overturning of all morality? |
49316 | What, to man, is the ape? |
49316 | Whether it is human, liberal, humane, whether unhuman, illiberal, unhumane, what do I ask about that? |
49316 | Whether what I think and do is Christian, what do I care? |
49316 | Why call it a sin to do what every man does, insofar as he can? |
49316 | Why make it a crime to do what every man''s instincts prompt him to do? |
49316 | Why should any man conform to laws formulated by a people whose outlook on the universe probably differed diametrically from his own? |
49316 | Will there be another super- superman to follow and a super- supersuperman after that? |
49316 | Wipe out your masculine defender, and your feminine parasite-_haus- frau_--and where is your family? |
49316 | With what, then, has he to fight his hardest fight? |
49316 | You say that Christianity has made the world better? |
49316 | You say that it is comforting and uplifting? |
49316 | You say that it is the best religion mankind has ever invented? |
49316 | [ 5] But upon what theory is prayer based? |
49316 | and, Is the presentation of it likely to make the pupil measurably more capable of discovering other facts? |
49316 | but, Is it essentially true? |
49316 | what call I that? |
41983 | How did I come? 41983 How did you come?" |
41983 | What signifies philosophy that does not apply to some use? 41983 Whence do the wasps derive it?" |
41983 | Who is there? |
41983 | ( say they) the heavens are open; if you enter not now, when will you enter? |
41983 | ------------Whence, but through an infinite, Almighty God, supremely wise and just? |
41983 | A rock(_ waoke_?) |
41983 | Among other things, he disputes whether or no the Anthropophagi act contrary to nature? |
41983 | And this leads to the consideration of a question proposed by Aristotle,--Why are the upper parts of the sea salter and warmer than the lower? |
41983 | And we may ask of this, as well as the former hypothesis,--what need of them, when the work may be done without them? |
41983 | And who can follow Nature''s pencil here? |
41983 | And why does a slighter degree of the nightmare sometimes seize people who sleep in an erect situation in a chair? |
41983 | And why? |
41983 | Another question sometimes agitated is, what kind of wood is meant by gopher wood? |
41983 | As we entered the church- yard, the respectful"How do you do?" |
41983 | But can putrefaction create an organic substance? |
41983 | But is it not also apparent, that in all their works they propose to themselves certain ends? |
41983 | But it may be asked, how is it produced? |
41983 | But why should they at all change their habitations? |
41983 | But, after all, what are those parts in the fungi casually observed by naturalists, and which they have taken for the parts of fructification? |
41983 | Can an extorted oath compel me to observe secrecy on a thing so incredible, but which ought to be left on record to posterity?" |
41983 | Can your majesty desire to see such another sight?" |
41983 | Drowns my spirits, draws my breath? |
41983 | Expressing some doubt of this to the landlord''s question,"Do you not know that he is blind?" |
41983 | Had not Aaron, the high priest of the Hebrews, a ring on his finger, whereof the diamond, by its virtue, operated prodigious things? |
41983 | Her father then asked why she would not make some signs when she wanted to drink? |
41983 | How can we conceive that fire, in certain circumstances, can exercise so powerful an action on the human body as to produce this effect? |
41983 | How was their frame to such perfection brought? |
41983 | I asked Idris if ever he had before seen such a sight? |
41983 | If a Chinese is asked how he finds himself in health? |
41983 | If it be asked, whether these imperfect creatures have all distinct souls while lurking yet in their parent? |
41983 | In the Athenian Oracle, a lady desires to know whether fleas have stings, or whether they only suck or bite, when they draw blood from the body? |
41983 | In the course of his journey, the Mask was one day heard to ask his keeper, whether the king had any design on his life? |
41983 | In the last place, he demanded of them,''What name they desired should be put upon the bell?'' |
41983 | Is it to be wondered at, then, that they hold the alarm- bird in the highest veneration? |
41983 | Is this, in reality, a picture of the human mind, with all its boasted attributes, its delicacies, its refinements, its civilized superiority? |
41983 | King James I. when a man was presented to him who could eat a whole sheep at one meal, asked,"What work could he do more than another man?" |
41983 | M. de St. Mars was alarmed at the sight; and asked the man with great anxiety, whether he could read, and whether any one else had seen the plate? |
41983 | My servants asked this man whether he could pipe these snakes out of their holes, and catch them? |
41983 | Now, in this case, how was the number to be ascertained? |
41983 | Or, when contending winds around you blow, Do you ne''er wish the cause of them to know?" |
41983 | Say, what the various bones so wisely wrought? |
41983 | Shall we soon be like him? |
41983 | Soon as the daisy decks the green, Thy certain voice we hear: Hast thou a star to guide thy path, Or mark the rolling year? |
41983 | Steals my senses, shuts my sight? |
41983 | The only question, therefore, is, by what means this air comes to be extricated, and to take up more room than it naturally does in the fluid? |
41983 | To which she answered,--why should she, when she had no desire? |
41983 | Upon being asked, whether she would submit to the church the truth of her pretended visions, revelations, and intercourse with departed saints? |
41983 | Upon what hypothesis can we account for a degree of foresight and penetration such as this? |
41983 | We shall now make a few observations on THE TIDES:-- Say, why should the collected main Itself within itself contain? |
41983 | What good man will ever come again under my roof, if I let my floor be stained with a good man''s blood?" |
41983 | What is this absorbs me quite? |
41983 | What then becomes of it? |
41983 | What was he to do? |
41983 | What youthful bride can equal her array? |
41983 | What, and did the Bank refuse payment, Sir?" |
41983 | When he wrote so much of what came to him as gifts, was it not to rouse more to give? |
41983 | When it was demanded, why she carried in her hand that standard at the unction and coronation of Charles at Rheims? |
41983 | When she was asked, why she put her trust in her standard, which had been consecrated by magical incantations? |
41983 | When the wicked cease from troubling, will the good cease from doing good? |
41983 | Where now the throng That press''d the beach, and, hasty to depart, Look''d to the sea for safety? |
41983 | Who can with her for easy pleasure vie? |
41983 | Who has furnished him with his painted wings? |
41983 | Who has given to him the faculty of inhabiting the ethereal regions? |
41983 | Who has raised him above the earth? |
41983 | Who has taught them not to mistake the time, but to calculate so exactly, that the eggs are not laid before the nest is finished? |
41983 | Who is able to number the different species of animals which people the seas? |
41983 | Why should its num''rous waters stay In comely discipline and fair array, Till winds and tides exert their high commands? |
41983 | Why to its caverns should it sometimes cree And with delighted silence sleep On the lov''d bosom of its parent deep? |
41983 | Will no morning break over the tomb? |
41983 | Will you permit once more our group to try To raise your laughter, or to make you cry? |
41983 | Would any one ever have imagined, that the wings of butterflies were furnished with feathers? |
41983 | and why is the land there dry and full of crevices? |
41983 | he exclaimed,"What do you mean by that?" |
41983 | on horseback?" |
41983 | or who can determine their form, structure, size, and properties? |
41983 | what finite can explore? |
41983 | where is thy sting? |
41983 | where is thy victory? |
41983 | who could conceive such knavery to exist? |
41983 | why is there commonly no kind of herb in the places where this species of fungus grows? |
34637 | Our fathers-- they were giants, were they? 34637 What do you tell of that for?" |
34637 | What has Pythagoras to do with the price of cotton? 34637 What of that?" |
34637 | ***** But now how can we change this, and get the idea of freedom into men''s minds? |
34637 | ***** But then comes the other question, What is the best use to be made of the day; the use most conducive to the highest interests of mankind? |
34637 | ***** Do men of the next world look in upon this? |
34637 | ***** How can we make the Sunday yet more valuable? |
34637 | ***** Shall we know our friends again? |
34637 | ***** Shall we remember the deeds of the former life; this man that he picked rags out of the mud in the streets, and another that he ruled nations? |
34637 | ***** What is this future life? |
34637 | And what does Massachusetts do? |
34637 | And would not all this extend the bounds of slavery? |
34637 | Are the present opinions respecting the origin, nature, and original design of that institution just and true? |
34637 | Are they present with us, conscious of our deeds or thoughts? |
34637 | Are you getting less in the qualities of a man? |
34637 | But if he adopted his old plan, what should we say of him? |
34637 | But is it likely that all the old tragedies will be enacted again? |
34637 | But is it only soldiers that we need? |
34637 | But the northern whigs have their leaders-- are they anti- slavery men? |
34637 | But what is it in 1848? |
34637 | But what is the South most noted for abroad? |
34637 | But what shall the free soil party do next? |
34637 | But what shall we say as the dust returns? |
34637 | But when the American Revolution begun, who, in England, had ever heard of John Hancock, President of the Congress? |
34637 | But where is the Adamitic man; the type and representative of his race, who makes actual its idea? |
34637 | But where is the soul all this time, between our death- day and our day of rising? |
34637 | But who shall speak it worthily? |
34637 | But you will ask, Why does not a minister demand piety in its natural form? |
34637 | But, continued the inquirer, is not this a good one-- To seek"The greatest good of the greatest number?" |
34637 | Can life in heaven do it? |
34637 | Can the Almighty deceive his children? |
34637 | Can the national faults be corrected? |
34637 | Can the practical saint and the practical hypocrite enter on the same course of being together? |
34637 | Did a decided people ever choose dough- faces?--a people that loved God and man, choose representatives that cared for neither truth nor justice? |
34637 | Did he ever forgive an enemy? |
34637 | Did obstinate men of the North send petitions relative to slavery, asking for its abolition in the District or elsewhere? |
34637 | Did slaves petition? |
34637 | Did the king of the French find it so? |
34637 | Did they find no warrant for that rigor in the New Testament? |
34637 | Did they love him-- love him as much? |
34637 | Did women petition? |
34637 | Do I err in estimating the number at one hundred and fifty? |
34637 | Do men tell you,"This is a degenerate age,"and"Religion is dying out?" |
34637 | Do the voters always know what they are about when they choose them? |
34637 | Do those men who control the politics of New England not like it? |
34637 | Do you ask the sects to engage in the work of extirpating concrete wrong? |
34637 | Do you get poor in your souls? |
34637 | Do you not reach out your arms for heaven, for immortality, and feel you can not die? |
34637 | Do you tell me that culprit''s mother loves her son more than God can love him? |
34637 | Does a mortal mother desert her son, wicked, corrupt and loathsome though he be? |
34637 | Does some one say,"Thou shalt,"or"Thou shalt not,"we ask,"Who are you?" |
34637 | Does your religion become poor and low? |
34637 | Even the worst man thinks God his Father; and is he not? |
34637 | For her three million slaves; and the North? |
34637 | Had he forgotten the famous words,"Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God?" |
34637 | Had he once been servile to the hands that wielded power? |
34637 | Has any man an unalienable right to live a savage in the midst of civilization? |
34637 | Her husband objects, saying,"Wherefore wilt thou go to him to- day? |
34637 | How did mankind come by this opinion? |
34637 | How long would intemperance continue, and pauperism, in Boston; how long slavery in this land? |
34637 | How long would men complain of a dead body of divinity and a dead church, and a ministry that was dead? |
34637 | How much more does the body hinder us from seeing? |
34637 | How shall we bring them to the task? |
34637 | I ask If you will? |
34637 | I would ask the worst of mothers, Did you forsake your child because he went astray, and mocked your word? |
34637 | If Light can thus deceive, wherefore not Life?" |
34637 | If my soul is to claim the body again, which shall it be, the body I was born into, or that I died out of? |
34637 | If there were a true, manly piety in this town, in due proportion to our numbers, wealth, and enterprise, how long would the vices of this city last? |
34637 | In 1830, when the French expelled the despotic king who encumbered their throne, what said Massachusetts, what said New England, in honor of the deed? |
34637 | In 1838, when England set free eight hundred thousand men in a day, what did Massachusetts say about that? |
34637 | In a word, who is it that in seventy years has made the nation great, rich, and famous for her ideas and their success all over the world? |
34637 | In your youth was the Sunday a welcome day; a genial day; or only wearisome and sour? |
34637 | Is God to be partial in granting the favors of another life? |
34637 | Is it Christian in us by statute to interdict them from their recreation? |
34637 | Is it always to be so? |
34637 | Is it too much to hope all this? |
34637 | Is that superiority of gift solely for the man''s own sake? |
34637 | Is the age wanting in piety, which makes such efforts as these? |
34637 | Is the man in arrears with virtue, having long practised wickedness and become insolvent? |
34637 | Is the present mode of observing it the most profitable that can be devised? |
34637 | Is this difference of any practical importance at the present moment? |
34637 | It is no merit to die; shall we tell lies about him because he is dead? |
34637 | Mr. President, is one of these anti- slavery? |
34637 | Must it not be so in the next? |
34637 | Must it not be so there, and we be with our real friends? |
34637 | Must it not be so there? |
34637 | No grain of dust gets lost from off this dusty globe; and shall God lose a man from off this sphere of souls? |
34637 | Now and then, for dust gets into the brightest eyes; but did they ever choose such men continually? |
34637 | Put one of the cold thin moons of Saturn into the centre of the solar system,--would the universe revolve about that little dot? |
34637 | Said the king,"Do you tell me I lie?" |
34637 | Samuel Adams, and John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson, and all the other men, what did the world know of them? |
34637 | See how every steamer brings us good tidings of good things; and do you believe America can keep her slaves? |
34637 | Shall I then have a handful of my former dust, and that alone? |
34637 | Shall not the prayers of all Christian hearts go up with them on that day, a great deep prayer for their success? |
34637 | Shall the American nation go on in this work, or pause, turn off, fall, and perish? |
34637 | Shall we conclude these are never to obtain development and do their work? |
34637 | Should a great man have known better? |
34637 | So at the last, which body shall claim my soul, for the ten had her? |
34637 | So the age asks of all institutions their right to be: What right has the government to existence? |
34637 | So the real and practical question between them is this: Shall there be a high tariff or a low one? |
34637 | Somebody once asked him, What are the recognized principles of politics? |
34637 | The Sunday is ended and over; the man is tired-- but has he been profited and made better thereby? |
34637 | The annexation of Texas, did they oppose that? |
34637 | The land is full of ministers, respectable men, educated men-- are they opposed to slavery? |
34637 | Was Bowditch one of the first mathematicians of his age? |
34637 | Was it even known to him? |
34637 | Was it safe to withstand the Revolution? |
34637 | Was its observance enforced by him? |
34637 | Was religion, dressed in her Sabbath dress, a welcome guest; was she lovely and to be desired? |
34637 | Was the mind of Newton gone when his frame, long over- tasked, refused its wonted work? |
34637 | Well, says the calculator, but who has the offices of the nation? |
34637 | What are such things to Ronge and Wessenberg? |
34637 | What did he aim at in that long period? |
34637 | What did they care for the freedom of thirty millions of men? |
34637 | What do the men who control our politics think thereof? |
34637 | What had New England to say? |
34637 | What had become of the"sovereignty of the people,"the"unalienable right of resistance to oppression?" |
34637 | What have the political leaders of Massachusetts, of New England, to say? |
34637 | What if Burns had been ashamed of his plough, and Franklin had lost his recollection of the candle- moulds and the composing stick? |
34637 | What is the idea of the abolitionists? |
34637 | What monarchy will dare fight republican France? |
34637 | What shall become of the minority, in that case? |
34637 | What shall they do? |
34637 | When death has dusted off this body from me, who will dream for me the new powers I shall possess? |
34637 | When power fled off from the Church--"Wilt thou also go away?" |
34637 | Whence did he gain such power to stand erect where others so often cringed and crouched low to the ground? |
34637 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
34637 | Who can not trust him to do right and best for all? |
34637 | Who can say aye or no? |
34637 | Who can tell; nay, who need care to ask? |
34637 | Who could have thought such darkness lay concealed Within thy beams, O Sun? |
34637 | Who ever heard of an anti- slavery Governor of Massachusetts in this century? |
34637 | Who ever missed it? |
34637 | Who fought the Revolution? |
34637 | Who gave the majority a right to control the minority, to restrict trade, levy taxes, make laws, and all that? |
34637 | Who has filled the Presidential chair forty- eight years out of sixty? |
34637 | Who has held the chief posts of honor? |
34637 | Who increases the cost of the post- office and pays so little of its expense? |
34637 | Who is most blustering and disposed to quarrel? |
34637 | Who knows but men born to heaven are waiting for your birth to come-- have gone to prepare a place for us? |
34637 | Who knows out of how deep a fulness of indignation such torrents gush? |
34637 | Who knows? |
34637 | Who made the Mexican war? |
34637 | Who occupy the chief offices in the army and navy? |
34637 | Who owns the greater part of the property, the mills, the shops, the ships? |
34637 | Who pays the national taxes? |
34637 | Who sends their children to school and college? |
34637 | Who sets at nought the Constitution? |
34637 | Who was fit to preside in such a case? |
34637 | Who would bring the greatest peril in case of war with a strong enemy? |
34637 | Who writes the books-- the histories, poems, philosophies, works of science, even the sermons and commentaries on the Bible? |
34637 | Why do we then shun Death with anxious strife? |
34637 | Why does God sometimes endow a man with great intellectual power, making, now and then, a million- minded man? |
34637 | Why is it that all great movements, from the American Revolution down to anti- slavery, have begun here? |
34637 | Why is it that education societies, missionary societies, Bible societies, and all the movements for the advance of mankind, begin here? |
34637 | Why not have the"further information"laid before the Senate? |
34637 | Why pretend to drag a weighty crutch about because it helped your father once, wandering alone and in the dark, sounding on his dim and perilous way? |
34637 | Why was the Sunday chosen as the regular day for religious meeting? |
34637 | Will it be most profitable to"give up the Sunday,"to use it as the Catholics do, as the Puritans did, or to adopt some other method? |
34637 | Will you say the outward life never completely comes up to that? |
34637 | Would it not be better to take one step more, adopt them before they offended, and allow no child to grow up in the barbarism of ignorance? |
34637 | You will ask, What was the secret of his strength? |
34637 | Your old men? |
34637 | Your young men? |
34637 | [ 3] Was the Sabbath observed as a day of rest before Moses? |
34637 | or who could find, Whilst fly and leaf and insect stood revealed, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind? |
34637 | said she;"Lord,"said Piety,"to whom shall we go? |
34637 | what can we know of it besides its existence? |
44854 | And why was it decided to build a new city as the nation''s capital, on a site where there was not even a settlement? 44854 Have we at last really found a waterway across this new land of America?" |
44854 | How,we are asked,"did it happen that the capital of a great nation was built almost on its eastern boundary?" |
44854 | 3. Who founded San Francisco, and what was it first called? |
44854 | After whom was the city named? |
44854 | But was not the wealth of the West left, and the harbor and the railroads? |
44854 | Can you tell why it was important for the United States to own New Orleans? |
44854 | Could the fort hold out against such a terrible bombardment? |
44854 | Do you know from what else we get sugar? |
44854 | Do you know why so much cotton is sent to foreign countries? |
44854 | Does the name"Golden Gate"seem appropriate to you? |
44854 | Had not the fire undone the work of forty years? |
44854 | How and when did the English first acquire Detroit? |
44854 | How are the city of Washington and the District of Columbia governed? |
44854 | How did Buffalo''s location make it one of the great centers of industry? |
44854 | How did it happen that the people of New York first came to settle west of the Appalachian Mountains, and where were these first settlements? |
44854 | How did the Civil War help the growth of the city? |
44854 | How did the Dutch governor secure the land from the Indians? |
44854 | How did the development of the farm lands about the city help the growth of Detroit? |
44854 | How does Detroit rank among our great cities in population, manufactured products, and exports? |
44854 | How does Philadelphia rank in size and manufactures among the great cities of the United States? |
44854 | How does the Senate differ from the House of Representatives? |
44854 | How is Buffalo furnished with power for her great manufacturing interests? |
44854 | How is petroleum obtained? |
44854 | How many come from each state? |
44854 | How was the journey made between 1811 and 1825? |
44854 | How was this done? |
44854 | How? |
44854 | In the manufacture of what three products does Boston, with her neighboring cities, rank high? |
44854 | In what business has St. Louis held an important place from its beginning? |
44854 | In what industries does Baltimore rank first in the United States? |
44854 | In what lines does St. Louis lead the world? |
44854 | In what manufactures does the city lead the world? |
44854 | In what respects does Chicago stand first of American cities, and in what two things does she lead the world? |
44854 | In what respects does New York rank first of all the cities of the United States? |
44854 | In what respects is rail transportation better than water transportation? |
44854 | In what year did Washington become the capital city, and what disaster visited it a few years later? |
44854 | Is it any wonder that Boston ranks first of all the cities of the United States in the fish trade? |
44854 | Is n''t it strange that there is a place in the United States where the citizens can not vote? |
44854 | Of what was the great wealth of California supposed to consist at first? |
44854 | To what does St. Louis owe her importance as an industrial center? |
44854 | To what two events does Cleveland chiefly owe its rapid growth? |
44854 | To whom does the beautiful city of Washington really belong, and why should we be proud of it? |
44854 | What advantages of location does Baltimore possess? |
44854 | What are its principal exports and imports? |
44854 | What are some of her most important industries? |
44854 | What are some of the natural beauties of the city? |
44854 | What are the advantages of water transportation over rail transportation? |
44854 | What are the chief exports of the city, and to what countries are they sent? |
44854 | What are the chief imports and exports of New Orleans? |
44854 | What are the chief imports of the city? |
44854 | What are the chief manufactured products of New York City, and how can it produce so much without many great factories? |
44854 | What are the duties of senators? |
44854 | What are the duties of the Treasury Department, and what may be seen in the Treasury vaults? |
44854 | What are the great advantages of San Francisco Bay? |
44854 | What are the great wheat- growing states of the United States? |
44854 | What are the leading exports of the city? |
44854 | What are the leading exports of this city? |
44854 | What are the most important industries of the Cleveland district? |
44854 | What benefit will San Francisco derive from the completion of the Panama Canal? |
44854 | What benefits does Cleveland derive from its location on Lake Erie? |
44854 | What brought about the sudden and rapid growth of St. Louis after the purchase? |
44854 | What commercial advantages does New York enjoy? |
44854 | What conditions have made Detroit a great center for commercial relations with Canada? |
44854 | What could the governor do? |
44854 | What do you know of Niagara Falls and the power plants on both sides of the Niagara River? |
44854 | What educational institution has won a splendid reputation for Baltimore? |
44854 | What effect did the arrival of vast numbers of immigrants have upon the city? |
44854 | What effect did the railroads have upon St. Louis''water transportation? |
44854 | What events of great historical interest have taken place in Carpenters''Hall and Independence Hall? |
44854 | What great advantages does its location on the Ohio River give Pittsburgh? |
44854 | What great ceremony connected with the establishment of the government of the United States took place in New York? |
44854 | What great disaster befell Chicago in 1871? |
44854 | What great disaster visited Baltimore in 1904, and how did the people of the city make this great trouble result in a better city? |
44854 | What great natural disadvantages were overcome in improving the city of New Orleans, and how was it done? |
44854 | What great steel company is located near this city? |
44854 | What has Chicago done to make her parks among the best in this country? |
44854 | What interesting buildings are located here, and for what are they used? |
44854 | What is interesting about Jackson Square? |
44854 | What is the benefit of parks to a city? |
44854 | What is the great wealth of the state considered to be to- day? |
44854 | What is there of interest in Back Bay? |
44854 | What means of communication with other cities did Cleveland have in the early days of its history? |
44854 | What of all we have seen or heard is it most important for us to remember? |
44854 | What other noted schools are in or near Boston? |
44854 | What part has the Chicago River played in the development of the city? |
44854 | What products in daily use are made from it? |
44854 | What railroad facilities has Cleveland to- day? |
44854 | What three bridges were built across the Mississippi at St. Louis, and why? |
44854 | What three things are necessary to success in manufacturing? |
44854 | What two fine buildings are on either side of the White House, and for what is each used? |
44854 | What two products found a meeting place at Cleveland, and with what results? |
44854 | What unusual arrangement of street cars is found in New Orleans? |
44854 | What wars were they? |
44854 | What was Cleveland''s first manufacturing plant, and what others did it soon have? |
44854 | What was the first route from Albany to Buffalo, and why was it used? |
44854 | What was the most important event in advancing the business growth of New York? |
44854 | What were some of the reasons for selecting the location of the capital city? |
44854 | What were the ambitions of the French governors, traders, and missionaries of Canada in the early days? |
44854 | When and how did San Francisco become an American possession? |
44854 | When did the great fire at San Francisco occur, and what damage was done? |
44854 | When, how, and by whom was the site of Philadelphia acquired? |
44854 | Where are her great steel works, and what do they manufacture? |
44854 | Where are the workers secured to carry on the great industries of Chicago? |
44854 | Where does Buffalo find a market for her products? |
44854 | Where does Pittsburgh get her iron ore, coal, and petroleum? |
44854 | Where does the Supreme Court of the country sit, and why is it called the Supreme Court? |
44854 | Who has not read of the terrible disasters caused by suffocation from fire damp, by flood, the falling of walls, or the explosion of coal dust? |
44854 | Why are Fort Myer, Arlington, and Mount Vernon very interesting to all citizens of the United States? |
44854 | Why are there such tall buildings in New York? |
44854 | Why are they necessary in handling grain? |
44854 | Why did Jefferson buy the country included in the Louisiana Purchase? |
44854 | Why did the Dutch settle on Manhattan Island? |
44854 | Why did the French build forts on the narrow rivers and straits that connect the Great Lakes? |
44854 | Why do we have two lawmaking bodies? |
44854 | Why is Baltimore called the gateway to the South? |
44854 | Why is Boston''s chief park called the Common? |
44854 | Why is Pittsburgh called the"workshop of the world"? |
44854 | Why is a codfish suspended in the hall of the House of Representatives in the State House? |
44854 | Why is the ferry system of San Francisco so important? |
44854 | Why was Chicago willing to spend millions of dollars to improve her water supply? |
44854 | Why was New Orleans called the Crescent City? |
44854 | Why was not some city already established chosen to be the chief city of the nation?" |
44854 | Why was this ceremony held in New York? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Why? |
44854 | Would it not be just as interesting to find out these things about the city we are to see on our journey? |
44854 | [ Illustration: PAUL REVERE''S HOUSE] Are we tired of the noise and confusion of the crowded tenement district? |
44854 | [ Illustration: SUBWAY TUNNELS][ Illustration: A FERRY BOAT] But what of the means of travel for those living outside of Manhattan? |
44854 | in Copley Square? |
53864 | ''And your little boy of course?'' |
53864 | ''Are n''t you going to kiss your own pocket Madame Melba?'' |
53864 | ''Are you going?'' |
53864 | ''Are you ready?'' |
53864 | ''Because I''m going to sing on Friday?'' |
53864 | ''But baby does n''t mind smoke at all-- do you, small sweet?'' |
53864 | ''But how shall we decide?'' |
53864 | ''But not if I do n''t teach her,''he insisted;''why, how can she?'' |
53864 | ''Could n''t you go in and get a pair?'' |
53864 | ''Do you think I''ve not had enough without_ you_ beginning?'' |
53864 | ''Does it?'' |
53864 | ''Dot is not looking well,''she said,''have n''t you noticed? |
53864 | ''Dot, you will obey me?'' |
53864 | ''For always, you mean?'' |
53864 | ''Give up being so childish, will you try?'' |
53864 | ''Has Larrie?'' |
53864 | ''He is good to you?'' |
53864 | ''He thinks I love you?'' |
53864 | ''He took it, he has taken everything, and is n''t it queer, I do n''t care in the very least?'' |
53864 | ''How dare you do such a thing?'' |
53864 | ''How dared you?'' |
53864 | ''How dared you?'' |
53864 | ''How did Peggie like the new soap I left her?'' |
53864 | ''How do you propose getting there?'' |
53864 | ''How does Peggie manage when you''re away? |
53864 | ''How''s the baby, why did n''t you bring him?'' |
53864 | ''How_ are_ we to settle it?'' |
53864 | ''How_ dared_ you?'' |
53864 | ''I can''t,--you must see I can''t,--how can I, Dot? |
53864 | ''If you have anything to say, say it now,''she said,''it is too late for bed now, what is it you are going to do?'' |
53864 | ''Is Larrie''s neuralgia better?'' |
53864 | ''Is it?'' |
53864 | ''Is there a stronger word than"No?" |
53864 | ''Is there_ anything_ to eat?'' |
53864 | ''Larrie''s all right-- what are you running your head against, small woman?'' |
53864 | ''Larrie,_ do_ you want to provoke me into throwing a saucepan at your head like an Irish washerwoman?'' |
53864 | ''My God,_ no_,''he burst out,''what are you dreaming of?'' |
53864 | ''Not even Saturdays, Larrie? |
53864 | ''Oh Larrie, look how uncomfortable he is, you''re a nice one to look after him; and where''s his comforter? |
53864 | ''Oh, what_ will_ Larrie say?'' |
53864 | ''Or there''s Dolly-- I''m not particular-- you can even call me Peg if you like, Mr-- what was it the gentleman said your name was?'' |
53864 | ''Then it_ is_ your name?'' |
53864 | ''Then you really will not tell him?'' |
53864 | ''Well, Larrakin?'' |
53864 | ''Well?'' |
53864 | ''Well?'' |
53864 | ''Well?'' |
53864 | ''Well?'' |
53864 | ''What did you make this one narrower than the other for?'' |
53864 | ''What do you mean?'' |
53864 | ''What have you put on them?'' |
53864 | ''What the deuce brought him here?'' |
53864 | ''What will you do then?'' |
53864 | ''What would you do?'' |
53864 | ''When shall you tell him?'' |
53864 | ''When were you thinking of going?'' |
53864 | ''Where is your child?'' |
53864 | ''Where''s a fellow to smoke when it''s hot or wet if there is n''t a decent verandah?'' |
53864 | ''Where?'' |
53864 | ''Who?'' |
53864 | ''Why do n''t you go?'' |
53864 | ''Will you draw or shall I?'' |
53864 | ''Would you have me break my vow, St Lawrence?'' |
53864 | ''You are going?'' |
53864 | ''You are hard,''she said,''cruel-- like a rock, what can I do? |
53864 | ''You mean Mr Wooster?'' |
53864 | ''You mean separate?'' |
53864 | ''You mean to say, Larrie, that you would try to stop me now?'' |
53864 | ''You sing it?'' |
53864 | ''You want me?'' |
53864 | ''You will obey me, Dot?'' |
53864 | ''You will stay?'' |
53864 | ''You''re putting milk in, what are you thinking of?'' |
53864 | ''Your reasons?'' |
53864 | --she said,''Larrie, has he-- does he?'' |
53864 | All her pleading had gone for nothing, why should she listen to Larrie''s? |
53864 | CHAPTER IX A CONFLICT OF WILLS''What things wilt thou leave me, Now this thing is done?'' |
53864 | CHAPTER VI LARRIE THE LOAFER''She had A heart-- how shall I say? |
53864 | CHAPTER XIII DOT GOES BABY- LIFTING''Me do you leave aghast With the memories we amassed?'' |
53864 | Did not mother tell you?'' |
53864 | Did you show it a beautiful flower or a low hanging silver moon, a picture, something bright with colour? |
53864 | Have you ever kissed a baby''s neck? |
53864 | Have you no regard for me?'' |
53864 | How could she bear life if on every hand episodes of the dead days were going to rise up in this way? |
53864 | It''s only Dot, do n''t you see? |
53864 | One absolute and irrevocable? |
53864 | She called to mind all the quarrels of their wedded life-- had he not always forgiven her? |
53864 | She covered her eyes for a second, then, suspiciously,''how do I know you have not marked one so you may know it?'' |
53864 | The mother sent down a little note; it was very hot, would Dot mind if she did not come, her head was inclined to ache badly? |
53864 | The woman looked over to Dot, standing with the door handle in her hand,''Shall I fetch the baby for you?'' |
53864 | Then she remembered Larrie''s anger a few minutes back,''But what made you so cross?'' |
53864 | Then she spoke very slowly,''Do you really mean to say, Larrie, that all this is because I am going to sing on Friday?'' |
53864 | They had both been incredulous of the existence of such a place as the dead level of matrimony-- was this it indeed they had already come upon? |
53864 | Travel is just what you need, is n''t it now, small woman?'' |
53864 | Was ever anything so warm and white and velvety? |
53864 | Was she not his wife, his property, did she not belong to him till death? |
53864 | What are you thinking of? |
53864 | What dreadful thing was coming? |
53864 | What would a ship be without a captain, or soldiers without their chief, an office with no one in authority? |
53864 | Why should you always have_ your_ way in things?'' |
53864 | he said, and sprang to her side in alarm,''you are ill-- God!--what is the matter with you?'' |
53864 | said Larrie,''I''m waiting, Dot, are you going to give it up?'' |
53864 | said Larrie,''that''s a high day and holiday name, shall we say Mary on week days?'' |
53864 | what_ can_ I do? |
7293 | ''To what, then, was the relapse owing? 7293 How much has he taken in the aggregate?" |
7293 | I gave thee so many talents, what hast thou done with them? |
7293 | In a letter dated October 27, 1814, Mr. Southey thus writes:''Can you tell me any thing of Coleridge? |
7293 | And I still take opium? |
7293 | And how do I find my health after all this opium- eating? |
7293 | And what am I doing? |
7293 | And, perhaps, have taken it unblushingly ever since"the rainy Sunday,"and"the Pantheon,"and"the beatific druggist"of 1804? |
7293 | Are there never any calm moments, when you impartially judge of your own actions by their consequences? |
7293 | As to the tincture of opium, commonly called laudanum,_ that_ might certainly intoxicate if a man could bear to take enough of it; but why? |
7293 | But could not I have reduced it a drop a day, or by adding water have bisected or trisected a drop? |
7293 | But in what way did that operate upon his exertions as a writer? |
7293 | But some will ask, was Mr. Coleridge right in either view? |
7293 | But what could be done? |
7293 | But what of the effects of opium- eating on the mind? |
7293 | But what then? |
7293 | But who are they? |
7293 | By what means? |
7293 | Could the immortal soul find itself in a more inextricable, a more_ grisly_ complication? |
7293 | Do you know Beaumont and Fletcher''s play of''Thierry and Theodoret?'' |
7293 | Do you know Dr. Fox? |
7293 | Friday,"26....... 200 What mean these abrupt relapses, the reader will ask, perhaps, to such numbers as 300, 350, etc.? |
7293 | He may find men who will give him board and lodging for the sake of his conversation, but who will pay his other expenses? |
7293 | Here I will be asked( as I am constantly out of the book), why not begin the abandonment of the drug as soon as this acute attack is over? |
7293 | How long has the patient habitually taken opium? |
7293 | How much constitutional strength remains to throw it off? |
7293 | I now took only one thousand drops of laudanum per day-- and what was that? |
7293 | I see a brother sinning a sin unto death, and shall I not warn him? |
7293 | In the one crime of OPIUM, what crime have I not made myself guilty of? |
7293 | Is indeed Leviathan so tamed? |
7293 | Is it a small thing, that one of the finest of human understandings should be lost? |
7293 | Is not the great test in some measure against you,"By their fruits ye shall know them?" |
7293 | It will occur to you often to ask, Why did I not release myself from the horrors of opium by leaving it off or diminishing it? |
7293 | Must he begin his former career again and afterward have all the same ground to go over? |
7293 | Need I say that my own apparent convalescence was of no long continuance? |
7293 | Still, bearing in mind the wonderful complexity of opium(_ vide_"What Shall They Do to be Saved?") |
7293 | Surely, now that the patient has gone for forty- eight hours or more without that dose, would it not be better never to return to it? |
7293 | That most of the influences to be derived from your present example should be in direct opposition to right and virtue? |
7293 | That your talents should be buried? |
7293 | The final decision of the question, How long a time should be allowed for the final relinquishment of the drug? |
7293 | The most judicious of the medical gentlemen whose aid I invoked, was, I think, the one who replied to my inquiry for his bill,"What for? |
7293 | The reader may ask who make up this unfortunate class, and under what circumstances did they become enthralled by such a habit? |
7293 | Then I took-- ask me not how much; say, ye severest, what would ye have done? |
7293 | Then what? |
7293 | Those Fata Morgana plans, should he again waste on them the effort of construction? |
7293 | Those pictures, why were they brought again to mock him? |
7293 | WHAT IS OPIUM? |
7293 | WHAT SHALL THEY DO TO BE SAVED? |
7293 | Were they not horrible impossibilities? |
7293 | Were they not, through the paralysis of his executive faculties, mere startling likenesses of Disappointment? |
7293 | What is to become of him? |
7293 | What then? |
7293 | What was I now to do? |
7293 | What, thought I, was to be the end of all the hopes I once cherished, and which were cherished of and for me by others? |
7293 | Who is sufficient for this long,_ long_ pull? |
7293 | Yes, but what else? |
7293 | You had, and still have, an acute sense of moral right and wrong, but is not the feeling sometimes overpowered by self- indulgence? |
7293 | and yet will you not be awakened to a sense of your danger, and I must add, your guilt? |
7293 | in short, how do I do? |
7293 | where did he learn_ that_? |
8442 | ( 2) As to the second question: What kind of cohesion was there between the western or the eastern sets of these vague and petty governments? |
8442 | ( 3) Now to the third point: What had survived of the old order in either half of this anarchy? |
8442 | A few thousand squires and merchants backing a few more thousand enthusiasts, changed utterly the mass of England?" |
8442 | A true answer to the question:"What was the Reformation?" |
8442 | An answer to the other question:"What was the Reformation?" |
8442 | And_ why_ did Britain fail in that great ordeal? |
8442 | Could any point have less to do with the fundamentals of the Faith? |
8442 | Could anything better prove the truth that mere irritation against the external organization of the Church was the power at work? |
8442 | EUROPE AND THE FAITH I WHAT WAS THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | He will ask what, then, did really happen? |
8442 | How came it? |
8442 | How came there to be also nations exterior to the Empire; old nations like Ireland, new nations like Poland? |
8442 | I turn, therefore, next to answer the question:"What happened in Britain?" |
8442 | II WHAT WAS THE CHURCH IN THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | III WHAT WAS THE"FALL"OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | My next task must, therefore, be an attempt to answer the question,"What was the Church in the Roman Empire?" |
8442 | Now how did Britain go, and why was the loss of Britain of such capital importance? |
8442 | Now what is the meaning of that word_ Rex_? |
8442 | Now why did not this man, this_ Rex_, in Italy or Gaul or Spain, simply remain in the position of local Roman Governor? |
8442 | On the coasts, and up the estuaries of the navigable rivers? |
8442 | Put yourself into the shoes of a sixteenth century Englishman in the midst of the Reformation, and what do you perceive? |
8442 | Shall I give an example? |
8442 | So far I have attempted to answer the question,"What Was the Roman Empire?" |
8442 | THE BEGINNING OF THE NATIONS V. WHAT HAPPENED IN BRITAIN? |
8442 | The Catholic may well ask:"How it is I can not understand the story as told by these Protestant writers? |
8442 | The historian answers the question,"_ What_ was?" |
8442 | The validity of the whole scheme depends upon our answer to the question,"What was the fall of the Roman Empire?" |
8442 | Then why was there a fight? |
8442 | This is perhaps the greatest of all historical questions, after the original question:"What was the Church in the Empire of Rome?" |
8442 | This process is commonly called"The Fall of the Roman Empire;"what was that"fall?" |
8442 | To the question,"_ Why_ was it?" |
8442 | V WHAT HAPPENED IN BRITAIN? |
8442 | VIII WHAT WAS THE REFORMATION? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE CHURCH IN THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE REFORMATION? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | WHAT WAS THE"FALL"OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE? |
8442 | Well, then, how did Britain break away? |
8442 | Well, then, what was this body of doctrine held by common tradition and present everywhere in the first years of the third century? |
8442 | What are the tests of this war? |
8442 | What do they tell us? |
8442 | What does that mean? |
8442 | What had survived in the eastern part of Britain? |
8442 | What of the Midlands? |
8442 | What really happened in this great transformation? |
8442 | What was the Roman Empire? |
8442 | What was the origin from which we sprang? |
8442 | What was the process of that decline? |
8442 | What would he find? |
8442 | What, then, were the supposed barbaric successes? |
8442 | When we said that"the Slav"failed us, what did we mean? |
8442 | When we say that Vienna was the tool of Berlin, that Madrid should be ashamed, what do we mean? |
8442 | Where lay the roots of so singular a contempt for our old order, chivalry and morals, as Berlin then displayed? |
8442 | Who shall explain the position of the Papacy, the question of Ireland, the aloofness of old Spain? |
8442 | Why did Prussia arise? |
8442 | Why does it not make sense?" |
8442 | Why these two camps? |
8442 | Why? |
8442 | Why? |
8442 | Why? |
8442 | Would Ferreolus have been a_ Christian_? |
8442 | Would he have been in danger of unpopularity where_ Christians_ were unpopular? |
8442 | Would he have counted with any single man of the whole Empire as one of the_ Christian_ body? |
8442 | Would the officials of the Roman Empire have called him a_ Christian_? |
8442 | Would_ Christians_ have received him among themselves as part of their strict and still somewhat secret society? |
8442 | this large national movement to be interpreted as the work of such minorities? |
28036 | 696.--''That, I suppose, is a comparatively new phenomenon?'' 28036 697.--''Is there any special defect in the management which produces this state of things, or is it essential to the nature of the school?'' |
28036 | But, Father,some one will say,"what harm can there be in sending children to Public Schools? |
28036 | Think you that those eighteen men on whom the tower of Siloam fell, were sinners above all others in Jerusalem? 28036 Where did you get it?" |
28036 | 6), what recompense will mothers not receive who instruct and sanctify them? |
28036 | And are they competent to do what the mother of the rich can not do? |
28036 | And can we wonder that the crime has descended from the highest to the lowest, and now pervades all classes of society? |
28036 | And during the whole war of the Revolution, who ever heard of a Catholic coward, or of a Catholic traitor? |
28036 | And how had they to battle till they had gained this merit? |
28036 | And then, which of all the Bibles, and whom among the numerous sects, shall be sent? |
28036 | And to whom, then, is it of any concern?" |
28036 | And what has Protestantism done for human freedom? |
28036 | And what kind of a name have these girls now? |
28036 | And what power has Protestantism to check the National Crime-- the murder of helpless innocents? |
28036 | And what will be the case where the Protestant pupils in a school are in a considerable majority, and the teacher of the same religion? |
28036 | And what will the child learn, in this Pagan system of education, to press down his rising passions? |
28036 | And when these women do condescend to have one or two children, what sort of a lifelong inheritance are they giving their offspring? |
28036 | And where was the source of all this light? |
28036 | And who are those secret conspirators and their myrmidon partisans who have sworn to unify Italy or lay it in ruins? |
28036 | And who but an infidel can blame her for that? |
28036 | And who could be charmed with such women? |
28036 | And why should we not believe it?... |
28036 | And why? |
28036 | And will any one assert that the faith and soul of a child are not in danger of being ruined in those godless common schools? |
28036 | Are not those pests, the Washington and Albany lobbies, rather_ too_ knowing? |
28036 | But do children profit by His abundant redemption? |
28036 | But how did souls created to the image of God grow up in such a state? |
28036 | But how shall I begin? |
28036 | But is it really true that Protestantism is not taught in many of our Public Schools? |
28036 | But some one will perhaps say,"Sir, what has all this dissertation to do with your subject? |
28036 | But then, in God''s name, is it not high time to inquire what should be done to correct the system, and stop the torrent of its evil influences? |
28036 | But what does the turtle rest on? |
28036 | But what does this make of them? |
28036 | But where does the virtue and intelligence of the State come from? |
28036 | But why have these great things been done for us? |
28036 | But why so many objections? |
28036 | Can we rely on the parents? |
28036 | Can we, knowing, as we do, how much Jesus Christ loves them, can we, I say, resign ourselves to leaving them in their misery? |
28036 | Can we, then, wonder that the Catholic Church has always encouraged a truly Christian education? |
28036 | Did it originate one republican principle, or found one solitary republic? |
28036 | Did it strike one blow for liberty during these two centuries and a half? |
28036 | Do not the"gold rings"and the"whiskey rings"know how to read and write? |
28036 | Do the managers of the Erie Railway lack any kind of intelligence that could be communicated in a common school? |
28036 | Do they draw from the source of graces that are open to all? |
28036 | Do they not prove, beyond a doubt, that the practical_ habit_ of devotion was not taught them in their youth? |
28036 | Do you desire, O Christian mother, to be saved? |
28036 | Do you want to see what man without God-- without religion-- can do? |
28036 | Does any one wonder, then, that we hear and read of"Trunk Horrors"? |
28036 | Does not all this prove to every thinking person that woman''s sphere and calling are_ widely different_?" |
28036 | Had not those blood- suckers, the shoddy- ites and army contractors, an average common school education? |
28036 | Has the pastor sufficiently instructed, warned, and watched over them? |
28036 | Have they not the same tendency to promote ignorance of, or indifference to, religion? |
28036 | Have we always comprehended all the good that we can do to children by our humble functions? |
28036 | How can it be otherwise? |
28036 | How could Protestantism check infidelity, since it leads to it? |
28036 | How did men arrive at the idea that the State should be a school- master? |
28036 | How is such a heart to be touched or moved, or placed under such influences as could move it? |
28036 | How long will it take our enlightened age to learn this simple but important truth? |
28036 | I ask if this is not a pretty fair and not overdrawn statement of the case? |
28036 | I ask, will the Lord fail to visit with similar judgments all those who are guilty of the same crimes? |
28036 | I ask-- am I right in all that I have said upon the State and its godless system of education? |
28036 | I once said to her,''Why do you not take the situation of a seamstress, or a nurse in a gentleman''s family?'' |
28036 | If the State claims the right to educate our children, why does it not just as well claim the right to nurse, feed, clothe, doctor, and lodge them? |
28036 | In a word, is not this to teach indifference to religion, or, what is equivalent, that no religion is necessary? |
28036 | Indeed, what is a school worth when a man will pay a premium to be exempt from sending his children to it? |
28036 | Is it heaven or hell that will be their lot for all eternity? |
28036 | Is it not a proof that the laity and clergy are all of one mind? |
28036 | Is it to be done in the midst of a day''s work, or in the weariness after the day''s work is done? |
28036 | Is not such the calamitous spectacle which the continent of Europe offers to us at this moment? |
28036 | Is not this a serious loss? |
28036 | Is not this compulsory support most violative of constitutional and religious rights? |
28036 | Is there any reason for their silence on the subject of education? |
28036 | It is for this reason that our Saviour tells us:"What doth it profit a man if he gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
28036 | May it not be considered as a great plebiscite? |
28036 | May we not infer that those mothers who bestow upon children the treasures of divine knowledge will receive an exceedingly great reward? |
28036 | May we not read the condemnation of all such proceedings in the lurid flames of the burning Capital of modern civilization? |
28036 | Men look around, and ask, Where is the remedy for the so wide- spread corruption of all classes of society? |
28036 | Mr. Johnson asks:"Are the modern fashionable criminalities of infanticide creeping into our State community?" |
28036 | Nor can it be otherwise; for what brought on the"Cities of the Plain"the material fires of heaven? |
28036 | Now how did it happen that the primitive Christian system of education became unchristian and anti- American? |
28036 | Now what has contributed most towards the enormous increase of these enemies of our republic? |
28036 | Now what is it to teach the soul to find her own Supreme Good? |
28036 | Now what is the perfection of soul? |
28036 | Now what is the result of all this training? |
28036 | Now what is the_ civil power_, or_ State_; what its origin, its authority, its legitimate functions, its rights and duties? |
28036 | Now what is to be done to stop the poisoned source from which the diabolical spirit and the crimes of our country flow? |
28036 | Now what kind of a being is the infidel, or the man without religion? |
28036 | Now what kind of education is necessary for a tradesman to carry on business successfully? |
28036 | Now what object had the tyrant in acting thus? |
28036 | Now who will give the Christian education, if not the pastor? |
28036 | Now will any one assert that the young tree was not in danger of perishing in this new place? |
28036 | Or what were the sins and crimes of the Gentile nations that called forth the terrible chastisements predicted by the prophets? |
28036 | Since when is it, then, that the price of the souls of little children has been lessened? |
28036 | The State can not impose uniformity on churches; why force it on schools? |
28036 | The man who has said"there is no God,"is he not on the point of also saying"lust is lawful,""property is robbery"? |
28036 | The man who scorns to love God and His law, how shall he continue to love his neighbor? |
28036 | The"Boards"that give the contracts do not make any money by way of commissions, do they? |
28036 | Think you that those six or seven on whom the axe of the public press fell, are sinners above all in New York and elsewhere? |
28036 | This granted-- because too clear to be denied-- does it not follow that the establishment of schools maybe made obligatory upon pastors? |
28036 | To attract non- Catholics? |
28036 | To what do they grow up? |
28036 | To which Las Casas replied:"Is it nothing to your Lordship that all these souls should perish? |
28036 | WHAT IS IT TO BE A MOTHER? |
28036 | WHAT IS IT TO BE A MOTHER? |
28036 | We see ecclesiastical edifices of great magnitude, splendor, and expense, erected everywhere by Catholics, but for what purpose? |
28036 | Well, then, the press: what shall be said of it? |
28036 | Well, what was the Church at the time of the Apostles? |
28036 | Were not Catiline of old, and Aaron Burr and Benedict Arnold of more recent times, men of intelligence? |
28036 | What American can forget the names of Rochambeau, De Grasse, De Kalb, Pulaski, La Fayette, Kosciusko? |
28036 | What can be done to stem the fearful torrent of evils that flood the land? |
28036 | What confidence, I ask, can be placed in a man who has no religion, and, consequently, no knowledge of his duties? |
28036 | What could hell and its agents do more than they have already done for her destruction? |
28036 | What did it do for the cause of freedom from that date down to 1776--when our Republic arose? |
28036 | What does he learn in such a school to make him obedient, honest, chaste, a good citizen, a good Christian? |
28036 | What father, then, will be mad enough to send his children by this vessel, across the ocean of time, to their heavenly fatherland? |
28036 | What future have these women to look forward to? |
28036 | What good, then, could be expected from calling upon the Legislature? |
28036 | What happened? |
28036 | What has been the result? |
28036 | What is the difference between an infidel and a madman? |
28036 | What is the natural harvest of this sowing? |
28036 | What is the object of his impious cries? |
28036 | What is the use of building castles in Spain, when we are obliged to live in America? |
28036 | What precept of positive virtue does he learn? |
28036 | What principle of self- restraint? |
28036 | What right, then, has a Christian State to compel Christians to support infidel schools? |
28036 | What shall I now say of books so compiled as to meet the exigencies of godless education? |
28036 | What shall we answer? |
28036 | What sufferings had they to endure, what trials to undergo? |
28036 | What though a Judas Iscariot may betray? |
28036 | What though a few of craven spirit may flee? |
28036 | What though some may desert and leave the lines? |
28036 | What would have become of Germany had there not been a power superior to that of this godless prince? |
28036 | What would the world be without it? |
28036 | What, then, is the meaning of Education? |
28036 | What, then, must we think of the reading of the Bible, when its reading, without note or comment, leads to such consequences? |
28036 | When he asked the barons assembled in council,"What must I do?" |
28036 | When is she to teach, and train, and shape, and fashion the characters, hearts, consciences, intellects of the children? |
28036 | Where did those priests who built them get the money? |
28036 | Where is the security for property or for life, if the sense of religious obligation desert the oaths which are administered in our courts of justice? |
28036 | Where will be our Catholics? |
28036 | Where, then, was the power to save? |
28036 | Who are those turbulent revolutionists who now long to erect the guillotine by the Tuilleries? |
28036 | Who can read, without a feeling of intense horror, the accounts left us of the treatment of their slaves by the Romans? |
28036 | Who can tell with what delight He makes of it His abode? |
28036 | Who denies it? |
28036 | Who does not feel most indignant at the State for having introduced such a godless system of education? |
28036 | Who ever heard of a Catholic Arnold? |
28036 | Who is to blame? |
28036 | Who originated all the free principles which lie at the basis of our own noble Constitution? |
28036 | Who were the leaders in the work of destruction and wholesale butchery in the Reign of Terror? |
28036 | Who, I would ask, first reared in triumph the broad banner of universal freedom on this North American Continent? |
28036 | Who_ first_ proclaimed, on this broad continent, the glorious principles of universal freedom? |
28036 | Why are there so many talents lying idle among us? |
28036 | Why is it that social and political life is poisoned in its source, and the blood of the nation corrupted? |
28036 | Why is it that the very bases of society have been sapped, and the conditions of good government despised, or denounced under the name of despotism? |
28036 | Why is it"that no person shall be compelled to erect, support, or attend any place of public worship, nor support any minister of religion"? |
28036 | Why not? |
28036 | Why should the State throw all these burdens on the parents, and assume that of instruction? |
28036 | Why should they starve, while their neighbors roll in splendor and luxury? |
28036 | Why so many pens that move not, when they should be burning with love for God, and for the welfare of their fellow- men? |
28036 | Why so many tongues that are ever silent, when they might, day after day, preach the good tidings of the Gospel of Christ? |
28036 | Why, then, is private property taken for Public Schools without compensation? |
28036 | Will anybody who has his eyesight doubt or deny this? |
28036 | Will he send his children by that vessel? |
28036 | Will not the Protestant children turn the doctrines and practices of the Catholics into ridicule? |
28036 | Will their learned and accomplished sons take the humble and laborious trades or occupations of their fathers? |
28036 | Will they be counted, in the course of their career, among the number of His faithful disciples, or among the enemies of His law? |
28036 | Will they be excluded? |
28036 | Will they be marked with the seal of Divine Adoption, and be nourished with His own Flesh in the Sacrament of His love? |
28036 | Will they one day be admitted into His kingdom? |
28036 | You banish those who are dearest to Me? |
28036 | _ What is the State?_ People in general have a vague and confused conception of this matter. |
28036 | and have not the laity assisted them in a most munificent manner? |
28036 | on Sunday- school teachers? |
28036 | shall, then, the first that teaches me the dread meaning of grave and shroud be my own, my first- born child? |
28036 | what is this to me, and what is that to the King?" |
28036 | what will be her end? |
28036 | who will answer for these little"waifs of society"? |
28036 | with such''Grecian Bends,''Grecian noses? |
23689 | ''Against any slave?'' |
23689 | ''Against my fifty sestertia he will stake any of his slaves excepting this Greek page?'' |
23689 | ''And are you one of those who believe that there can be no forgiveness for repentant woman?'' |
23689 | ''And you will not postpone this trial?'' |
23689 | ''Are they fools? |
23689 | ''Art weary, or afraid to continue?'' |
23689 | ''But, Leta, only strive to think that--''''Nay, what is the use? |
23689 | ''Could I foresee that it would come to this?'' |
23689 | ''Dies? |
23689 | ''Do we care to listen to your miserable dactyls? |
23689 | ''Do you command this battalion?'' |
23689 | ''Do you not see that he shakes his head? |
23689 | ''Have you never before known such a thing as a master giving up his slave for the public amusement? |
23689 | ''How knew you that I had gold-- or this signet ring; or that there was a ship to sail from Ostia?'' |
23689 | ''How was I to identify Mr. Moore with''George''s friend from the army''? |
23689 | ''How was I to know that my trivial transgression would have ended so sorrowfully for you? |
23689 | ''I may keep this?'' |
23689 | ''I would like well once more to see her and bid her farewell, and utter my thanks for all her kindness; but to what purpose? |
23689 | ''Is that a horse?'' |
23689 | ''Is there aught wonderful in that?'' |
23689 | ''Is this a threat?'' |
23689 | ''Like them? |
23689 | ''Marguerite, will you die here with me, or go back again to the life that will separate us?'' |
23689 | ''Nay, as much as that?'' |
23689 | ''O Clement, dear old fellow, do you know me?'' |
23689 | ''O''Malley, is that you?'' |
23689 | ''Say, Bulger,''I ask of one of them,''who''s ahead of you?'' |
23689 | ''The same as of old?'' |
23689 | ''Then you are not satisfied with the New England mean of perfection, in everything, mentally, morally, and meteorologically?'' |
23689 | ''Was it in the bond,''he said,''that one should await the convenience of the other? |
23689 | ''We have to hold territory in inclement and sickly places; where are the Democrats to do this? |
23689 | ''What can he say,''interrupted the proconsul,''but that he sold his Rhodian to me, the day thereafter? |
23689 | ''What dispute can there be? |
23689 | ''What''s that?'' |
23689 | ''Where?'' |
23689 | ''Whether male or female?'' |
23689 | ''Will you offer the same to me, Sergius?'' |
23689 | ''Will you, then, take up with an offer to play off that Rhodian against ten of my slaves? |
23689 | ''Would you still win it back, Sergius? |
23689 | ''Yes,''says the captain,''and who the devil are you?'' |
23689 | ''You hear?'' |
23689 | ''You will not take me with you, then; is it not so?'' |
23689 | ''[ 5][ Footnote 5:''Des Droits des Nations Neutres,''t. I., p. 301] Can language be clearer? |
23689 | Against twenty, then? |
23689 | Am I not the same Leta as of old?'' |
23689 | And am I to trust it blindly? |
23689 | And do we not know that no warrant has ever been given to you to recite a single line before the emperor, either in or out of the arena? |
23689 | And do you not know his obstinacy? |
23689 | And do you suppose I did not know your aims, cunningly as you may think you veiled them? |
23689 | And have the community given you for it these jewelled rings, these chains of violet amethysts?... |
23689 | And how, when he would have beaten you, I stood before you, and prevented him? |
23689 | And if he should put me in chains or order me to be hung? |
23689 | And is n''t that, as everyone knows, the highest result of strategy? |
23689 | And the sesteria also? |
23689 | And then? |
23689 | And when your powder and ball shall be utterly exhausted? |
23689 | And will nothing take place to- morrow? |
23689 | And with the training I have given him, who, indeed, could overcome him? |
23689 | Are not the words convincing proof that President Lincoln is honest and faithful and capable? |
23689 | Are we in extremity, that this example of Napoleon should be suggested in support of the Chicago platform? |
23689 | Are we less determined than they were? |
23689 | Are we not willing to be Abolitionists for the sake of saving the Constitution and the Union? |
23689 | Are we such degenerate sons that we are willing to give up the legacy they left us, at half its original cost? |
23689 | But how, in fact, could he tell it? |
23689 | But is this a description of Washington? |
23689 | But was this great material gain of the people to be accompanied by a corresponding spiritual advancement? |
23689 | But what if they already knew it? |
23689 | But what is the Constitution? |
23689 | By commanding officers? |
23689 | Can it progress no farther in the path in which he stands to oppose me? |
23689 | Can they not hear? |
23689 | Can we not approve it? |
23689 | Canst thou not deceive_ thyself_ as thou hast deceived others?... |
23689 | Citizen Leonard, is the thing really to come off to- morrow? |
23689 | Citizen general? |
23689 | Concluding finally with--''And you did n''t fall in love with''the princess''?'' |
23689 | Did n''t we save our wagon train? |
23689 | Did she not love him, and he her? |
23689 | Do you know Count Henry? |
23689 | Do you not see the knife glittering upon his breast? |
23689 | Do you really believe that, to save a dishonored life, I would suffer myself to be enslaved and dragged about, chained to your car of triumph? |
23689 | Do you remember, Cleotos, how once, when children, we went together and stole the grapes from Eminides''s vine? |
23689 | Do you think that I would deny my word? |
23689 | Does anybody deny it? |
23689 | For does not''a cessation of hostilities''presuppose parties of equal sovereignty on both sides? |
23689 | For they concern themselves with what? |
23689 | For what is the purport of them? |
23689 | From whence did it come? |
23689 | Had n''t we been a month in service, and been through one great invasion already? |
23689 | Had she not brought it all upon herself? |
23689 | Has it been the United States Government? |
23689 | Has my spirit for the first time encountered its equal? |
23689 | Has the contribution from the shoemakers been received? |
23689 | Has there not been time enough for each to procure his man? |
23689 | Have I not won fifty sestertia from you? |
23689 | Have not better men submitted to that inevitable lot? |
23689 | Have not thousands like yourself thus gone on, until at last, becoming old and worthless, they are left to die alone upon some island in the Tiber? |
23689 | Have we not in that moment, and in that thing, then recognized the Southern Confederacy as a separate and independent Power? |
23689 | Have you already explored all the paths in the dark and unknown country of the Future? |
23689 | Have you collected the provisions for the carousal of the millions? |
23689 | Have you forgiven me, citizen? |
23689 | Have you heard nothing of Count Henry? |
23689 | Have you no regard for my rights over him? |
23689 | Having him, I felt safe, for who could you obtain to stand up against him? |
23689 | His resistance is the last obstacle to be overcome-- he must be overthrown-- and then? |
23689 | How can one avoid his destiny?'' |
23689 | How could he sit and pledge them in deep draughts, and all the time suspect that each one knew his secret, and was laughing about it in his sleeve? |
23689 | How is it that this man, Count Henry, still dares to resist and defy_ me_, the ruler of millions? |
23689 | How many men will you send with me on this embassy? |
23689 | How old are you, Count Henry? |
23689 | How, then will I get this money, if you now strip him of all that he owns?'' |
23689 | If we propose to the rebels''a cessation of hostilities,''does not the question immediately become one of negotiation between separate Governments? |
23689 | If woman deceives, was that a reason why man should mourn and grow gray with melancholy? |
23689 | In the arena?'' |
23689 | In the first place, how are hostilities to cease, unless the power that controls the Southern armies so wills it? |
23689 | Is any among us so base he would have peace with dishonor? |
23689 | Is he not the famous Bianchetti, a condottiere employed by the people, as the condottieri once were by the kings and nobles? |
23689 | Is he who speaks these words of patriotism a tyrant and usurper? |
23689 | Is it condemnation of a rebellion that has''rent the land with civil feud, and drenched it in fraternal blood''? |
23689 | Is it joy, or is it grief? |
23689 | Is it, then, for the United States Government to propose to the authors of this usurpation to cease seeking its total overthrow? |
23689 | Is that a reason for giving up now? |
23689 | Is there anything unconstitutional in that? |
23689 | It is strange, is it not? |
23689 | It will be hard to take, will it not? |
23689 | Mr. Moore, I can manage a boat; will you go with me?'' |
23689 | No? |
23689 | Of whose murder can you yourself boast? |
23689 | Oh woe!--(_Aloud._) How do you mean to conduct the siege, citizen general? |
23689 | Old Eagle of glory, is it not true that my hour is not yet come? |
23689 | Pancratius, why this delay, these half measures, these contracts, this strange interview? |
23689 | Please to remember that this was in May, 1861( or was it 1851? |
23689 | Remember_ Punch''s_ advice to young persons about to be married? |
23689 | See the smoke? |
23689 | Shall we play for him?'' |
23689 | Shall you say that when you are rested again? |
23689 | She will then deceive you, of course; but what of that? |
23689 | Should she try to fly? |
23689 | Smallweed, where in the h-- have you been? |
23689 | Tell me, O man without ancestors, where is your natal soil? |
23689 | That one question is, Shall we maintain the integrity of the nation? |
23689 | The priests chant the praise of freedom; why do you not hasten forward? |
23689 | The question recurs, moreover, what''cessation''have we to propose? |
23689 | There are no spies here; and what if some one should hear us? |
23689 | Thinks? |
23689 | This brings us face to face with the question, Who began the war? |
23689 | This, with good luck, you may do-- a little here and a little there-- who knows? |
23689 | To which party in this terrible strife of brothers does''liberty''look for protection to- day? |
23689 | To- morrow or the next day they must fall, what matter which? |
23689 | Vanished? |
23689 | Was he not master in his own house? |
23689 | Was it merely to eat and drink that we have assembled? |
23689 | Was it not partly for this purpose that he had assembled them? |
23689 | Was it only an echo, or an army of ghosts crossing a dim field, long since fought over-- the steady tramp, tramp, the pendulum of time? |
23689 | Was she infatuated? |
23689 | Was there one among them who would not, while openly commiserating him, laugh at him in the heart? |
23689 | We shall never again together see Eminides''s vineyard, shall we?'' |
23689 | Well; and is it known to you that I am appointed to read a dedicatory ode before the emperor and in honor of that occasion? |
23689 | What and whom do you fear, and why do you delay? |
23689 | What demon had possessed the Fates that they should have brought this lot upon her? |
23689 | What do you demand, Herman? |
23689 | What do you mean by the title,''madame?'' |
23689 | What do you say, citizen? |
23689 | What do you seek from me, redeemer of the people, citizen- god? |
23689 | What does he say? |
23689 | What else will tempt you? |
23689 | What is General Bianchetti considering with so much attention? |
23689 | What is it you wish me to do? |
23689 | What is the worth of that quarry of yours to the south of the Porta Triumphalis?'' |
23689 | What kind of a dance is that? |
23689 | What ladies are those dancing before him you call Leonard? |
23689 | What more is needed as a warrant for extraordinary power? |
23689 | What of our mistress? |
23689 | What say you, therefore?'' |
23689 | What were games and combats of that kind to her? |
23689 | What, then, have I been able to do for myself since? |
23689 | What, therefore, consists with the perpetuity and strength of the Union? |
23689 | Where are now your words and promises; the equality, perfectibility, and universal happiness of the human race? |
23689 | Where are the arms and provisions for your soldiers? |
23689 | Where are the lords, where are the kings, who lately walked the earth with crown and sceptre, ruled with pride and scorn? |
23689 | Where are your soldiers? |
23689 | Where is our God; where is His church? |
23689 | Where is your artillery? |
23689 | Where? |
23689 | Whither? |
23689 | Who are these sleeping beauties on the draw? |
23689 | Who are you with that haughty face, citizen, and why do you not join in the solemnities? |
23689 | Who can complain if the basis of their rebellious scheme is annihilated? |
23689 | Who can oppose us? |
23689 | Who could achieve them? |
23689 | Who has attacked the''public welfare''? |
23689 | Who is that man hiding himself in the folds of your mantle? |
23689 | Who is there? |
23689 | Who is this young man standing in front of us, mounted upon the ruins of the shrine? |
23689 | Who knows, too, with what zeal she may worm herself into your affection, under the guidance of her ambition? |
23689 | Who will begin it? |
23689 | Who will end it? |
23689 | Who would then have thought that, in a few years, we should be here in Rome-- slaves, and parting forever? |
23689 | Who, in this contest, has assailed the principles of''justice, humanity, and liberty''? |
23689 | Whom do you think of killing? |
23689 | Whose voices are those I hear so harsh and wild from that little mound on our left? |
23689 | Why did n''t you tell me, Leu?'' |
23689 | Why do you drag me on through mist, through thorns and briers, through ashes and embers, over heaps of ruins? |
23689 | Why does not the Chicago platform suggest a way of avoiding this difficulty? |
23689 | Why has it left the country in uncertainty on a question so vital? |
23689 | Why not yield with a pleasant grace to the current, when we know that, in the end, struggle as we may, it will surely sweep us under?'' |
23689 | Why should she? |
23689 | Why, indeed, had he called these men around him? |
23689 | Why, then, do I long to see him, long to win him to our side? |
23689 | Will not any other slave answer, Emilius?'' |
23689 | Will you play any other slave than this page against fifty sestertia?'' |
23689 | Will you plunder him entirely? |
23689 | Will you throw or not?'' |
23689 | Wo n''t you please ride back and send my battalion forward? |
23689 | Would I have given up Leta to you, if she had been of any further value to myself? |
23689 | Would not the lieutenant Plautus now rejoice to make retaliatory odes? |
23689 | Yet what sort of peace would that be which we should thus begin by seeking? |
23689 | You all heard that he gave the choice of his slaves, whether male or female?'' |
23689 | You are young, and the blood mounts rapidly into your brain; but will the hour of combat find you more resolute than myself? |
23689 | You pledge your word to me for the honorable treatment of him who will visit you at midnight? |
23689 | You reject too all hope for him?... |
23689 | You remember Lois Berkeley? |
23689 | You watch, I see, and whet your swords for to- morrow.--(_Approaching one of the men:_) What are you making here in this corner? |
23689 | You will forbear that advantage, and will consent to postpone our trial to another time?'' |
23689 | You, Pancratius, and your followers, what do you deserve? |
23689 | and what dependence can you place on the few you still retain? |
23689 | and what_ could_ come between them? |
23689 | have you considered what you are resolved upon encountering? |
23689 | hear you not that wailing chant? |
23689 | under those hoary trees drooping with the night dew, and through this curdling, whitening vapor, see you not the giant shadow of the dead Past? |
23689 | what are you doing under this tree, and why do you look so pale and wild? |
23689 | what hell of flame is this throwing its crimson light into the gloom, and leaping through these heavily fringed walls of the forest? |
23689 | what will become of us? |
23689 | when I offer to undo my work and set you free, you will surely forgive me?'' |
23689 | why, in the name of the immortals, will you, why will you present flags? |
23689 | yes-- don''t you? |
37369 | And now, Master Cadger, what wilt? 37369 And what say you, Arnold?" |
37369 | Are we set upon? 37369 Art reasonable again? |
37369 | Ay, to Warrington on the Cliffs; good!--and warily to be borne? 37369 Benedict-- nephew,"interposed the Lady Maria,"why dost thou fling thy bird so rudely? |
37369 | But you have seen the world, Doctor, and studied, and served in good families? |
37369 | Can this be true, Arnold? |
37369 | Can you describe its virtues, Doctor? |
37369 | Did you not steal that lob, my husband, from me, thief? |
37369 | Dost thou not know that I can put thee in the dust and trample on thee as a caitiff? 37369 Frents, how do you do?" |
37369 | Good lack, Mistress Dorothy, wife, why dost thou bear thyself in such a sort as this? |
37369 | Hast thou an elixir that shall expel a lumbago? |
37369 | Have I not said I could not? 37369 Have you e''er a good cleansing purge for a moulting hawk?" |
37369 | Have you heard the news, mistress? |
37369 | How came you by so rich an inventory, Rob? |
37369 | How dost, friend Rob? |
37369 | How fares it, gentlemen? 37369 How looks the night, Garret?" |
37369 | How many fingers, dame? |
37369 | How should it be other than ready? 37369 I know his name-- they told it to me there-- but his quality and condition, father?" |
37369 | I pray you, Master Captain,inquired the publican, having now regained his self- possession,"what speed at the Chapel? |
37369 | I pray you, what o''clock is it, mistress? |
37369 | If such a thing might be, where wouldst thou take it, Nichol? |
37369 | In the devil''s name, what have we here? |
37369 | In what force, did they say? |
37369 | Indeed!--there is probability in that report,said the Proprietary:"well, and how had they sped? |
37369 | Is it more seemly I should waste my strength on the fruitless labour to clamber up that rough slope, or thou come down to me? 37369 Is the dame likely to be angry, Captain?" |
37369 | Is your breviary needful when you go forth to practise a laneret? |
37369 | Master Shortgrass told me you had need of me,said Garret Weasel, as he now entered the door;--"what wouldst with me, wife Dorothy?" |
37369 | Old, did she say? 37369 Or a nostrum that shall be sure work on a horse with a farcy?" |
37369 | Then thou shouldst do well to despatch a messenger to him,interrupted the Lady Maria, playfully;"dost thou not think he might forget?" |
37369 | Then, in brief,said Nichol Upstake,"I would fain know if you could supply me with Antigua to- day, or aqua vitæ, I care not which?" |
37369 | There is a lie in thy face, John Alward;--the Mattapany road is the broadest and best of the two-- is it not so, Pamesack? |
37369 | There is something far off like the howl of a dog and yet more devilish I should say-- did ye not hear it, masters? 37369 They fired upon you, Captain?" |
37369 | Thou, who hast no more to do than a stray in the pound, what are you fit for, if it be not to do as you are commanded? 37369 Upon what condition?" |
37369 | What brought thee here, Garret Weasel? |
37369 | What can she say, when all is come and gone, but, perchance, that thou wert rash and hot- headed? 37369 What can that signify?" |
37369 | What dost thou mutter? |
37369 | What has become of that man Weasel? |
37369 | What hast thou seen, Captain? 37369 What is that?" |
37369 | What more? |
37369 | What news do you bring us from the old world? |
37369 | What was it? |
37369 | What would you with my husband, Master Baldpate? 37369 When does your provincial court hold its sessions?" |
37369 | Where are we, Pamesack? 37369 Wherein might it be obeyed, my Lord?" |
37369 | Who and what is this Master Secretary that hath set the maiden of the Rose Croft to look upon me with an evil spirit? 37369 Who be these, sir?" |
37369 | Who dwells here? |
37369 | Whose can it be else? |
37369 | Why dost thou not join in the burden? |
37369 | Why not? |
37369 | Why was I not told of this? |
37369 | Why, Garret, vintner, art asleep, man? |
37369 | Will you, mistress? 37369 Would you have the gauger''s wife, sister?" |
37369 | You are sure, Doctor Debor, these were Sinniquoes you saw? |
37369 | You give credence to these idle tales? |
37369 | You have late news from England? |
37369 | You have witnessed this yourself, Arnold? |
37369 | You will obey this high behest? 37369 You will speak to my father?" |
37369 | And did he not bring his sobriety with him from the very bosom of the land you rail against?" |
37369 | And then the woods!--what pallet hath colours for the forest? |
37369 | And, besides, what sort of an enemy do we fight? |
37369 | Are you not steeped in wickedness and abomination by evil- consorting with this copper Captain, and this most horrid wood ranger? |
37369 | Art thou such a dizzard as to tempt my anger? |
37369 | But these whirring and whizzing ghosts and their cronies, that fly about one''s ears like cats, and purr and mew like bats-- what am I saying? |
37369 | But who the countless charms can draw That grac''d his mistress true? |
37369 | But you must have heard it before this?" |
37369 | Can you suspect such intercourse?" |
37369 | Canidius, That from Terentum, and Brundusium, He could so quickly cut the Ionian sea, And take in Toryne? |
37369 | Did I not say true when I tell you it is not my nature to soar in de clouts?" |
37369 | Did I not see the very cask on''t at Trencher Rob''s? |
37369 | Did n''t I see both him and his trumpeter last night at the Crow and Archer, with all their jin- gumbobs in a pair of panniers? |
37369 | Did they find it easy to purchase their powder and lead in Albany? |
37369 | Did you not beguile me last night with a base lie? |
37369 | Did you not hear that shot, woman?" |
37369 | Did you not practice upon me, you faithless, false- hearted coward?" |
37369 | Did your instructer In the dear tongues never discourse to you Of the Italian mountebanks?" |
37369 | Do you admit the promise, my child?" |
37369 | Doth not the devil keep his quarters there?" |
37369 | Fairly, I hope, as you deserve? |
37369 | For my sake, pretty hostess, you will allow him to sup with us? |
37369 | Friends, you all saw these things?" |
37369 | Garret, how comes it that you did not tell this matter to your wife, as I charged you to do?" |
37369 | Had he come hither before you sailed? |
37369 | Has Fendall, or any of his confederates had commerce with this house, Captain Dauntrees? |
37369 | Has your goodman, honest Garret, come home yet, dame?" |
37369 | He lives near this troubled house?" |
37369 | He remembers me?--a blessing on his head!--and he wears well, Master Skipper?" |
37369 | Hither, Natta-- there is the wench on the pillion-- who could serve thee with a better grace than that?" |
37369 | How can you look me in the face, knowing him, as you do, for a most shallow vessel, Captain Dauntrees?" |
37369 | How dar''st thou reprove me, boy?" |
37369 | How does the world use thee? |
37369 | How fares it with thee, Master Skipper?" |
37369 | How goes the night with you dame?" |
37369 | How is it, Arnold? |
37369 | I do not soar in de clouts?" |
37369 | I were a fool to be vexed because I could not read the riddle of a maiden''s fancy: how should such fish of the sea be learned in so gentle a study? |
37369 | Is he more personable in shape or figure?--goes he in better apparel? |
37369 | Is he taking in sail?--is he seeking an anchorage? |
37369 | Is it not so, Arnold?" |
37369 | Is it not well named, my lady, and superlative cheap? |
37369 | Is it that he hath a place in the train of his Lordship? |
37369 | Is n''t that a bird? |
37369 | Is the Chapel ready for our service?" |
37369 | Lend me thy lantern quoth a? |
37369 | Look around you: is Anthony Warden so incapable, or so hurtful to your service that you might find plea to dismiss him?" |
37369 | Look at Arnold there: is there a more temperate, orderly, well- behaved liegeman in the world than the ranger? |
37369 | Nine, said you? |
37369 | Now to what wench, ask you? |
37369 | Now what scent art thou upon, Nichol Upstake? |
37369 | Now, what set thee to jogging so early, Dickon? |
37369 | The Lieutenant at the fort, doubtless, told thee that we were absent last night on special duty at his Lordship''s command?" |
37369 | The Proprietary remained for some moments silent: at last, turning to the ranger, he inquired--"What dost thou know of this house, Arnold?" |
37369 | The hostess bent her head down, as the Captain desired, when he said in a half whisper,"Send me a flask of the best,--you understand? |
37369 | Thou dost not spurn the strong waters, Kate of Warrington,--nor the giver of them?" |
37369 | We were thronged to- day; was it not so, Arnold?" |
37369 | Were it safe, think you, to wake him?" |
37369 | What call you your great compound, Doctor? |
37369 | What crotchet is this?" |
37369 | What devil of mutiny is abroad now? |
37369 | What do you seek on the wold?" |
37369 | What does Kate of Warrington in this neighbourhood? |
37369 | What dole hath he done this flight?--what more wealthy knave than himself hath he robbed? |
37369 | What have you to do with the flavour of the news? |
37369 | What makes you here? |
37369 | What new commodity, honest mistress, shall I find with Rob? |
37369 | What point of duty calls on us to baulk the skipper in his trade? |
37369 | What reason was given by the Northern Indians for joining in this scheme?" |
37369 | What servant would your Lordship displace? |
37369 | What will she say in the morning?" |
37369 | Whence comes he?" |
37369 | Where do you say you have spent the night?" |
37369 | Where dost thou come from?" |
37369 | Which of us has not, dame? |
37369 | Who is this Secretary of my Lord''s private chamber? |
37369 | Who showed them the path to my cabin, that I must be driven out at this hour?" |
37369 | Why are you angry, that you scowl so, Master Rob?" |
37369 | Why do you loiter there?" |
37369 | Why is not Albert in your train? |
37369 | Why should my birth- day be so remembered that all the town must be talking about it?" |
37369 | Will that content you, Blanche?" |
37369 | Would''st thou play at thine old game, and sack the town, and take the daintiest in it for ransom? |
37369 | You agree with me in this, Mistress Weasel?" |
37369 | You comprehend?" |
37369 | You dullards, could n''t I have told you it was the Dutch Doctor,--if your fright had left you but a handful of sense to ask a question? |
37369 | You have no counsel for me? |
37369 | You have the eatables safe and the wine sound, worthy Weasel?--Nicholas,"he said, speaking to the Lieutenant--"are our horses saddled?" |
37369 | You have, doubtless, had great experience?" |
37369 | You heard of this,--father?" |
37369 | You said you would be merry; shall we not have a song? |
37369 | You will spare me Garret, dame? |
37369 | You would have a peep at my aurum potabiles in dat little casket-- my multum in parvo? |
37369 | Your hand, Master Verdun-- I think so you said?" |
37369 | _ Martin._ And what is that? |
37369 | are we set upon, comrades?" |
37369 | exclaimed Dauntrees, with affected astonishment,"would you tarry to do your duty to Mistress Dorothy? |
37369 | exclaimed the Cripple, as a frown gathered on his brow;"what is he? |
37369 | exclaimed the Cripple;"what''s in the wind?" |
37369 | exclaimed the priest, with the alacrity of his native French temper, as he took the assailed damsel by the hand,"what have they to say against you? |
37369 | exclaimed the skipper,"you have lost no whit of that railing tongue I left with you at my last venture? |
37369 | inquired Dauntrees;"when have we the moon?" |
37369 | no hawk''s eye upon thy path?" |
37369 | or is that broken English of his more natural to the province than my plain speech, that he should claim the right to chide me for my behaviour? |
37369 | said Rob with a low- toned chuckle that shook his figure for some moments, and almost closed his eyes;"hath he not his court in the Chapel? |
37369 | said the Proprietary;"with what weapons?" |
37369 | she shouted at the top of her voice:"friends, are ye? |
37369 | that I can drive thee from the province as a vile outlaw? |
37369 | were the publican''s first words.--"Does she suspect us for a frisk to- night? |
37369 | what have I done to redden thy brow?" |
37369 | what was their success?" |
37369 | where do you come from?" |
37369 | why was I seduced upon this fool''s errand?" |
37369 | you pelieve yourself on a bank, up on a stage, before de rabble rout? |
16772 | And do you not think that the great Saints, on their side, seeing what they owe to all little souls, will love them with a love beyond compare? 16772 And how can that be done?" |
16772 | And what attracts you? |
16772 | And what do you say to Jesus? |
16772 | And what is this_ little way_ that you would teach to souls? |
16772 | Are not the river and the brook,they urge,"of more use than a dewdrop? |
16772 | But have you not always been faithful to those favours? |
16772 | But how could you have hidden your innocence from your Confessor? |
16772 | But what do you think about? |
16772 | But,she answered,"why cry at my death? |
16772 | Holy Father,I repeated,"in honour of your jubilee, will you allow me to enter the Carmel when I am fifteen?" |
16772 | How comes it,I said,"that you can be so patient? |
16772 | How do you manage not to give way to discouragement at such times? |
16772 | How is it, Mother, that Our Lord, knowing what was about to happen, did not say to him:''Ask of Me the strength to do what is in thy mind?'' 16772 If you love them that love you, what thanks are to you? |
16772 | Is that how a child kisses its father? 16772 No-- they are not terrible: can a little Victim of Love find anything terrible that is sent by her Spouse? |
16772 | O my Divine Master,I cried from the bottom of my heart,"shall Thy Justice alone receive victims of holocaust? |
16772 | That is true,she replied,"but, do you know what gives me strength? |
16772 | To enjoy such a privilege, would it suffice to repeat that Act of Oblation which you have composed? |
16772 | We too would like to become all golden-- what must we do? |
16772 | What are you doing? |
16772 | What are you looking at, Thérèse, dear? |
16772 | What are you thinking of? |
16772 | What is it you see? |
16772 | What would you do,said Thérèse to the impatient one,"if it were not your duty to mend these blankets? |
16772 | Why are you so bright this morning? |
16772 | Why do you think that, dear Mother? |
16772 | Why? |
16772 | Will the_ Divine Thief,_ some one asked,"soon come to steal His little bunch of grapes?" |
16772 | Would you like me to fetch you thither soon, dear Mother? |
16772 | You are suffering very much just now, are you not? |
16772 | You see this little glass? |
16772 | [ 11] After so many graces, may I not sing with the Psalmist thatthe Lord is good, that His Mercy endureth for ever"? |
16772 | [ 13] For what joy can be greater than to suffer for Thy Love? 16772 [ 15] A few minutes after seven, turning to the Prioress, the poor little Martyr asked:"Mother, is it not the agony? |
16772 | [ 18] But is this pure love really in my heart? 16772 [ 24]"Then death will come to fetch you?" |
16772 | [ 3] And now, Mother, what more shall I say? 16772 [ 46] We know, then, what is this word which must be kept; we can not say, like Pilate:"What is truth? |
16772 | [ 6] What will this old age be for me? 16772 [ 8] Is not Jesus your only treasure? |
16772 | [ 8] One day she had not brought any-- what was to be done? 16772 ''[ 3]******"What would you do if you could begin over again your religious life?" |
16772 | ''And what does Almighty mean?'' |
16772 | ''If I were in another convent,''I reflected,''what would it matter to me if the chestnut- trees of the Carmel at Lisieux were entirely cut down?'' |
16772 | ''Oh, Mamma,''she answered,''then if I am not good, shall I go to Hell? |
16772 | ''Remaining little''--what does it mean?" |
16772 | ''Who dare glory in his own good works?'' |
16772 | ******"Do you know which are my Sundays and feast- days? |
16772 | ******"What do you think of all the graces that have been heaped upon you?" |
16772 | ******"You will look down upon us from Heaven, will you not?" |
16772 | A whole month has passed since we parted; but why do I say parted? |
16772 | Alas, what will become of that poor little heart? |
16772 | All was ready for my espousals;[17] but do you not think that something was still wanting to the feast? |
16772 | And another time:"You have had many trials to- day?" |
16772 | And in face of this folly, what wilt Thou, but that my heart leap up to Thee? |
16772 | And now what science is He going to teach? |
16772 | And our dear Father!--it is heartrending, but how can we repine since Our Lord Himself was looked upon"as one struck by God and afflicted"? |
16772 | And so if holy Priests, whom Our Lord in the Gospel calls the salt of the earth, have need of our prayers, what must we think of the lukewarm? |
16772 | And what shall I say of the Holy House? |
16772 | Anyone but you, dear Mother, who know me thoroughly, would smile at reading these pages, for has ever a soul seemed less tried than mine? |
16772 | Are not my boundless desires but dreams-- but foolishness? |
16772 | Are there yet any rose- coloured joys on earth for your little Thérèse? |
16772 | Are you much concerned at this moment as to what is happening in other Carmelite convents, and whether the nuns there are busy or otherwise? |
16772 | Are you not afraid that I shall let your lambs stray afar? |
16772 | Are you not ready to suffer all that God wills? |
16772 | But a thought comes into my mind:"Why did God give this light to a child who, if she had understood it, would have died of grief?" |
16772 | But does not her royal lover know better than she does, the extent of her poverty and ignorance? |
16772 | But from whence comes their light? |
16772 | But how shall I show my love, since love proves itself by deeds? |
16772 | But no concert is complete without singing, and if Jesus plays, must not Céline make melody with her voice? |
16772 | But of what avail to thee, my Jesus, are my flowers and my songs? |
16772 | But on whom shall our poor hearts lavish this love, and who will be worthy of this treasure? |
16772 | But suppose he heard the whole truth, would he not in that case love him still more? |
16772 | But was it possible to be in Rome and not go down to the real Coliseum? |
16772 | But what of that? |
16772 | But what shall I say? |
16772 | But what was I speaking of? |
16772 | But where am I? |
16772 | But, O my Spouse, why these desires of mine to make known the secrets of Thy Love? |
16772 | But, what had I made ready? |
16772 | Céline said the other day:''How can God be in such a tiny Host?'' |
16772 | Did He not permit Lazarus to die even though Mary and Martha had sent word that he was sick? |
16772 | Did not God tell Adam of what he would die when He said to him:''Thou shalt die of death''? |
16772 | Did not Jesus cry out:"My father, remove this chalice from Me"? |
16772 | Do not creatures belong to Him who made them? |
16772 | Do you not find, as I do, that our beloved Father''s death has drawn us nearer to Heaven? |
16772 | Do you not know, dear Marie, that by acting thus you help him to accomplish his end? |
16772 | Do you remember my telling you, dear Mother, how fond I am of snow? |
16772 | Do you remember, dear Mother, the charming little book you gave me three months before the great day? |
16772 | Does He not see our anguish and the burden that weighs us down? |
16772 | Does not fear lead to the thought of the strict justice that is threatened to sinners? |
16772 | Does not the Wise Man tell us--"Life is like a ship that passeth through the waves: when it is gone by, the trace thereof can not be found"? |
16772 | Does that please you? |
16772 | Does their work prevent you praying or meditating? |
16772 | Earth''s air is failing me: when shall I breathe the air of Heaven?" |
16772 | For is there anything more sweet than the inward joy of thinking well of our neighbour? |
16772 | God has taken from us him whom we loved so tenderly-- was it not that we might be able to say more truly than ever:"Our Father Who art in heaven"? |
16772 | Had not Thérèse asked Him to take away her liberty which frightened her? |
16772 | Had she anything on her conscience? |
16772 | Has He Himself told you so? |
16772 | Has anyone ever reproached brothers who fight side by side, or together win the martyr''s palm? |
16772 | Has not Our Lord said:"If the salt lose its savour wherewith shall it be salted? |
16772 | Has not Thy Merciful Love also need thereof? |
16772 | Have I not, then, good reason to say that your lot is a beautiful one-- worthy an apostle of Christ? |
16772 | Have we not a glorious mission to fulfill? |
16772 | Have we not learned all things from Him? |
16772 | He looked at me attentively and smiling said:"Well, and how is our little Carmelite?" |
16772 | He looked at me with indescribable tenderness, and, pressing me to his heart, said:"What is it, little Queen? |
16772 | Here, during this silent visit, I found my one consolation-- for was not Jesus my only Friend? |
16772 | How can I thank Him, how render myself less unworthy of so great a favour? |
16772 | How can a soul so imperfect as mine aspire to the plenitude of Love? |
16772 | How can anybody fear Him Who allows Himself to be made captive"with one hair of our neck"? |
16772 | How can anything so contrary to our natural inclinations afford such extraordinary pleasure? |
16772 | How can he who ignores the riches he possesses, spend them generously upon others?" |
16772 | How can it be said that it is more perfect to separate oneself from home and friends? |
16772 | How could He cleanse in the flames of Purgatory souls consumed with the fire of Divine Love? |
16772 | How could I forget those souls they are to win by their sufferings and exhortations? |
16772 | How could his little Queen talk of leaving him when he had already parted with his two eldest daughters? |
16772 | How could my Mother''s absence grieve me on my First Communion Day? |
16772 | How could my trust have any limits? |
16772 | How could they stray away? |
16772 | How did these three months pass? |
16772 | How is it, dear Mother, that my youth and inexperience have not frightened you? |
16772 | How reconcile these opposite tendencies? |
16772 | How shall I describe the feelings which thrilled me when I gazed on the Coliseum? |
16772 | How would it do if I wrote at Easter and described my dream, telling her that Jesus desires to have her for His Spouse?" |
16772 | How, then, could I hope soon to be admitted to the Carmel? |
16772 | How, therefore, can you expect me to be otherwise than filled with fear?" |
16772 | I can not receive Thee in Holy Communion as often as I should wish; but, O Lord, art Thou not all- powerful? |
16772 | I knew that Jesus was there asleep in my little boat, but how could I see Him while the night was so dark? |
16772 | If the mere desire of Thy Love awakens such delight, what will it be to possess it, to enjoy it for ever? |
16772 | If you fought only when you felt eagerness, where would be your merit? |
16772 | Is God pleased with me? |
16772 | Is He pleased with me?" |
16772 | Is it for itself that He made it so sweet? |
16772 | Is it not Thyself alone Who hast taught them to me, and canst Thou not unveil them to others? |
16772 | Is it not clear that the constant remembrance of gifts bestowed serves to increase the love of the giver? |
16772 | Is it not you who have taught me? |
16772 | Is not Jesus all- powerful? |
16772 | Is not such a choice worthy of God''s Love? |
16772 | Is not the apostolate of prayer-- so to speak-- higher than that of the spoken word? |
16772 | Is not your life made up of them? |
16772 | Is there anyone who will understand it and-- above all-- is there anyone who will be able to repay? |
16772 | Is there on the face of this earth a soul more feeble than mine? |
16772 | It was through your hands that I gave myself to Our Lord, and you have known me from childhood-- need I write my secrets? |
16772 | Jesus has drawn us to Him together, for are you not already His? |
16772 | Life is full of sacrifice, it is true, but why seek happiness here? |
16772 | Mamma laughingly said he always did whatever I wanted, but he answered:"Well, why not? |
16772 | Must I die of sorrow because of my helplessness? |
16772 | My companions remarked:"What an ugly thing!--of what use will it be?" |
16772 | My companions were astonished, and asked each other afterwards:"Why did she cry? |
16772 | My darling Céline, you who asked me so many questions when we were little, I wonder how it was you never asked:"Why has God not made me an Angel?" |
16772 | Need I say that in the depths of my heart I felt certain my request would be granted? |
16772 | Now,"we shed tears as we remember Sion, for how can we sing the songs of the Lord in a land of exile? |
16772 | O Céline, how can I tell you all that is happening within me? |
16772 | O my God, what shall we then see? |
16772 | O my only Friend, why dost Thou not reserve these infinite longings to lofty souls, to the eagles that soar in the heights? |
16772 | Of what avail is it? |
16772 | Of what means, then, would He make use? |
16772 | Of what, then, need I be afraid? |
16772 | One evening, when we went to our prayers, I said to her:"Will you begin the_ Memorare?_ I am going to light the candles." |
16772 | Our Beloved Himself fell three times on the way to Calvary, and why should we not imitate our Spouse? |
16772 | Pauline put me to bed, and I invariably asked her:"Have I been good to- day? |
16772 | Perhaps it is daring, but, for a long time, hast thou not allowed me to be daring with Thee? |
16772 | Shall I eat the flesh of bullocks, or shall I drink the blood of goats? |
16772 | She added further:"When misunderstood and judged unfavourably, what benefit do we derive from defending ourselves? |
16772 | She replied:"Why seek to surmount it? |
16772 | Should I run after those which were no longer in sight and so perhaps miss the train, or should I beg for a seat in the carriage of Father Révérony? |
16772 | Since when has He lost the right to make use of one of His children, in order to supply the others with the nourishment they need? |
16772 | So an act of humility was asked of the Apostles, and Our loving Lord called to them:"Children, have you anything to eat? |
16772 | Tell me, Céline, is it for the peach''s own sake that God created that colour so fair to the eye, that velvety covering so soft to the touch? |
16772 | The Jews asked Him:"Master, where dwellest thou? |
16772 | The day after his execution I hastily opened the paper,_ La Croix,_ and what did I see? |
16772 | The dew- drop-- what could be simpler, what more pure? |
16772 | Then he turned to me and said:''Well, little Queen, would you like to learn painting too?'' |
16772 | Then why should I be troubled? |
16772 | There is my sole treasure, dearest Godmother, and why should it not be yours? |
16772 | To be Thy Spouse, O my Jesus, to be a daughter of Carmel, and by my union with Thee to be the mother of souls, should not all this content me? |
16772 | To such folly as this what answer wilt Thou make? |
16772 | Was He not supremely happy in the company of His Father and the Holy Spirit of Love? |
16772 | Was it into the shell?" |
16772 | Was it not by suffering and death that He ransomed the world? |
16772 | Was it not right that this feast should be complete, since in it all other joyful days were reunited? |
16772 | Was it not when I saw the Precious Blood flowing from the Wounds of Jesus that the thirst for souls first took possession of me? |
16772 | Was not this ardour--"vanity and vexation of spirit"? |
16772 | Was this not a sweet response? |
16772 | Was this not touching? |
16772 | We who live under the law of Love, shall we not profit by the loving advances made by our Spouse? |
16772 | Well, you know what I will do-- I shall fly to you in Heaven, and you will hold me tight in your arms, and how could God take me away then?'' |
16772 | Were He in search of lofty ideas, has He not His Angels, whose knowledge infinitely surpasses that of the greatest genius of earth? |
16772 | Were they not the very ones to help a timid child whom God destines to become an apostle of apostles by prayer and sacrifice? |
16772 | What are the hidden treasures which Our Divine Master thus reveals to us through His chosen little servant? |
16772 | What are we to think of a novice who must have a walk every day?" |
16772 | What can I tell you, dear Mother, about my thanksgivings after Communion? |
16772 | What does it matter if we get wet? |
16772 | What does it matter, even if you are devoid of courage, provided you act as though you possessed it? |
16772 | What have I done for God that He should shower so many graces upon me? |
16772 | What is the key of this mystery? |
16772 | What is this life which will have no end? |
16772 | What is this sweet Friend about? |
16772 | What is to become of me? |
16772 | What matter if the routes we follow lie apart? |
16772 | What matters a little toil upon earth? |
16772 | What should I have become, if, as the world outside believed, I had been but the pet of the Community? |
16772 | What was He doing during His sweet slumber, and what became of the ball thus cast on one side? |
16772 | What was I to do in such a difficulty? |
16772 | What will be our joy when we communicate eternally in the dwelling of the King of Heaven? |
16772 | What would happen if an ignorant gardener did not graft his trees in the right way? |
16772 | What, then, are His loving designs for our souls? |
16772 | What, then, have we to envy in the Priests of the Lord? |
16772 | What, then, have we to fear? |
16772 | When I was only just learning to talk, and Mamma asked:"What are you thinking about?" |
16772 | When a soul with childlike trust casts her faults into Love''s all- devouring furnace, how shall they escape being utterly consumed? |
16772 | When will you learn to hide your troubles from Him, or to tell Him gaily that you are happy to suffer for Him?" |
16772 | Where do you find all that you teach us?" |
16772 | Where is the creature so mighty that he can make one flake of it fall to please his beloved? |
16772 | Where, then, must we go? |
16772 | Which Thérèse will be the more fervent? |
16772 | Which of these two ways is more pleasing to Our Lord? |
16772 | Who shall tell how many ripened ears have sprung forth since, how many the sheaves that are yet to come? |
16772 | Why do I say I am beside myself with joy? |
16772 | Why does He deign to say:"Pray ye the Lord of the harvest that He send forth labourers"? |
16772 | Why does He not come and comfort us? |
16772 | Why had I such a fancy for snow? |
16772 | Why, then, come down on earth to seek sinners and make of them His closest friends? |
16772 | Why? |
16772 | Will He not soon come to fetch me?" |
16772 | Will not the God of Infinite Justice, Who deigns so lovingly to pardon the sins of the Prodigal Son, be also just to me"who am always with Him"? |
16772 | Will the Angels watch over me?" |
16772 | With a heart like mine, I should have been taken captive and had my wings clipped, and how then should I have been able to"fly away and be at rest"? |
16772 | Would you then be as the mediocre souls? |
16772 | [ 8] How can a heart given up to human affections be closely united to God? |
16772 | _ the chariots_--that is to say, the idle clamours which beset and disturb us-- are they within the soul or without? |
16772 | ______________________________ CHAPTER VIII PROFESSION OF SOEUR THÉRÈSE Need I tell you, dear Mother, about the retreat before my profession? |
16772 | am I not going to die?" |
16772 | if he did not understand the nature of each, and wished, for instance, to make roses grow on peach trees? |
16772 | must Thy Love which is disdained lie hidden in Thy Heart? |
16772 | she answered;"must I not profit of these small opportunities for penance since the greater ones are forbidden me?" |
16772 | they were frightened themselves, but Marie, hiding her feelings, ran to me and said:"Why are you calling Papa, when he is at Alençon?" |
16772 | what mother would not straightway clasp her child lovingly to her heart, and forget all it had done? |
16772 | would not that prove its desire to be identified with the fire to the point of sharing its substance? |
38965 | How shall this be done,and yet my vow be left intact? |
38965 | How shall this be done? |
38965 | How shall we sing in a strange land? |
38965 | Whence is this to me, that the Mother of my Lord should come to me? |
38965 | Who is My Mother? |
38965 | Who is She? |
38965 | Who is She? |
38965 | Who is she that cometh up from the desert? |
38965 | Who is she? |
38965 | Who is she? |
38965 | Who is she? |
38965 | Who is she? |
38965 | Who is she? |
38965 | Why hast Thou done so? |
38965 | ("_ How shall this be done?_") 23 7. |
38965 | ("_ Son, why hast Thou done so to us?_") 65 18. |
38965 | (_ Introit for the Feast of the Assumption._) What were the causes of their joy? |
38965 | All those to whom He appeared would take it for granted that His Mother had seen Him-- why write down a thing that everybody knew? |
38965 | Am I in_ haste_ to perform acts of charity, especially when the request for them comes at inconvenient moments? |
38965 | Am I prepared to ratify this offering that my Elder Brother made in my name? |
38965 | Am I ready to give them up to Him to Whom they belong when He asks for them? |
38965 | Am I ready to make my sacrifice-- even a blind one-- ready to say:_ Ecce adsum_--"Behold, here I am"--and to trust where I can not understand? |
38965 | Am I, like Mary, absolutely faithful to any contract that I may have made with GOD? |
38965 | And He answers:"Did you not know that I must be about My Father''s business?" |
38965 | And do I regard it as something precious, consecrated and dedicated, GOD''S Temple, His own dwelling- place? |
38965 | And during those long years-- according to some opinions fifteen, to others, twenty- three-- what was Mary''s strength? |
38965 | And if Mary turned and said:"Yes, my child, what is it?" |
38965 | And it is the same flame of love which now impels her to speak:"How shall this be done?" |
38965 | And shall not I, too, take an interest in this wondrous Treasury? |
38965 | And what about JESUS? |
38965 | And what about Mary''s joy? |
38965 | And what is such an effectual barrier to sympathy as the feeling that we are not understood? |
38965 | And what was Mary''s part? |
38965 | And what will be my position there? |
38965 | Are my affections set on things above, where JESUS and Mary are? |
38965 | Are not all such things as these a part of it? |
38965 | Are these great things possible for me? |
38965 | As soon as I know that whatever is being asked of me is the Holy Spirit''s doing, am I at rest? |
38965 | Before I go on, let me ask myself to what extent I am copying my Mother in at once passing on to GOD all praise that may come to me? |
38965 | But are we not making Mary almost equal with her Son? |
38965 | But what is It to those who know? |
38965 | Can I, sweet Mother of Sorrows, pour balm into that terrible wound? |
38965 | Can it be that they do not believe that GOD did great things for her? |
38965 | Can it be that they refuse to listen to the inspiration of the Holy Spirit Who tells them that Mary is blessed among women? |
38965 | Could any gulf be wider? |
38965 | Could not her intercession for the Church have been even more effectual had she been close to her Son''s throne in Heaven? |
38965 | Could she not have been the Mother of Good Counsel in Heaven for those who had to guide the Church in its infancy, as she has been ever since? |
38965 | Did Mary receive the Last Sacraments? |
38965 | Do I always take JESUS with me when I go to visit my friends? |
38965 | Do I follow my Mother''s example in this? |
38965 | Do I in my times of desolation turn instinctively to His House, where I know that He is hidden? |
38965 | Do I love to hear about my own country? |
38965 | Do I realise that this makes my body holy? |
38965 | Do I say:"How can this be done?" |
38965 | Do I tell my Mother of all the difficulties of the way and allow her to console me with stories of the Homeland? |
38965 | Do those whom I visit feel that I create an atmosphere-- an atmosphere which makes them more ready to bless JESUS and Mary? |
38965 | Does it almost weary me to have such perfection given me to copy? |
38965 | Does it seem impossible? |
38965 | Does my happiness, even in the midst of trial, make others understand what great things GOD_ can_ do for those who love Him? |
38965 | Does not everything in the house speak of Him? |
38965 | Does she sit still and mourn over the days that are gone? |
38965 | Does the joy that is in my heart show itself in my countenance, in my manner, in my actions, and sometimes perhaps in my words? |
38965 | Does the mother mind the sighs? |
38965 | For the third time the Angels ask the question:"Who is she that cometh up from the desert flowing with delights, leaning upon her Beloved?" |
38965 | GOD gave His reasons this time-- but when He does not, what then? |
38965 | Have I any right to claim the privileges? |
38965 | Have things of earth no attraction for me in comparison with heavenly things? |
38965 | How can I be like JESUS, and a child of thine without it? |
38965 | How can I do this or that_ here_? |
38965 | How comes it that there is no sorrow with which the Heart of Mary can not sympathise? |
38965 | How could Joseph bear to have suspicions of his wife, whom he considered to be purity itself, and whom he loved so tenderly? |
38965 | How did Mary win the Victor''s crown? |
38965 | How does Mary act? |
38965 | How far am I like her? |
38965 | How far am I like my Mother in this? |
38965 | How far do I copy my Mother in this? |
38965 | How is it that"never is it heard of that her children turn to her in vain"? |
38965 | How is it with me? |
38965 | How often I say it!--_Hail Mary!_ What do I mean by it? |
38965 | How was Mary transformed? |
38965 | How was the world transformed? |
38965 | If I know that He is there, why need I trouble so much about the ups and downs? |
38965 | If my salvation cost JESUS and Mary so much, ought it not to cost me something too? |
38965 | Is it my first motive and object? |
38965 | Is it not just because of this flame of communicating love? |
38965 | Is it so? |
38965 | Is it so? |
38965 | Is my whole heart in Heaven because my treasure is there? |
38965 | Is not this something like my_ Hail Maries_ carelessly and lightly said? |
38965 | Is there any use in crying for re- admittance? |
38965 | Is there anything in which I can copy her in her visit to her cousin Elizabeth? |
38965 | It was certainly_ love_ that prompted the word, but in what sense was it a_ transforming_ love? |
38965 | Let me answer my question by another:_ Could_ GOD do otherwise? |
38965 | Mary had more reason to hope than many others, for was she not of the tribe of Judah, and of the House of David? |
38965 | Mary''s Fifth Word"_ And His Mother said to Him: Son, why hast Thou done so to us? |
38965 | Mary''s First Word"_ And Mary said to the Angel: How shall this be done, because I know not man?_"( St Luke i. |
38965 | May not another reason have been in order that she might be the_ better able to sympathise_ with the exiled children of Eve(_ exules filii Evæ_)? |
38965 | O Mother of fair love, why do the poor banished children of Eve so continually turn to thee? |
38965 | Of what, then, did Mary die? |
38965 | Or is she disappointed to find that her child''s thoughts are not really with her at all? |
38965 | She knew that He would rise again-- but would she see Him? |
38965 | She says straight out what she is feeling, with that holy familiarity to which her love gives her a right:"Son, why hast Thou done so to us? |
38965 | That is: Who is she who is adorned with all possible graces and virtues? |
38965 | This was Mary''s sacrifice-- but what is her part in the Sacrifice that her Son is offering to His Father for the world''s redemption? |
38965 | To what extent have I taken this word seriously? |
38965 | To what extent is this_ flamma amoris compatientis_ burning in me? |
38965 | To whom, then, is it more natural for the poor banished children of Eve to turn than to the Mother whose one idea is to get them back? |
38965 | Was it just before the War in Heaven, when He revealed His plans to the first creatures of His Hands? |
38965 | Was it not just what they wanted? |
38965 | Was it on the day of the Holy and Immaculate Conception? |
38965 | Was it when He spoke to our first parents of"the seed of the woman"? |
38965 | Was the birth of this little one so different from any other? |
38965 | What about our sacrifice? |
38965 | What did our Lord do with His interruption, which was a very real one, and far more disturbing than are many of ours of which we complain so readily? |
38965 | What do I know of this flame of joyful love? |
38965 | What does He do? |
38965 | What does Mary''s death say to me? |
38965 | What does it mean-- this word"_ Ave_,"_ Hail!_ with which Gabriel begins his message? |
38965 | What does it mean? |
38965 | What have I got to do, then, in the matter? |
38965 | What have_ I_ got to do as an exile? |
38965 | What is the secret, then, of suffering? |
38965 | What is this ark sanctified by GOD but Mary''s body, of which the Son of GOD took flesh? |
38965 | What is to decide whether I get it or not? |
38965 | What made those Communions so intense? |
38965 | What position shall I earn? |
38965 | What was JESUS to Mary in the land of her exile? |
38965 | What was it that gave her an almost superhuman courage? |
38965 | What, then, must have been the measure with which Mary was"filled with the Holy Ghost,"for what was the Apostles''work compared with hers? |
38965 | When did GOD begin to prepare His Tabernacle? |
38965 | When she turns at my_ Hail!_ to ask me for something, does she always get it? |
38965 | Where can I get it? |
38965 | Who had a greater right to know it than Mary, through whose means the Incarnation took place? |
38965 | Who is My mother? |
38965 | Who is my Mother? |
38965 | Who is this but the Queen of Heaven clothed with her glorious body of immortality? |
38965 | Why are the Angels so full of interest? |
38965 | Why is mine so precious? |
38965 | Why was Abraham called the friend of GOD? |
38965 | Why was Mary''s body so precious? |
38965 | Why was her body not left in the tomb? |
38965 | Why was it? |
38965 | Why, then, has He done so? |
38965 | Why, then, should Mary die? |
38965 | Why? |
38965 | Why? |
38965 | Why? |
38965 | Why? |
38965 | Why? |
38965 | Why? |
38965 | Why? |
38965 | Would He come to her? |
38965 | Would it be better not to say it at all, than to risk any want of respect to that Mother whom I love so dearly? |
38965 | Would it be fair if all were easy and smooth for me? |
38965 | Would it be worthy of Himself if He were to give me anything less than a_ perfect_ copy? |
38965 | Would not the Beatific Vision in Heaven have been better than her Communions on earth? |
38965 | _ 1st Prelude._ The Angels asking three times:"Who is she?" |
38965 | _ Colloquy_ with Mary, asking her to obtain for me the grace to say with her:"How shall this be done?" |
38965 | _ Point I._--"WHO IS SHE?" |
38965 | _ Point I._--THE ANGELS What does it all mean? |
38965 | _ Point I._--THE PREPARATION OF THE TABERNACLE Why should Mary be called a Tabernacle? |
38965 | _ Point II._--"WHO IS SHE?" |
38965 | _ Point II._--FULL OF GRACE How is Mary full of grace? |
38965 | _ Point II._--THE HOLY TABERNACLE What was it? |
38965 | _ Point II._--THE REASON FOR MARY''S EXILE Why did her Son leave her behind to suffer so intensely, as He well knew she would, from the separation? |
38965 | _ Point III._--"WHO IS SHE?" |
38965 | _ Point III._--A LESSON ON RELATIONSHIPS To the interrupter He said:"Who is My mother? |
38965 | _ Resolution._ To ask myself the question often to- day:"Who is she?" |
38965 | _ Spiritual Bouquet._"How shall this be done?" |
38965 | _ Spiritual Bouquet._"Why hast Thou done so to us?" |
38965 | and who are My brethren?" |
38965 | should I know? |
38965 | that it was of me that He thought and to me that He spoke? |
46776 | ''And that tall handsome man on the hill, whom you whispered? 46776 And how long has she been dead?" |
46776 | And this, I suppose, is your nurse, darling? |
46776 | By shaming Miss Smart into repentance, or getting him a new sweetheart? |
46776 | Did you ever read Sir David Brewster on Optical Delusions? 46776 Do the Avenels keep their old house?" |
46776 | Four bobs-- four shillings? 46776 Going far?" |
46776 | How you dare, scum of de earth that you are,cried he,[20]"how you dare make cry the signorina?" |
46776 | I believe the Avenels have only two of their children alive still-- their daughter, who married Mark Fairfield, and a son who went off to America? |
46776 | I did not know as they were there; Mark kep''em; they got among his--LEONARD.--"Who was Nora?" |
46776 | I han''t Betty, sir; do you want she? |
46776 | I hope you like the wine, sir? |
46776 | Is my lord at the park? |
46776 | Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing? |
46776 | Love you? 46776 May I not keep these verses, mother? |
46776 | Mrs Avenel is the same as ever? |
46776 | Not I-- what is it about? |
46776 | Not unnatural,said the Parson indulgently;"but he visits his parents: he is a good son, at all events, then?" |
46776 | Papa, she says she is to go back; but she is not to go back-- is she? |
46776 | Satirical, sir? 46776 What does he mean by that? |
46776 | What have you been about, Lenny?--searching in my box? |
46776 | ''And what if he does n''t, bebee; is n''t he poisoned like a hog? |
46776 | ''Hasten him? |
46776 | ''Why so?'' |
46776 | --"But she must have been highly educated?" |
46776 | --"Your sister-- is it possible? |
46776 | After this, who shall deny magic? |
46776 | And if he does not mean that, why all this empty bluster and ridiculous vapouring upon a point which has not yet been mooted? |
46776 | And if not, why are these big words thrown at our heads? |
46776 | And what follows? |
46776 | And when is it denied? |
46776 | And why do I say so? |
46776 | Are we conspiring? |
46776 | Are we doing anything, or do we propose to do anything, contrary to the spirit of the Constitution? |
46776 | Are we plotting? |
46776 | Are_ they_ all here?--sure?" |
46776 | As it has been justly retorted-- how did he, knowing nothing of them, know that they knew nothing? |
46776 | But I do n''t think you ever read the''Apology of Apuleius?''" |
46776 | But it ben''t near election time, be it, sir?" |
46776 | But money is required for these things; and where, it will be asked, is money to be found in this already overtaxed and suffering community? |
46776 | But seems it such rubbish to the poor man, to whom it promises a paradise on the easy terms of upsetting a world? |
46776 | But these verses are not my father''s-- whose are they? |
46776 | But what degree of agricultural prosperity is implied by the previous statement? |
46776 | But who ever saw upon earth a community of men such as sit on the hearth- rugs of Messrs Owen and Fourier? |
46776 | But you picked it up on the roads, no doubt? |
46776 | Ca n''t we hasten him?'' |
46776 | Can our opponents not see that it is the failure of Free Trade alone which constitutes our strength? |
46776 | Can you, Grosvenor, by any effort of imagination, shadow out my emotion?... |
46776 | Did he not rehearse his causes before it as before a master in the art? |
46776 | Did he teach her ciphering, or French, or cross- stitch, or cooking according to the method of Mrs Glass, or philosophy, divinity, or calisthenics? |
46776 | Did not Socrates recommend such attention to his disciples-- did he not make a great moral agent of the speculum? |
46776 | Do we destroy the law? |
46776 | Do you remember poor Nora-- the Rose of Lansmere, as they called her? |
46776 | From what country does he come-- in what favoured land is laid the scene of his exploits? |
46776 | Great advancement has been made, and is making daily; and what is the consequence of this revived taste? |
46776 | He has settled at Lansmere?" |
46776 | He is in England, then?" |
46776 | How are we to convulse the country-- endanger property-- or shake our institutions to the foundations? |
46776 | How comes it you never spoke of her before? |
46776 | How did you pick it up? |
46776 | How know we what lives a single thought retained from the dust of nameless graves may have lighted to renown? |
46776 | How should he get up?'' |
46776 | However, it is nothing to me; she knows not who I am; and if she did, what then?''" |
46776 | I dare say it was all my fault, only I did not understand you: are not these things weeds?" |
46776 | I grant that it is an up- hill work that lies before you; but do n''t you think it is always easier to climb a mountain than it is to level it? |
46776 | If the lady''s hallucination was not reasonable, what is his, who believes in such visions as these?" |
46776 | If this story of the snail- shells found its ardent admirer or sympathiser, what other could possibly be pronounced to be superfluous? |
46776 | Is Mr Morgan, the medical man, still here?" |
46776 | Is he a Moldavian, a Wallachian, a Hungarian, a Bohemian, a Copt, an Armenian, or a Spaniard? |
46776 | Is it fact or fiction that Mr Borrow is a snake- tamer, a horse- charmer, and something more? |
46776 | Is this state of things_ unavoidable_, or are there any means by which, under Providence, it may be removed or alleviated? |
46776 | Just let me look at it, will you?" |
46776 | LEONARD.--"How was that?" |
46776 | LEONARD.--"Why not, mother?--what has become of her?--where is she?" |
46776 | MRS FAIRFIELD.--"Who?--child,--who? |
46776 | Now, what does the reader think the respectable Jasper had been doing? |
46776 | Or was each Pantisocrat to train himself for one special art, to be practised for the benefit of the whole? |
46776 | PARSON.--"Halves?" |
46776 | Shall I tell your fortune, sir-- your dukkerin? |
46776 | Shall we shock the reader if we add, too, that there may be a very innocent superstition? |
46776 | TRAVELLER.--"In a chaise or fly? |
46776 | The black cat existed only in her fancy, but the hallucination was natural and reasonable-- eh-- what do you think?" |
46776 | The traveller peered out at him as he whirled by-- saw Mr Dale tossed up and down on the saddle, and cried out,"How''s the leather?" |
46776 | There was such a pretty one about the''Peasant''s Fireside,''Lenny-- have you got hold of that?" |
46776 | Was each man to be his own tailor, shoemaker, carpenter,& c.? |
46776 | Was he, an ex- Prime Minister, so entirely ignorant of our fiscal system, that he did not know what were the peculiar burdens upon land? |
46776 | Was not Demosthenes always at his speculum? |
46776 | Was there anything in this discordant with the theories of Free Trade? |
46776 | We called her Nora for short"--"Leonora-- and I am Leonard-- is that how I came by the name?" |
46776 | What do the people constantly ask for? |
46776 | What is his name?'' |
46776 | What is to be done? |
46776 | What on earth are we to make of"dukkeripens,""chabos,""poknees,""chiving wafado dloova,""drabbing bawlor,""kekaubies,""drows,"and"dinelos?" |
46776 | What on earth have you got there? |
46776 | What reduction, then, was Lord John Russell willing to have given in 1846? |
46776 | Where could he find any? |
46776 | Where did you say you were going?" |
46776 | While such things are, and things as strange, who can hope to expel superstition from the stronghold of man''s belief? |
46776 | Who can answer for himself? |
46776 | Who furnished every species of decoration-- the sculpture, the painted glass, the pictures, that were a language? |
46776 | Who were they who designed these miracles of art? |
46776 | Who would not wish them success? |
46776 | Who, in the name of Mumbo Jumbo, we thought, can this Lavengro be? |
46776 | Whose was the ignorance? |
46776 | Why is the eulogy of the Church confined in this passage to the eleventh century? |
46776 | Why not? |
46776 | Why or wherefore should we accept his affectionate entreaty, and be on our guard? |
46776 | Why should the man who acts from conviction of rectitude, grieve because the prejudiced are offended? |
46776 | You call upon business?" |
46776 | You seem prepared for a journey?" |
46776 | You take me, sir?" |
46776 | _ Hinc illæ lachrymæ._ But how did they so increase? |
46776 | and who would wish to do it altogether, if the vacant citadel is to be taken possession of by such philosophy as this-- the fanaticism of science? |
46776 | are you sleeping? |
46776 | cried the girl,''what is this? |
46776 | e._ stood for? |
46776 | indeed; why call him gentleman? |
46776 | no, sure; what did I say? |
46776 | or down the margin of what other passage could our critical and expurgatorial pencil have safely strayed? |
46776 | what do you mean, bebee? |
46776 | what do you mean? |
46776 | why not?'' |
8495 | And have you nothing to give Me? |
8495 | And how much do you love them? |
8495 | And how much is that? |
8495 | Are you not afraid for me? |
8495 | But how can I be joyful,said the weeping child,"whilst I am so far from my Spouse and His palace, and still kept a prisoner in this vale of tears?" |
8495 | But,replied the voice,"would you not fear the fire? |
8495 | How can I do so? |
8495 | Is it you, indeed? 8495 My Francesca, whom I left an hour ago at the point of death?" |
8495 | What are you saying? |
8495 | What bow, and what arrow, are you talking of? |
8495 | Where are the capons,she said,"that were in the court this morning?" |
8495 | Why do you stand thus gazing at my son? |
8495 | You dear little angels,she said,"are you not glad at what our Lord has done?" |
8495 | (_ Quando? |
8495 | Absorbed in the subject, Vannozza exclaimed, with childlike simplicity,"But what should we have to eat, sister?" |
8495 | Am I dreaming? |
8495 | Amidst the joys of Paradise hast thou remembered earth and its sufferings?" |
8495 | And at the words he did indeed come; and looking up sweetly into Dominica''s face, he asked,"And do you really love Jesus?" |
8495 | And do you rob God of His glory by unlawful dealings with hell?" |
8495 | And is the bliss of the Saints and the joy of loving God so inexpressibly sweet to any souls here on earth? |
8495 | And the bewildered Vannozza suddenly awoke out of her sleep, and distrusting the evidence of her senses, kept repeating,"Who calls me? |
8495 | And who will venture to say that it is not good_ for us all_ to have such thoughts frequently pressed upon our attention? |
8495 | Angel of God, hast thou thought of thy mother, of thy poor father? |
8495 | Are angels and devils so near, so very near, to us all? |
8495 | Are suffering and awful bodily anguish blessings to be_ really_ coveted? |
8495 | Are the maxims which I daily hear around me so hopelessly bad and accursed? |
8495 | Are these marvellous tales to be regarded as poetry, romance, superstitious dreaming, or as historical realities? |
8495 | Are these things possible? |
8495 | Are they not a butt for determined and obstinate Protestants, and for such Protestants only? |
8495 | Are this life and this world so literally vain and worthless, so absolutely nothing worth? |
8495 | As she looked at them the lady spoke to her:"Dominica,"she said,"why are you here, and what do you seek?" |
8495 | Do the Jesuits entrap the Pope? |
8495 | Do the clergy cheat the laity? |
8495 | Do you not see how every day fresh miseries are gathering on the devoted heads of her people? |
8495 | Do you not see the bow bent, and the arrow ready to fly?" |
8495 | Does not such a supposition confute itself? |
8495 | Does the reader wish to know the motive she had for soliciting this singular privilege? |
8495 | Drawing near to Francesca''s bed, he said:"I am Alexis, and am sent from God to inquire of thee if thou choosest to be healed?" |
8495 | Francesca takes him aside: what can she know of what is passing in his soul: how read what has not been revealed to any human creature? |
8495 | Have you not heard how two years ago the thunderbolts fell on her sacred towers? |
8495 | He is already growing,"she exclaimed;"now He is twice the size He was!--how is that?" |
8495 | He spoke again,"Dominica, what seekest thou here, amid these rocks and woods?" |
8495 | He then asked of His little Spouse;"will you not give Me that silk mantle and pretty necklace?" |
8495 | Her mother observed her as she lingered behind:"Lucy,"she said,"do you know who that beautiful lady is whom you see there? |
8495 | How could she have done so? |
8495 | How is it you do not remember the Precious Blood which redeemed you from the power of the devil? |
8495 | I am prepared to accomplish His bidding; but without you, my sisters what can I do? |
8495 | I ask; which are the dupes, and which the rogues? |
8495 | Is it worth admitting, even as an hypothesis? |
8495 | Is religion, after all, so terribly near to us? |
8495 | Or do the laity( who have quite as much to do with these miracles) cheat the clergy? |
8495 | Or does the Pope mystify the Jesuits? |
8495 | That God''s will is not accomplished, or that your own is thwarted? |
8495 | The Oblate seemed to awake from a long dream, and opening her eyes, she distinctly said,"Mother, what would you have me to do?" |
8495 | The two beautiful children which he had left by her side, where were they? |
8495 | Then the voice of her Spouse spoke within her and said,"What would you do, Dominica, if you saw your Spouse in the midst of those flames?" |
8495 | They enchain the attention; they compel us to say, Are these things true? |
8495 | They heard her murmur several times with an indescribable emphasis the word,"When? |
8495 | Was it never to end, this life of many cares? |
8495 | Whence do you come? |
8495 | Who are you? |
8495 | Who would say to a blind man,"Forget the tangible realities of this life, because you can not see them"? |
8495 | Why do you weep, Francesca? |
8495 | Why is it that the material creation is not the ordinary instrument by which our souls converse with Him? |
8495 | Why tarry we longer? |
8495 | Will not the eye follow them with love, and many rise up to call them blessed? |
8495 | Would such a statement be endured for a moment by a judge and twelve men in a jury- box? |
8495 | _ Where_ is it, then? |
8495 | and why is your soul disquieted? |
8495 | do you not remember how terrible was the pain when your sister burnt her hand?" |
8495 | if your wounds give forth this delicious perfume, what will the perfume of Paradise be like?" |
8495 | said the woman;"what do you see in him?" |
8495 | she exclaimed,"if you abandon me, you who have taught me to love God and to serve Him I What am I without you? |
8495 | she exclaimed,"what is the matter with your hands?" |
8495 | what is this? |
8495 | what your abode? |
8495 | when?" |
8495 | who are your companions? |
8495 | why further delay? |
8495 | why hast thou left Me thus?" |
8495 | why hast thou left Me thus?" |
8495 | with what do you anoint your son''s wounds, for the odour of them is sweeter than my sweetest flowers?" |
7014 | What would these animals eat, if we did not pass this way? |
7014 | Why,says Aristotle in his curious book of Problems,"why is sound better heard during the night? |
7014 | *(* Does this formation of secondary limestone of the Llanos contain galena? |
7014 | *(* Que le han parecido los zancudos de noche? |
7014 | Are storms the effect of this unequal charge of the different superincumbent strata of air? |
7014 | Are there any gold- washings more to the south, toward the Uaupe, on the Iquiare( Iguiari, Iguari), and on the Yurubesh( Yurubach, Urubaxi)? |
7014 | Are these animals fatigued by long flight? |
7014 | Are these cetacea peculiar to the great rivers of South America, like the manatee, which, according to Cuvier, is also a fresh water cetaceous animal? |
7014 | Are these pure waters produced by condensed vapours?) |
7014 | Are they led thither by female turtles, which adopt the young as by chance? |
7014 | Are they the remains of islets in the midst of an inland sea, that covered the flat ground between the Sierra Parime and the Parecis mountains? |
7014 | Besides, does not this problem reduce itself to the simple question, whether the salt be owing to new or very ancient inundations? |
7014 | But what can we conclude from simple terminations which are most frequently foreign to the roots? |
7014 | But what is this root Teo? |
7014 | But where shall we find the names of Yurubesh and Iquiare, given by the Fathers Acunha and Fritz? |
7014 | By what accident has our Rosa centifolia become wild in this country, while we nowhere found it in the Andes of Quito and Peru? |
7014 | Cacao: Cacavua*(* Has this word been introduced from a communication with Europeans? |
7014 | Can it really be the rose- tree of our garden?) |
7014 | Can we admit that so many alternating rocks, imbedded one in the other, have a common origin? |
7014 | Como stamos hoy de mosquitos?) |
7014 | Did nations farther advanced in civilization descend from the mountains of Truxillo and Merido to the plains of the Rio Apure? |
7014 | Did the course of the waters direct her way? |
7014 | Did the word chellal penetrate with the Moors into the west of Africa? |
7014 | Did we see in fact the internodes( parts between the knots) of a gramen of the tribe of nastoides? |
7014 | Do the neighbouring rocks of mica- slate and gneiss contain veins? |
7014 | Does it belong to the trap- formation of Parapara? |
7014 | Does not the impulse of the air against the elastic spangles of mica that intercept the crevices, contribute to modify the sounds? |
7014 | Does the Amazon- stone come from the rocks of euphotide, which form the last member of the series of primitive rocks? |
7014 | Does the word cannibal, applied to the Caribs of the West India Islands, belong to the language of this archipelago( that of Haiti)? |
7014 | Does this ground, composed probably of primitive rocks, like that which I examined more to the east, contain disseminated gold? |
7014 | Dost thou know what sort of life they lead here? |
7014 | He asserts that he observed[ sometimes?] |
7014 | How are we to account for this singular course in the development of knowledge? |
7014 | How are we to- day for the mosquitos? |
7014 | How can we account for these contrasts between the temperate and the torrid zone? |
7014 | How can we explain the origin of the sulphuretted hydrogen? |
7014 | How can we imagine domestic happiness in so unequal an association? |
7014 | How have the unlearned inhabitants of one hemisphere become cognizant of a fact which, in the other, so long escaped the sagacity of the scientific? |
7014 | How then do the tortuguillos find these pools? |
7014 | If the jaguar were not pressed by hunger, why did it approach the children at all? |
7014 | Is it of the same formation as that of Guire, on the coast of Paria, which contains sulphur? |
7014 | Is there an action propagated through the great aerial ocean from the temperate zone towards the tropics? |
7014 | Is there any authenticated instance of a dog having recognized a full length picture of his master? |
7014 | Is this a hunter''s tale, or a fact that has really been observed? |
7014 | Is this difference caused by the position of the electric organ, which is not double in the gymnoti? |
7014 | Is this diminution more rapid now than in former ages? |
7014 | Is this phenomenon independent of the nature of the rocks? |
7014 | Is this predilection founded on the facility with which the savage procures ochreous earths, or the colouring fecula of anato and of chica? |
7014 | Is this sulphuretted hydrogen mixed with a great proportion of carbonic acid or atmospheric air? |
7014 | May not the mosquitos themselves increase the insalubrity of the atmosphere? |
7014 | May we suppose that there are some trees with flowers purely monoecious, mingled with others furnished with hermaphrodite flowers? |
7014 | Of what nature is the milk of mushrooms?) |
7014 | Salutations were made heretofore in the Celestial empire in the following words, vou- to- hou, Have you been incommoded in the night by the serpents? |
7014 | Should we not spell this word matpara? |
7014 | The Urubaxi, or Hyurubaxi( Yurubesh), falls into the Rio Negro near Santa Isabella; the Iguari( Iquiare?) |
7014 | The puchery, or pichurim, which is grated like nutmeg, differs from another aromatic fruit( a laurel?) |
7014 | We were surprised at not hearing thunder; but possibly this was owing to the prodigious height of the storm? |
7014 | What are the causes of the diminution of the waters of the lake? |
7014 | What can be the cause of this increased intensity of sound, in a desert where nothing seems to interrupt the silence of nature? |
7014 | What idea can we form of the action of the water, which produces a deposit, or a change of colour, so extraordinary? |
7014 | What is it that causes the want of homogeneity in the vertical strata of the atmosphere to disappear instantaneously?) |
7014 | What is the cause of these alternations of motion and rest? |
7014 | What is the monocotyledonous plant* that furnishes these admirable reeds? |
7014 | What is this brownish black crust, which gives these rocks, when they have a globular form, the appearance of meteoric stones? |
7014 | What must have been the state of those low countries of Guiana that now undergo the effects of annual inundations? |
7014 | What must we conclude from this narration of the old missionary of Encaramada? |
7014 | What name shall we give to these majestic plants? |
7014 | What prevents the electricity from descending towards the earth, in air which becomes more humid after the month of March? |
7014 | What then are the causes of this rupture of the equilibrium in the electric tension of the air? |
7014 | When two persons meet in the morning, the first questions they address to each other are: How did you find the zancudos during the night? |
7014 | Why did we find no river white near its springs, and black in the lower part of its course? |
7014 | Why do so many naked natives paint only the face, though living in the neighbourhood of those who paint the whole body? |
7014 | Why does it not fill that vast space that reaches as far as the Cordillera of the coast, and which is fertilized by numerous rivers? |
7014 | Why does not the great forest of the Orinoco extend to the north, on the left bank of that river? |
7014 | Why may there not be an alluvial auriferous soil to the east of the Cordilleras, as there is to the west, in the Sonoro, at Choco, and at Barbacoas? |
7014 | of this commencement and duration of the rainy seasons? |
7014 | of this continual condensation of the vapours into water? |
7014 | of this interruption of the breezes? |
7014 | or did they come from the south by the Rio Topayos, which descends from the vast table- land of the Campos Parecis? |
7014 | or have these walls of rock, these turrets of granite, been upheaved by the elastic forces that still act in the interior of our planet? |
7014 | or may this carex be perhaps a cyperaceous plant* destitute of knots? |
7014 | or must we admit that they go up from the sea against the current, as the beluga sometimes does in the rivers of Asia? |
7014 | or must we seek for it in an idiom of Florida, which some traditions indicate as the first country of the Caribs?) |
7014 | than that of the orang- otang, given rise to the fable of the salvaje? |
41310 | Hath God cast away His people? |
41310 | Is any afflicted? 41310 Is it Paul who says this?" |
41310 | The children of Belial said, How shall this man save us? 41310 Wherefore hearest thou men''s words,"he asked,"saying, Behold, David seeketh thy hurt? |
41310 | Ye men,he cries,"why do ye these things? |
41310 | [ 26] 10 Is any in joy or in sorrow? 41310 [ 39] What is this but to say in one word that we find them barbarians? |
41310 | [ 6] In a subsequent assembly of the people, in which he testified his uprightness, he says,Is it not wheat harvest to- day? |
41310 | 15 Does my present loneliness distress you? |
41310 | 20 What, then, was to happen to this restless race, which had sought for happiness and peace across the globe, and had not found it? |
41310 | 30"And I cried out to this effect:''And Thou, O Lord, how long, how long, Lord, wilt Thou be angry? |
41310 | 5 after whom dost thou pursue? |
41310 | 5 why not in this very hour put an end to this my vileness?'' |
41310 | = A brotherhood... below.= Where in the range of English prose is to be found form wedded to sense in a more surpassingly beautiful way? |
41310 | = Cumber the ground.="Why doth it( the barren fig tree) cumber the ground?" |
41310 | A decisive victory over the enemy followed; then the popular cry became,"Who is he that said, Shall Saul reign over us? |
41310 | Afterwards, when he anointed him king, he"kissed him, and said, Is it not because the Lord hath anointed thee to be 5 captain over His inheritance?" |
41310 | Again, if bishops, priests, and deacons flee, why must the laity stay? |
41310 | Ambrose has no leisure; we have no leisure to read; where shall we find even the books? |
41310 | And does not the difference of the two discover itself in some measure, even to our eyes, in the very history of their wanderings and pinings? |
41310 | And what is he prompted to do? |
41310 | And what other mode is there of reconciling them than that which I have above laid down? |
41310 | And why it does not, who can say, 5 except that the Lord is in it? |
41310 | Are Thy martyrs to cry from under Thine altar for their loving vengeance on this guilty people, and to cry in 10 vain? |
41310 | As a fellow to the above, I add one of his letters:"TO CARTERIA"What are you saying? |
41310 | BASIL AND GREGORY"What are these discourses that you hold one with another, as you walk and are sad?" |
41310 | But if so, when pay we court to our great friend, whose favors we need? |
41310 | But since God had expressly told him to destroy them, what 10 was this but to imply, that Divine intimations had nothing to do with such matters? |
41310 | But still could we be surprised, my Fathers and my Brothers, if the winter even now should not yet be quite over? |
41310 | But what is it, my Fathers, my Brothers, what 20 is it that has happened in England just at this time? |
41310 | But where shall it be sought, or when? |
41310 | But why? |
41310 | Can we religiously suppose that the blood of our martyrs, three centuries ago and 30 since, shall never receive its recompense? |
41310 | Did St. Paul 30 delight in what was licentious? |
41310 | Did its Maker and Lord see any good thing in it, of which, under 30 His Divine nurture, profit might come to His elect, and glory to His name? |
41310 | Did not Thou Thyself pray for Thine enemies upon the cross, and convert them? |
41310 | Did not Thy first Martyr win Thy great Apostle, then a persecutor, by his loving prayer? |
41310 | For whither should my heart flee from my heart? |
41310 | Forever? |
41310 | Great hope has dawned; the Catholic faith teaches not what we thought; and do we doubt to knock, that the rest may be opened? |
41310 | Had it been prophesied some fifty years ago, would not the very notion have seemed preposterous and wild? |
41310 | Has the whole course of history a like to show? |
41310 | He reminded his 20 Lord that he himself had also been that Lord''s persecutor, and why not try them a little longer? |
41310 | Here, then, a question may be raised-- Why was Saul thus marked for vengeance from the 15 beginning? |
41310 | His celibacy seemed a drawback: what constituted his hidden life? |
41310 | How am I to account for it? |
41310 | How are these texts fulfilled when a man flees? |
41310 | How could Athens have collected hearers in such numbers, unless she had selected teachers of such power? |
41310 | How did it ever cross his brain to betake 20 himself to Athens in search of wisdom? |
41310 | How does originality differ from the poetical talent? |
41310 | How would the Gospel ever have been preached throughout the world, if the Apostles 25 had not fled? |
41310 | I cried out, piteously,''How long? |
41310 | Is his character so essentially faulty that it must be thus distinguished for reprobation 20 above all the anointed kings after him? |
41310 | Is it according to Thy promise, O King of Saints, if I may dare talk to Thee of 15 justice? |
41310 | Is this Thy way, O my God, righteous and true? |
41310 | Job''s life was not to be touched by Satan, yet was not his fortitude shown in what he suffered? |
41310 | LETTERS OF CHRYSOSTOM, WRITTEN IN EXILE"TO OLYMPIAS"Why do you bewail me? |
41310 | Life is a poor thing, death is uncertain; if it surprises us, in what state shall we depart hence? |
41310 | Now how shall we account for this? |
41310 | Now, what is this but the very history 20 of the preaching of the Gospel? |
41310 | O my Fathers, my Brothers, had that revered Bishop so spoken then, who that had heard him but would have said that he spoke what could 10 not be? |
41310 | O you 5 great men, ye academics, is it true, then, that no certainty can be attained for the ordering of life? |
41310 | On his first meeting with him, he addressed 30 him in the words of loyalty--"On whom is all the desire of Israel? |
41310 | On the contrary, what can be more pleasant than my sojourn here? |
41310 | Persecution is sent by Him, to put 15 His servants to the test; to divide between good and bad: it is a trial; what man has any right to interfere? |
41310 | Saul was for the time overcome; he said,"Is this thy voice, my son David? |
41310 | Shall the Saxons live again to God? |
41310 | Shall the grave open? |
41310 | Shall the past be rolled back? |
41310 | Shall they lose life, and not gain a better life for the children of those who persecuted them? |
41310 | The forenoons, indeed, our scholars 20 take up; what do we during the rest of our time? |
41310 | The history proceeds:"_ Behold, Saul came after the herd out of 20 the field_; and Saul said, What aileth the people that they weep? |
41310 | Then he goes on to a further question, what is 35 to be done in a case where all ministers are likely to perish, unless some of them take to flight? |
41310 | Those priests, secular and regular, did they suffer for no end? |
41310 | UNIVERSITIES WHAT IS A UNIVERSITY? |
41310 | Upon this,"all that knew him beforetime"said,"What is this that is come unto 25 the son of Kish: is Saul also among the prophets? |
41310 | WHAT IS A UNIVERSITY? |
41310 | Was it to grow old in its place, and dwindle away, and consume in the fever of its own heart, which admitted 25 no remedy? |
41310 | We do not merely believe it, or infer it, but we have the enduring and living evidence of it-- how? |
41310 | We pray,"Lead us not into temptation, but deliver 30 us from evil;"why, if we may deliver ourselves? |
41310 | Well, and is it not so in matter of fact? |
41310 | What food for the intellect is it possible to procure indoors, that you stay there looking about 30 you? |
41310 | What if death itself cut off and end all care and feeling? |
41310 | What is it all about? |
41310 | What is more significant of the Life Book of the saintly Oxford Scholar than his self- written epitaph:"Ex umbris et imaginibus in veritatem?" |
41310 | What is so ordinary and familiar to us as the elements, what so simple and level to us as their presence and operation? |
41310 | What is that act? |
41310 | What signs did it show that it was to be singled 20 out from among the nations? |
41310 | What was the first consequence of this? |
41310 | What was the necessary consequence? |
41310 | What would have been the feelings 30 of that venerable man, the champion of God''s ark in an evil time, could_ he_ have lived to see this day? |
41310 | When he announced him to the people as their king, he said,"See ye him whom the Lord hath chosen, that there is none like him among all the people?" |
41310 | Where is he to lodge? |
41310 | Wherefore delay then to abandon worldly hopes, and give ourselves wholly to seek after God and the blessed life?..." |
41310 | Who then could have dared to hope that, out of so sacrilegious a nation as this is, a people would have been formed again unto their Saviour? |
41310 | Why are you grieved because you have failed in effecting my removal from Cucusus? |
41310 | Why beat your breast, 5 and abandon yourself to the tyranny of despondency? |
41310 | Why can not art rival the lily or the rose? |
41310 | Why is it that we feel an interest in Cicero which we can not feel in Demosthenes or Plato? |
41310 | Why stop within your lodgings counting the rents in your wall or the holes in your tiling, when nature and art call you away? |
41310 | Why these presages of misfortune, which from the first hung over him, gathered, fell in storm and tempest, and at length overwhelmed him? |
41310 | Why, while David is called a man after God''s own heart, should Saul be put aside as worthless? |
41310 | Why, you will ask, need we go up to knowledge, when knowledge comes down to us? |
41310 | You were equal to it in its condescension, but who shall gaze without astonishment at its vast expanse in the bosom 25 of the ocean? |
41310 | against what is it directed? |
41310 | and are they not dressed up and set forth for 5 admiration in their best shapes, in tales and in poems? |
41310 | and shall we not 30 rather suffer the punishment of this negligence? |
41310 | and when shall we learn what here we have neglected? |
41310 | and_ in one spot_; else, how can there be any school at all? |
41310 | are they not necessarily acquired, where they are to be found, in high society? |
41310 | do you think to read there? |
41310 | how long? |
41310 | is it not on thee, and on all thy father''s house?" |
41310 | it seems charity so captivated you that you desiderated their sight, you longed to gaze upon 30 their earthly, fleshly countenance? |
41310 | let him pray; is any merry? |
41310 | or must they flee also? |
41310 | or rather, for an end which is not yet accomplished? |
41310 | or was he cold at heart? |
41310 | or was he of a famished and restless spirit? |
41310 | or when persecution is set on foot only with the view of reaching the ministers of the Church? |
41310 | or, if he came thither by accident, how did the love of it ever touch his heart? |
41310 | that your unintermitting 15 ailments have hindered you from visiting me? |
41310 | to- morrow and to- morrow? |
41310 | what is to startle you? |
41310 | what prodigious, what preternatural event 30 is adequate to the burden of so vast an effect? |
41310 | what to seduce you? |
41310 | what wonder has happened upon earth? |
41310 | when compose what we may sell to scholars? |
41310 | when refresh ourselves, unbending our minds from this intenseness of care? |
41310 | where are your books? |
41310 | where, or when, 15 procure them? |
41310 | whither 20 should I flee from myself? |
41310 | whither not follow myself? |
41310 | who shall hear without awe the dashing of its mighty billows along the beach? |
41310 | whom is he 20 to attend? |
41310 | why not this? |
41310 | why not_ now_? |
8103 | The true question of this argument is no other than this: May every man who chooses to destroy his life, innocently do so? 8103 Who resisteth His will?" |
8103 | 17- 21), did she do right in speaking thus to save their lives? |
8103 | Again, is the polyandrous wife to be, or not to be, the head of the family? |
8103 | Again, ought not the State to accept his offer? |
8103 | Again, ought not the State to agree? |
8103 | And then? |
8103 | And what is the result of these long investigations? |
8103 | And why? |
8103 | Apart from the hope of the world to come, is the Italy of to- day happier than the Italy of Antoninus Pius? |
8103 | Are we not taught to set bounds to our desire? |
8103 | Assassination of tyrants, whether in public or private life, may be wickedness, or it may be a laudable outburst of public spirit, who knows? |
8103 | But attained by man? |
8103 | But how can a man, who takes pleasure to be his highest good and happiness, live otherwise than for himself? |
8103 | But how can it be aught else than speech against the mind, when the heart thinks_ yea_, and the tongue says_ nay_? |
8103 | But if a man only feeds the hungry that he may have the satisfaction of seeing them eat, is it the hungry or himself that he finally seeks to gratify? |
8103 | But if it is meant that every man has a right to live on the fruits of some soil or land of his own, where is the proof? |
8103 | But if it is never to be satisfied, what is it? |
8103 | But if it is no one individual''s duty to propagate his kind, how is it that we have laid down that there is such a duty? |
8103 | But is it not immoral to interfere with conscience, and to attempt to stifle sincere convictions? |
8103 | But is not every capital sentence a trespass upon the dominion of God, Lord of life and death? |
8103 | But is not this desire of unmixed happiness unreasonable? |
8103 | But may not one with no prudence to guide him hit upon the_ golden mean_ by some happy impulse, and thus do an act of virtue? |
8103 | But supposing that pure democracy is coming, how long is it likely to last? |
8103 | But what if his wife and children have perished, and you meant them so to perish, in the fire? |
8103 | But what of a man who has entirely broken away from God, what of his eating, drinking, and other actions that are of their kind indifferent? |
8103 | But what of him who closed his career in wickedness exceeding great? |
8103 | But when was a work of the highest art based upon an idea unsound, irrational and vicious?] |
8103 | But when will such constraint become necessary? |
8103 | But who is the owner at any given time, and at what stage of the transaction does the dominion pass? |
8103 | But why is not this qualification spoken out with the tongue? |
8103 | But, it will be said, does not a man forego his right to reputation by doing the evil that belies his fair fame? |
8103 | Can subjects overthrow the ruler, or alter the polity itself, as often as they have a mind so to do? |
8103 | Certainly, it will be said, the employer should be paid for his mental labour, but why at so enormously higher a rate than the manual labourers? |
8103 | Did not the first heralds of Christianity trouble the peace of the Roman world?" |
8103 | Do the mere consequences make this otherwise innocent amusement evil? |
8103 | Does this physical ability represent also a_ moral power_? |
8103 | For, shall we say that we are then at liberty to commit suicide, when we find our continuance in life becomes useless to mankind? |
8103 | Has Aristotle, then, said the last word on happiness? |
8103 | Have we duties of charity to the lower animals? |
8103 | He seems to act for mere pleasure: yet who shall be stern enough to condemn him, so that he exceed not in quantity? |
8103 | He would croon softly as he went about the house old Hell''s words:"Not so, my sons, not so: why do ye these kind of things, very wicked things?" |
8103 | How is it possible to divert such a one from his course by argument? |
8103 | How then am I_ obliged_ to obey man''s law? |
8103 | How then does the probabilist contrive to extract certainty out of a case of insoluble doubt? |
8103 | If a person goes on to ask,"Well, what if I do contradict my rational self?" |
8103 | If all our secret and personal offences are liable to be made public by any observer, which of us shall abide it? |
8103 | If any revolutionist yet will have the hardihood to say with Proudhon,"Property is theft,"we shall ask him,"From whom?" |
8103 | If he chooses to contradict his rational self, is not that his own affair? |
8103 | If therefore man is his own master, in the sense that no one else can claim dominion over him, may he not accordingly destroy himself? |
8103 | Is a man to be tried for his life? |
8103 | Is a tax to be levied on ardent spirits? |
8103 | Is he not his own master, and may he not play the fool if he likes? |
8103 | Is not moderation a virtue, and contentment wisdom? |
8103 | Is perfect happiness out of the reach of the person whom in this mortal life we call man? |
8103 | Is that God? |
8103 | Is the agent justified in exercising it? |
8103 | Is then the idea of vengeance nothing but an unclean phantom? |
8103 | Is there a call to arms? |
8103 | Is there no such thing as vengeance to a right- minded man? |
8103 | Is there one subjective last end to all the human acts of a given individual? |
8103 | Is there one supreme motive for all that this or that man deliberately does? |
8103 | It comes to this: May the civil power be resisted when it does grievous wrong? |
8103 | Let us begin our reply with another question: May children strike their parents? |
8103 | Not even in self- defence? |
8103 | Now what is a_ serious_ doubt? |
8103 | Now, who is the offended party in any evil deed? |
8103 | Or would the government insist on purchasing the improvements, and look out for a new tenant paying a higher rent? |
8103 | So long as the fruits of the earth do not fail to reach a man''s mouth, what matters it whose earth it is that grows them? |
8103 | Suppose a trangressor has suffered accordingly for a certain time after death, what shall be done with him in the end? |
8103 | Take the_ easy_ course, and leave the obligation out of count? |
8103 | Take the_ safe_ course: suppose there is an obligation, and act accordingly? |
8103 | The astonished workman turns round upon the exhibitors of this fairy vision:"And pray who are You?" |
8103 | The human mind lighting upon good soon asks the question, Will this last? |
8103 | The person spoken to might reply:"But what if I do miss my train, and fail in my examination?" |
8103 | The question resolves itself into three:--how do sins differ in point of gravity? |
8103 | Then suppose he said, Give it me for ever and I will pay £ 30 a year? |
8103 | Then you ask: When have I made this large contract by the most voluntary act in the world? |
8103 | There is little use in the enquiry, Which is the best polity? |
8103 | Was not that material, iron- ore,"created by God,"equally with any other portion of the earth''s crust that we may please to call_ land_?] |
8103 | What certificated stranger can supply for a mother''s love? |
8103 | What is the man to do? |
8103 | What is to become of such obstinate characters? |
8103 | What then is conscience? |
8103 | What would be the use, then, of any such withdrawal? |
8103 | Which of us is sure that all property is not theft? |
8103 | Why should not a voluntary death be sought as an escape from temptation and from imminent sin? |
8103 | Why should not the first victims of a dire contagion acquiesce in being slaughtered like cattle? |
8103 | Why should not the solitary invalid destroy himself, he whose life has become a hopeless torture, and whose death none would mourn? |
8103 | You ask: Is there not hope, that if humanity goes on improving as it has done, capital punishment will become wholly unnecessary? |
8103 | and above all, whose is it? |
8103 | and are his fellows under a moral obligation of justice to leave him free to exercise it? |
8103 | and what is it for? |
8103 | is grave sin ever forgiven? |
8103 | or has the ruler a right to his position even against the will of his people? |
8103 | when the parent is going about to do the child some grievous bodily hurt? |
32157 | A brother? |
32157 | And what then is more favourable to religion than to quiet thirteen virtuous souls, and lead them to a perfect union with the divine essence? |
32157 | Annihilate? 32157 Are the examples you have shown from the books and letters of the great men of the famous age sufficiently conclusive for our own time? |
32157 | Are you sure you possess the heart entirely, if you have not the body? 32157 But at least my sister? |
32157 | Do not speak so loud if you want to make people doze? |
32157 | How can I see her so unhappy, pining, uneasy, and ill? 32157 Sin!--But is it sin? |
32157 | What is the use of knowledge and literature? 32157 Why were you always looking at his feet?" |
32157 | ( Why does the heart palpitate so strongly here?) |
32157 | ( what shall I call you?) |
32157 | A woman? |
32157 | And do our loyal Galileans and the scrupulous Jansenists abstain from the equivocal? |
32157 | And her family now? |
32157 | And how long did the misconception last? |
32157 | And life?--is it renewed? |
32157 | And what was their religious work among us in the old days of Louis XIV.? |
32157 | And when was the fear of sliding stronger than after those great crimes of the sixteenth century, when Man was top- heavy, and lost his balance? |
32157 | And who is the most worthy? |
32157 | And who will understand it best? |
32157 | Are, then, these men philosophers, and friends of liberty? |
32157 | As for the soul, can we say it lives? |
32157 | At what price does authority sell its indulgence? |
32157 | But can she have any defects in this state? |
32157 | But does God wish it? |
32157 | But does not Rome perceive how much she is compromised by such allies? |
32157 | But in acknowledging inaction to be both superior to action and a state of perfection, does he not make us wish that the inaction might be perpetual? |
32157 | But in this prostration of strength, in this terror of despair and abandonment of dignity, is there not already a complete downfall? |
32157 | But is it the same in these days with men who have no wings, who crawl and can not fly? |
32157 | But now, what need of doctors? |
32157 | But she will not yet get the comforting word:"To- day? |
32157 | But what do they want with virtue? |
32157 | But what is to prevent another from flattering still more? |
32157 | But what place, I ask, is more powerful over the imagination, richer in illusions, and more fascinating than the church? |
32157 | But where is their heart? |
32157 | But who would distrust water? |
32157 | But why did you stay in that fairy dwelling, and give the spider time to spin his web? |
32157 | But why do you not reveal yourself to the companion of your life, in that which is for you your life itself? |
32157 | But why this strange reception? |
32157 | But why torment a blind man by speaking to him of colours? |
32157 | But, at least, woman has still her children to console her? |
32157 | But, whether a Christian or not, guilty or not, is he not still a man, my lord bishop? |
32157 | By what gradation of griefs, disappointments, and anguish had he been induced to commit this unnatural act? |
32157 | By whom are our daughters and wives brought up? |
32157 | Can you fear anything of the sort from the poor simple priests whom we have now? |
32157 | Champions of a principle? |
32157 | Come, then, my child, come and tell me-- what you have not dared to whisper in your mother''s ear; tell it me; who will ever know?" |
32157 | Could you not, whilst you were condemning suicide, let fall one word of pity by the way? |
32157 | Dead beat in the world of ideas, where could they hope to resume their warfare, save in the field of intrigue, passion, and human weaknesses? |
32157 | Do people then become positive? |
32157 | Do you believe that this poor nun is tranquil in this life so monotonous? |
32157 | Do you find a new- birth after this death- struggle? |
32157 | Do you mean to say that in speaking of his faith with so much energy, he is a hypocrite and a liar?" |
32157 | Do you perceive all the skill of the Jesuits in this manoeuvre of theirs? |
32157 | Do you think she can? |
32157 | Does he not see, that at every instant he wounds, and heals only to renew the pain? |
32157 | Does he profit by it? |
32157 | Does not the nine months''support of the mother establish this? |
32157 | Everything is changed in their intimate habits, always for a good reason:"To- day is a fast day"--and to- morrow? |
32157 | Father[ Transcriber''s note: Rather?] |
32157 | For who can know it? |
32157 | Hardly does his young nature awake, and flourish in its liberty, than they are all astonished, and all shake their heads:"What is this? |
32157 | Has the sun darted a ray through a crack in the tomb? |
32157 | He answers vaguely; occasionally he may guess pretty nearly; but how can it be helped? |
32157 | He is a sinner like yourself: has he then a right to be severe? |
32157 | How are these chastisements administered? |
32157 | How are they protected by ecclesiastical authority? |
32157 | How can that man be resisted, who, to force one to love him, can entice by the offer of Paradise, or frighten by the terrors of hell? |
32157 | How can they, nervous and trembling with weakness, expect to repose? |
32157 | How can we be surprised that such a theory should have had such results in morals? |
32157 | How can we wonder, then, if her affection for him be lessened? |
32157 | How could such men follow, in the confession and direction, the learned tactics of the priests of former ages? |
32157 | How could the king, with his two- fold adultery posted up in the face of all Europe, make his devotions without them? |
32157 | How could they be reasoned with? |
32157 | How is it possible the former should not know the ideas and wishes which he himself has inspired, and which are his own? |
32157 | How is it that those who undertake to develope it in others dispense with giving any proof of it in themselves? |
32157 | If he permitted the nuns a few trifling falsehoods[5], ought we to believe he never granted the same indulgence to himself? |
32157 | If he writes down his secret thoughts, not wishing to utter them, they are read:--by whom? |
32157 | If self- will disappear at this point, what will take its place? |
32157 | If the automaton should still possess some motion, how will they lead it? |
32157 | If the future that is within you were revealed in its full light, who would turn his eyes towards the departing shadows of darkness and night? |
32157 | If this be law, and the other one directly contrary be also law, what will he do, who believes them both to be sacred? |
32157 | In the civil world, does love( charity, patriotism, or whatever they call it) do anything but this? |
32157 | In the day- time? |
32157 | In what, I should like to know, do convents of our time differ from houses of correction and mad- houses? |
32157 | Is it death, or is it life? |
32157 | Is it not he who wished to be loved with liberty? |
32157 | Is it not then an illusion, Bossuet? |
32157 | Is it you, My Lady Abbess? |
32157 | Is not that a sufficient reward for you? |
32157 | Is not this intellectual degradation of the clergy sufficiently comforting? |
32157 | Is spiritual dominion complete, if it does not comprehend the other? |
32157 | Is the heart of woman hard enough to resist it? |
32157 | Is this not rather actual death? |
32157 | Is this person a queen who is seated by the king''s side, and before whom princesses are standing-- or is she not? |
32157 | It is not incumbent on her to separate from them? |
32157 | Let this workwoman, whom the opposition of the convent has crushed, crawl to the gate of the convent-- can she find an asylum there? |
32157 | Little family? |
32157 | Man? |
32157 | Must he not become a learned man? |
32157 | Must we take it for granted, because you are clownish, you are less cunning on that account? |
32157 | Of faith?--what faith? |
32157 | Of what age is the chapel? |
32157 | One of those very short instances when the night of our egotism is illumined by a ray from God?" |
32157 | Only one thing perplexes her: will her child be a Bonaparte, a Voltaire, or a Newton? |
32157 | Ought I to speak of this terrible history of the Vaudois, or pass it over in silence? |
32157 | People may say,"Perhaps the bishop did not know?" |
32157 | Perhaps, then, there is something of the Jansenist austerity? |
32157 | Plato, in his Athenian Tartuffe( the Euthyphron), put this grand moral question,"Can there be_ sanctity_ without_ justice_?" |
32157 | Pray where are our St. François de Sales, our Bossuets, and our Fenelons? |
32157 | Shall we then feel our hearts affected only for those of whom we are afraid? |
32157 | Sick? |
32157 | Since it is so, how can you expect that your young wife, intelligent as she is, should understand you at once? |
32157 | Sir, how shall I tell you? |
32157 | Some Jesuit or other? |
32157 | Some inquisitor? |
32157 | The latter, our public education, which is certainly better in our days than it ever was-- what does it require? |
32157 | The lover is asked who is the loved object? |
32157 | The mother would like to wait longer:"What is the hurry? |
32157 | The one is nothing but Latin, the next shines in Mathematics; but where is the_ man_, I pray you? |
32157 | The priests would not believe us, when we explained to them this sublime edifice; they did not recognise it; but who can wonder? |
32157 | The punishment of her enemies? |
32157 | The same sound of the same bell, for ever and ever; who could withstand it? |
32157 | The thing is commanded; is it not enough? |
32157 | Their helpful interposition had too long been repelled from the threshold of the convents by these crafty words:"_ What are you going to do_? |
32157 | These are vain metaphors, and very ill- placed, I allow: to what deserts of Arabia must I not resort to find more suitable ones? |
32157 | This protection is often very dearly purchased; and for what? |
32157 | This was the line of conduct laid down for all.--How is it that the lover gets an advantage over the husband? |
32157 | This workman( what are we all but workmen, each in his own particular line? |
32157 | To ascend would be well and good; but if it should be to fall lower? |
32157 | Two days after, the same man came to my house and said,''What did you think of me?'' |
32157 | Was it an inanimate object? |
32157 | Was it misery, passion, madness, spleen, or moral weakness in this melancholy season? |
32157 | Was it not simplicity itself to prescribe in set terms this lethargic doctrine, and give out noisily a theory of sleep? |
32157 | Was it passion or grief? |
32157 | What ails this holy man of God? |
32157 | What are all the thrones in comparison to this kingly sway? |
32157 | What became of all their petty arts of evasion in presence of this severe truth? |
32157 | What became of their worldly devotions and romantic piety, together with all the Philotheas, Erotheas, and their imitations? |
32157 | What by- path led from these mild theories to such atrocious results? |
32157 | What can be less credible, or less conformable to nature? |
32157 | What can education and true direction require? |
32157 | What can ever be added to this sublime saying? |
32157 | What can support her? |
32157 | What completes marriage and the family? |
32157 | What could she do? |
32157 | What distance have you come, whilst you were dreaming? |
32157 | What do I mean? |
32157 | What does she ask for? |
32157 | What does this mean? |
32157 | What has become of the casuists? |
32157 | What has she to do to possess what she loves? |
32157 | What holy man have we here? |
32157 | What is dominion over an unknown crowd? |
32157 | What is it then? |
32157 | What is it you want? |
32157 | What is its end and aim? |
32157 | What is she to do? |
32157 | What is to keep order in this lower sphere, where the soul no longer descends? |
32157 | What is, in your opinion, the most faithful incarnation of the devil in this world? |
32157 | What language could be used towards them? |
32157 | What man is there who, in seeing the heart of a woman bleeding before him, would not feel his own heart inspired with words to heal it? |
32157 | What must the world give up in its turn? |
32157 | What pity could be expected from them? |
32157 | What return then could I, who am myself advancing towards old age, make her for the many things I owe her? |
32157 | What signifies their writing against the theory of Quietism? |
32157 | What sort of terms of composition may not be extorted by fear? |
32157 | What steps of moral purgatory had he descended before he reached the bottom of the abyss? |
32157 | What then do you fear? |
32157 | What then remains for her? |
32157 | What was the last use made of the omnipotent sway of the La Chaises and the Telliers? |
32157 | What was this subject? |
32157 | What will be the ameliorations and the remedies for these serious evils? |
32157 | What wonder, then, if this woman is sad, sadder every day, frequenting the most melancholy- looking avenues, and no longer speaks? |
32157 | What would have happened if the Saint had not found fuel for this powerful flame that he had raised too high-- higher than he desired himself? |
32157 | What, then, are their laws? |
32157 | What, then, could be wanting to this master- piece, this drama of such profound conception and powerful execution? |
32157 | What, then, is to interfere in its place? |
32157 | Which is the good Samaritan in this case? |
32157 | Who bestows it upon them? |
32157 | Who can know its thickness? |
32157 | Who can measure a soul? |
32157 | Who can save us? |
32157 | Who can say by what enchantment he bewitched souls, and filled them with transport? |
32157 | Who can say where asceticism finishes and captation begins, that"_ compelle intrare_"applied to fortune? |
32157 | Who can tell? |
32157 | Who could resist that? |
32157 | Who could say? |
32157 | Who dares enter here? |
32157 | Who gave them this last advantage? |
32157 | Who has not remarked this charm in the smile of the children of Savoy, who are so natural, yet so circumspect? |
32157 | Who has this right in our age? |
32157 | Who is the mortified man in the present day, in this time of hard work, eager efforts, and fiery opposition? |
32157 | Who is the real priest, the true father? |
32157 | Who knows? |
32157 | Who maintains the family? |
32157 | Who picked up the bleeding victim from the road, before whom the Pharisees had passed? |
32157 | Who proved himself the neighbour of the wretched woman? |
32157 | Who regulates the number of stripes? |
32157 | Who respects in these days the original and free ingenuity of character, that sacred genius which we receive at our birth? |
32157 | Who then could answer? |
32157 | Who then will have eyes to see thee, or a heart to cherish thee? |
32157 | Who was the real priest? |
32157 | Who will believe some future day that men have thus undertaken to nurse and feed these sucklings? |
32157 | Who will dare to assert that his position is the same as before? |
32157 | Who would not pity this victim of social contradictions? |
32157 | Whom do I blame in all this? |
32157 | Whom ought we to accuse in the present state of things? |
32157 | Why did we just now speak of influence, dominion, and royalty? |
32157 | Why try remedies? |
32157 | Why, then, miserable reasoner, did you make so much noise about your proofs? |
32157 | Will not physical possession give up corners of the soul, which otherwise would remain inaccessible? |
32157 | Will nothing open your fatherly heart? |
32157 | Will there even be one small drop of dew? |
32157 | Will they then be governed by it? |
32157 | With such a direction, is she not always ill, embarrassed, fearful, and too infirm to do anything of herself? |
32157 | Would it not be foolish for him who runs to stop when he falls, and weep like a child, instead of pursuing his course? |
32157 | Yet Poussin saw the best days of the Jesuit art: what would he have said if he had seen what followed? |
32157 | Yet see, Madame de Chantal sickens and breathes with difficulty.... How will it be towards evening? |
32157 | You think so? |
32157 | You, subjects of a foreign prince; you, who deny the French church, how dare you speak of France? |
32157 | You, who, out of a GRAIN OF CORN, can make a GOD, tell me, was it not also a god that you held just now in that credulous and docile soul? |
32157 | [ 1] But what did they give them as a substitute? |
32157 | [ 1] What? |
32157 | [ 6] Did not this horrible art calculate well on the influence of the body? |
32157 | _ she_ ask his advice? |
32157 | _ she_ call him_ father_? |
32157 | and of what shape? |
32157 | do you not see that the poor woman is dying? |
32157 | had she not a spiritual physician at her bedside to succour and encourage her? |
32157 | her downfall? |
32157 | her husband? |
32157 | how can you understand so heavy a calamity?" |
32157 | how will she get rid of so many? |
32157 | is it the last judgment? |
32157 | is this fierce soldier my son? |
32157 | my mother?" |
32157 | of what figure? |
32157 | of what name? |
32157 | or little intrigue? |
32157 | or you, Father Superior? |
32157 | perhaps only for one moment? |
32157 | poor torrent, what has become of thee? |
32157 | that she is becoming weaker at every burst of grief? |
32157 | that the support is useless, and that we must leave the plant to itself? |
32157 | the priest no longer believes? |
32157 | three days and three whole nights in the same anxiety? |
32157 | what do you expect then? |
32157 | what have you done with that interior god of man, that we call liberty? |
32157 | what is to be done? |
32157 | where are the limits of maternal thought? |
32157 | who does not know that certain dignitaries of their order have become immortal by ridicule? |
32157 | who will keep his footing on this declivity? |
32157 | will not reading, and the press, the great overruling power of our own days, give a stronger education than the former one? |
32157 | you reach the beautiful, or ever lay a finger upon it? |
32157 | youth, danger, futurity, and hopes clouded with fear-- does not all this move you? |
40057 | ''Paid by the world, what dost thou owe Me?'' 40057 And pray,"said Mrs. Roberts,"who are you?" |
40057 | But how will they_ pairt_ with her,he said,"what''ll they do without her? |
40057 | Can you find soldiers''orphans for me to educate,wrote one,"because I do n''t like leaving my sisters?" |
40057 | Did I tell you,wrote Miss Nightingale to Madame Mohl( May 7, 1861),"what prompted my little chapter on_ Minding Baby_? |
40057 | Has Heaven bestowed everlasting souls on men, and sent them upon earth for no better purpose than to marry and be given in marriage? 40057 Have you,"she was asked by the Royal Commission of 1857,"devoted attention to the organization of civil and military hospitals?" |
40057 | Here is a dispute which is Hebrew to me; would you look it over with Sutherland? |
40057 | I am getting up the examinations; does anything occur to you? |
40057 | I beg you to supply me, and that immediately--with what? |
40057 | Is there anything higher,she asked,"in thinking of one''s own salvation than in thinking of one''s own dinner? |
40057 | Oh, no,he replied;"Madame Mohl is ill.""Then does Paris mean Madame Mohl?" |
40057 | One of the Lady Nurses was his theological instructor, and asked him where he would go when he died if he were a good boy? 40057 Ought not one''s externals,"she wrote in her diary( July 2, 1849),"to be as nearly as possible an incarnation of what life really is? |
40057 | Please, ma''am, have you any black- edged paper? |
40057 | Please, what can I give which would keep on his stomach; is there any arrowroot to- day for him? |
40057 | Sidney is again in despair for you,wrote Mrs. Herbert;"can you come? |
40057 | The difficulty is,wrote Mr. Nightingale to his wife,"where is the county that is habitable for twelve successive months?" |
40057 | Why do you do all this,wrote Mr. Herbert( Jan. 16),"with your own hands? |
40057 | Would not Mr. Herbert,she wrote( Sept. 11),"go to you for a few days, settle all the points, and then communicate daily by letter? |
40057 | You leave her alone,said his mate,"do n''t you see she''s one of Miss Nightingale''s women?" |
40057 | [ 366] I also feel myself mistaken all day long in thought, feeling, or doing-- but what help do I find? 40057 ''Do you mean what you say?'' 40057 ''Yes, certainly; why do you ask me?'' 40057 ( 2) What does Mr. Herbert say to the scheme itself? 40057 ( 3) Would you or some one of my Committee write to Lady Stratford to say,This is not a lady but a real Hospital Nurse,"of me? |
40057 | ( June 20, 1861):"Is the Architect''s ideal the profile of a revolver pistol? |
40057 | 1? |
40057 | And are there any stores for the Hospital he would advise us to take out? |
40057 | And if it comes by certain laws, why do n''t we find them out? |
40057 | And then, with a humorous transition not infrequent in her musings, she asks,"But why ca n''t you get up in the morning? |
40057 | And was there ever an age in so much need of heroism? |
40057 | And when he said the"Son of Man,"did he not mean the sons of men? |
40057 | And who can say how often her presence may have been as"a cup of strength in some great agony"? |
40057 | And, again,"How would you like Leicestershire? |
40057 | Are sets and cliques and dislikes unknown where men live together? |
40057 | As to my calamity itself, it is like the Mariage de Mademoiselle: who could have foreseen it? |
40057 | Because the Purveyor took it upon himself to override the requisition of the medical officers? |
40057 | But I hear that you still feel interested in such subjects, and therefore may I venture to try and entertain you?" |
40057 | But are we not really to do as Christ did? |
40057 | But could not a compromise be arranged? |
40057 | But shall I tell you what made you write to me? |
40057 | But why could not this clearly foreseen want have been supplied? |
40057 | But why, it was asked, were there no Presbyterians? |
40057 | But would it be seemly for a gentlewoman to do this? |
40057 | But would it? |
40057 | But, did we study history as much as physical science, would this be so? |
40057 | But, it may be asked, were the things which Miss Nightingale procured and issued really wanted? |
40057 | By what authority could it be there, except as delegated from the Lady Superintendent in Chief? |
40057 | Can it be said that the Battle of the Alma has been an event to take the world by surprise? |
40057 | Can such an illness be unaccompanied by suffering? |
40057 | Could not the heroine, the''sweet sad enthusiast,''have been set to some such work as this? |
40057 | Could she not delay? |
40057 | Could you come in to- morrow between 2 and 4, and bring your list of the causes of death after operations? |
40057 | Could you give them a lesson? |
40057 | Did a purveyor want some special authority from the military to facilitate his task? |
40057 | Did a surgeon want some point represented with special urgency to the authorities at home? |
40057 | Do you think me one of Byron''s young ladies? |
40057 | Does he think it will be objected to by the authorities? |
40057 | Econ.?) |
40057 | For women she has-- what? |
40057 | Four days later:"Can Miss Nightingale give me the names of some Governors for our new General Hospitals?" |
40057 | Had I"lost"the Report, what would the health I should have saved have"profited"me? |
40057 | Has M. Mohl told you? |
40057 | Has not the expedition to the Crimea been the talk of the last four months? |
40057 | Have you heard Batta on the violoncello at Paris? |
40057 | He and his wife returned from the Continent with their infant daughters in 1821, and the question became urgent, Where to live? |
40057 | Her habit of late rising grew upon her; for what had she to wake for? |
40057 | Honorary members abound, but where are the working ones? |
40057 | I enclose a letter from E. Do you think it any use to apply to Miss Burdett Coutts? |
40057 | I indulge the hope that you will permit me hereafter to continue an acquaintance( may I say friendship?) |
40057 | I relied on a Secretary of State, where is he? |
40057 | II In what precise respect, it may be asked, did Florence Nightingale"found"modern nursing? |
40057 | If not, why does she grumble at troubles which she can not remedy by grumbling?" |
40057 | If we are asked, Is such or such a disease a reparative process? |
40057 | If you were inclined to undertake this great work, would Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale give their consent? |
40057 | If, when the plough goes over the soul, there were always the hand of the Sower there to scatter the seed after it, who would regret? |
40057 | Is all that china, linen, glass necessary to make man a Progressive animal? |
40057 | Is he at Paris now? |
40057 | Is it not the same with moral evil, the laws of which are just as_ calculable_?" |
40057 | Is it to be buried in that most undisturbed grave of wise thought and useful information, a blue book? |
40057 | Is not this the reason why these cases_ are_ exceptional? |
40057 | Is this for us or against us?" |
40057 | Is this the way to manage the finances of a great nation? |
40057 | Jesus Christ prayed on the Cross not for life or safety, but only for the light of His countenance: Why hast Thou forsaken me? |
40057 | MY DEAREST FRIENT-- Do you see where I am? |
40057 | May they not have been her fads? |
40057 | Mrs. Herbert sent to Miss Nightingale the current riddle:"Why is Gladstone like a lobster?" |
40057 | My other belongings, where are they? |
40057 | My question simply is, Would you listen to the request to go and superintend the whole thing? |
40057 | Nightingale?" |
40057 | Now in what one respect could I have done other than I have done? |
40057 | Now, why should not the_ Commissariat purvey_ the Hospital with food? |
40057 | Now, will you undertake to look after them? |
40057 | On the immediate question, To publish or not to publish? |
40057 | One can almost hear the honest Colonel''s guffaw as he wonders whether"she will wear a wig or a helmet?" |
40057 | Or do you think me an Ascetic? |
40057 | Or ought not, in these times, all expenditure to be reproductive? |
40057 | Or rather, is it any exercise at all? |
40057 | Other contributions were quickly forthcoming, and on October 14 a letter was published asking:"Why have we no Sisters of Charity? |
40057 | PART II THE CRIMEAN WAR( 1854- 1856) Who is the happy Warrior? |
40057 | Poetry? |
40057 | Shall I come to you at 5 o''c., or would you come here?" |
40057 | Shall I come to you between 3 and 5? |
40057 | Shall I say one odd and perhaps rather impertinent thing? |
40057 | Shall we then not love the spirit of all that is loveable, which_ all_ material presence bespeaks to us?... |
40057 | She applied only one kind of test to a nurse: Was she a good woman, and did she know her business? |
40057 | She gave a sketch of Miss Nightingale''s career, and then continued:"Is it not like St. Elizabeth of Hungary? |
40057 | She was of Ibsen''s persuasion:-- What is Life? |
40057 | Since we came home in September, how long do you think we have been alone? |
40057 | Some one said once, He that would save his life shall lose it; and what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
40057 | That the sufferings of Christ''s life were intense, who doubts? |
40057 | The man said to me afterwards,''Sa feelin''o''Is Royal Ighness, was n''t it, m''m?'' |
40057 | The questions are propounded, whether biography should describe a person''s life or his character? |
40057 | The scheme is excellent, but what are the results?" |
40057 | Then, again, was she"Protestant"or"Catholic"? |
40057 | There is a letter from Lady Verney to Clarkey which describes how some one asked Mr. Nightingale,"Are you going to Paris?" |
40057 | There was company coming to Embley, and could Florence have the heart to leave her mother? |
40057 | This is only an anecdote( I hate anecdotes, do n''t you?). |
40057 | To this letter she replied as follows:--(_ Miss Nightingale to Dr. Sutherland._) And what shall I say in answer to your letter? |
40057 | True, there is in this world much more waiting to be done; but is it the man leading a secular life who will do it? |
40057 | V How, if at all, it may be asked, did she adjust her innermost beliefs to the current creeds of the day? |
40057 | Was Hampshire eager, she asked, to emulate the evil fame of Scutari? |
40057 | Was Miss W---- an unsympathetic governess? |
40057 | Was not the great Soyer himself among the escort? |
40057 | Was she Unitarian or Trinitarian? |
40057 | What can the future hell be other than this? |
40057 | What do the cookery books say? |
40057 | What gives her such a fullness of life now and makes her find enough in herself? |
40057 | What have I done the last three months? |
40057 | What is my business in this world and what have I done this last fortnight? |
40057 | What is she to do? |
40057 | What is the secret of Lady Jocelyn''s sublime placidity? |
40057 | What suggestions do the above ideas make to you in Embley drawing- room? |
40057 | What then, poor sufferer, dost thou want? |
40057 | What was the use of praying to be delivered from"plague and pestilence"so long as the common sewers were still allowed to run into the Thames? |
40057 | What would she say to Florence Nightingale? |
40057 | What would they think of me did I possess such a discovery and keep it secret?" |
40057 | When I had done he said,''That is perfect, whose is that?'' |
40057 | When a ship goes down in an"unforeseen"gale,"Do we say,''How could God permit such a dreadful calamity as the loss of all hands on board? |
40057 | When, after many hours, he recovered his senses, I believe after trepanning, his first words were to ask after his comrade,''Is he alive?'' |
40057 | Whence comes it, why does it suffer, or why is it blighted, but that it is incipient love, and truth, and wisdom, tortured or suppressed? |
40057 | Who are the other three?" |
40057 | Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be? |
40057 | Why are the men to die of foul air in August because they are too cold at Christmas? |
40057 | Why ca n''t you, who do men''s work, take man''s exercise in some shape?... |
40057 | Why could she not smile and be gay, while yet biding her time and not forsaking her ultimate ideals? |
40057 | Why could she not, or why did she not, seek it in marriage? |
40057 | Why did n''t I write before? |
40057 | Why did she reject the second? |
40057 | Why do I wish to leave this world? |
40057 | Why must Florence go to the Sisters, and Roman Catholic Sisters, too-- abroad? |
40057 | Why refused? |
40057 | Why should not Miss Nightingale stay on at Malvern altogether? |
40057 | Why should she be wearing herself out away from them? |
40057 | Why should she not stay at home, and conduct some small institution on her own account? |
40057 | Why should the Sacrament or Oath of Marriage be less sacred than any other? |
40057 | Why was this? |
40057 | Will you let me have a line at the War Office to let me know? |
40057 | Will you not come? |
40057 | Will you not come? |
40057 | Would he give us any advice or letters of recommendation? |
40057 | Would there be any use in my applying to the Duke of Newcastle for his authority? |
40057 | Would you have one go away and''give utterance to one''s feelings''in a poem to appear( price 2 guineas) in the_ Belle Assemblée_? |
40057 | You will say,_ Bless_ that man, why ca n''t he leave me in peace? |
40057 | _ Vox populi_? |
40057 | and was not hers perhaps a work of supererogation, for could not the official Purveyor have supplied them? |
40057 | do I_ learn_ therefrom? |
40057 | do my three score years and more give me the repose of a life spent in helping others or even in helping myself?... |
40057 | his work or how he did it? |
40057 | or what exertion have I made that I could have left unmade?... |
40057 | or what would ten years of life have advantaged me, exchanged for the ten weeks this summer? |
40057 | that most repulsive, unapproached, unapproachable place of sepulture? |
40057 | to invent wants in order to supply employment? |
40057 | what is to become of me?" |
40057 | where all my many friends on whom I placed my work? |
40057 | where is my strength? |
40057 | where, my Hospitals? |
40057 | with the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth? |
22088 | Against Rome? |
22088 | Are we quite sure that the Bishops will not be drawing up some stringent declarations of faith? 22088 But the effort made in the forty- eight pages of the redoubtable pamphlet,''What then does Dr. Newman Mean?'' |
22088 | Has not all our misery, as a Church, arisen from people being afraid to look difficulties in the face? 22088 Imprimis, why did I go up to Littlemore at all? |
22088 | Is not this a time of strange providences? 22088 It is easy to say,''Why_ will_ you do_ any_ thing? |
22088 | It may be said,--I have said it to myself,--''Why, however, did you_ publish_? 22088 May I be allowed to say, that I augur nothing but evil, if we in any respect prejudice our title to be a branch of the Apostolic Church? |
22088 | Pentheu, Rector Thebarum, quid me perferre patique Indignum cogas? |
22088 | What, then, could I think that Dr. Newman_ meant_? 22088 Why do you meddle? |
22088 | ''How do you mean?'' |
22088 | 2. is it in its_ nature_ certainly miraculous? |
22088 | 3. has it sufficient_ evidence_? |
22088 | 5. Who''s to blame? |
22088 | Again, a practical, effective doubt is a point too, but who can easily ascertain it for himself? |
22088 | Among other things, he said:--"What, then, did the Sermon_ mean_? |
22088 | And again, speaking of the death of Arius:"But after all, was it a miracle? |
22088 | And how am I now to be trusted, when long ago I was trusted, and was found wanting? |
22088 | And moreover, I should here also ask the previous question, Have I any right to accept such a confidence? |
22088 | And thus I am led on to ask,"What head of a sect is there? |
22088 | And what is the consequence? |
22088 | And what was that political principle, and how could it best be suppressed in England? |
22088 | And why does it remain dry at every other time, even at the most humid temperature of the air possible, and in the wettest years, for instance, 1866? |
22088 | And, again, if all killing be not murder, nor all taking from another stealing, why must all untruths be lies? |
22088 | And, if they were unsettled already, how could I point to them a place of refuge, when I was not sure that I should choose it for myself? |
22088 | Are all Protestant text- books, which are used at the University, immaculate? |
22088 | Are text- books the ultimate authority, or rather are they not manuals in the hands of a lecturer, and the groundwork of his remarks? |
22088 | But for myself, I can not indeed prove it, I can not tell_ how_ it is; but I say,"Why should it not be? |
22088 | But how came this about? |
22088 | But how is that possible in a few words? |
22088 | But is it an excellence which can he purchased? |
22088 | But they persisted:"What was I doing at Littlemore?" |
22088 | But why does the slab which bears the holy relics alone sweat? |
22088 | Can you give a better than that it is a sin against justice, as Taylor and Paley consider it? |
22088 | Can, then, the infallible authority, with any show of reason, be said in fact to have destroyed the energy of the Catholic intellect? |
22088 | Controversies should be decided by the reason; is it legitimate warfare to appeal to the misgivings of the public mind and to its dislikings? |
22088 | Could not he say_ which_ they are? |
22088 | Did he value and feel tender about, and cling to his position?... |
22088 | Did it? |
22088 | Do they force all men who go to their Churches to believe in the 39 Articles, or to join in the Athanasian Creed? |
22088 | Does any serious man abuse the Church of Rome, for the sake of abusing her, or because that abuse justifies his own religious position? |
22088 | Does the same argument tell in the House of Commons, on the hustings, and at Exeter Hall? |
22088 | For what have I done that I am to be called to account by the world for my private actions, in a way in which no one else is called? |
22088 | For who can know himself, and the multitude of subtle influences which act upon him? |
22088 | Had he a single fact which belongs to me personally or by profession to couple my name with equivocation in 1843? |
22088 | Have we never thought lawyers tiresome who did_ not_ observe this polite rule, who came down for the assizes and talked law all through dinner? |
22088 | How am I to say all that has to be said in a reasonable compass? |
22088 | How are we to avoid Scylla and Charybdis and go straight on to the very image of Christ?" |
22088 | How can I make a record of what passed within me, without seeming to be satirical? |
22088 | How could I be considered in a position, even to say a word to them one way or the other? |
22088 | How could I ever hope to make them believe in a second theology, when I had cheated them in the first? |
22088 | How could I in any sense direct others, who had to be guided in so momentous a matter myself? |
22088 | How could I presume to unsettle them, as I was unsettled, when I had no means of bringing them out of such unsettlement? |
22088 | How could I remain at St. Mary''s a hypocrite? |
22088 | How could it? |
22088 | How could men act together, whatever was their zeal, unless they were united in a sort of individuality? |
22088 | How many years had I thought myself sure of what I now rejected? |
22088 | How, for instance, does it tend to make a man a hypocrite, to be forbidden to publish a libel? |
22088 | I asked, in the words of a great motto,"Ubi lapsus? |
22088 | I did believe what I said on what I thought to be good reasons; but had I also a just cause for saying out what I believed? |
22088 | I made answer,"What do you mean by''Rome?''" |
22088 | I thought myself right then; how was I to be certain that I was right now? |
22088 | I wish people to know_ why_ I am acting, as well as_ what_ I am doing; it takes off that vague and distressing surprise,''What_ can_ have made him?''" |
22088 | I would ask, by which of the commandments is a lie forbidden? |
22088 | I would not do so for my own sake; for how could I acquiesce in a mere Protestant interpretation of the Articles? |
22088 | If they were inspired by Roman theologians,( and this was taken for granted,) why did they not speak out at once? |
22088 | In my Essay on Miracles of the year 1826, I proposed three questions about a professed miraculous occurrence: 1. is it antecedently_ probable_? |
22088 | In short, would not Hooker, if Vicar of St. Mary''s, be in my difficulty?" |
22088 | Indeed, is it possible( humanly speaking) that those, who have so much the same heart, should widely differ? |
22088 | Is it a mortal sin in_ me_, not joining another communion? |
22088 | Is it necessary to take for gospel every word of Aristotle''s Ethics, or every assertion of Hey or Burnett on the Articles? |
22088 | Is it not what every one says, who speaks on the subject at all? |
22088 | Is it right, or is it wrong, to begin with private judgment? |
22088 | Is it true moderation, instead of trying to fortify a middle doctrine, to fling stones at those who do?... |
22088 | Is it wise to quarrel with this ground, because it is not exactly what we should choose, had we the power of choice? |
22088 | Is not my present position a cruelty, as well as a treachery towards the Church? |
22088 | Is not this almost a truism in the Roman controversy? |
22088 | Is this what Moberly fears? |
22088 | It is difficult, impossible, to imagine, I grant;--but how is it difficult to believe? |
22088 | It is the concrete being that reasons; pass a number of years, and I find my mind in a new place; how? |
22088 | It was thrown in our teeth;"How can you manage to sign the Articles? |
22088 | May I take a case parallel though different? |
22088 | May not I consider my post at St. Mary''s as a place of protest against it? |
22088 | May we not leave to another age_ its own_ evil,--to settle the question of Romanism?" |
22088 | May we not try to leave it in His hands, and be content? |
22088 | May we not, on the other hand, look for a blessing_ through_ obedience even to an erroneous system, and a guidance even by means of it out of it? |
22088 | My difficulty was this: I had been deceived greatly once; how could I be sure that I was not deceived a second time? |
22088 | Nay, how could I, with satisfaction to myself, analyze my own mind, and say what I held and what I did not hold? |
22088 | Need I say that I am speaking of John Keble? |
22088 | Next, how could I have come by them? |
22088 | Next, the_ matter of fact_:--_is_ there an oil flowing from St. Walburga''s tomb, which is medicinal? |
22088 | Now observe; can there be a plainer testimony borne to the practical character of my Sermons at St. Mary''s than this gratuitous insinuation? |
22088 | On this occasion I recollect expressing to a friend the distress it gave me thus to speak; but, I said,"How can I help saying it, if I think it? |
22088 | Or that Queen Victoria''s Government was to the Church of England what Nero''s or Dioclesian''s was to the Church of Rome? |
22088 | Pusey? |
22088 | Secondly, But, if I allow of_ silence_, why not of the method of_ material lying_, since half of a truth_ is_ often a lie? |
22088 | She does not teach that human nature is irreclaimable, else wherefore should she be sent? |
22088 | Some one, I think, asked, in conversation at Rome, whether a certain interpretation of Scripture was Christian? |
22088 | Such being the object which I had in view, what were my prospects of widening and of defining their meaning? |
22088 | The one question was, what was I to do? |
22088 | The reader says,"What else can the prophecy mean?" |
22088 | The simple question is, Can_ I_( it is personal, not whether another, but can_ I_) be saved in the English Church? |
22088 | The vital question was, how were we to keep the Church from being liberalized? |
22088 | The_ Supremacy_;--now, was I saying one single word in favour of the Supremacy of the Holy See, in favour of the foreign jurisdiction? |
22088 | Then, when the Movement was in its swing, friends had said to me,"What will you make of the Articles?" |
22088 | They are asked, how can we trust you, when such are your views? |
22088 | They asked him,"Have you seen Athanasius?" |
22088 | To be certain is to know that one knows; what inward test had I, that I should not change again, after that I had become a Catholic? |
22088 | To insinuate that a Church which had sacramental confession and a celibate clergy was the only true Church? |
22088 | To what work of mine then could the writer be referring? |
22088 | Was Elizabeth zealous for the marriage of the Clergy? |
22088 | We_ are_ keeping persons from you: do you wish us to keep them from you for a time or for ever? |
22088 | Were the question asked of them,"Do you worship a Trinity?" |
22088 | What I needed was a corresponding antagonist unity in my defence, and where was that to be found? |
22088 | What am I to say in answer to your letter? |
22088 | What do I know of substance or matter? |
22088 | What do I know of the Essence of the Divine Being? |
22088 | What do they gain by professing a Creed, in which, if their enemies are to be credited, they really do not believe? |
22088 | What do you say to the logic, sentiment, and propriety of this?" |
22088 | What gain is it to be applauded, admired, courted, followed,--compared with this one aim, of not being disobedient to a heavenly vision? |
22088 | What gain is it to please the world, to please the great, nay even to please those whom we love, compared with this? |
22088 | What good can it do? |
22088 | What have been its great works? |
22088 | What hope was there of condensing into a pamphlet of a readable length, matter which ought freely to expand itself into half a dozen volumes? |
22088 | What is the fault of saying this? |
22088 | What is the harm of this? |
22088 | What is the matter with this statement? |
22088 | What is the meaning of the very word"Protestantism,"but that there is a call to speak out? |
22088 | What is the precise_ work_ which it is directed to effect? |
22088 | What is the_ definition_ of a lie? |
22088 | What is their reward for committing themselves to a life of self- restraint and toil, and perhaps to a premature and miserable death? |
22088 | What is there in it to make us hypocrites, if it has not that effect upon Protestants? |
22088 | What is wonderful in such an apology? |
22088 | What march of opinions can be traced from mind to mind among preachers such as these? |
22088 | What more unclean and foul, as St. James says, than... that a fountain by the same jet should send out sweet water and bitter? |
22088 | What shall be said to this heart- piercing, reason- bewildering fact? |
22088 | What then? |
22088 | What was it to me what they were now doing in opposition to the New Test proposed by the Hebdomadal Board? |
22088 | What was that something else? |
22088 | What was the great question in the days of Henry and Elizabeth? |
22088 | What was the harm of all this? |
22088 | What was this, but to give up the Notes of a visible Church altogether, whether the Catholic Note or the Apostolic? |
22088 | What''s to hinder it? |
22088 | What_ call_ have we to change our communion? |
22088 | When shall I pronounce him to be himself again? |
22088 | When will they know their position, and embrace a larger and wiser policy?" |
22088 | Who can account for the impressions which are made on him? |
22088 | Who can but feel shame when the religion of Ximenes, Borromeo, and Pascal, is so overlaid? |
22088 | Who can but feel sorrow, when its devout and earnest defenders so mistake its genius and its capabilities? |
22088 | Who does not feel for such men? |
22088 | Who knows what the state of the University may be, as regards Divinity Professors in a few years hence? |
22088 | Who would ever dream of making the world his confidant? |
22088 | Who would not save his father''s life, at the charge of a harmless lie, from persecutors or tyrants?" |
22088 | Whom have I in heaven but Thee? |
22088 | Why bring fear, suspicion, and disunion into the camp about things which are merely_ in posse_? |
22088 | Why did they keep the world in such suspense and anxiety as to what was coming next, and what was to be the upshot of the whole? |
22088 | Why is it that I must pain dear friends by saying so, and kindle a sort of resentment against me in the kindest of hearts? |
22088 | Why may I not have that liberty which all others are allowed? |
22088 | Why should I unsettle that sweet calm tranquillity, when I had nothing to offer him instead? |
22088 | Why should it sweat, the whole church being so dry that not a single humid spot of a hand''s breadth is visible? |
22088 | Why should we seek our Lord''s presence elsewhere, when He vouchsafes it to us where we are? |
22088 | Why then does he not deal out the same measure to Catholic priests? |
22088 | Why this reticence, and half- speaking, and apparent indecision? |
22088 | Why was I to be dishonest and they immaculate? |
22088 | Why was it preached? |
22088 | Why will you not let me die in peace? |
22088 | With what face could I publish a new edition of a dogmatic creed, and ask them to receive it as gospel? |
22088 | With what sort of sincerity can I obey the Bishop? |
22088 | Would it not be plain to them that no certainty was to be found any where? |
22088 | Would not that be the case with many friends of my own? |
22088 | Would the Bishop of Oxford accept them? |
22088 | Would you rather have your sons and daughters members of the Church of England or of the Church of Rome?" |
22088 | Yes, I said to myself, his very question is about my_ meaning_;"What does Dr. Newman mean?" |
22088 | Yet how is it compatible with my holding St. Mary''s, being what I am?" |
22088 | Yet what shall I say of the upshot of all his talk of my economies and equivocations and the like? |
22088 | Yet who can speak with patience of his enemy and the enemy of St. John Chrysostom, that Theophilus, bishop of Alexandria? |
22088 | _ What proof have I, then, that by''mean it? |
22088 | _ What_ communion could we join? |
22088 | _ What_ has to be proved? |
22088 | a thousand? |
22088 | after the Bishops''charges? |
22088 | after the Jerusalem"abomination[8]?" |
22088 | am I alone, of Englishmen, not to have the privilege to go where I will, no questions asked? |
22088 | am_ I_ in safety, were I to die to- night? |
22088 | and may we not leave them meanwhile to the will of Providence? |
22088 | and shall I lift up my hand against them? |
22088 | and, if it be an unlawful promise, is it binding when it can not be kept without a lie? |
22088 | and, why do all others beside, above, beneath it, in and out of the altar- cave, though being of the same nature, remain perfectly dry? |
22088 | but, if so, how can it be a sin at all, if your neighbour is not injured? |
22088 | did I, or my opinions, drop from the sky? |
22088 | did he disbelieve Purgatory? |
22088 | died a Catholic, I am led to say: It_ may_ be, but what is your_ proof_? |
22088 | for what is the life of you all, as day passes after day, but a simple endeavour to serve Him, from whom all blessing comes? |
22088 | had he no friend to tell him whether I was"affected"or"artificial"myself? |
22088 | have I any right to make such a promise? |
22088 | have I not given up my position and my place? |
22088 | have I not retreated from you? |
22088 | how am I to act in the frequent cases, in which one way or another the Church of Rome comes into consideration? |
22088 | how came I, in Oxford,_ in gremio Universitatis_, to present myself to the eyes of men in that full blown investiture of Popery? |
22088 | how could I be answerable for souls,( and life so uncertain,) with the convictions, or at least persuasions, which I had upon me? |
22088 | how could I ever again have confidence in myself? |
22088 | how could I range myself among the professors of a theology, of which it put my teeth on edge even to hear the sound? |
22088 | how had I done worse, than the Evangelical party in their_ ex animo_ reception of the Services for Baptism and Visitation of the Sick[6]? |
22088 | how had the Arians drawn up their Creeds? |
22088 | how was I to be sure that I should always think as I thought now? |
22088 | how was I to have confidence in my present confidence? |
22088 | is it a phenomenon which depends on nothing else than itself, or is it an effect which has a cause? |
22088 | is it not our safest course, without looking to consequences, to do simply_ what we think right_ day by day? |
22088 | it was answered that Dr. Arnold took it; I interposed,"But is_ he_ a Christian?" |
22088 | just as my Accuser asks,"What, then, does Dr. Newman mean?" |
22088 | merely to get rid of"Popery?" |
22088 | or had she a conscience against the Mass? |
22088 | quid feci?" |
22088 | religiously hold Justification by faith only? |
22088 | shall we not be sure to go wrong, if we attempt to trace by anticipation the course of divine Providence? |
22088 | they denounced the English as heretical? |
22088 | what business had you to think of any such plan at all?'' |
22088 | who can admire or revere Pope Vigilius? |
22088 | who can have one unkind thought of them? |
22088 | why can not you let me alone? |
22088 | why may not a hundred? |
22088 | why wo n''t you keep quiet? |
22088 | would be the highest measure of devotion:--but who can really pray to a Being, about whose existence he is seriously in doubt? |
6844 | Alas, poor child, has it come to this? 6844 Am I wrong? |
6844 | And, what of that, ye cruel winds of Autumn? 6844 But, see their glassy bosom, what scene could be more bright? |
6844 | Child of my love, why wearest thou That pensive look and thoughtful brow? 6844 Doctor, I''m better, am I not?" |
6844 | Dost cling to it? 6844 Now, brother, thou''lt have none to share thy sports till I return,-- Say, what shall be the glitt''ring prize that I afar must earn?" |
6844 | Perhaps''tis music thou seekest, child? 6844 The White Lily surely speaks in jest, For has she not seen me gaily dressed? |
6844 | What are now its broad rich acres to me, Stretching out as far as my gaze can see? 6844 What dost thou dare avow? |
6844 | What!--a crown? 6844 You all seem doubtful, and a smile of scorn your features wear, Look on my gems, and say if yours are but one half as fair?" |
6844 | A shudder runs through her-- what does it tell? |
6844 | A smile lit up the sleeper''s face, but soon it softly fled, The rose leaf cheeks and lips grew wan-- could it be the child was dead? |
6844 | Ah, what do we reap from flirting But heartaches, mutual pain? |
6844 | And thou, wilt thou not promise me Thy heart will never change, That tones and looks, so loving now, Will ne''er grow stern and strange? |
6844 | And, ere I shall return oh say, what goal must I have won-- What is the aim, the prize, that most thou wishest for thy son?" |
6844 | And, turning towards him that God like brow, He asked the suppliant,"What wouldest thou?" |
6844 | Art toiling for some worldly aim, Or for some golden prize, Devoting to that glitt''ring goal Thy thoughts, thy smiles, thy sighs? |
6844 | At length he paused, then questioned:"Brother, thou dost not speak; In the vague bright page of the future To read dost thou never seek?" |
6844 | Autumn winds, what means this plaintive wailing Around the quiet homestead where we dwell? |
6844 | But paupers-- came they to our shores, Want, sickness, death to leave?" |
6844 | But the sisters who had brightened once the home now desolate-- Lived they to mourn each brother''s loss? |
6844 | But voices breaking the silence Are heard, fast drawing nigh, And falls on his ear the clamor Of vast crowds moving by:"What is it?" |
6844 | But was she happier? |
6844 | But what does he see? |
6844 | But why dost thou watch me in doubting surprise, Why thus dost thou raise thy dark, deep, melting eyes? |
6844 | But, Azof, did not thought of him some passing joy impart; Did not the memory of his love bring gladness to her heart? |
6844 | But, say, what were the visions sweet that filled that gentle heart? |
6844 | Can''st gaze abroad on this world so fair And yet thy glance be fraught with care? |
6844 | Could a whole life''s praises thank_ Him_ For the wonder He had wrought? |
6844 | Did He answer? |
6844 | Do I hear right? |
6844 | Do they not tell thee, my peerless one, Thou''rt lovelier far than they?" |
6844 | Dost love its bright- dyed birds and flowers, its radiant golden sun? |
6844 | Dost thou wonder at my daring Thus to seek thy sacred shrine, When the sinner''s lot despairing, Wretched-- hopeless-- should be mine? |
6844 | Enough, my sister, wouldst make me sad, When my smile should be bright and my heart be glad? |
6844 | Every thought for siren pleasure, And its sinful, feverish mirth; Who can find one moment''s leisure For aught else save things of earth? |
6844 | Fond, tender voices, press me to stay-- Think''st thou from them I would pass away? |
6844 | Has she, too, heard the voices That are calling me away? |
6844 | His soiled and shattered crest he laid low at his father''s feet, And sadly said,"''Tis all I have-- is it an off''ring meet? |
6844 | How solace him beneath his trial sore? |
6844 | In silvery tones she murmurs forth"My heart is light and glad, Youth, beauty, hope, are all mine own, Then, why should I be sad? |
6844 | Is it not better I should seek To win the name he bore, Than waste my youth in pastimes weak Upon the tiresome shore? |
6844 | Is it not bliss to know what e''er Thy future griefs and fears, They will be never dimmed like thine By sorrow''s scalding tears? |
6844 | Is she not the child of fortune, fortune''s pet and darling bright, Yes, the beauteous, courted heiress-- heroine of the gala night? |
6844 | Is there none but this one stranger-- unlearned in Gods ways, His name and mighty power, to give word of thanks or praise?" |
6844 | Let no rich worldling dare to say:"For them why should we grieve? |
6844 | Man, in the wane of thy stately prime, Hear''st thou the silent warnings of Time? |
6844 | Montreal, Jan. 27, 1864 WHEN WILL IT END? |
6844 | Must he take his darling''s life? |
6844 | Mutely the bridegroom caught her up after that touching appeal; Why refuse her prayer when on her brow was already set death''s seal? |
6844 | O say, dear sister, are you coming Forth to the fields with me? |
6844 | Of many gifts bestowed on earth To cheer a lonely hour, Oh is there one of equal worth With music''s magic power? |
6844 | Or shall we loll on the grassy bank For hours dreamy, still, To draw from its depths some silv''ry prize, Reward of angler''s skill? |
6844 | Our chief-- our Sachem? |
6844 | Rising from hillside and lowly vale,-- Say, what can its meaning be? |
6844 | Roses still bloom in glowing dyes, Sunshine still fills our summer skies, Earth is still lovely, nature glad-- Why dost thou look so lone and sad?" |
6844 | Sad age, dost thou note thy strength nigh, spent, How slow thy footstep-- thy form how bent? |
6844 | Say, art thou angry? |
6844 | Say, does she rave? |
6844 | Say, was there none o''er that young chief to shed one single tear, To sorrow o''er the end of his untimely stopt career? |
6844 | Say, what is it all? |
6844 | Say, when will thy sex learn that man can forget? |
6844 | See my gentle mother softly To me approaches now, What is the change she readeth Upon my pale damp brow? |
6844 | See''st thou yon angel fair, With flowing robes and starry crown Gemming her golden hair? |
6844 | See, yonder wait our gallant crew, So, weep not, mother dear; My father was a sailor too-- What hast thou then to fear? |
6844 | Shall we hie unto the streamlet''s side To seek our little boat, And, plying our oars with right good will, Over its bright waves float? |
6844 | She clasps her hands in anguish Whose depth no words might say? |
6844 | Slowly questioned him the Saviour, with majesty divine:--"Ten were cleansed from their leprosy-- where are the other nine? |
6844 | That thou''lt be kind, whatever faults Or failings may be mine, And bear with them in patient love, As I will bear with thine? |
6844 | The merry smile her words had raised fled, as with falt''ring voice, He asked of her, the best beloved,"Mother, what is_ thy_ choice?" |
6844 | Themselves upon the ground they throw, Cheeks pillowed on each rounded arm-- And fall asleep soon, murmuring low, And wondering"why it is so warm?" |
6844 | Then say what is the fairy spell, Around her beauty thrown, Lending a new and softer charm To every look and tone? |
6844 | Thou art accused of worshipping Jesus the Nazarene-- Of scorning Rome''s high, mighty Gods,--speak, say if this has been? |
6844 | Thou hast spirit, brother; Say, of laurels will it be? |
6844 | Thou wast not there? |
6844 | Was young bride in her beauty ever clothed in robe as bright? |
6844 | What are the laurels of earth beside The joys of bliss divine? |
6844 | What do I wish thee, darling, say? |
6844 | What doth he at this lowly shrine? |
6844 | What horrors drear Are those that meet his eye, For he springs aside and shades his brow With a sharp, though stifled, cry? |
6844 | What mattered it that an antique vase Of_ Sèvres_ costly and old, Was destined, henceforth, in royal State, Its fair young form to hold? |
6844 | What mattered it that the richest silks Of the far famed Indian loom, With priceless marbles paintings rare, Adorned its prison room? |
6844 | What mean those prayers and sighs, The tearful mist that dims the light Of his flashing, eagle eyes? |
6844 | What strange and holy magic seems earth and air to fill, That worldly thoughts and feelings are now all hushed and still? |
6844 | What was my crime? |
6844 | What would''st thou? |
6844 | Whence comes the awe- struck feeling that fills the gazer''s breast, The breath, quick- drawn and panting, the awe, the solemn rest? |
6844 | Who might know? |
6844 | Why add by such sad words unto thy grey haired father''s woe? |
6844 | With silence and gloom where''er you roam, What then, what then, of your forest home?" |
6844 | Yet why should sorrow fill thus each breast? |
6844 | Yet''mid those guilt- stained men could any vile enough be found To harm the victim who there stood, in helpless thraldom bound? |
6844 | am I not as lovely in my garb of spotless white? |
6844 | and her eyes gleam forth A flashing, fearful ray,"I, young, rich, lovely, from this earth To pass so soon away? |
6844 | and must it be? |
6844 | by aim more pure and holy Say, could soldiers be enticed? |
6844 | calm thine anxious fears-- What dost thou dread for me? |
6844 | cast away the gems and flowers That bind thy thoughtless brow, Where will their gleam or brightness be In a few short years from now? |
6844 | dare to rail at our snow- storms, why Not view them with poet''s or artist''s eye? |
6844 | do you see in yon sunset sky, That cloud of crimson bright? |
6844 | dost find this earth a fair and lovely one? |
6844 | dost hear that mournful wail''Bove the joyous revelry? |
6844 | her father, didst thou say? |
6844 | in that last moment drear How looked she? |
6844 | my child, what right have I to smile And whisper, too dearly bought, By wand''ring many a weary mile-- Dust, heat, and toilsome thought? |
6844 | need we ask? |
6844 | rest thee from the idle chase, With no bliss can it endow; Of fame or gold, what will be thine In a few short years from now? |
6844 | say must I leave this world of light With its sparkling streams and sunshine bright, Its budding flowers, its glorious sky? |
6844 | say, say, wilt though repine If I tell thee that those cherished hopes have all proved vain but thine? |
6844 | sister fair, What lot with thine can now compare? |
6844 | unguessed thy secret yet? |
6844 | was theirs a happier fate? |
6844 | what are those voices Heard on the midnight air, Of strange celestial sweetness, Breathing of love and prayer? |
6844 | what is this?" |
6844 | what means that look so weary, that long- drawn and painful sigh; And that gaze, intense and yearning, fixed upon the starlit sky? |
6844 | what wilt thou do with thy heart, my child? |
6844 | where is he?" |
6844 | where may the heart seek, in moments like this, A whisper of hope, or a faint gleam of bliss? |
6844 | why wilt thou grieve me so? |
15348 | A canoe? |
15348 | A long one? |
15348 | A noo mountain come into action, p''raps, an''blow''d its top off? |
15348 | A what, sir?. |
15348 | Ai n''t it a nice place, Nigel? |
15348 | An''is you_ quite_ easy in your mind? |
15348 | An''whar you go to? |
15348 | An''where would_ you_ like to sleep, Massa Spinkie? |
15348 | And little Nelly Drew, what of her? |
15348 | And pray who is massa? |
15348 | And that is--? |
15348 | And what about large game? |
15348 | And what may you be going to do there? |
15348 | And you never heard of a gun- boat having captured a pirate junk and----"Why do you ask, and why pause? |
15348 | And you wo n''t tell me your master''s name? |
15348 | Ant vat if you do_ not_ find your frond zee captain of zee steamer? |
15348 | Ant zey can not arrife, you say, for several veeks? |
15348 | Are the Keeling Islands far off? |
15348 | Are there any in these parts? |
15348 | Are things quieter? |
15348 | Are things quieting down? |
15348 | Are ve near to zee spote? |
15348 | Are you engaged, Van der Kemp? |
15348 | Are you hurt, dear-- child? |
15348 | Are you in earnest, father? |
15348 | Are zee raskils near? |
15348 | Are zey dangerows? |
15348 | Are''ee sure, lad? |
15348 | Ay, why not? |
15348 | But how about_ my_ skull, Moses? 15348 But how if water gets in through a leak below?" |
15348 | But how shall we ever see to make our way down stream? |
15348 | But how,he asked,"am I to get zere ven ve reach zee sea- coast? |
15348 | But how-- how-- why? |
15348 | But is it wise in you to stay if you think an explosion so likely? 15348 But is not the cargo of the said ship safe in Batavia? |
15348 | But seriously, Moses,he continued;"what do you think I should do? |
15348 | But should we not hear them coming a long way off? |
15348 | But what good will writing to my father do? |
15348 | But what if I do n''t want to take service? |
15348 | But what if Rakata itself should become active? |
15348 | But what of the poor little girl? |
15348 | But why did you go to live in such a strange place, dear father? |
15348 | But why do you call her_ poor_ Kathy? 15348 But why do you love him, Moses?" |
15348 | But-- where? |
15348 | Can you guess what is the matter with him? |
15348 | Can you run aft, Winnie? |
15348 | Can you write shorthand? |
15348 | Could n''t we lower a boat? |
15348 | D''you think our old harbour will be available, Moses? |
15348 | Did n''t I say so? |
15348 | Did they_ all_ go in one direction? |
15348 | Did you ever, during your search,asked Nigel slowly,"visit the Cocos- Keeling Islands?" |
15348 | Do it always rain ashes here? |
15348 | Do it? 15348 Do you alvays sneeze like zat?" |
15348 | Do you expect''em back soon, sir? |
15348 | Do you feel disposed for bed? |
15348 | Do you hear anything? |
15348 | Do you hear? |
15348 | Do you know what makes him so sad? |
15348 | Do you know, Moses, what business your master is going about? |
15348 | Do you mean that we shall sleep in the canoe? |
15348 | Do you not remember that my mother was ill when you spent a night in our hut, and my little sister was dying? 15348 Do you see that brass thing in front of you?" |
15348 | Do you then think there is a possibility of an outbreak at some future period? |
15348 | Do you think it safe to venture to visit your cave? |
15348 | Do you think the people would object to my getting up into a tree with my rifle and watching beside the grave part of the night? |
15348 | Do you think this is an attempt to deceive us? |
15348 | Enchoy it? 15348 Had we not better run for the nearest land?" |
15348 | Hallo? |
15348 | Has he, then, done you such foul wrong? |
15348 | Has she ever spoken to_ you_? |
15348 | Have you ever travelled in the interior of the larger islands? |
15348 | Have you never seen or heard of your daughter since? |
15348 | Have you not told me that this is the first time for about two hundred years that Krakatoa has broken out in active eruption? |
15348 | Have you reason to think he would take your life if he could? |
15348 | How comes it,he said,"that you are so much interested in me? |
15348 | How d''ee know_ she_ will wait? |
15348 | How did you escape? |
15348 | How much time have you to spare? |
15348 | How so? |
15348 | How!--Do you get them to tow you? |
15348 | How? 15348 I suppose the larger islands are densely wooded?" |
15348 | I suppose you have plenty of other kinds of food besides this? |
15348 | I suppose,he said,"that there is no fear of the Dyaks of the village being unable to beat off the pirates now that they have been warned?" |
15348 | I''n''t it awrful? |
15348 | If the volcano seems quieting down,said Nigel to his host,"shall you start to- morrow?" |
15348 | If you tumbles a t''ousand feet into de water how much t''ink you will be lef to pick up? |
15348 | Indeed? 15348 Is Baderoon the enemy whom you saw on the islet on our first night out?" |
15348 | Is Winnie going? |
15348 | Is he harsh, then? |
15348 | Is he not apt to be suffocated? |
15348 | Is he so very bitter against you? |
15348 | Is he then so fierce? |
15348 | Is it daylight yet? |
15348 | Is it far? |
15348 | Is it often as dark as this in the daytime, an''is the sun usually green? |
15348 | Is n''t dat enuff? |
15348 | Is n''t you a goin''to take nuffin''wid you? 15348 Is that all?" |
15348 | Is that the lad Baso I see down there with the crew of the prau? |
15348 | Is that what he is doing? |
15348 | Is this then the craft in which you intend to voyage? |
15348 | Is, then, the orang- utan so powerful and savage? |
15348 | Is-- is-- Van der Kemp safe? |
15348 | Look''ere now, whitey,returned Moses,"what you take me for?" |
15348 | May I ask, sir, what sort of cargo you expect there? |
15348 | May I venture to ask for a fuller account of the injury he did you? |
15348 | May not the cause be presentiment? |
15348 | Mr. Moor,said the captain somewhat excitedly, as he reached the deck of his vessel,"are all the men aboard?" |
15348 | Need I say,continued the hermit,"that revenge burned fiercely in my breast from that day forward? |
15348 | Nigel,said the captain, in a tone and with a look that were meant to imply intense solemnity,"have you ever spoken to her about love?" |
15348 | Not dead? |
15348 | Not in years,he returned;"but old,_ very_ old in experience, and-- stay, what was it that you were asking about? |
15348 | Not widout arms? |
15348 | Now, Moses, are you ready? |
15348 | Now, Moses; what d''ye think of all that? |
15348 | Now, are you ready? |
15348 | Now, boy,said the captain when their host had gone,"what''ll''ee do? |
15348 | Of course you have agreed? |
15348 | Passionate? |
15348 | Risk what? 15348 Seen who?" |
15348 | Shall I light de lamp? |
15348 | Shall we have a stormy night, think you? |
15348 | Shall we manage it, Moses? |
15348 | Strong? |
15348 | Surely you''re not afraid of his giving you a licking, Moses? |
15348 | The Keeling Islands? |
15348 | The cone from which I observed smoke rising? |
15348 | The gasometer? |
15348 | The right hole? |
15348 | Then that is the girl who is now here? |
15348 | Then you have resided here for some time? |
15348 | Then you wo n''t arrive as a stranger? |
15348 | Then, may I call you Kathleen? |
15348 | Vare? 15348 Vat must ve do_ now_?" |
15348 | Vat shall I do? 15348 Vat you mean by zat?" |
15348 | Vat_ shall_ I do? |
15348 | Vere? 15348 Vy did I not shot it?" |
15348 | Well now, what do you propose to do, as you refuse to leave me? |
15348 | Well, I do n''t see much use ob two, but which does you like to be called by-- Nadgel or Roy? |
15348 | Well, now,continued the captain,"what about Black Sam?" |
15348 | Well, what of that? |
15348 | Well? |
15348 | Well? |
15348 | Well? |
15348 | Were you born in this region, Van der Kemp? |
15348 | What brought you here, my son? |
15348 | What cheer, Van der Kemp? 15348 What d''ee say to my soundin''her on the subject?" |
15348 | What d''you mean, father? |
15348 | What does he say? |
15348 | What have you got? |
15348 | What if the wind were to change and blow it all this way? |
15348 | What is it? |
15348 | What is to be done? |
15348 | What must be the dwelling- place of the Creator Himself when his footstool is so grand? |
15348 | What o''that? 15348 What other matter?" |
15348 | What part of the shore are we near, d''you think, father? |
15348 | What said you? |
15348 | What was her name? |
15348 | What was it, then? |
15348 | What you want wi''_ me_, sar? |
15348 | What''s wrong, massa? |
15348 | What''s wrong, my girl? |
15348 | What, the fish? |
15348 | What_ can_ he be up to now, I wonder? |
15348 | When do you start? |
15348 | When you are almost terrified of your wits do n''t you pretend that there''s nothing the matter with you? |
15348 | Where I puts your bed, massa? |
15348 | Where am I? 15348 Where are you?" |
15348 | Where do you go first? |
15348 | Where is the professor, Baso? |
15348 | Where''s Verkimier? |
15348 | Whereabouts are you? |
15348 | Who can tell? 15348 Who''s Van der Kemp?" |
15348 | Why are you so anxious not to meet this man? |
15348 | Why d''you think so? |
15348 | Why did you not shoot it, professor? |
15348 | Why not bring this man who claims to be her father_ here_? |
15348 | Why not? |
15348 | Why not? |
15348 | Why not? |
15348 | Why should I''pologise? |
15348 | Why so? 15348 Why you not look out?" |
15348 | Why!--what-- how beautiful!--but-- but-- what do you mean? |
15348 | Why, Verkimier, what are you after? |
15348 | Why, do n''t your flossiphers say dat black am better dan white for''tractin''heat, an''ai n''t our skins black? 15348 Why, what''s the matter, Moses?" |
15348 | Will it come again soon? |
15348 | Will ye throw us a rope? |
15348 | Winnie,said Nigel when they were alone,"does n''t it feel awesome and strange to be standing here in such intense darkness?" |
15348 | Wo n''t you tell us what you intend to do, professor? |
15348 | Would it be presumptuous if I were to ask why it is that this pirate had such bitter enmity against you? |
15348 | Would n''t you like a trip in my brig to Anjer, my dear girl? |
15348 | Yes-- well? |
15348 | You don''want nuffin''more to- night, I s''pose? |
15348 | You draw landscape also, I doubt not? |
15348 | You enjoy this sort of thing? |
15348 | You have heard of the saying, no doubt, that''all things are possible to well- directed labour''? |
15348 | You knew it? |
15348 | Your doubting me, father, does not correspond with your lately expressed opinion of my seamanship; does it? |
15348 | _ I_ wish you would turn your eyes towards me for I''m convinced they would give some light--? 15348 ''Cause why? 15348 ART ON THE KEELING ISLANDS,_ facing page_ 36 THEY DISCOVER A PIRATES''BIVOUAC, 164DO YOU HEAR?" |
15348 | All eyes were turned at once on Nigel, some boldly, others with a shy inquiring look, as though to say, Can_ you_ tell stories? |
15348 | Am I not a first mate with a handsome salary?" |
15348 | An''what did she say with her eyes?" |
15348 | An''who is your frond?" |
15348 | And what of Moses''opinion of the new home? |
15348 | And who has been your other teacher?" |
15348 | And why do you fear him?" |
15348 | And-- and when may I start?" |
15348 | Are you much hurt?" |
15348 | Are you prepared?" |
15348 | Are you there, boys?" |
15348 | Besides, am I not your hired servant?" |
15348 | Besides, is it not unkind to such hospitable people to bolt off after you''ve got all that you want out of them?" |
15348 | But are you certain there will be another explosion?" |
15348 | But how dare you, sir, venture to think of marryin''on nothin''?" |
15348 | But why you call me Kathleen just now?" |
15348 | But, excuse me-- v''ere did you come from, and vy do you come? |
15348 | But, will you explain how I am to make sure of Winnie''s state of mind without asking her about it?" |
15348 | But-- really-- are we to start at daylight?" |
15348 | CONVERSATION: WHY DON''T WE DO MORE GOOD BY IT? |
15348 | Can you keep a secret, Moses?" |
15348 | Could reasoning be clearer or more conclusive? |
15348 | D''ee feel_ that_?" |
15348 | D''ye want a lift to- day?" |
15348 | DAPHNE''S DECISION; OR, WHICH SHALL IT BE? |
15348 | Do I not hear somet''ing?" |
15348 | Do n''t you needlessly run considerable risk?" |
15348 | Do''ee want to be smothered, roasted, and blown up?" |
15348 | Do_ you_ know, Moses?" |
15348 | Does he not run a very great risk of being discovered?" |
15348 | Does n''t it strike you so?" |
15348 | Does you really t''ink I would say or do any mortal t''ing w''atsumiver as would injure_ my_ massa?" |
15348 | FREAKS ON THE FELLS: and Why I did not become a Sailor? |
15348 | Has anything happened?" |
15348 | Has not its owner a good bank account in England? |
15348 | Have you ever been in England?" |
15348 | Have you had breakfast?" |
15348 | Have you observed these two strong ropes running all round our gunwale, and the bridles across with ring- bolts in them?" |
15348 | Have you tasted zee Durian?" |
15348 | Have you, Moses?" |
15348 | He come in vis a moss----""A what?" |
15348 | He felt inclined to add:"But why all this moving about?" |
15348 | How came it to grow in this way?" |
15348 | How did I get here? |
15348 | How does he live?" |
15348 | How''s''er head?" |
15348 | How-- how''s old mother Morris?" |
15348 | How_ do_ you catch the turtle? |
15348 | I have longed to visit Sumatra, ant vat better fronds could I go viz zan yourselfs?" |
15348 | I have preparations to make, however, and I have no doubt you wo n''t object to remain till all is ready for a start?" |
15348 | If you say it is, how are we to account for love at first sight? |
15348 | Is it not so?" |
15348 | Is not zat vonderful?" |
15348 | Is there a bulkhead between it and_ your_ heels?" |
15348 | Is there danger?" |
15348 | It''s a considerable length to get, that, is n''t it? |
15348 | It''s quite clear that she do n''t know what danger means-- and why should she? |
15348 | May I ask what that service is to be, and where you think of going to?" |
15348 | May I look now at what you have done?" |
15348 | Moor?" |
15348 | Moor?" |
15348 | Moses, what are you talking to over there?" |
15348 | None ob de books or t''ings?" |
15348 | Not hurt much, I hope?" |
15348 | Now the thing is ridiculous-- impossible-- for how can I know your opinion on any subject until I have asked you?" |
15348 | Now, Moses, are you ready?" |
15348 | Now, do you see the little island away there to the nor''-west?" |
15348 | Of course you understand how to manage sails of every kind?" |
15348 | Old Holbein?" |
15348 | Our Maker has so ordained it as well as stated it, for is it not written,"The sleep of the labouring man is sweet"? |
15348 | Roy?" |
15348 | Roy?" |
15348 | Shall I have to fetch any provisions with me for the voyage?" |
15348 | Should I reveal my suspicions to Van der Kemp?" |
15348 | THE QUESTION OF QUESTIONS:"WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST?" |
15348 | There is a friend there who has just told me he met you on the Cocos- Keeling Island, Nigel Roy;--you start, Winnie?" |
15348 | There was an indication of a tendency to flight on the part of the natives, but Nigel''s asking"Where_ are_ you?" |
15348 | Vat is zat? |
15348 | Vat say you, Van der Kemp?" |
15348 | Vy you come here joost now?" |
15348 | WILL IT LIFT? |
15348 | Was he asleep? |
15348 | Was it nightmare? |
15348 | Well-- where was I?" |
15348 | Whar you comes fro''?" |
15348 | What cause better zan frondship? |
15348 | What has happened?" |
15348 | What say you, Nigel?" |
15348 | What would you say to charter a steamer and have a grand excursion to the volcano?" |
15348 | Where are my comrades-- Nigel and the negro?" |
15348 | Where is she?" |
15348 | Who has not experienced this, and felt himself to be a very hero of self- denial in the circumstances? |
15348 | Why do ye ask?" |
15348 | Why not? |
15348 | Why, therefore, did he feel uncomfortable? |
15348 | Why?" |
15348 | Will my friend go by that?" |
15348 | Wo n''t you go in, Miss Winnie?" |
15348 | You and the hermit are goin''off to Krakatoa to- day, I suppose?" |
15348 | You are not hurt, I hope-- are you?" |
15348 | You hear?" |
15348 | You know all about the brig, an''what a deal o''repair she''s got to undergo?" |
15348 | You wo n''t miss them, I daresay?" |
15348 | [ Illustration:"DO YOU HEAR?" |
15348 | _ I_ know,"cried the cheeky boy;"you means Johnson? |
15348 | a moth-- well?" |
15348 | are you awake?" |
15348 | came at that moment from the other side of the obstruction,"are you there-- all right?" |
15348 | cried Nigel, interrupting him,"do you really mean to tell me that you''ve brought me here as a hired servant?" |
15348 | echoed the youth,"are some of them wrong ones?" |
15348 | father?" |
15348 | is she Moses too?" |
15348 | laughed Moses, in guttural tones,"you soon see dat-- I''spose it time for me to get out de grub, massa?" |
15348 | man, what d''ye mean?" |
15348 | replied the negro, looking up with a somewhat stern frown and a pout of his thick lips, as much as to say--"Who are_ you_?" |
15348 | said Nigel;"but how do you manage when the mountain comes between you and the sun, as I see it can not fail to do during some part of the day?" |
15348 | say you so, mine frond? |
15348 | steer through a green sea of leaves like that?" |
15348 | still king?" |
15348 | the professor?" |
15348 | vare?" |
15348 | vat vas it?" |
15348 | vy do n''t you let me_ out_?" |
15348 | what do you mean?" |
15348 | what you gwine to do with massa?" |
15348 | what''s his name, and what does he do? |
15348 | where are''ee bound for?" |
15348 | who could sleep with such wonders going on around? |
28540 | Alack, sir,rejoined the landlady,"what is there that thus disturbs you in the sight of those books? |
28540 | How is this? |
28540 | I am at a loss,said Philemon,"to comprehend exactly what you mean?" |
28540 | I dreamt a dream last night;which has been already told-- but what was yours? |
28540 | Madam,said Ferdinand,"is there no possibility of inspecting the_ books_ in the_ cupboard_--where is the key?" |
28540 | Well, and what message was this? 28540 Well, then, and will we see what a weighty message this was that Gardiner so exquisitely commended? |
28540 | What dream has disturbed your rest? |
28540 | What,cried I,"is the meaning of these objects?" |
28540 | When the king saw the Archbishop enter the room, he said,''What have you brought with you those_ rarities_ and_ jewels_ you told me of?'' 28540 Who BUT John Clarke?" |
28540 | Who was the happy man to accomplish such a piece of binding? 28540 Who, madam, who is the lucky owner?" |
28540 | Why do you so much admire the Helen of Zeuxis? |
28540 | Will he part with them-- where does he live? 28540 ''For whom,''said the king,''is this model?'' 28540 ''This Briefe Examen following, was found in the Archbishop''s( Laud?) 28540 ( George Peele''s: 7_l._ 7_s._) 1902:( Sackville''s Ferrex and Porrex: 2_l._ 4_s._)--But--quo Musa tendis?" |
28540 | ( and are there not a few, apparently, as unimportant and confined in these rich volumes of the Treasures of Antiquity?) |
28540 | ( what is there between a Scot and a Sot?) |
28540 | --Is it not probable that Dr. Johnson himself might have sold for SIXPENCE, a_ Tusser_, which now would have brought a''GOLDEN GUINEA?''] |
28540 | --What say you to this specimen of Caxtonian eloquence? |
28540 | 5 5 0( Shall I put one, or one hundred marks-- not of admiration but of astonishment-- at this price?! |
28540 | A brave and enviable spirit this!--and, in truth, what is comparable with it? |
28540 | A little volume of indescribable rarity 12 15 0 221 Arnold''s Chronicle, 4to., printed at Antwerp, by Doesborch( 1502)? |
28540 | After such an account, what bibliomaniac can enjoy perfect tranquillity of mind unless he possess a_ Grollier copy_ of some work or other? |
28540 | Ah, well- a- day!--have I not come to the close of my BOOK- HISTORY? |
28540 | Alas, madam!--why are you so unreasonable? |
28540 | Alas, when will all these again come under the hammer at one sale?! |
28540 | Am I to talk for ever? |
28540 | And do you imagine that no one, but yourself, has his pockets"lined with pistoles,"on these occasions? |
28540 | And of this latter who can possibly entertain a doubt? |
28540 | And pray what are these? |
28540 | And when they tell ought, what delight can be in those things that be so plain and foolish lies? |
28540 | And why not? |
28540 | Are there any other bibliomaniacs of distinction yet to notice? |
28540 | Are we as successful in printing upon vellum as were our forefathers? |
28540 | Are you accustomed to attend book- auctions? |
28540 | Are you then an enemy to booksellers, or to their catalogues when interlaced with bibliographical notices? |
28540 | At what bookseller''s shop, or at what auction, are they to be procured? |
28540 | But I suppose you would not object to be set right upon any subject of which you are ignorant or misinformed? |
28540 | But I suspect you exaggerate? |
28540 | But am I to be satisfied with the possession of those works already recommended? |
28540 | But bibliography has never been, till now, a popular( shall I say fashionable?) |
28540 | But can not you resume this conversation on the morrow? |
28540 | But can you properly place Erasmus in the list? |
28540 | But does he atone for his sad error by being liberal in the loan of his volumes? |
28540 | But first tell us-- why are these copies so much coveted? |
28540 | But had we not better speak of the book ravages, during the reformation, in their proper place?" |
28540 | But have I not discoursed sufficiently? |
28540 | But have you quite done, dear Lysander? |
28540 | But how may this heat be brought again? |
28540 | But it must have been obtained in the golden age of book- collecting? |
28540 | But our friend is not forgetful of his promise? |
28540 | But what becomes of the English, Spanish, and Italian bibliographers all this while? |
28540 | But what can be said in defence of the dissolute lives of the monks? |
28540 | But what has a BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ROMANCE to do with_ Love_ and_ Marriage_? |
28540 | But what has become of Ashmole all this while? |
28540 | But what is become, in the while, of the English, Italian, and Spanish bibliographers-- in the seventeenth century? |
28540 | But what is to be done? |
28540 | But what is to be done? |
28540 | But what shall we say to Lord Shaftesbury''s eccentric neighbour, HENRY HASTINGS? |
28540 | But where shall we begin? |
28540 | But why are we about to make learned dissertations upon the old English Chronicles? |
28540 | But why is perfection to be expected, where every thing must necessarily be imperfect? |
28540 | But why so suddenly silent, gentlemen? |
28540 | But why so warm upon the subject? |
28540 | But you promise to commence your_ symptomatic_ harangue on the morrow? |
28540 | But you promise to renew the subject afterwards? |
28540 | But you promise, when you revisit the library, not to behave so naughtily again? |
28540 | But, Philemon, consider with what grace could this charge come from HIM who had"shed innocent blood,"to gratify his horrid lusts? |
28540 | Can any eyes be so jaundiced as to prefer volumes printed in this crabbed, rough, and dismal manner? |
28540 | Can it be possible? |
28540 | Can such a declaration, from such a character, be credited? |
28540 | Can the enlightened reader want further proof of the existence of the BIBLIOMANIA in the nunnery of Godstow? |
28540 | Can these things be? |
28540 | Can you find it in your heart, dear brother, to part with your black- letter Chronicles, and Hakluyt''s Voyages, for these new publications? |
28540 | Can you introduce me to him?" |
28540 | Come a short half hour, and who, unless the moon befriend him, can see the outline of the village church? |
28540 | Did Geyler allude to such bibliomaniacs in the following sentence? |
28540 | Did you ever read the inscription over the outside of my library door-- which I borrowed from Lomeir''s account of one over a library at Parma? |
28540 | Did''st ever hear, Lisardo, of one WILLIAM THYNNE? |
28540 | Do pray tell me what it is you wish me to go on with? |
28540 | Do they contain more than the ordinary ones? |
28540 | Do you frankly forgive-- and will you henceforth consider me as a worth[ Transcriber''s Note: worthy]"_ Aspirant_"in the noble cause of bibliography? |
28540 | Do you mean to have it inferred that there were no collections, of value or importance, which were sold in the mean time? |
28540 | Does he ever quote Clement, De Bure, or Panzer? |
28540 | Does not this recital chill your blood with despair? |
28540 | Does this madness''Grow with our growth, and strengthen with our strength?'' |
28540 | Dr. R(awlinson, qu.?) |
28540 | First, therefore, what is meant by LARGE PAPER COPIES? |
28540 | For heaven''s sake, into what society are we introduced, sister? |
28540 | From what period shall we take up the history of BOOKISM( or, if you please, BIBLIOMANIA) in this country? |
28540 | From what you say, it would appear to be wiser to lay out one''s money at a bookseller''s than at a book- auction? |
28540 | Good news, I trust? |
28540 | Good!--even good-- Robin- hood? |
28540 | Had you not better confine yourself to personal anecdote, rather than enter into the boundless field of historical survey? |
28540 | Has the reader ever seen the same primate''s copy of the_ Aldine Aristophanes_, 1498, in the same place? |
28540 | Have we any other symptom to notice? |
28540 | Have we here no patriotic spirit similar to that which influenced the Francises, Richlieus, Colberts, and Louises of France? |
28540 | Have you many such characters to notice? |
28540 | Have you nothing else, in closing this symptomatic subject, to discourse upon? |
28540 | Have you recovered, Sir, the immense fatigue you must have sustained from the exertions of yesterday? |
28540 | Have you the conscience to ask for more? |
28540 | He afterwards came to himself, and demanded whether or not the king had arrived? |
28540 | He replied,''But, Sir, shall I not now have it with me?'' |
28540 | How can I, therefore, after the fatigues of the whole of yesterday, and with barely seven hours of daylight yet to follow, pretend to enter upon it? |
28540 | How do you feel? |
28540 | How is this? |
28540 | How shall I talk of thee, and of thy wonderful collection, O RARE RICHARD FARMER? |
28540 | How so? |
28540 | I have no doubt that there was a_ presentation_ copy printed UPON VELLUM; but in what cabinet does this precious gem now slumber?] |
28540 | I hear him exclaim--"Where is this treasure now to be found?" |
28540 | I hope you forgive her, Lysander? |
28540 | I suppose, then, that Bagford, Murray, and Hearne, were not unknown to this towering bibliomaniac? |
28540 | I suspect that, like many dashing artists, you are painting for_ effect_? |
28540 | I think HENDERSON''S[397] library was sold about this time? |
28540 | I will make a memorandum to try to secure this"comical"piece, as you call it; but has it never been reprinted in our"_ Corpora Poetarum Anglicorum_?" |
28540 | If I mistake not, I observe the mild and modest countenance of my old acquaintance, HERBERT, in this bibliographical group of heads? |
28540 | If it be said-- why"draw his frailties from their drear abode?" |
28540 | In each of these instances, should we have heard the harsh censures which have been thrown out against it? |
28540 | Is THOMAS RAWLINSON[375] so particularly deserving of commendation, as a bibliomaniac? |
28540 | Is decoration to be confined only to the exterior? |
28540 | Is not my reason good?" |
28540 | Is that so formidable? |
28540 | Is there any other passion, or fancy, in the book- way, from which we may judge of Bibliomaniacism? |
28540 | Is this an episode? |
28540 | Is this digressive? |
28540 | Is''t not so, Lisardo? |
28540 | It is unluckily printed upon wretched paper-- but who rejects the pine- apple from the roughness of its coat? |
28540 | Let_ half_ of another similar course of time roll on, and where will the SURVIVORS be? |
28540 | Look at your old romances, and what is the system of education-- of youthful pursuits-- which they in general inculcate? |
28540 | Mercy on us-- what is this_ Burr_?! |
28540 | Most true; but, in my humble opinion, most ridiculous; for what can a sensible man desire beyond the earliest and best editions of a work? |
28540 | My question, yesterday evening, was-- if I remember well-- whether a_ mere collector_ of books was necessarily a bibliomaniac? |
28540 | No; but I will line my pockets with pistoles, and who dare oppose me? |
28540 | Now a- days, the last article alone would pr duce[ Transcriber''s Note: produce]--shall I say_ nine_ times the sum of the whole? |
28540 | Now let any man, in his sober senses, imagine what must have been the number of volumes contained in the library of the above- named THOMAS RAWLINSON? |
28540 | Now pray, Sir, inform us what is meant by that strange term, UNCUT COPIES? |
28540 | Now, my friends, what have you to say against the_ English_ system of education? |
28540 | Now, tell me who is yonder strange looking gentleman? |
28540 | Of Padaloup, De Rome, and Baumgarten, where is the fine collection that does not boast of a few specimens? |
28540 | Of SIR THOMAS MORE,[296] where is the schoolboy that is ignorant? |
28540 | Of what do you suppose he would have informed us, had he indulged this bibliographical gossipping? |
28540 | On collationnoit ensuite pour vérifier s''il n''y avoit ni transposition, ni omission de feuilles ou de pages?!!'' |
28540 | Or, is not_ that_ the most deserving of commendation which produces the most numerous and pleasing associations of ideas? |
28540 | Or, open the beautiful volumes of the late interesting translation of Monstrelet, and what is almost the very first thing which meets your eye? |
28540 | Passe, with thirty- two Englishes[ qu? |
28540 | Perhaps you will go on with the mention of some distinguished patrons''till you arrive at that period? |
28540 | Perhaps, Three Hundred Guineas? |
28540 | Pray consider what will be the issue of this madness? |
28540 | Pray inform us what are the means of cure in this disorder? |
28540 | Quis enim in tanta multitudine rerum et librorum omnia exhauriret? |
28540 | Quis non alicubi impingeret? |
28540 | Quis putet esse Deos? |
28540 | Quis salvum ab invidia caput retraheret, ac malignitatis dentes in liberiore censura evitaret? |
28540 | Shakspeare, surely, could never have meant to throw such"physic"as this"to the dogs?!" |
28540 | Shew me in what respect the gallant spirit of an ancient knight was hostile to the cultivation of the belles- lettres? |
28540 | Skelton and Roy are in my library;[316] but who is RAMSAY? |
28540 | Speak-- are you about to announce the sale of some bibliographical works? |
28540 | Such a collection, sold at the present day-- when there is such a"_ qui vive_"for the sort of literature which it displays-- what would it produce? |
28540 | Suppose we had found such a treatise in the volumes of Gronovius and Montfaucon? |
28540 | Surely he knew something about books? |
28540 | Tell me-- are bibliographers usually thus eloquent? |
28540 | Tell us, good Lysander, what can you possibly mean by the_ seventh symptom_ of the Bibliomania, called TRUE EDITIONS? |
28540 | The Clementine and Florentine museums? |
28540 | The Spira Virgil of 1470, UPON VELLUM, will alone confer celebrity upon the_ first_ catalogue-- but what shall we say to the_ second_? |
28540 | The leaves"discourse most eloquently"as you turn them over: and what sound, to the ears of a thorough bred bibliomaniac, can be more"musical?"] |
28540 | The reader may, perhaps, wish for this,"coronation dinner?" |
28540 | The science( dare I venture upon so magnificent a word?) |
28540 | The weather will probably be fine, and let us enjoy a morning_ conversazione_ in THE ALCOVE? |
28540 | Then, reading the title- page, he said,''What is this? |
28540 | There is at present no reprint of either; and can I afford to bid ten or twelve guineas for each of them at a public book- sale? |
28540 | They have likewise been made use of by several in part, but how much more complete had this been, had it been finished by himself?" |
28540 | To what? |
28540 | To whom do such gems belong?" |
28540 | Upon condition that you promise not to interrupt me again this evening? |
28540 | Upon what principle,_ a priori_, are we to ridicule and condemn it? |
28540 | Upwards of thirty guineas? |
28540 | Was Captain Sw- n, a Prisoner on Parole, to be catechised? |
28540 | Was Captain Sw----n a Prisoner on Parole, to be catechised? |
28540 | Was Wright''s the only collection disposed of at this period, which was distinguished for its dramatic treasures? |
28540 | Was not this( think you) a good mean to live chaste? |
28540 | Was there ever a more provoking blunder?!] |
28540 | We admit Vitruvius, Inigo Jones, Gibbs, and Chambers, into our libraries: and why not Mr. Hope''s book? |
28540 | We have heard of De Thou and Colbert, but who is GROLLIER? |
28540 | Weary!? |
28540 | What are become of Malvolio''s busts and statues, of which you were so solicitous to attend the sale, not long ago? |
28540 | What are become of our bibliomaniacal heroes? |
28540 | What can there possibly be in a large paper copy of a_ Catalogue of Books_ which merits the appellation of"nobleness"and"richness?" |
28540 | What can you say in defence of your times of beloved chivalry? |
28540 | What countenances are those which beam with so much quiet, but interesting, expression? |
28540 | What defects do you discover here, Lysander? |
28540 | What does the reader think of 2000 chickens, 4000 pigeons, 4000 coneys, 500"and mo,"stags, bucks, and roes, with 4000"pasties of venison colde?" |
28540 | What gracious figures are those which approach to salute us? |
28540 | What has become of Wyatt and Surrey-- and when shall we reach Leland and Bale? |
28540 | What has become of the said Dr. Kenrick now? |
28540 | What have we here? |
28540 | What have we to do more with him than with the great Calypha of Damascus? |
28540 | What is his name? |
28540 | What is the meaning of this odd symptom? |
28540 | What other ills have you to enumerate, which assail the region of literature?" |
28540 | What say you? |
28540 | What should I do with such books? |
28540 | What should I rehearse here, what a bunch of BALLADS AND SONGS, all ancient? |
28540 | What should he do? |
28540 | What should now be done? |
28540 | What think you of such a ridiculous passion in the book- way? |
28540 | What was to be expected, but that boys, thus educated, would hereafter fall victims to the BIBLIOMANIA?] |
28540 | What would we not give for an authenticated representation of Dean Colet in his library,[295] surrounded with books? |
28540 | When and how do you propose going? |
28540 | When does my Lord Brougham_ really_ mean to reform the law? |
28540 | Where are we digressing? |
28540 | Where sleep now the relics of DYSON''S Library, which supplied that_ Helluo Librorum_, Richard Smith, with"most of his rarities? |
28540 | Which is the next symptom that you have written down for me to discourse upon? |
28540 | Which of these is indicative of the_ true_ edition? |
28540 | Who is that gentleman, standing towards the right of the auctioneer, and looking so intently upon his catalogue? |
28540 | Who is the next bibliomaniac deserving of particular commendation? |
28540 | Who is this Marcus? |
28540 | Who shall hence doubt of the propriety of classing Ascham among the most renowned bibliomaniacs of the age?] |
28540 | Who that has seen how frequently his name is affixed to Dedications, can disbelieve that Cecil was a LOVER OF BOOKS? |
28540 | Who will accompany me? |
28540 | Why does such indifference to the cause of general learning exist-- and in the 19th century too? |
28540 | Why have I delayed, to the present moment, the mention of that illustrious bibliomaniac, EARL PEMBROKE? |
28540 | Why this abrupt interruption? |
28540 | Will not such volcanic fury burn out in time? |
28540 | Will the same friend display equal fickleness in regard to THIS volume? |
28540 | Will this word"re- animate his clay?" |
28540 | With what? |
28540 | Yet further intelligence?" |
28540 | Yet what could justify the cruelty of dragging this piece of private absurdity before the public tribunal, on the death of its author? |
28540 | Yet what has he not_ produced_ since that representation of his person? |
28540 | Yet, who was surrounded by a larger troop of friends than the Individual who raised the Monument? |
28540 | You allude to a late sale in Pall Mall, of one of the choicest and most elegant libraries ever collected by a man of letters and taste? |
28540 | You allude to the STRAWBERRY HILL Press? |
28540 | You are averse then to the study of bibliography? |
28540 | You are full of book anecdote of Elizabeth: but do you forget her schoolmaster, ROGER ASCHAM? |
28540 | You did not probably bid ten guineas for it, Lisardo? |
28540 | You do n''t mean to sport_ hereditary_ aversions, or hereditary attachments? |
28540 | You have all talked loudly and learnedly of the BOOK- DISEASE; but I wish to know whether a_ mere collector_ of books be a bibliomaniac? |
28540 | You have called the reign of Henry the Seventh the AUGUSTAN- BOOK- AGE; but, surely, this distinction is rather due to the æra of Queen Elizabeth? |
28540 | You observe, my friends, said I, softly, yonder active and keen- visaged gentleman? |
28540 | You remember what Cowper says-- God made the country, and Man made the town? |
28540 | You wished for these books, to_ set fire_ to them perhaps-- keeping up the ancient custom so solemnly established by your father? |
28540 | ]: from which will he obtain the clearer notions? |
28540 | _ Where_ will you look for such books? |
28540 | a place upon his shelf? |
28540 | and Elizabeth, paid in proportion for the volumes of_ their_ Libraries? |
28540 | and if so, has Mr. Hope illustrated it properly? |
28540 | and set them to sale:''Magno conatu nihil agimus,''& c.''Quis tam avidus librorum helluo,''who can read them? |
28540 | and, if so, are works, which treat of these only, to be read and applauded? |
28540 | by one John Southern? |
28540 | goods? |
28540 | l.? |
28540 | of the editor''s taste, than the ensuing representation of a pilgrim Hawker? |
28540 | or suppose something similar to Mr. Hope''s work had been found among the ruins of Herculaneum? |
28540 | said the king,''is it possible we shall behold yet more rarities?'' |
28540 | what they sold for? |
28540 | when will such gems again glitter at one sale? |
28540 | which you have in your possession?'' |
28540 | which, collectively, did not produce 35_l._--but which now, would have been sold for----!? |
28294 | And it carried off the eggs too, I suppose? |
28294 | Are you aware of anything he ever did? |
28294 | Art thou, too, fallen, Iberia? 28294 But,"I rejoined,"have you no idea of their number?" |
28294 | Can you tell me,I asked,"who made the world?" |
28294 | Did you ever,whispered my Russian friend,"see such a people?" |
28294 | Do other boys and girls, your acquaintances, go to confession? |
28294 | Do you go to church? |
28294 | Do you go to confession? |
28294 | Do you take the sacrament? |
28294 | Do_ you_ not believe in them? |
28294 | Does the priest ask you about anything else? |
28294 | For what? |
28294 | Has it wrought any of late? |
28294 | Have you any coffee? |
28294 | Have you beef?--Have you cheese?--Have you macaroni? |
28294 | Have you ever heard of Christ? |
28294 | Have you,said the official,"any more?" |
28294 | How are we,abruptly asked the preacher,"to become the sons of God?" |
28294 | How can you avoid confessing? |
28294 | If you confess it a second time, what happens? |
28294 | In what quarter of Rome did she live? |
28294 | Is this Italy? |
28294 | Then, why do n''t you? |
28294 | Was Christ ever on earth? |
28294 | Was Mary ever on earth? |
28294 | Was there,asked Mr Whiteside of a sculptor in Rome,"really affecting yourself, any practical oppression under old Gregory?" |
28294 | Well, when you go to confess, what does the priest ask you? |
28294 | What did she do when here? |
28294 | What does he ask you about them? |
28294 | What does she say? |
28294 | What is that to me? |
28294 | What is the matter? |
28294 | What o''clock is it? |
28294 | What of the night? |
28294 | What shall I have for doing so? |
28294 | When will it be ready for the transport of the cannon? |
28294 | When you confess that you have done a bad action, what then? |
28294 | Where are its temples, its palaces, its vineyards? |
28294 | Where is Christ? |
28294 | Where is she? |
28294 | Where,you exclaim,"are its highways?" |
28294 | Who is he? 28294 Who is she?" |
28294 | Whose Son is he? |
28294 | Again we ask, why is this? |
28294 | Again we say, Where are your subjects, Pio Nono? |
28294 | An hundred thousand? |
28294 | And after this, what can he look for among the ordinary worshippers? |
28294 | And even when he honestly wishes to serve him, what can he do? |
28294 | And how can it be otherwise, when the Church, for reasons best known to itself, denies the people the use of the indispensable instruments? |
28294 | And how can it be otherwise? |
28294 | And how happens it, too, that the Pope is infallible in only one science,--even the theological? |
28294 | And how was this temple built? |
28294 | And to what? |
28294 | And was time to close upon a world shrouded in darkness, with nought but this feeble beacon burning amid the Alps? |
28294 | And what becomes of the families of these unhappy men? |
28294 | And what did they depose? |
28294 | And what is canon law? |
28294 | And what is that work? |
28294 | And what is the aspect of the country? |
28294 | And what the appearance and apparent profession of these men? |
28294 | And what will our country then become? |
28294 | And who are they who tenant these places? |
28294 | And who is he? |
28294 | And why is it so? |
28294 | And why were they brought out of their house of bondage? |
28294 | And why were they there? |
28294 | And why, even to this hour, has it not told us all, but reserved some very important questions for future decision, or revelation rather? |
28294 | And why? |
28294 | And why? |
28294 | As the night grew late, the inquiries became more frequent,"Are we not yet at Rome?" |
28294 | Before decreeing worship to one, would it not be better to let his contemporaries pass from the stage of time? |
28294 | Beneath the dark shadow of the Vatican do they ever think of the sunny and vine- clad hills of their Palestine? |
28294 | But farther, what is the principle of the mass? |
28294 | But how comes this? |
28294 | But how shall I describe or group the horrors that have darkened and desolated the Papal States from that hour to this? |
28294 | But how stands the fact? |
28294 | But of what subjects do these catechisms treat? |
28294 | But should we fall from that happy state, how are we to recover it? |
28294 | But this solitary pillar, which stands erect where so many temples have fallen, with what message is it freighted? |
28294 | But what could they do? |
28294 | But what is the fact? |
28294 | But what sort of farming are we to expect from such corporations as we find in the city of Rome? |
28294 | But where are you to look for justice,--justice in its unmixed, eternal purity,--if not at Rome? |
28294 | But where is the Rome of the Cæsars, that great, imperial, and invincible city, that during thirteen centuries ruled the world? |
28294 | But where was the key that could open that breast, and read the secrets locked up in it? |
28294 | But who is to make them? |
28294 | But why is this? |
28294 | But, pray tell me, why do you permit the cardinals or the Pope ever to die, when the Bambino can cure them?" |
28294 | By the way, why should the profession of astrology and the cognate arts be permitted to only one class of men? |
28294 | Can Infallibility not walk alone, that it uses crutches? |
28294 | Can an infallible man not know truth from error till first he has collected the votes of fallible bishops? |
28294 | Can any sane man doubt that paganism once reigned here? |
28294 | Can he enclose within a little silver box that Almighty One whom the heaven, even the heaven of heavens, can not contain? |
28294 | Can the spirit, I asked myself, ever forget its earthly struggles, or the scene on which they were endured? |
28294 | Can you tell me anything about him?" |
28294 | Condemned to what? |
28294 | Could I, when far away,--in the seclusion of my own library, for instance,--bid the Alps rise before me, in stupendous magnificence, as now? |
28294 | Dare not till the earth God has given you?" |
28294 | Did he hasten to the prison, and beg his prisoner to come forth? |
28294 | Did it not come out of the foul box of Tetzel the indulgence- monger? |
28294 | Did no monk ever think of putting a stained window in the east, and compelling the sun to ogle the world through spectacles? |
28294 | Did not the Marshal Nouilles order a war against bankers? |
28294 | Did not the law of the suspected compel Protestants to nourish soldiers in their houses, as a punishment for refusing to go to mass? |
28294 | Did the ages seem long to him, or was it but as a few days since he left the earth? |
28294 | Did the heart of Gregory relent? |
28294 | Did you don the mail- coat of the warrior, or the white robe of the priest? |
28294 | Did you ever, reader, set foot in a_ diligence_? |
28294 | Do they not still love us? |
28294 | Do they not still think of us? |
28294 | Do we see The robber and the murderer weak as we? |
28294 | During all this time, what way has been made by the Catholic nations? |
28294 | Had he been shot, or what had happened? |
28294 | Had he not often climbed this Capitol? |
28294 | Had not his feet pressed, times without number, this lava- paved road through the Forum? |
28294 | Has he marked that tall thin man who has just passed him,"Walking in beauty like the night?" |
28294 | Has he political papers?" |
28294 | Has its natural canal, the Po, dried up? |
28294 | Has the Creator set limits to the life of kingdoms, as to that of man? |
28294 | Have we considered the infinite degradation of defeat? |
28294 | Have we forgotten the famous declaration of Wiseman, that his grand end in the papal aggression was to introduce canon law? |
28294 | Her great Founder demanded that she should be tried by her fruits; and why should Rome be unwilling to submit to this test? |
28294 | How came these tombstones there, if early Christianity and the early martyrs be a fable? |
28294 | How can a worship in which no one ever joins edify any one? |
28294 | How can it be otherwise? |
28294 | How do they conduct that process at Rome? |
28294 | How is this? |
28294 | How many iron- workmen are there in the Papal States? |
28294 | How much is that? |
28294 | How was I to carry in my pocket such a cage of imps? |
28294 | How was I to sleep at night in their company? |
28294 | How, then, can He be regarded with confidence or love? |
28294 | I looked at the little man in the box, to see how he was taking it; but he was true to his own remark,"What is that to me?" |
28294 | I might have puzzled the boy by asking,"But who made the masons?" |
28294 | I passed three Sabbaths in Rome; I worshipped each Sabbath in the English Protestant chapel; and what did I see at the door of that chapel? |
28294 | I walked under it,--walked round it,--viewed it on all sides; but why should I describe what the engraver''s art has made so familiar all over Europe? |
28294 | I wondered whether that coast had looked as unkindly to Æneas, when first he cast anchor on it after long ploughing the deep? |
28294 | If so, what mean these dungeons? |
28294 | If the Pope believes in his own relics, what conceptions must he have of Peter? |
28294 | If there was no purgatory, how could the painters of an infallible Church ever have given so exact a representation of it? |
28294 | Is Christ''s Vicar a model to all governors? |
28294 | Is he not a priest, and is not Rome his own? |
28294 | Is he not the same man? |
28294 | Is it for the past you mourn?" |
28294 | Is it its noble monuments,--its fine palaces,--its august temples? |
28294 | Is it not strange, then, to confine with bolt and bar beings who intend anything but escape? |
28294 | Is it not that Christ is again offered in sacrifice, and that the pain he endures in being so propitiates God in your behalf? |
28294 | Is it so? |
28294 | Is it the Jesuits? |
28294 | Is it the Pope? |
28294 | Is it the cardinals? |
28294 | Is it when the decree has been voted by the Council that it becomes infallible? |
28294 | Is its soil less fertile? |
28294 | Is not the Papal Government manifestly sacrificing its own interests? |
28294 | Is not, then, the area of Europe that is covered with masses"_ the place where our Lord was crucified_?" |
28294 | Is that the account which we have of his ministry? |
28294 | Is there, then, no immortality in reserve for nations? |
28294 | Is this the man that did make the earth to tremble,--that did shake kingdoms,--that made the world as a wilderness, and destroyed the cities thereof?" |
28294 | Is this the"three- score- and- ten"of nations, beyond which they can not pass? |
28294 | Let any minister or missionary attempt to do so now, and what would be his fate? |
28294 | May not the same principle be applicable, in some extent, to our passage from earth into the world beyond? |
28294 | Must they continue to die? |
28294 | Nay, what is a nation''s duration, when weighed against thine? |
28294 | Now, why is this? |
28294 | Once was he chased from Rome; and now that he is returned, can he call Rome his own? |
28294 | One can hardly see it without asking,"What ails thee? |
28294 | One thousand? |
28294 | Or do ye descry from afar the coming of a better era? |
28294 | Or had the Church completed her triumphs, and finished her course? |
28294 | Or is it when it is confirmed by the Pope that it becomes infallible? |
28294 | Repents, does she? |
28294 | Shall God, indeed, the fowls and manna strew,-- My daily bread? |
28294 | She has grown pitiful, and tender hearted, has she? |
28294 | Should they take it into their head to creep out of my book, and buzz round my bed, would it not give me unpleasant dreams? |
28294 | Take the same Rome six months after his return, and how many do you find in it? |
28294 | Taking advantage of the greater timidity of the female mind, it has become a leading question with the confessor,"Does your husband read the Bible? |
28294 | The Church will stand, doubtless, because they tell us she is founded on a rock; but what will become of the State? |
28294 | The French Prefect, Mr Whiteside tells us, published a statistical account of Rome; and how many paupers does he say there are in it? |
28294 | The beads have been counted, and an Ave Maria said with each; and what more does the Church require? |
28294 | The case being so, where, I ask, are you entitled to look for justice, if not at Rome? |
28294 | The first floor is occupied as a granary; the second floor is occupied as a granary; the third floor,--how is it occupied,--the attic story? |
28294 | The first question that arises is, in what light do the priests in Italy regard their own system? |
28294 | Then, why should affluence, and the other accessories of power, have so uniformly a corrupting and dissolving effect upon society? |
28294 | To what region has she gone where barbarism and vice have not disappeared? |
28294 | To whom did she make her appeal? |
28294 | Violators of the law,--brigands, murderers? |
28294 | Was it then a reality, and not a dream? |
28294 | Was not the law of requisition for the public roads practised to prepare the roads for Queen Marie Leczinska? |
28294 | Was not the law of the maximum, which regulated prices, practised by the regency? |
28294 | Was the Argus of the Vatican asleep when this wolf broke into the fold? |
28294 | Were its cities filled with looms and forges, would not its people have more money to spend on masses and absolutions? |
28294 | Were my reader living in London or in Edinburgh, and wished to visit Chelsea or Portobello, how would he proceed? |
28294 | Were not the commissions called revolutionary tribunals first used against the Protestants? |
28294 | Were not the fusilades first used at the bidding of the priests to crush heresy? |
28294 | Were not the houses burned down of those who frequented Protestant preaching? |
28294 | Were not the properties of the Protestant emigrants confiscated? |
28294 | Were the priests afraid that, if withdrawn for a moment from the influence of their eye, a wail of woe would burst forth from these poor creatures? |
28294 | What are embattled cities and aisled cathedrals to the eternal hills, with their thunder- clouds, and their rising and setting suns? |
28294 | What can they do but beg? |
28294 | What do you see throughout the successive ages? |
28294 | What do you see? |
28294 | What enterprise or interest have a sisterhood of nuns to farm their property? |
28294 | What gulf divides them? |
28294 | What had he seen and felt these four thousand years? |
28294 | What has become of them? |
28294 | What is it that strikes you on first entering the"Holy City?" |
28294 | What is it which has produced this universal slavery? |
28294 | What is it, I repeat, that holds the whole body in subjection, from the Pope down to the friar? |
28294 | What is the Government of the Papal States, but just the Government of the Inquisition? |
28294 | What is to be done with the carcase? |
28294 | What matters it that the Adriatic is no longer the highway of the world''s merchandise, and that India is now closed to Venice? |
28294 | What matters it that, in rooting out British Protestantism, she should shed oceans of blood, and sound the death- knell of a whole nation? |
28294 | What skill or capital have a brotherhood of lazy monks, to enable them to cultivate their lands? |
28294 | What stronger condemnation of their system could they pronounce? |
28294 | What though the Pope reigns over a wasted land and a nation of beggars? |
28294 | What was I to do? |
28294 | What would our country be without its iron,--without its railroads, its steam- ships, its steam- looms, its cutlery, its domestic utensils? |
28294 | When Christianity entered Rome in the person of the Apostle Paul, did the tyrant of the Palatine strike her dumb? |
28294 | When Pio Nono fled from Rome to Gaeta, what was the amount of its population? |
28294 | When did Christ build dungeons, or gather_ sbirri_ about him, or send men to the galleys and the scaffold? |
28294 | When did they come into being, and of what stock are they sprung? |
28294 | When men can be awed neither by painted fiends nor real cannon, what is to awe them? |
28294 | Where are your subjects, Pio Nono? |
28294 | Where have they gone to? |
28294 | Whether, said I to myself, does Italy owe most to its rivers or to its Governments? |
28294 | Who can tell how much the firmness and perseverance of the more prominent actors in these struggles were owing to her wise and affectionate counsels? |
28294 | Who converted Italy into a barbarian and a slave? |
28294 | Who has not heard of the Pra de la Torre, in the valley of Angrona? |
28294 | Who is he, and what does he there? |
28294 | Who kindled that solitary lamp? |
28294 | Who through the deep, and o''er the desert plain Will aid and cheer me, and the path will show? |
28294 | Who, what, and where is he? |
28294 | Why did it not give that creed to the Church in the first century which it kept back till the sixteenth? |
28294 | Why did it permit so many men, in all preceding ages, to live in ignorance of so many things in which it could so easily have enlightened them? |
28294 | Why did it permit so many questions to be debated, which it could so easily have settled? |
28294 | Why did the Papists divide_ territorially_ the country? |
28294 | Why did they assume_ territorial_ titles? |
28294 | Why do ye not, ye glorious mountains, put on sackcloth, and mourn with the mourning nations beneath you? |
28294 | Why does it deal out truth piecemeal,--one dogma in this century, another in the next, and so on? |
28294 | Why does it not tell us all at once? |
28294 | Why erect new houses, when those already built will last their time and the world''s? |
28294 | Why is it that all persons and systems in this world of ours must die in order to enter into life? |
28294 | Why is it that all the functions of nature are beneficent? |
28294 | Why is this? |
28294 | Why is this? |
28294 | Why make provision for posterity, when there is to be none? |
28294 | Why preach liberty to men in chains? |
28294 | Why should Infallibility seek help, which it can not in the nature of things need? |
28294 | Why should the Pope need assessors and advisers? |
28294 | Why should they incur the toil of labouring or thinking in a world that is soon to pass away, and which is as good as ended already? |
28294 | Why these trials shrouded in secrecy? |
28294 | Why this clanking of chains, and that cry which has gone up to heaven, and which pleads for justice there? |
28294 | Why, then, is iron not imported into that country? |
28294 | Why, then, was it not till the sixteenth century that Infallibility gave anything like a fixed and complete creed to the Church? |
28294 | Why? |
28294 | Will any Romanist kindly explain this to us? |
28294 | Will his ride convert him into a heretic, or shake his faith in Peter''s successor? |
28294 | Will no kind hand draw the veil aside but for a moment? |
28294 | Will she now adopt half measures? |
28294 | Will she now falter and draw back,--she that never before feared enemy or spared foe? |
28294 | Will the reader accompany me to another and very different scene? |
28294 | Will the reader go back with me to the point where we began our excursion through Rome,--the Flaminian Gate? |
28294 | Will you permit it? |
28294 | Will you tamely sit still till it has put its foot on your neck, and its fetter on your arm? |
28294 | With such evidence before him as Italy furnishes, can any man doubt what the consequence would be of admitting this system into Britain? |
28294 | Would Christianity ever re- appear? |
28294 | Would any one have been at the pains to have done all this, or could he have done it without being detected? |
28294 | Would it not be better for itself were Italy covered with a prosperous agriculture and a flourishing trade? |
28294 | Would not Sodom have been spared had ten righteous men been found in it? |
28294 | Would they softly speak to us if they could? |
28294 | Yet why blame these poor people? |
28294 | You ask, why do these men remain in a Church which they see to be apostate? |
28294 | and dare I to implore Thy pillar and thy cloud to guide me, Lord? |
28294 | and is it not, to say the least, a needless waste of iron, in a country where iron is so very scarce and so very dear? |
28294 | and is the glory that mantles your summits the kindling of an inward joy at the prospect of coming freedom? |
28294 | and is the region over which he bears sway renowned throughout the earth as the most virtuous, the most happy, and the most prosperous region in it? |
28294 | and may not the very same picture of beauty and grandeur now before my eye be imprinted eternally on the memory of many of the blessed in Heaven? |
28294 | and what the fate of any Roman who might dare to visit him? |
28294 | and why do they so pertinaciously cling to these titles? |
28294 | and why not Piedmont, seeing the Waldensian Church was there? |
28294 | can a priest at any hour he pleases give existence to Him who exists from eternity? |
28294 | if such were Lombardy, what meant the Croat beside me, and the black eagle blazoned on the flag, that I saw floating on the Castle of Milan? |
28294 | in darkness, and in the bowels of the earth? |
28294 | might not the same response as of old be made to this disclaimer,"The voice of thy brother''s blood crieth unto me from the ground?" |
28294 | or do they regard it as indeed founded in truth, and clothed with the sanction of heaven? |
28294 | thought I, if this majestic image has so faded in the interval of a few moments, what will it be years after? |
28294 | what glory is this which begins to burn upon the crest of the snowy Alps? |
28294 | who will break my servile chain? |
28294 | worshipping, are they?" |
8120 | What is it that distresses thee, little sinner? 8120 10:Si bona suscepimus de manu Dei, mala quare non suscipiamus?" |
8120 | 17:"Numquid homo Dei comparatione justificabitur?" |
8120 | 20:"Dæmonium habet et insanit: quid Eum auditis?" |
8120 | 22:"Potestis bibere calicem?" |
8120 | 24:"Quis me liberabit de corpore mortis hujus?" |
8120 | 4:"Ubi est Deus tuus?" |
8120 | 7. Who can look upon our Lord, covered with wounds, and bowed down under persecutions, without accepting, loving, and longing for them? |
8120 | 7:"Quis dabit mihi pennas sicut columbæ?" |
8120 | All my service of God there was lip- service: why did I, having the opportunity of living in greater perfection, neglect it? |
8120 | All used to say, If she does not sin against God, and acknowledges her own misery, what has she to be afraid of? |
8120 | Am I not thy God? |
8120 | Among them were these, while showing how He loved me:"I give thee My Son, and the Holy Ghost, and the Virgin: what canst thou give Me?" |
8120 | And if the more we serve Him, the more we become His debtors, what is it, then, we are asking for? |
8120 | And what greater gain can we have than some testimony of our having pleased God? |
8120 | Are we striving after union with God? |
8120 | But do we suppose that God is better pleased when men account us wise and discreet persons? |
8120 | But how could my spirit be quiet? |
8120 | But how is it that they are not many who, in consequence of these sermons, abstain from public sins? |
8120 | But so great a blessing, what harm can it do? |
8120 | But what will be its sufferings when it returns to the use of the senses, to live in the world, and go back to the anxieties and the fashions thereof? |
8120 | Can the Father be without the Son and without the Holy Ghost? |
8120 | Can we be thus bold with the kings of this world? |
8120 | Comparisons are always bad, even in earthly things; what, then, must they be in that, the knowledge of which God has reserved to Himself? |
8120 | Could the Son create an ant without the Father? |
8120 | Do we not know that he can not stir without the permission of God? |
8120 | Do you, my father, know wherein much of this fire consists? |
8120 | Dost Thou not remember that this my soul has been an abyss of lies and a sea of vanities, and all my fault? |
8120 | Dost thou not see how ill I am treated here? |
8120 | For how can we, by any efforts of ours, picture to ourselves the Humanity of Christ, and imagine His great beauty? |
8120 | For how shall he be useful, and how shall he spend liberally, who does not know that he is rich? |
8120 | For if our Lord has been thus gracious to so-- miserable a thing as myself, what will He be to those who shall serve Him truly? |
8120 | For the rest, it is enough that I am a woman to make my sails droop: how much more, then, when I am a woman, and a wicked one? |
8120 | For what is he worth, O my Lord, who does not utterly abase himself to nothing for Thee? |
8120 | He confessed his other sins but of this one he used to say, How can I confess so foul a sin? |
8120 | He said to me,"Why are you astonished at it? |
8120 | He then said:"How did you know that it was Christ?" |
8120 | He would ask me whether I told him the truth so far as I knew it; or, if not, had I intended to deceive him? |
8120 | How can I open my mouth, that has uttered so many words against Him, to receive that most glorious Body, purity and compassion itself? |
8120 | How can I show My love for thee better than by desiring for thee what I desired for Myself? |
8120 | How can that love Thou hast for me endure this? |
8120 | How could I possibly take any pleasure in those things which led me directly to so dreadful a place? |
8120 | How is it that the understanding has time enough to arrange these locutions? |
8120 | How is it, I ask again, that the same Lord brings it to the perfection of virtue only in the course of time? |
8120 | How is this consistent with Thy compassion? |
8120 | How is this, O my God? |
8120 | How much more, then, the thinking of heavenly things? |
8120 | How, then, is it that we see the Three Persons distinct? |
8120 | I have spoken amiss; I ought to have said, and my complaint should have been, why is it we do not? |
8120 | I was once thinking whether I was to be sent to reform a certain monastery;[ 9] and, distressed at it, I heard:"What art thou afraid of? |
8120 | If His Majesty repays us so abundantly, that even in this life the reward and gain of those who serve Him become visible, what will it be in the next? |
8120 | If thou lovest Me, why art thou not sorry for Me? |
8120 | If, then, the soul should be wholly engulfed, what then? |
8120 | In the extremity of my trouble, our Lord said to me:"Knowest thou not that I am the Almighty? |
8120 | Is it anything of worth, and anything lasting? |
8120 | Is it possible to love the Father without loving the Son and the Holy Ghost? |
8120 | Is it possible, O my Lord, that I could have had the thought, if only for an hour, that Thou couldst be a hindrance to my greatest good? |
8120 | Is it true that in religious houses no explanations are necessary, for it is only reasonable we should be excused these observances? |
8120 | Is there any way at all for me to go on which is not a going back? |
8120 | It is abiding alone with Him: what has it to do but to love Him? |
8120 | It may be that I knew Thee not when I sinned against Thee; but how could I, having once known Thee, ever think I should gain more in this way? |
8120 | It remembers the words:"Who shall be just in Thy presence?" |
8120 | It was enough for me to recite the Office, as all others did; but as I did not that much well, how could I desire to do more? |
8120 | Knowest thou what it is to love Me in truth? |
8120 | Look at Me, poor and despised of men: are the great people of the world likely to be great in My eyes? |
8120 | Many other things I should like to say of him, if I were not afraid, my father, that you will say, Why does she meddle here? |
8120 | O my God, was there ever blindness so great as this? |
8120 | O my God, what must that soul be when it is in this state? |
8120 | O my God, why is their soul still on the earth? |
8120 | On other occasions, the soul seems to be, as it were, in the utmost extremity of need, asking itself, and saying,"Where is Thy God?" |
8120 | Once, when I was much distressed at this, our Lord said to me, What was I afraid of? |
8120 | One vision alone of Him is enough to effect this; what, then, must all those visions have done, which our Lord in His mercy sent me? |
8120 | Our Lord said this to me one day:"Thinkest thou, My daughter, that meriting lies in fruition? |
8120 | Seest thou all her penance? |
8120 | Shall we not at least weep with the daughters of Jerusalem,[ 12] if we do not help to carry his cross with the Cyrenean? |
8120 | Then, if each one is by Himself, how can we say that the Three are one Essence, and so believe? |
8120 | They asked, how could I, who had not kept the rule in that house, think of keeping it in another of stricter observance? |
8120 | Those which our Lord gives, what are they? |
8120 | Thou seekest to have the counsels of men in writing; why, then, thinkest thou that thou art wasting time in writing down those I give thee? |
8120 | To what torments could she be then exposed, that would not be delicious to endure for her Lord? |
8120 | Was there ever blindness so great as mine? |
8120 | What can it mean, O my Lord? |
8120 | What does it mean? |
8120 | What does it mean? |
8120 | What have I been thinking of? |
8120 | What is there that is procurable by this money which we desire? |
8120 | What keeps him back who does so much for God? |
8120 | What must St. Paul and the Magdalene, and others like them, have suffered, in whom the fire of the love of God has grown so strong? |
8120 | What should I have done without these persons? |
8120 | What should have been my thoughts, then, on those two occasions when I saw what I have described? |
8120 | What should we be without them in the midst of these violent storms which now disturb the Church? |
8120 | What think you must be the power of His Majesty, seeing that in so short a time it leaves so great a blessing and such an impression on the soul? |
8120 | What use is there in governing oneself by oneself, when the whole will has been given up to God? |
8120 | What was I, then, afraid of? |
8120 | What will they do who are only just born, and who may live many years? |
8120 | What, then, must it be to see a soul in danger of pain, the most grievous of all pains, for ever? |
8120 | What, then, must it be when I hear so many? |
8120 | What, then, once more, will the gardener do now? |
8120 | When I was in this distress, and afflicted by many occasions of disquiet wherein I was placed, our Lord spoke to me, saying:"What art thou afraid of? |
8120 | Whence are all my blessings? |
8120 | Where could I think I should find help but in Thee? |
8120 | Where was I? |
8120 | Which is better, poverty or charity? |
8120 | Who can endure it? |
8120 | Who can hinder this, seeing that it could be fashioned by the understanding? |
8120 | Who is there, O Lord of my soul, that is not amazed at compassion so great and mercy so surpassing, after treason so foul and so hateful? |
8120 | Why do we seek blessings and joys so great, bliss without end, and all at the cost of our good Jesus? |
8120 | Why has it not arrived at the summit of perfection? |
8120 | Why have I not strength enough to fight against all hell? |
8120 | Why should I not believe them? |
8120 | Why should it not rather proceed to other matters which our Lord places before it, and for neglecting which there is no reason? |
8120 | Why, then, did I fail in courage to serve One to whom I owed so much? |
8120 | Why, then, do we desire it? |
8120 | Why, then, give graces so high to souls who have been such great sinners? |
8120 | You, my father, will ask me: How comes it, then, that a rapture occasionally lasts so many hours? |
8120 | [ 13] Is it by pleasure and idle amusements that we can attain to the fruition of what He purchased with so much blood? |
8120 | [ 15] So I said to myself: Who is He, that all my faculties should thus obey Him? |
8120 | [ 19] What do we think we can do? |
8120 | [ 4] But what must that of the Virgin have been? |
8120 | [ 7] He filled me with such thoughts as these: How could I make my prayer, who was so wicked, and yet had received so many mercies? |
8120 | [ 7] O my Lord, what does it mean? |
8120 | ah, if Thou didst not throw a veil over Thy greatness, who would dare, being so foul and miserable, to come in contact with Thy great Majesty? |
8120 | and how is it that the Son, not the Father, nor the Holy Ghost, took human flesh? |
8120 | are they not from Thee? |
8120 | aut quo operiemur?" |
8120 | how can it be that mercies and graces so great should fall to the lot of one who has so ill deserved them at Thy hands? |
8120 | how shall I be able to magnify the graces which Thou, in those years, didst bestow upon me? |
8120 | knowest thou not that I am almighty? |
8120 | or is it descent or virtue that is to make you esteemed?" |
8120 | what am I afraid of? |
8120 | what art thou afraid of?" |
8120 | what has the servant to do with her Lord, and earth with heaven? |
8120 | what is it? |
8120 | who can describe Thy Majesty? |
40967 | Art thou a King then? |
40967 | Art thou the King of the Jews? |
40967 | Jesus answered him, Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me? 40967 Pilate answered, Am I a Jew? |
40967 | Was it Celestine, Diocletian, or Esau? 40967 What accusation bring ye against this man?" |
40967 | What is truth? |
40967 | [ 104] Maddened by the relentless importunity of the mob, Pilate replied scornfully and mockingly:Shall I crucify your king?" |
40967 | [ 48] But why a crime? 40967 [ 99]"Barabbas, or Jesus which is called the Christ?" |
40967 | ''Is there any likelihood,''say they,''that Pilate should write such things to Tiberius concerning a man whom he had condemned to death? |
40967 | A. Adeone me delirare censes, ut ista esse credam? |
40967 | AUDITOR: Do you think I''m such a fool as to give credence to such things? |
40967 | AUDITOR: Why? |
40967 | Addressing Jesus, Pilate said:"Knowest thou not that I have power to crucify thee and have power to release thee? |
40967 | Addressing the prisoner, Pilate asked:"Art thou the King of the Jews?" |
40967 | Admitting that Jesus acknowledged the jurisdiction of Herod, was He compelled to answer irrelevant and impertinent questions? |
40967 | Admitting that this is true, is anything proved by the fact? |
40967 | Again, what Roman law was applicable to the charges made against Jesus to Pilate? |
40967 | Again, what charges were brought against Jesus at the hearing before Pilate? |
40967 | Alexander, Cæsar, Charlemagne, and myself founded great empires; but upon what did the creations of our genius depend? |
40967 | And Annas and Caiaphas said: Why are you so much moved? |
40967 | And Dysmas answering reproved him, saying: Dost thou not fear God, because thou art in the same condemnation? |
40967 | And I said to him, Who art thou, my lord? |
40967 | And Joseph said: Why have you called me? |
40967 | And Nicodemus says to them: How have you come into the synagogue? |
40967 | And Pilate says to the Jews: Do you not wonder how the tops of the standards were bent down and adored Jesus? |
40967 | And Pilate says to them: For what reason do they wish to put him to death? |
40967 | And Pilate sent for the Jews and said to them: Have you seen what has happened? |
40967 | And Pilate went again into the Pretorium and spoke to Jesus privately, and said to him: Art thou the king of the Jews? |
40967 | And Pilate, calling Annas and Caiaphas, says to them: What are proselytes? |
40967 | And Pilate, having called the runner, says to him: Why hast thou done this, and spread out thy cloak upon the earth and made Jesus walk upon it? |
40967 | And Pilate, having called them, says: Tell me how I, being a procurator, can try a king? |
40967 | And Pilate, having summoned Jesus, says to him: What do these witness against thee? |
40967 | And are we to imagine that they referred with such emphasis as they employed to the mere creations of their fancy? |
40967 | And first they call Adas and say to him: How didst thou see Jesus taken up? |
40967 | And if he had proposed it, who can make a doubt that the senate would not have immediately complied? |
40967 | And likewise Joseph also stepped out and said to them: Why are you angry against me because I begged the body of Jesus? |
40967 | And on the Sabbath our teachers and the priests and Levites sat questioning each other and saying: What is this wrath that has come upon us? |
40967 | And the Jews answering, say unto Pilate: Did we not tell thee that he was a sorcerer? |
40967 | And the Jews, noticing this and hearing it, say to Pilate: What more wilt thou hear of this blasphemy? |
40967 | And the Jews, seeing what the runner had done, cried out against Pilate, saying: Why hast thou ordered him to come in by a runner, and not by a crier? |
40967 | And the children of the prophets met him and said, O Elissæus, where is thy master Helias? |
40967 | And the elders of the Jews answered, and said to Jesus: What shall we see? |
40967 | And the procurator ordered the Jews to go outside of the Pretorium; and, summoning Jesus, he says to him: What shall I do to thee? |
40967 | And the procurator trembled, and said to all the multitude of the Jews: Why do you wish to pour out innocent blood? |
40967 | And the procurator, having called the standard bearers, says to them: Why have you done this? |
40967 | And they again said to them: Why have you come? |
40967 | And they asked him, and he said to them: Why have you not believed my son? |
40967 | And they call Phinees, the priest, and ask him also, saying: How didst thou see Jesus taken up? |
40967 | And they said to Elissæus, Has not a spirit seized him, and thrown him upon one of the mountains? |
40967 | Are not all these more than sufficient to condemn Him in their eyes and prove Him worthy of death? |
40967 | Are not these things sufficient to bring down upon him their condemnation? |
40967 | Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ? |
40967 | But others have appeared in it; would it not be possible to produce them also before history? |
40967 | But there are no Cæsars, no Napoleons, no Shakespeares, no Aristotles among them, you say? |
40967 | But they of two things chose the one; and who knows but that they chose the better? |
40967 | But was Pilate alone guilty of the crime of the crucifixion? |
40967 | But were they always a mere money- changing, money- getting, money- hoarding race? |
40967 | But who was this Herod before whom Jesus now appeared in chains? |
40967 | But why was Jesus sent to Herod? |
40967 | CHAPTER III POWERS AND DUTIES OF PILATE What were the powers and duties of Pilate as procurator of Judea? |
40967 | Can a more favorable verdict be expected of the members of the second chamber, composed as it was of men so conceited and arrogant? |
40967 | Can we, then, be astonished at the murderous hatred which these false and ambitious men conceived for Christ? |
40967 | Cocyti fremitus? |
40967 | Could impartiality be expected of those proud and selfish men, whose lips delighted in nothing so much as sounding their own praises? |
40967 | Could not Jesus, reasoned Pilate, be the son of the Hebrew Jehovah as Hercules was the son of Jupiter? |
40967 | Did Pilate apply Hebrew or Roman law to the charges presented to him against the Christ? |
40967 | Did Pilate apply these laws either in letter or in spirit? |
40967 | Did he imitate this model? |
40967 | Did he observe these rules and regulations? |
40967 | Did not the reception of his miracles and his triumphal entry into Jerusalem indicate His popularity with the plain people? |
40967 | Did the general laws of Roman provincial administration apply to this province? |
40967 | For how, thought Pilate, can He pretend to have a Kingdom, unless He pretends to be a king? |
40967 | For what else are your ensigns, flags, and standards, but crosses, gilt and beautiful? |
40967 | From out the anguish of his soul, the voice of Justice sends to his quivering lips the thrice- repeated question:"Why, what evil hath he done?" |
40967 | Has the emperor not appointed him to this place of dignity? |
40967 | Having decided that there were two trials, we are now ready to consider the questions: Were the two trials separate and independent? |
40967 | His first recorded words are:"What accusation bring ye against this man?" |
40967 | How did it happen that a sacrifice to Apollo gave favorable, and one to Diana unfavorable signs? |
40967 | If colossal forms of intellect and soul be invoked, does not the Jew still lead the universe? |
40967 | If not legally, was Pilate politically justified in delivering Jesus to be crucified? |
40967 | If not, is it rational to suppose that their innocent descendants have been the victims of this curse? |
40967 | If not, was the second trial a mere review of the first, or was the first a mere preliminary to the second? |
40967 | If not, was the second trial a mere review of the first, or was the first a mere preliminary to the second? |
40967 | If so, why were there two trials instead of one? |
40967 | In a cynical and sarcastic mood, Pilate turned to Jesus and asked:"What is truth? |
40967 | In the first place, were there two distinct trials of Jesus? |
40967 | Is anybody so keenly discerning as to see in Irish dispersion a divine or superhuman agency? |
40967 | Is it any wonder that the tragedy of the Prætorium and Golgotha, aside from its sacred aspects, is the most notable event in history? |
40967 | Is it not reasonably certain that a large majority of the countrymen of Jesus were his ardent well- wishers and sincerely regretted his untimely end? |
40967 | Is it not true that the Jewish people, as a race, were not parties to the condemnation and execution of the Christ? |
40967 | Is it possible to conceive that these friends and well- wishers were the inheritors of the curse of Heaven because of the crime of Golgotha? |
40967 | Is this not an error on their part? |
40967 | It may be analyzed thus: Confession: Inside the palace, Pilate asked Jesus the question:"Art thou the King of the Jews?" |
40967 | Jesus answered Pilate: Dost thou say this of thyself, or have others said it to thee of me? |
40967 | Levi says to them: Do you not know that from him I learned the law? |
40967 | M. An tu hæc non credis? |
40967 | Maybe so; but what of that? |
40967 | Now, in the light of the facts and principles just stated, what was the exact political status of the Jews at the time of Christ? |
40967 | Of what kind do you suppose are the meetings of these people? |
40967 | Or were peculiar rights and privileges granted to the strange people who inhabited it? |
40967 | Pilate answered Jesus: Am I also a Jew? |
40967 | Pilate said to him: Art thou, then, a king? |
40967 | Pilate said: Has God said that you are not to put to death, but that I am? |
40967 | Pilate saith unto them, What shall I do then with Jesus which is called the Christ? |
40967 | Pilate says to Annas and Caiaphas: Have you nothing to answer to this? |
40967 | Pilate says to him: What is truth? |
40967 | Pilate says to the Jews: Why should he die? |
40967 | Pilate says to them who said that the demons were subject to him: Why, then, were not your teachers also subject to him? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: And what did they shout in Hebrew? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: If you bear witness to the words spoken by the children, in what has the runner done wrong? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: What evil practices? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: Why do you gnash your teeth against him when you hear the truth? |
40967 | Pilate says: And what are the things which he does, to show that he wishes to do away with it? |
40967 | Pilate says: For a good work do they wish to put him to death? |
40967 | Pilate says: How given? |
40967 | Pilate says: Is truth not upon earth? |
40967 | Pilate says: What temple? |
40967 | Pilate says: What, then, shall we do to Jesus, who is called Christ? |
40967 | Romans, can you think youths initiated, under such oaths as theirs, are fit to be made soldiers? |
40967 | Sayest thou nothing? |
40967 | Shall these, contaminated with their own foul debaucheries and those of others, be champions for the chastity of your wives and children? |
40967 | Shall we not rather consider it as a matter of shame and remorse to ourselves? |
40967 | Suppose that he should do it while acting as an administrator, would it be less an assassination? |
40967 | Suppose that the Governor General should do this while sitting as a judge, would it not be judicial murder? |
40967 | Suppose this should happen beneath the American flag, what would be the judgment of the American people as to the merits of the proceedings? |
40967 | That arms should be intrusted with wretches brought out of that temple of obscenity? |
40967 | The Jews cry out and say to the runner: The sons of the Hebrews shouted in Hebrew; whence, then, hast thou the Greek? |
40967 | The Jews say to him: How hast thou come into the synagogue? |
40967 | The Jews say to him:_ Hosanna membrome baruchamma adonai._ Pilate says to them: And this hosanna, etc., how is it interpreted? |
40967 | The Jews say: And wherefore did you not lay hold of them? |
40967 | The Jews say: At what time was this? |
40967 | The Jews say: Is not this the very thing we said, that on a Sabbath he cures and casts out demons? |
40967 | The Jews say: To what women did he speak? |
40967 | The Jews say: What benefactors? |
40967 | The Sanhedrin says to Rabbi Levi: Is the word that you have said true? |
40967 | The elders and the priests and the Levites say to them: Have you come to give us this announcement, or to offer prayer to God? |
40967 | The elders and the priests and the Levites say: If anyone speak evil against Cæsar, is he worthy of death or not? |
40967 | The governor answered and said unto them, Whether of the twain will ye that I release unto you? |
40967 | The men of the guard say to the Jews: You have seen so great miracles in the case of this man, and have not believed; and how can you believe us? |
40967 | The men of the guard say: We were like dead men from fear, not expecting to see the light of day, and how could we lay hold of them? |
40967 | The question still arises: Who were the morally guilty parties? |
40967 | The runner says to them: I asked one of the Jews, and said: What is it they are shouting in Hebrew? |
40967 | Therefore when they were gathered together, Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that I release unto you? |
40967 | They say to Pilate: We are Greeks and temple slaves, and how could we adore him? |
40967 | They say to the teacher Levi: How knowest thou these things? |
40967 | Thine own nation and the chief priests have delivered thee unto me: What hast thou done?" |
40967 | This act brought down upon him the disdainful retort from the others,"Art thou also a Galilean?" |
40967 | This challenge was boldly accepted by Mr. Stephen, who says:"Was Pilate right in crucifying Christ? |
40967 | This raises the question: Who were the real crucifiers of the Christ, the Jews or the Romans? |
40967 | Three times, in reply, Conscience sent to Pilate''s trembling lips the searching question:"Why, what evil hath he done?" |
40967 | Triceps apud inferos Cerberus? |
40967 | Upon what charge was He finally condemned and crucified? |
40967 | Upon whom should the greater blame rest, if both were guilty? |
40967 | Was any Roman or Punic god interested in this event? |
40967 | Was any deity concerned about these things? |
40967 | Was there an attempt by Pilate to attain substantial justice, either with or without the due observance of forms of law? |
40967 | Were the Jews wholly blameless? |
40967 | Were the two trials separate and independent? |
40967 | Were these charges the same as those preferred against Him at the trial before the Sanhedrin? |
40967 | Were we not justified in forming of them an unfavorable opinion?... |
40967 | What could have rendered his condemnation surer than such manifestations of contempt for the pride and voluptuousness of these men? |
40967 | What course would be taken towards him? |
40967 | What did Pilate think of Jesus? |
40967 | What forms of criminal procedure, if any, were employed by Pilate in conducting the Roman trial of Jesus? |
40967 | What forms of criminal procedure, if any, were employed by him in conducting the Roman trial of Jesus? |
40967 | What hast thou done? |
40967 | What nation ever contended more manfully against overwhelming odds for its independence and religion? |
40967 | What nation ever, in its last agonies, gave such signal proofs of what may be accomplished by a brave despair? |
40967 | What passage of Scripture, it may be asked, justifies this parallel with the case of Jesus before Pilate? |
40967 | What then was the law of Rome in relation to the crime of high treason? |
40967 | What were these rules? |
40967 | What, indeed, could have been the issue of a trial before the first chamber, composed as it was of demoralized, ambitious, and scheming priests? |
40967 | When Pilate had mounted the_ bema_, and order had been restored, he asked:"What accusation bring ye against this man?" |
40967 | Where is it anywhere stated, or by reasonable inference implied, that Pilate considered whether he ought not to become a disciple of Jesus? |
40967 | Where shall created beings find rest if you suppose that shades in hell and souls in heaven continue to have any feeling? |
40967 | Where were they, what thinking and why silent? |
40967 | Which of them do you wish me to release to you? |
40967 | Who were the directly responsible agents of the crucifixion, the Jews or the Romans? |
40967 | Who, then, could think of excluding him from the people of Israel? |
40967 | Why did Pilate do this? |
40967 | Why did he not examine the prisoner in the presence of His accusers in the open air? |
40967 | Why did he not release Him, and, if need be, protect Him with his cohort from the assaults of the Jews? |
40967 | Why did the Etruscan, the Elan, the Egyptian, and the Punic inspectors of sacrifice interpret the entrails in an entirely different manner? |
40967 | Why did they not do this? |
40967 | Why did they seek the aid of Pilate and invoke the sanction of Roman authority? |
40967 | Why do you weep? |
40967 | Why not persecute all the Greeks of the earth, wherever found, because of the injustice of the Areopagus? |
40967 | Why were there two trials of Jesus? |
40967 | Why? |
40967 | Why? |
40967 | Would it not stamp with indelible shame the administration that should sanction or tolerate it? |
40967 | Would the Governor General retain his office by such a course of conduct? |
40967 | You do n''t believe in them? |
40967 | You wish this man, then, to be a king, and not Cæsar? |
40967 | [ 150] M. Dic, quæso, num te illa terrent? |
40967 | [ 185] But we may ask, Why is this pompous name given to this chamber by the Evangelists? |
40967 | [ 186] But how, then, can we account for the presence of several high priests at the same time in the Sanhedrin? |
40967 | did you not know that Lucullus would dine with Lucullus?" |
40967 | travectio Acherontis? |
10387 | And all that were with him? |
10387 | And has no recollection of her father? |
10387 | And left you alone? |
10387 | And makes no effort to protect you? |
10387 | And the ship? |
10387 | And wherefore can you not? |
10387 | And wherefore, pray, were you imprisoned? |
10387 | And you are from Virginia? |
10387 | And your fears? |
10387 | And your mother? |
10387 | Are they? |
10387 | Are we able to defend Jamestown against them? |
10387 | Are we all? |
10387 | Are we going down? |
10387 | Are you better, general? |
10387 | Are you favorable to royalty? |
10387 | Are you happy now? |
10387 | Are you injured? |
10387 | Are you injured? |
10387 | Are you not sorry for yourself? |
10387 | Are you strong enough for the walk? |
10387 | Are you tired? |
10387 | Aye, do you mean it? 10387 Blanche, Blanche, must I give you up, you who have so long cheered my lonely life? |
10387 | Blanche, are you cold? |
10387 | Blanche, would ten years change a baby? |
10387 | But Mr. Price, what shall I do with him? |
10387 | But can I see him? |
10387 | But my little boy? |
10387 | But surely you are not of England? |
10387 | But the king? |
10387 | But wherefore not tear her from his arms and fly to some foreign land? |
10387 | But your ship is an English craft, and your crew are Englishmen? |
10387 | But your stepfather and you? |
10387 | By whom? |
10387 | Can I see my mother and sister before I go? |
10387 | Can he cross? |
10387 | Can we from there determine what land we are on? |
10387 | Can we not go back for them? |
10387 | Can you not get it? 10387 Can you, a Christian, speak thus?" |
10387 | Dead,she answered sadly,"Then you are an orphan?" |
10387 | Deny you, Blanche? 10387 Did he leave two children?" |
10387 | Did you hear the captain say where we were before the ship struck? |
10387 | Did you know of her marriage before your arrival? |
10387 | Did you want to see me again, child? |
10387 | Do n''t you believe in the rights of the common people? |
10387 | Do you contemplate an elopement? 10387 Do you feel equal to the task?" |
10387 | Do you know aught of my mother, sister, and Ester? |
10387 | Do you mean it? |
10387 | Do you remember your father? |
10387 | Do you see any sail? |
10387 | Do you see the large brick house upon the hill-- not the one on the left of the church, but to the right with the broad piazza and wires in front? |
10387 | Do you travel alone, young maid? |
10387 | Does he know that Ester is General Goffe''s daughter? |
10387 | Does he? |
10387 | Does mother know of it? |
10387 | Ester, my child,the swordsman returned,"have you been happy?" |
10387 | For whom was it built? |
10387 | Has he a heart? 10387 Has he ability for a leader?" |
10387 | Has he been tried? |
10387 | Has the sentence been executed? |
10387 | Hath he invited our wandering prince to Virginia? |
10387 | Have you called at that house? |
10387 | Have you ever been in Virginia before? |
10387 | Have you heard from your husband, Dorothe Stevens? |
10387 | Have you money? |
10387 | Have you no faithful servant? |
10387 | Have you no hopes nor fears? |
10387 | Have you no wife-- no children? |
10387 | Have you not heard the news? |
10387 | Have you suffered annoyances from him before? |
10387 | He was five when you left home? |
10387 | How are you, Robert-- ahem? |
10387 | How could I live here without you, Blanche? |
10387 | How could she? |
10387 | How is Sir William Berkeley? |
10387 | How is our own boat? |
10387 | How know you that? |
10387 | How know you this? |
10387 | How long will that stay be? |
10387 | How long will you stay? |
10387 | How much is involved? |
10387 | I will not forget it, Mr. Holmes; but why do you refer to it? 10387 If he captures him, who will prevent it?" |
10387 | If there be cities, will we see them? |
10387 | If you have a fortune there, why do n''t you go and get it? |
10387 | Is gain in traffic of more consequence than human life? |
10387 | Is he your father? |
10387 | Is it such a great grievance to the people? |
10387 | Is that why Mr. Price left? |
10387 | Is this country inhabited? |
10387 | Is this you? |
10387 | Is your name Stevens? |
10387 | Is your son with Bacon? |
10387 | Joshua, is this payment for what I have done for you? 10387 Mr. Bacon, have you forgot to be a gentleman?" |
10387 | Mr. Hugh Price is your second husband? |
10387 | My friend, how can one so poor as I repay you? |
10387 | No, who lives there? |
10387 | No; what is it? |
10387 | Not understand me? 10387 Now what will you do with the ship?" |
10387 | Of what offence am I accused? |
10387 | Oh, are you quite sure? |
10387 | Ought I to leave my wife and children? |
10387 | Pray why not? 10387 Pray, what is it?" |
10387 | Robert,he said, pressing his lips firmly together,"do you know what I do if my horse or dog will not obey me?" |
10387 | Say, neighbor, are you having a hard time? |
10387 | Shall I awake them? |
10387 | Shall I see mother? |
10387 | Shall I see you home? |
10387 | Shall I take you in mine? |
10387 | Surely you have no one to fear? |
10387 | The war rages again? |
10387 | Then why does he not send an army against them? |
10387 | Then why not make one? |
10387 | Then why refuse me what I ask? |
10387 | Then you must know all of Jamestown? |
10387 | To hang? |
10387 | True, yet why shrink from this voyage? |
10387 | Under the restoration, do you-- ahem-- think it is a much greater expense to keep two people than to keep one? |
10387 | Verily, how can I, when danger overwhelms even the captain? |
10387 | Waiting for what? |
10387 | Was no one saved? |
10387 | Well, my young cavalier, when a king has been convicted of treason, should he not suffer death as the humblest peasant in the land? |
10387 | Well? |
10387 | What are they? |
10387 | What are they? |
10387 | What are you cooking in your kitchen, the savory odors of which are maddening to a hungry man? |
10387 | What are your hopes? |
10387 | What can it contain, that is so heavy? |
10387 | What cause have they for taking up the hatchet? |
10387 | What do you advise? 10387 What gala scene have they prepared for our amusement?" |
10387 | What is it? |
10387 | What is the crisis? |
10387 | What is the matter, Blanche? |
10387 | What is your wish, Sir Albert? |
10387 | What know you of Goffe, pray? |
10387 | What meaneth this? |
10387 | What name? |
10387 | What power hath that strange old wizard that he leads kings as it were by the nose? |
10387 | What will you do? |
10387 | What will you have me do? |
10387 | What would I better do? |
10387 | What would be his fate if he should be taken? |
10387 | When are we to go, Dinah? |
10387 | When did your first husband die? |
10387 | When do you go? |
10387 | When do you think of going? |
10387 | Where are you from? |
10387 | Where is Rebecca? |
10387 | Where is he-- where is Robert? |
10387 | Where is mother, Dinah? |
10387 | Where is your father? |
10387 | Where is your mother? |
10387 | Where is your wife? |
10387 | Where would you have us go? |
10387 | Where? |
10387 | Wherefore not? |
10387 | Wherefore not? |
10387 | Wherefore, good wife, do you say as much? |
10387 | Whither has he gone? |
10387 | Who are you? |
10387 | Who are you? |
10387 | Who are you? |
10387 | Who are you? |
10387 | Who is Ester? |
10387 | Who is he? |
10387 | Who is he? |
10387 | Who is he? |
10387 | Who is that man? |
10387 | Who is there? |
10387 | Who, Sir William Berkeley or Mr. Hugh Price? |
10387 | Who? |
10387 | Whom do you wish to see? |
10387 | Whom should I fear-- the man whose face I plastered with mud? 10387 Why did you think to see a sail, Blanche?" |
10387 | Why do n''t John come back with the money? |
10387 | Why do you dare enter this house? |
10387 | Why do you take such interest in us, Sir Albert? 10387 Why does he not?" |
10387 | Why is he here? 10387 Why not declare yourself to the world and claim your wife?" |
10387 | Why say ye so, Sarah Drummond? |
10387 | Why sit you here? |
10387 | Why, who are you, that dare defy me? |
10387 | Why? |
10387 | Why? |
10387 | Why? |
10387 | Why? |
10387 | Will he let us live at home, now that he has come? |
10387 | Will it not be carried off? |
10387 | Will that man Hugh Price come to live at our house? |
10387 | Will you be afraid to remain here while I go for the provisions and musket left at the spring? |
10387 | Will you draw me some water? 10387 Will you not seek revenge?" |
10387 | Will you? |
10387 | William Stump, when did you come? |
10387 | Wo n''t you ask them if we can stay here? |
10387 | Wo n''t you sit? 10387 Would it be too dangerous to undertake a voyage to those islands?" |
10387 | Would you be afraid to remain on the beach while I went? |
10387 | Would you fight for such principles? |
10387 | Would you take a small bit of writing to him? |
10387 | Would you take us all, and Ester, too? |
10387 | Yes, sir, two,she sighed, and the white- haired stranger; glancing at her face, asked:"Was he a good man?" |
10387 | You are of age? |
10387 | You are stronger than I,she said,"why should you grieve more at our calamity? |
10387 | You came in the last ship? |
10387 | You did not come alone? |
10387 | You have my thanks; but where is the culprit? |
10387 | You wo n''t be long gone? |
10387 | Your home is still here? |
10387 | ''Do you know the old man of the sea, of the sea? |
10387 | A wild yell went up from the crowd, and an impudent urchin cried:"Ann Linkon, how like you your bath?" |
10387 | After a long silence, he asked:"Blanche, how long have we been here?" |
10387 | After drinking, the old man returned the mug and, fixing his eyes on the young man, asked:"Have you lived long in Virginia?" |
10387 | After several moments, she asked:"How long must we stay?" |
10387 | And you will surrender her to him?" |
10387 | Are we attacked?" |
10387 | At first the eyes glared at the host fiercely, then became more gentle, as he remarked:"You know me?" |
10387 | Be you afraid of your payment? |
10387 | Blanche marked the troubled look on his face and asked:"Do you know where we are?" |
10387 | But why had they come by land when travel by water was so much easier? |
10387 | Can I endure it?" |
10387 | Can you not get it?" |
10387 | Coming quite close, she said:"Prythee, friend, why do you not get this child to bed?" |
10387 | Could one conceive a more happy family picture? |
10387 | Dare I for their sakes declare who I am?" |
10387 | Did she but have her deserts, would she be at home and Ann Linkon on the stool? |
10387 | Did you come from Greenspring Manor this morn?" |
10387 | Did you know him?" |
10387 | Did you learn of my great speech in the house of burgesses yesterday, when they were about to refuse your general his commission?" |
10387 | Do I not make myself plain?" |
10387 | Do n''t you observe how Hugh Price is continually with your mother?" |
10387 | Do not Whalley and Goffe find in that country aiders and abettors in their criminal proceeding?" |
10387 | Do not other men support their families, and why not you, pray?" |
10387 | Do you belong here?" |
10387 | Do you disdain to labor for your wife and children? |
10387 | Do you live at Jamestown?" |
10387 | Do you think I talk to fools? |
10387 | Dorothe glanced at him, her great dark eyes wide open in real or affected wonder and asked:"Well, Mr. Price, for what have you chosen this moment?" |
10387 | Doth not the Scriptures say that''Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall''? |
10387 | Drummond at last gasped:"''Fore God, who are you?" |
10387 | Drummond, who was impetuous and hated Hugh Price, cried:"And will you leave her to him?" |
10387 | Drummond?" |
10387 | For a moment he stood hesitating and actually quaking, and then he appealed to his wife with:"What must be done?" |
10387 | Had I not better take the boat and go to the wreck for more food?" |
10387 | Half starting from his seat, the traveller fixed his terrible eyes on the host and asked:"What mean you? |
10387 | Have you a young man named Stevens prisoner?" |
10387 | Have you been to Robinson''s?" |
10387 | Have you met with that dreadful old man? |
10387 | Have you no one in Boston brave enough?" |
10387 | Have you seen them since your return?" |
10387 | He asked,"What arts, sciences, schools of learning, or manufactures have been promoted by any now in authority?" |
10387 | He knew the room in which Rebecca slept, and going to her door, tapped lightly until he heard her stirring, and the voice within asked:"Who are you?" |
10387 | How could he help loving you?" |
10387 | How dare he come here?" |
10387 | How dare you thus annoy my sister?" |
10387 | I do n''t remember my own father; but you do, Robert?" |
10387 | Illegalize the marriage and make an adulteress of my wife? |
10387 | In a moment the eyes disappeared, and Blanche, alarmed at the report of the gun, sprang from the tent and wildly asked:"What was it? |
10387 | Is he brave?" |
10387 | It was dusk when he reached Robert''s plantation, and he took the planter aside and asked:"Do you not know me?" |
10387 | John called a halt and asked:"Shall we go on, or return to the beach?" |
10387 | Landing he unloaded his boat, and asked:"Have you seen any one?" |
10387 | Lawrence?" |
10387 | Must I never listen to the sweet music of your voice again?" |
10387 | Must he let one go, and above all Robert Stevens, whom he hated? |
10387 | My father''s sister and children are captives; think you I would remain at home for lack of a leader?" |
10387 | Now you are very anxious to know what it is, are you not?" |
10387 | One evening he met them at the home of Drummond and, relating his condition, asked:"Knowing all as you do, what do you advise?" |
10387 | Price left the room, and Sir Albert, turning to Berkeley, asked:"Have you signed the pardon, governor?" |
10387 | Price?" |
10387 | Price?" |
10387 | Price?" |
10387 | Robert turned to his sister and asked:"Where is mother?" |
10387 | Sam was summoned, and Rebecca asked:"Sam, could you find my brother?" |
10387 | She came weeping into the street and asked:"What will become of us, my son? |
10387 | She gazed up at the kind face and asked:"Are you the owner of the ship_ Despair_?" |
10387 | She was landed soon after the vessel cast anchor, and her first inquiry was for Rebecca Stevens:"Is she a relative of yours, young maid?" |
10387 | She whispered a few words in his ears which made him turn pale, and with eyes starting from their sockets, he asked:"How know you this?" |
10387 | Someone brought in a lighted wax taper, and the strange man, gazing on the face of the sleeping child, asked:"Can she remain? |
10387 | The aged patriarch at last seized the arm of General Goffe and asked:"Whom have we here?" |
10387 | The alarmed fencing- master cried out:"Who can you be? |
10387 | The fencing- master evidently thought he had an easy victory, for a smile curled his lip, as he asked:"Are you ready?" |
10387 | The landlord, with flushed face and greasy apron, appeared on the porch and asked:"What do you want?" |
10387 | The reaction came, and, falling on his knees, he cried:"O God, why is such a fate mine?" |
10387 | The smith thought of all this, and asked:"Why do you not go to one of the inns?" |
10387 | The swordsman gazed on him for a moment, and asked:"Do you know what a regicide is?" |
10387 | Then Rebecca, appealing to him, asked:"Must I obey Hugh Price?" |
10387 | They have been furnished with firelocks and powder-- by whom? |
10387 | Think ye that the fear of all the water in James River will awe me to silence?" |
10387 | Three or four idlers were sitting on the bank, and of one of them he asked:"For what is that ugly machine used?" |
10387 | Turning her great, sad eyes on the man who had been their protector in their hour of peril, she asked:"Shall I go?" |
10387 | Turning to Lord Clarendon, who was present, the monarch asked:"Do you advise me to grant a charter to this good gentleman and his people?" |
10387 | Was he awake, or was it but a dream? |
10387 | What can I do?" |
10387 | What is your father''s name?" |
10387 | What leads up to this revolution?" |
10387 | What strange freak had induced the owner of this wonderful craft to give it such a melancholy name? |
10387 | What use would those millions be to him on this island? |
10387 | What with her extravagance, her temper, and the way she does hate his old mother whom he loves, his life must be a burden?" |
10387 | Where did they come from? |
10387 | Where is that coward Giles Peram?" |
10387 | Wherefore is Dorothe Stevens so great that one must not say ill of her that they be plunged in the pond? |
10387 | While the landlord was gazing at him, lost in a sort of revery, he was suddenly startled by the awful voice asking:"Will supper be ready soon?" |
10387 | Whither shall we fly? |
10387 | Who may you be?" |
10387 | Whom does he come to see?" |
10387 | Why could not one have been spared? |
10387 | Why do you not send and bring her home? |
10387 | Why should we fear death? |
10387 | Why? |
10387 | Will you care for them until this hour has passed?" |
10387 | Will you show me up to him? |
10387 | Wo n''t you let her remain?" |
10387 | Would you, for money, give us a morsel to eat and a blanket and corner in which to sleep?" |
10387 | Wrecked on an unknown shore, with dangers and difficulties to surmount, what hope had he of the future? |
10387 | You are Sir Albert of the_ Despair_, are you not?" |
10387 | [ Illustration:"ARE YOU READY?"] |
10387 | a fugitive?" |
10387 | can God permit such injustice? |
10387 | can it be cannon?" |
10387 | dead?" |
10387 | hath the sea given up its dead? |
10387 | have you not heard it already?" |
10387 | master what are you about?" |
10387 | think you, Sarah, that a wife is like a shoe to be cast off at will? |
10387 | what hath she done?" |
10387 | where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face? |
10387 | who are your friends?" |
10387 | young cavalier from Virginia, dare you utter those words in your own colony?" |
29412 | And Bernier, our fellow- citizen, what is become of him? |
29412 | And have you seen this master? |
29412 | And what did she do to give you this power? |
29412 | And what do you come here for? |
29412 | And whence comes it that you know me? |
29412 | Do you know that now you see nothing with the eyes of your body? |
29412 | In a dream? |
29412 | Now, how can he approve a dissertation false in itself and contrary to himself? 29412 Of what may we not believe the imagination capable, after so strong a proof of its power? |
29412 | Well, then, with what eyes do you behold me? |
29412 | When is it,he says afterwards,"that the oracles have ceased to reply throughout all Greece, but since the advent of the Saviour on earth? |
29412 | Who art thou? 29412 [ 161] And in Ecclesiasticus,"Who will pity the enchanter that has been bitten by the serpent? |
29412 | ''I knew it well,''said she;''did I not behold it the day before yesterday?''" |
29412 | ( or"What can I do for you?") |
29412 | A little while after, he adds,"But what shall we say of that magic they held in such admiration? |
29412 | ARE THE VAMPIRES OR REVENANS REALLY DEAD? |
29412 | After mass, St. Augustin, preceded by the cross, went to ask this dead man why he went out? |
29412 | After such avowals, what can we think of the doctrine of this chief of the innovators? |
29412 | After this, must we not own that the Greeks of to- day are not great Greeks, and that there is only ignorance and superstition among them? |
29412 | Again, what shall we say of those tacit compacts so often mentioned by the author, and which he supposes to be real? |
29412 | And again, how could he satisfy it with a demon, who appeared to him in the form of a girl he loved? |
29412 | And had not their accomplices also, whose names must have been declared, as much to fear? |
29412 | And how can we reconcile this concurrence with the wisdom, independence, and truth of God? |
29412 | And if Samuel appeared to Saul, how could it take place if Samuel had no members? |
29412 | And if he had received it, was he not at the same time reconciled to the church? |
29412 | And if he was there bodily, how could he render himself invisible? |
29412 | And if his excommunication was only regular and minor, would he deserve after his martyrdom to be excluded from the presence of the holy mysteries? |
29412 | And if these bodies are merely phantomic, how can they suck the blood of living people? |
29412 | And in his treatise on the soul, he exclaims,"What shall we say of magic? |
29412 | And what glory to God, what advantage to men, could accrue from these apparitions? |
29412 | And why do we not make any use of so wonderful an art in armies? |
29412 | And would Jacob have asked him for his blessing had he deemed him a bad angel? |
29412 | Another time he saw the same young man, who said to him,"Do you know me?" |
29412 | Are the Vampires or Revenans really Dead? |
29412 | Are there not still to be found people who are so simple, or who have so little religion, as to buy these trifles very dear? |
29412 | Are these equivocal marks of the reality of obsessions? |
29412 | Are they not interred? |
29412 | As they were conversing in her presence of the singularity of the adventure which here happened at St. Maur,''Why are you so much astonished?'' |
29412 | At last they asked what was the name of him who should succeed to the Emperor Valens? |
29412 | Besides that, of how many crimes were they not guilty in the use of their spells? |
29412 | But are they not rather magicians, who render themselves invisible, and divert themselves in disquieting the living? |
29412 | But can anything more strange be thought of than what is said of tacit compacts? |
29412 | But how can they come out of their graves without opening the earth, and how re- enter them again without its appearing? |
29412 | But if the dead know not what is passing in this world, how can they be troubled about their bodies being interred or not? |
29412 | But what can you obtain in favor of heresy from sensible and upright people, to whom God has thus manifested the power of his church? |
29412 | But what could it avail the demon to give the treasure to these gentlemen, who did not ask him for it, and scarcely troubled themselves about him? |
29412 | But what is the use of so many arguments? |
29412 | But why amuse ourselves with fruitless researches? |
29412 | By what authority did the demon take away this boy''s life, and then restore it to him? |
29412 | CAN A MAN WHO IS REALLY DEAD APPEAR IN HIS OWN BODY? |
29412 | CAN THESE INSTANCES BE APPLIED TO THE HUNGARIAN GHOSTS? |
29412 | Can a Man really Dead appear in his own Body? |
29412 | Can an angel or a demon restore a dead man to life? |
29412 | Can it be the spirit of the defunct, which has not yet forsaken them, or some demon, which makes their apparition in a fantastic and borrowed body? |
29412 | Can so simple an agent as the soul act upon itself, and reproduce it in some sort by thinking, after it has ceased to think? |
29412 | Can the soul when separated from the body re- enter it when it will, and give it new life, were it but for a quarter of an hour? |
29412 | Can these Instances be applied to the Hungarian Revenans? |
29412 | Can we conceive that God allows them thus to come without reason or necessity and molest their families, and even cause their death? |
29412 | Can we not see that such an opinion is making a god of the devil? |
29412 | DO THE EXCOMMUNICATED ROT IN THE GROUND? |
29412 | Did he do this by his own strength, or by the permission of God? |
29412 | Did he not wash away his fault with his blood? |
29412 | Did not Simon the magician rise into the air by means of the devil? |
29412 | Did not St. Paul impose silence on the Pythoness of the city of Philippi in Macedonia? |
29412 | Did not the first- mentioned perform many wonders before Pharaoh? |
29412 | Do the Excommunicated rot in the Earth? |
29412 | Do they not prevent people from inhabiting certain houses, under pretence of their being haunted? |
29412 | Do they take them and leave them at will, as we lay aside a habit or a mask? |
29412 | Do we not know with how many errors it has been infatuated in all ages, and which, though shared in common, were not the less mistakes? |
29412 | Do we put to death hypochondriacs, maniacs, or those who imagine themselves ill? |
29412 | Do you laugh at all that is told of dreams, magical operations, miracles, sorcerers, ghosts, and Thessalian wonders? |
29412 | Do you see the Prince of Condè dead in that hedge?'' |
29412 | Does any one imagine that such things can be believed without offending God, and without showing a very injurious mistrust of his almighty power? |
29412 | Does not St. Paul complain of the_ angel of Satan_ who buffeted him? |
29412 | Does not St. Peter[657] tell us that"the devil prowls about us like a roaring lion, always ready to devour us?" |
29412 | Does not the apostle tell us that the angel of darkness transforms himself into an angel of light? |
29412 | For will it be said that these maledictions and inflictions were the effect of the inspiration of the good Spirit, or the work of good angels? |
29412 | For, does it not happen that wood of different kinds, and fish bones, produce some light when their heat is excited by putrefaction? |
29412 | HAS THE DEMON POWER TO CAUSE ANY ONE TO DIE AND THEN TO RESTORE THE DEAD TO LIFE? |
29412 | Had he received the sacraments of the Church? |
29412 | Has the Demon power to kill, and then to restore to Life? |
29412 | Has the devil in this respect a greater power than an angel and a disembodied soul? |
29412 | Have we ever seen lethargies, or swoons, or syncopes last whole years together? |
29412 | Have we not again calendars in which are marked the lucky and unlucky days, as has been done during a time, under the name of Egyptians? |
29412 | He answered,--"And who has taught you that secret?" |
29412 | How can he be absolved without asking for absolution, or its appearing that he hath requested it? |
29412 | How can it serve the demon to maintain this, and destroy the general opinion of nations on all these things? |
29412 | How can people be absolved who died in mortal sin, and without doing penance? |
29412 | How can you absolve him from excommunication before he has received absolution from sin? |
29412 | How can you absolve the dead? |
29412 | How can you convince a whole people of error? |
29412 | How could St. Maur appear to him in his Benedictine habit, having the wizard on his left hand? |
29412 | How could he introduce himself into young M. de la Richardière''s chamber without either opening or forcing the door? |
29412 | How could he render himself visible to him alone, whilst none other beheld him? |
29412 | How could he who appeared to the tailor Bauh imprint his hand on the board which he presented to him? |
29412 | How could this wretched shepherd cast the spell without touching the person? |
29412 | How did Apollonius of Tyana persuade the Ephesians to kill a man, who really was only a dog? |
29412 | How did he know that this dog, or this man, was the cause of the pestilence which afflicted Ephesus? |
29412 | How do the saints hear our prayers? |
29412 | How do they drag them? |
29412 | How do they speak? |
29412 | How is this done? |
29412 | How is this resurrection accomplished? |
29412 | How many enterprises, praiseworthy in appearance, has he not inspired, in order to draw the faithful into his snare? |
29412 | How many false miracles has he not wrought? |
29412 | How many holy actions has he not counseled? |
29412 | How many instances have we not seen of people who expired with fright in a moment? |
29412 | How many times has he foretold future events? |
29412 | How was it that the soldier mentioned by Æneas Sylvius did not recognize his wife, whom he pierced with his sword, and whose ears he cut off? |
29412 | If in all there is only falsehood and illusion, what does he gain by undeceiving people? |
29412 | If it is not God who drags them from their graves, is it an angel? |
29412 | If it is so, why do they return to their graves? |
29412 | If magicians possessed the secret of thus occasioning the death of any one they pleased, where is the prince, prelate, or lord who would be safe? |
29412 | If people insist on these resurrections being real ones, did we ever see dead persons resuscitate themselves, and by their own power? |
29412 | If the angels even have not a certain kind of body?--for if they are incorporeal, how can they be counted? |
29412 | If the circumstance is certain, as it appears, who shall explain the manner in which all passed or took place? |
29412 | If these two men were only spectres, having neither flesh nor bones, how could one of them imprint a black color on the hand of this widow? |
29412 | If they are not resuscitated by themselves, is it by the power of God that they have left their graves? |
29412 | If they are not united to them, how can they move them, and cause them to act, walk, speak, reason, and eat? |
29412 | If they are reprobate and condemned, what have they to do on this earth? |
29412 | If they are united to them, then they form but one individual; and how can they separate themselves from them, after being united to them? |
29412 | If they could thus roast them slowly to death, why not kill them at once, by throwing the waxen image in the fire? |
29412 | If they dared not stay in the church during the mass, when were they? |
29412 | If they were evil genii, why did they ask for masses and order restitution? |
29412 | Is all that accomplished by the natural power of these spirits? |
29412 | Is it an angel, is it a demon who reanimates it? |
29412 | Is it by the order, or by the permission of God that he resuscitates? |
29412 | Is it for a long time, like that of the persons who were restored to life by Jesus Christ? |
29412 | Is it not certain that the first step taken by those who had recourse to magic was to renounce God and Jesus Christ, and to invoke the demon? |
29412 | Is it not since mankind began to enjoy the divine presence of the Word? |
29412 | Is it sepulture? |
29412 | Is it surprising that the bedstead should be seen to move, especially when the floor of the room is waxed and rubbed? |
29412 | Is it the Almighty, to satisfy the revenge of an insignificant woman, or the jealousy of lovers of either sex? |
29412 | Is it to show forth the works of God in these vampires? |
29412 | Is not that, as it appears to some, denying and affirming at the same time the same thing under different names? |
29412 | Is this resurrection voluntary on his part, and by his own choice? |
29412 | It is by the strength of the_ revenant_, by the return of his soul into his body? |
29412 | It is the devil, who sports with the simplicity of men? |
29412 | Lord, why hast thou sent me back to this gloomy abode?" |
29412 | M. Viardin having asked him in Latin,"Ubi censebaris quandò mane oriebaris?" |
29412 | M. de Saumaise told him it meant,"Save yourself; do you not perceive the death with which you are threatened?" |
29412 | Might it not be advanced that this light has appeared because the eye of the count was internally affected, or because it was so externally? |
29412 | Must we, on this account, consider these histories as problematical? |
29412 | Nevertheless, it may be asked, How these bodies came out? |
29412 | Of what may we not believe the imagination capable after so strong a proof of its power? |
29412 | Or was it the natural effect of Divine love, or fervor of devotion in these persons? |
29412 | Origen adds, What could Providence have designed in performing for this Proconnesian the miracles we have just mentioned? |
29412 | Ought he not rather to combat this writing, and show its weakness, falsehood, and dangerous tendency? |
29412 | Peter added,"Could you tell me any news of Alphonso, king of Arragon, who died a few years ago?" |
29412 | St. Augustine inquires afterwards if the dead have any knowledge of what is passing in this world? |
29412 | The Jews sometimes went so far as to insult them in their dwellings, and even to say to them,[709]_ Ubi est verbum Domini? |
29412 | The demon added,"Is it not enough that I show thee that I understand what thou sayest?" |
29412 | The master of the house, and his domestics, the boldest amongst them, at last asked him what he wished for, and in what they could help him? |
29412 | The saint asked him, where was the sepulchre of the priest who had pronounced against him the sentence of excommunication? |
29412 | The saint laughed and said to him,"Would it not be better to give the value of your horses to the poor rather than employ them in such exercises?" |
29412 | The spectre said to him,"Where are you going?" |
29412 | The system of M. Law, bank notes, the rage of the Rue Quinquampoix, what movements did they not cause in the kingdom? |
29412 | The young man added,"Was it in a dream, or awake, that you saw all that?" |
29412 | The young man then asked,"Where is your body now?" |
29412 | Then they wished to know if alms should be given in his name? |
29412 | They asked him if he required any masses to be said? |
29412 | They asked why he infested that house rather than another? |
29412 | This is certainly not the case; but if it were so, why should witches have less power than magicians? |
29412 | Thus we read in Ecclesiasticus--"Who will pity the enchanter that is bitten by the serpent?" |
29412 | To what can these things be attributed, if not to an elf? |
29412 | To what persecutions were not himself and Baruch his disciple exposed for having spoken in the name of the Lord? |
29412 | UNDER WHAT FORM HAVE GOOD ANGELS APPEARED? |
29412 | Under what form have Good Angels appeared? |
29412 | Was her resurrection effected by her own strength and will, or was it a demon who restored her to life? |
29412 | Was it a demon who animated the body of the boy, or did his soul re- enter his body by the permission of God? |
29412 | Was it by the ministration of angels, or by the artifice of the seducing spirit, who wished to inspire her with sentiments of vanity and pride? |
29412 | Was it his soul which moved his body, or a demon which made use of this corpse to disturb and frighten the living? |
29412 | Was it not generally believed in former times, that there were no antipodes? |
29412 | Was it their soul which appeared to me, or was it some other spirit which assumed their form?" |
29412 | Was this young girl really dead, or only sleeping? |
29412 | We read, in the author I am combating,"What shall we say of the fairies, a prodigy so notorious and so common?" |
29412 | Were they the souls of these two pagans, or two demons who assumed their form? |
29412 | Were they whole, or in a state of decay? |
29412 | What advantage does the devil derive from making idiots believe these things, or maintaining them in such an error? |
29412 | What becomes, in particular, of all the stories of the holy solitaries, of St. Anthony, St. Hilarion,& c.? |
29412 | What benefit could mankind derive from them? |
29412 | What cures has he not operated? |
29412 | What do they want? |
29412 | What does it matter, in fact, that they made false boastings, and that their attempts were useless? |
29412 | What glory does the Divinity derive from them? |
29412 | What has not been said for and against the divining- rod of Jacques Aimar? |
29412 | What interest could the demon have in not permitting these bodies to come under the power of the Christians? |
29412 | What is the aim of Lucian, in his Dialogue entitled"Philopseudis,"but to turn into ridicule the magic art? |
29412 | What is the object of these resurrections? |
29412 | What proof is there that God has anything to do with it? |
29412 | What reason is given for this? |
29412 | What stronger proof of the falsity of this art can we have than to see that Nero renounced it?" |
29412 | What will become of the apparitions of Onias to Judas Maccabeus, and of the devil to Jesus Christ himself, after his fast of forty days? |
29412 | What will become of the apparitions of angels, so well noted in the Old and New Testaments? |
29412 | What would you have me do for you?" |
29412 | When did they begin to despise the magic art? |
29412 | Whence does it happen that they neither come back nor infest the place any more when they are burned or impaled? |
29412 | Where, also, did they go? |
29412 | Who are these witnesses? |
29412 | Who can have given such power to the devil? |
29412 | Who can not perceive in these words the surest marks of prepossession and fear? |
29412 | Who will believe in our days that Ezzelin was the son of a will- o''-the- wisp? |
29412 | Why did he not deny all these facts? |
29412 | Why do these excommunicated persons return to their tombs after mass? |
29412 | Why do they attach themselves to certain spots, and certain persons, rather than to others? |
29412 | Why do they haunt and fatigue persons who ought to be dear to them, and who have done nothing to offend them? |
29412 | Why do they make themselves perceptible only during a certain time, and that sometimes a short space? |
29412 | Why is it so little sought after by princes and their ministers? |
29412 | Why then may not the heat excited in this confined spirit produce some light? |
29412 | Why wish to explain the whole book of Job literally, and as a true history, since its beginning is only a fiction? |
29412 | Will it be God, will it be itself? |
29412 | Will it be said that this is only the effect of imagination, prepossession, or the trickery of a clever charlatan? |
29412 | Will this thinking matter think on always, or only at times; and when it has ceased to think, who will make it think anew? |
29412 | Without this fruitful source, what becomes of the most ingenious fictions of Homer? |
29412 | Would it be again the imagination of the living and their prejudices which reassure them after these executions? |
29412 | [ 139] Will it be said that there was any collusion between St. Paul and the Pythoness? |
29412 | [ 160] Job, speaking of the leviathan, which we believe to be the crocodile, says,"Shall the enchanter destroy it? |
29412 | [ 352]"Quid se præcipitat de rarissimis aut inexpertis quasi definitam ferre sententiam, cum quotidiana et continua non solvat?" |
29412 | [ 652] Did those whom he gave up to Satan for their crimes,[653] suffer nothing bodily? |
29412 | [ 675]"Somnia, terrores magicos, miracula, sagas, Nocturnos lemures, portentaque Thessala rides?" |
29412 | [ 702] Numquid dæmonium potest coecorum oculos asperire? |
29412 | [ 76]"Quamquam cur Genium Romæ, mihi fingitis unum? |
29412 | a man or a God? |
29412 | and also is it not what he proposed to himself in the other, entitled"The Ass,"whence Apuleius derived his"Golden Ass?" |
29412 | and consequently, how can we know whether it ought to be punished leniently or rigorously? |
29412 | and has not joy itself sometimes produced an equally fatal effect? |
29412 | and if there is any truth in them, why decry his own work, and take away the credit of his subordinates and his own operations? |
29412 | and on what foundation can it be asserted that they are less criminal? |
29412 | and why comest thou here?" |
29412 | and why do we ask them for their intercession? |
29412 | how could any one make it without renouncing common sense? |
29412 | is it a demon? |
29412 | is it their own spirit? |
29412 | naked, or clad in their own dress, or in the linen and bandages which had enveloped them in the tomb? |
29412 | or that of persons resuscitated by the Prophets and Apostles? |
29412 | or, Do you hear me? |
29412 | that according to whether the sacred fowls had eaten or not, it was permitted or forbidden to fight? |
29412 | that some of them die of it instantaneously, and others a short time afterwards? |
29412 | that the statues of the gods had spoken or changed their place? |
29412 | when will God give us some rain?" |
29412 | whence do I come? |
29412 | why do they not remain amongst the living? |
29412 | why do they suck the blood of their relations? |
29412 | why do you not rather make use of the sabres of the Turks? |
29412 | wilt thou never be satisfied? |
32075 | After all, what does it matter? |
32075 | Already, Mary? |
32075 | Am I glory''s queen? |
32075 | And are you sure that the Baron will approve of your choice of an escort? |
32075 | And do you notice how she can manage s before a, and not before u? 32075 And even if I am, what matter is that? |
32075 | And his office, 170 Rue des Allumettes? |
32075 | And if I am, am I letting light or darkness in upon my poor poet? 32075 And in fact you do n''t think a girl ought to be allowed to spend her money without some wise person of the superior sex to guide her hand? |
32075 | And the object? |
32075 | And went by the name of Jules von Dressdorf? |
32075 | And what are you going to do? |
32075 | And you wo n''t tell me what all this means? |
32075 | And your king-- the king in your story-- did he cut the rope at last? |
32075 | Bad form, is n''t it-- don''t you think? 32075 Believe what nonsense? |
32075 | Both what fellows? |
32075 | But are there not rules in every game? 32075 But how could that be?" |
32075 | But why do you make this offer to me? |
32075 | Ca n''t you tell me what it was like? |
32075 | Came from''Frisco? |
32075 | Can I do_ nothing_ but sit here and wait? 32075 Did you hear? |
32075 | Did, eh? |
32075 | Do you see much of an alteration in the ways of men toward me already, Mary? 32075 Do you think,"I said wearily,"that the proprietor of the_ pension_ was an accomplice?" |
32075 | Do? 32075 Flanel peticoat?" |
32075 | Had my trouble with the police here anything to do with the matter? |
32075 | Have you a passport? |
32075 | Have you been long here? |
32075 | Have you read the papers to- day, Lil? |
32075 | He d money left him? |
32075 | His name? |
32075 | How could that be, Mr. Heron? 32075 How d''ye do, Miss Grey? |
32075 | How do you like Blanchet''s book? |
32075 | How would that do for a young lady''s name? |
32075 | I do n''t think a man ought to take such a helping hand as that from-- well, from----"From a woman, you were going to say? 32075 I hope you found a pleasant reception there?" |
32075 | I wonder what he would say if he knew of it? |
32075 | I''d know it ef I seed it, but----"Was it like this? |
32075 | I''ll walk a little way with you if you will allow me? |
32075 | Ma- a- a''m? |
32075 | Miss or Mrs., ma''am? |
32075 | Mought I ax your name, ma''am? |
32075 | No? 32075 Offended? |
32075 | Oh, that fellow? 32075 Ronayne, fount of wisdom and light, whatever may the Dialectical Society be?" |
32075 | Sir, your passport? |
32075 | So you are really going to be an heiress, my dearest? |
32075 | Spoke English well? |
32075 | That little old maid? 32075 The man you talked to just now?" |
32075 | The officer''s number to whom you say you gave your passport? |
32075 | The terms? |
32075 | The youth-- black eyes, black hair, high forehead, projecting chin, height five feet three? |
32075 | The_ pension_ in the Porte de Schaerbeck? |
32075 | Then how am I to become returning officer for Keeton? |
32075 | Then your visit did not bring you any nearer to a reconciliation with your brother? |
32075 | Then, papa, do you think we sha n''t win now? |
32075 | Throwing away her money? |
32075 | To me? |
32075 | Was he-- an-- educated man? |
32075 | Was the snow very deep? |
32075 | Was there no danger of his freezing to death? |
32075 | Well, Mr. Heron, what if they do? |
32075 | Well, why should there not be a woman Alceste? 32075 Whar_ did_ yer come from?" |
32075 | What can I do for you to thank you? |
32075 | What can it matter which way my wishes go-- if they went any way? |
32075 | What can_ I_ do to find him? 32075 What do you mean?" |
32075 | What does it matter if I am made a little ridiculous in my own eyes? |
32075 | What does our father, the Dean, say? |
32075 | What have I to do with it? |
32075 | What is his opera to be called? |
32075 | What is like a woman? 32075 What must I do? |
32075 | What on earth can he be doing there,he asked,"under her window? |
32075 | What was the date of your leaving Brussels? |
32075 | What was the name of the advocate? |
32075 | What''s that fellow''s name that wus partners with Circus Jack in the Banderita? |
32075 | What? |
32075 | When can I see the youth? |
32075 | Where? |
32075 | Why confess myself a fool by asking what anything means? 32075 Why do I make the offer to you? |
32075 | Why do you think that, my dear? |
32075 | Why should he be a lover any more than I? |
32075 | Why should n''t he be there as well as I? |
32075 | Will the Herr ride or walk? |
32075 | Will the Herr ride or walk? |
32075 | Wo n''t you_ help_ me? |
32075 | Yes, I am speaking of Blanchet, of course-- of whom else could I be speaking in such a way? |
32075 | You are not going any further, I suppose? |
32075 | You are shocked at my want of sweet, feminine docility? 32075 You do n''t like the other fellow so well?" |
32075 | You surprise me-- and where? |
32075 | You wise woman, what is it? |
32075 | Zo? 32075 Zo?" |
32075 | Zo? |
32075 | Zo? |
32075 | _ Quien sabe?_ Let the dead past bury its dead. |
32075 | ''What else_ could_ he do?'' |
32075 | ''What would I not have given a year ago for any sort of hard work that would have made me sure of £ 500 a year?'' |
32075 | ''Will you go with me to see him, and convince yourself?'' |
32075 | --Where will the desire for championship not lead some one of us, and where will it end? |
32075 | Am I depriving him of the amber, the dew, and the saffron light, or not? |
32075 | Am I wicked, I wonder, to be repeating these stories? |
32075 | And do I never, in these days, see anything of my coöperative friends? |
32075 | And he did n''t see how it was it had n''t killed me off long ago-- you remember, Jim? |
32075 | And is it not an argument in its favor that its discipline is able to control and surmount such demoralizing tendencies? |
32075 | And pray, what have you to do with Dialecticals, Eve? |
32075 | And that young Scotch doctor that was so astonished to see what a family I had-- you have n''t forgotten him, have you, Jim?'' |
32075 | And then what do I want of it?" |
32075 | And this permit?" |
32075 | And what have either been since? |
32075 | And why exact military service from those who are in the decline of life? |
32075 | And why not? |
32075 | And, now, what have you been doing with yourself?" |
32075 | Are there not such things as fair and unfair?" |
32075 | Are we never to do a kind thing, we unfortunate creatures, because we are women and are young?" |
32075 | Be he livin''in Mariposa, ma''am?" |
32075 | But I do n''t suppose in real life brothers and sisters ever do care much for each other-- do you think they do? |
32075 | But even if they were? |
32075 | But if this be Swedenborgianism, who of us is there that will not bid it God speed? |
32075 | But to what great end? |
32075 | But what can have made you think that I needed any lecture about him? |
32075 | But what did this matter to the criticaster? |
32075 | But what is all this hurly- burly about? |
32075 | But what is its real value? |
32075 | But what of that? |
32075 | But what was I going to tell you? |
32075 | But whom then do you care about-- in that sense?" |
32075 | But why should you not object just at present? |
32075 | By the by, did Danneris advance you money for the journey?" |
32075 | By the way, you know Mellifont?" |
32075 | Can anything have happened to Mrs. Malise''s baby? |
32075 | Can it be possible that he too is a lover?" |
32075 | Can you fancy it? |
32075 | Can you give me the names of the Three Persons?'' |
32075 | Colette, the Saint who was walled up? |
32075 | Could one have suspected such oddities in human shape, such outlandish rigs? |
32075 | Danneris?" |
32075 | Dared I apply to the English embassy? |
32075 | Did Herbert think for a moment what would befall Mimi if she acted as her generosity and all their ideas would prompt her? |
32075 | Did a cruel father, my lammie, spear his own child with a wicked pin, and stick her up in a case?" |
32075 | Did you ever notice any-- ring-- that he wore or-- carried?" |
32075 | Did you know it?" |
32075 | Dis- moi, qu''en penses- tu dans tes jours de tristesse? |
32075 | Do they hang around me in adoring groups? |
32075 | Do they lean enraptured over me as I sweep the chords of the harp? |
32075 | Do they who whispered that I sang like the crow before, now loudly declare that my voice puts the nightingale out of conceit with his own minstrelsy?" |
32075 | Do you ever look at the pictures and the titles of books in the windows of the High Church bookshops? |
32075 | Do you know what being wiped out means?" |
32075 | Do you know what these things are, Miss Grey?" |
32075 | Do you remember that particular year when it froze so very soon, or did not freeze for such an unprecedented length of time? |
32075 | Do you understand what that means?" |
32075 | Finally, with an effort, she half whispered:"Do you know where he is now?" |
32075 | He briefly compared my person with the description, and then queried:"And the boy?" |
32075 | He further inquired"what they wanted to hev sech a doggoned mis''able word as thet on a ring fur?" |
32075 | He is at work on an opera, you know-- or perhaps you have not heard?" |
32075 | He too? |
32075 | Heron?" |
32075 | Heron?" |
32075 | How could I possibly be offended? |
32075 | How could I save him with such a wreck? |
32075 | How d''ye think of getting a livelihood this winter?'' |
32075 | How soon will it freeze this season? |
32075 | I believe you do own a good many of the houses there now, do n''t you?" |
32075 | I called him han''some, did n''t you, Scotty?" |
32075 | I dare say it has given me as much pleasure as it has given him, and made me quite as proud too-- and is not that something to gain?" |
32075 | I have n''t known any such cases-- have you?" |
32075 | I ought not to have any ideas of my own, I suppose?" |
32075 | I suppose it means being killed?" |
32075 | I think they are both right enough all things considered, do n''t you know?" |
32075 | I wish I could think myself entitled to bear such a name?" |
32075 | I wonder if he is happy-- if he_ is_ anywhere?" |
32075 | If the one should be condemned-- and it should be-- what should be done in case of the other? |
32075 | In appointments other tests than the Jeffersonian,"Is he honest, is he faithful, is he capable?" |
32075 | In the light of recent disclosures, does not the ill- gotten money burn in your pockets? |
32075 | In what year did it freeze soonest? |
32075 | Is it not extraordinary,"said M. Danneris, turning to me,"that even the very children of this oppressed race fill their minds with a sense of wrong?" |
32075 | Is it not written that good Americans, when they die, go to Paris? |
32075 | Is it praise or blame, this dedication? |
32075 | Is not this rather a pitiful spectacle? |
32075 | Is the affair of Bull Run to be wondered at, with such material, and in the light of later education? |
32075 | Is the reason given any reason at all? |
32075 | Is there anything in it? |
32075 | Is there anything to- day?" |
32075 | It sounds very mean, but what is a girl to do? |
32075 | It was his own philosophy that in this matter one thing is about as good as another-- Aimer est le grand point; qu''importe la maitresse? |
32075 | Just in time to see you, I suppose, before you go? |
32075 | Now then, Miss Grey, which of these two fellows is to sit for Keeton?" |
32075 | Now which of them do you want to win?" |
32075 | Now, Miss Grey, who is to have the seat?" |
32075 | Odd, is it not? |
32075 | Odd, is n''t it, that he should come to be elected after all by me?" |
32075 | Oh, my dear little Mary Blanchet, why must you have a brother-- and why must that brother be a poet?" |
32075 | On the other hand, how could he formally ask for a private conversation with Minola without stirring all manner of absurd curiosity and conjecture? |
32075 | On what precise day was it closed to navigation last year-- the year before-- the year before that? |
32075 | Paul?" |
32075 | Paul?" |
32075 | Paul?" |
32075 | Paul?" |
32075 | Perhaps you would even choose to be bow- legged if so you could escape doing your duty? |
32075 | Qu''importe le flacon pourvu qu''on ait l''ivresse? |
32075 | Que t''a dit le malheur quand tu l''as consulté? |
32075 | Shall we indeed see that? |
32075 | She patiently answered one hundred and seven inquiries that evening, varying from,"How''s the sick lady?" |
32075 | So- and- So said there was n''t another case like mine in this country, did n''t he, Jim? |
32075 | Some particular person, then?" |
32075 | That sisters may be fond of their brothers sometimes?" |
32075 | That was the same year that-- no, not that year; it was the other year, do n''t you remember? |
32075 | The question with us is, Where is your passport? |
32075 | The work was a little expensive in this case, but what miser will say that the money was thrown away? |
32075 | Then you pronounce for Heron?" |
32075 | Then, as the men looked at each other, she cried in a clearer tone,"Is he_ dead_?" |
32075 | There are not many such men, I suppose?" |
32075 | They were there in charge of a sacred trust, and they have sold and betrayed that trust-- for what? |
32075 | This may be called devotion to one''s work? |
32075 | This morning I shook her, and nurse asked her,''What does papa do?'' |
32075 | To whom is the offer to be made? |
32075 | Trompé par tes amis, trahi par ta maitresse, Du ciel et de toi- même as- tu jamais douté? |
32075 | Was I in a dream? |
32075 | Was ever anything so unfortunate? |
32075 | Was it bile? |
32075 | Was it love? |
32075 | Was there some such ill- omened charm working all that night on Victor Heron? |
32075 | What are the ideas? |
32075 | What art thou doing here, O Imagination? |
32075 | What could I do? |
32075 | What could Minola say against all this arrangement, which seemed so satisfactory and so delightful to her friends? |
32075 | What distinctive principles divide them? |
32075 | What do you say to a scamper over the continent?" |
32075 | What do you think of a Duke''s brother for an admirer, Minola?" |
32075 | What do you think of all this, Susie? |
32075 | What is one of the mediocre mass to do? |
32075 | What is there here of harmony or of melody that would be valuable for its own sake? |
32075 | What next?" |
32075 | What to all the cheek- by- jowl encounters with the peasants in our cheap, rapturously happy sketching tours? |
32075 | What to my lodgings at the tailor''s-- a poor cobbler- tailor, in Dresden? |
32075 | What to my lunches of_ Wurst_ beer and black bread? |
32075 | What to the concerts, where, in smoke and a three- penny seat, I heard music as good as plenty which costs me ten shillings to a guinea in London? |
32075 | What was dramatic poetry before the half century which began with Marlow and Shakespeare? |
32075 | What was painting before the like period of its glory? |
32075 | What would have been thought of them five years ago even? |
32075 | What would they have said to it? |
32075 | When could you start?" |
32075 | When? |
32075 | Where is the blame If, when their mute significance I meet, Mine say the same? |
32075 | Where was the free life she had arranged for herself? |
32075 | Where were the frowns gone? |
32075 | Where?" |
32075 | Which of these two men do you want to see in Parliament?" |
32075 | Whither hast thou, Fancy free, Guided me, Wild Bohemian sister dear? |
32075 | Who does not know Mrs. Norton''s"A soldier of the Legion lay dying in Algiers,"and has not conjured up an image of"fair Bingen on the Rhine"? |
32075 | Who is wise enough to tell what differentiates the Republican and the Democratic parties? |
32075 | Who then was_ the_ lover-- the other lover? |
32075 | Who would ever have thought of meeting you here?" |
32075 | Why ca n''t you tell me what you are going to do?" |
32075 | Why not from a woman, Mr. Heron? |
32075 | Why not now as well as at any other time?" |
32075 | Why not speak out, Mr. Heron, like a man and a brother? |
32075 | Why should I disturb the arrangements of these kind people because of any weaknesses of mine? |
32075 | Why should I not be? |
32075 | Why should Mr. Wilkes speak of Bassanio''s going to Belmont"to swindle Portia"? |
32075 | Why should military law assume the power to control more? |
32075 | Why should there be any greater degradation to him in having it done by me? |
32075 | Why such an incongruous distinction between uniformed corps and ununiformed militia? |
32075 | Why then ask, was Mr. Sheppard too a lover? |
32075 | Why? |
32075 | Will not the Herr dine before he leaves?" |
32075 | Will the Herr follow me?" |
32075 | Will you have beer or wine? |
32075 | Would I be seated? |
32075 | Would you exchange love in the bush for love among these"leaders of thought"in London? |
32075 | You appreciate my motives I am sure, Heron, my dear friend?" |
32075 | You do n''t know what that is, my barbaric New Zealander? |
32075 | You have promised to excuse my blunt way of talking out, have n''t you? |
32075 | You know both these fellows, do n''t you?" |
32075 | You would have thought that would have fetched him, would n''t you? |
32075 | _ Voilà tout._""Bribe the commissaire?" |
32075 | to,"Jim Wilmer''s gal perking up a little arter her faint?" |
44450 | And what next--so the listeners ask--"what was the next step made?" |
44450 | And you, O disciple dearly loved, what of you and your brethren? |
44450 | Do ye now believe? 44450 How much is that man worth?" |
44450 | Master, where dwellest thou? |
44450 | What think ye of the Christ? |
44450 | Whom seek ye? |
44450 | ''Have I not chosen you twelve, and yet one of you is a devil?'' |
44450 | ''Will ye also go away?'' |
44450 | A man may disrobe; what more can be done? |
44450 | A really earnest, humble consecration to God? |
44450 | Alexander, CÃ ¦ sar, Charlemagne, and myself founded great empires; but upon what did the creations of our genius depend? |
44450 | And Charles Wesley''s melancholy is the most attractive in the world-- Oh, when shall we sweetly move? |
44450 | And do you really think that the world will ever be converted in that way? |
44450 | And he saith,"But who say ye that I am?" |
44450 | And once again, in the haste of the resurrection morning, what was the moment and what was the scene which turned his despair into belief? |
44450 | And so what is faith? |
44450 | And they say, What have we got to do now? |
44450 | And they-- they hardly knew what to say-- only they must see Him, must go with Him; and they stammered out:"Rabbi, where dwellest thou?" |
44450 | And what are the rest of us doing? |
44450 | And what did our Lord Himself say to St. Peter about his fall? |
44450 | And what does all this teach us? |
44450 | And what is the meaning of that sacrifice, if it be not to teach us that God counts no price too great to pay for the redemption of the human soul? |
44450 | And what next did they learn? |
44450 | And what, oh, what shall I do?" |
44450 | And yet what has it done but make known to us a universe infinitely more wonderful and sublime than men had ever dreamed of? |
44450 | And, then, how shall it be restored? |
44450 | Are we not under the strongest possible obligations to account for Jesus Christ? |
44450 | Are you musing in your heart which of them may be your guide and master, which is the Christ? |
44450 | Are you not of more value than many sparrows?" |
44450 | Are you yet at the beginning, looking wistfully, with hungry eyes, after a hundred gallant human heroes who point you this way and that? |
44450 | But have we gotten rid entirely of the premise on which it rested? |
44450 | But how can we account for the perfection of His humanity, if we deny the reality of His divinity? |
44450 | But is not this far too often accompanied by a revolt from all dogmatic truth? |
44450 | But what does follow? |
44450 | But what is evangelization? |
44450 | But what is it to"believe in Christ?" |
44450 | But, dear friends, am I right in saying that this frame is a Christian frame? |
44450 | Can He whose life they tell be Himself no more than a mere man?... |
44450 | Can he be a man capable, not only of acting for himself, but capable, by that subtle and magical influence, of arousing the activity of others? |
44450 | Can it be that writings at once so sublime and so simple are the work of men? |
44450 | Can we demand a fairer world than God will make? |
44450 | Can we do that? |
44450 | Can we imagine better than God can do? |
44450 | Can we then wonder at all forms of opposition meeting us? |
44450 | Certainly, but which is the fact, that or this? |
44450 | Christ came to cast fire on earth, and what does He desire but that it be kindled? |
44450 | David fell-- deep as man can fall; but what does he say in that great fifty- first Psalm, in which he confesses his sin? |
44450 | Did the medieval Church never regret the act by which it drove forth the Waldenses into schism? |
44450 | Did you ever hear a satisfactory definition of laughter? |
44450 | Do they wear too dark a hue at times? |
44450 | Do you believe it? |
44450 | Do you believe it?" |
44450 | Do you know what the word"bless"means, what it was derived from? |
44450 | Do you remember the story of the portrait of Dante which is painted upon the walls of Bargello, at Florence? |
44450 | Do you say, What can I do, because the light round me is like unto darkness? |
44450 | Do you say, What is the use of fighting, for where I stand we have barely held our own? |
44450 | Do you think walking up to the cannon''s mouth would have been difficult to that man? |
44450 | Does he possess the third? |
44450 | Does it seem that the perfect life for the individual, and for the race, is too sublime, that it is a distant and unattainable ideal? |
44450 | Does not the Scripture itself go even further? |
44450 | Does not the commercial view of life still prevail in civilized society? |
44450 | Does the difficulty lie in the event or in the method of approaching it? |
44450 | Does the religion of Christ, the absolute and abiding faith, need the defense of concealment, or of sophistical apology, or of lies? |
44450 | Does there not come a time when we feel that the power, as it were, of things has forsaken us? |
44450 | Facts? |
44450 | God made His minister a flame of fire in the dark and cold, else could Christ have conquered? |
44450 | Has He not been working in the saints who have reminded the world of God? |
44450 | Has a man faith in the Lord Jesus Christ who simply does not disbelieve in him? |
44450 | Has it slipt into the water? |
44450 | Has our Church never regretted the day when it looked askance at the work of John Wesley? |
44450 | Has the ax- head gone? |
44450 | Has the splendid hope of Christ been falsified? |
44450 | Have there been no grounds for optimism? |
44450 | Have ye each made this yet sufficiently a matter of prayer, of self- denial, of deep, faithful trusting all to God? |
44450 | Have you any right to expect that it should be converted in that way? |
44450 | Have you ever thought how St. Paul was actually driven to use the awful language of the passion when he described his own life? |
44450 | Have you met your tempter yet? |
44450 | Have you never seen a group of evil- doers deliberately set themselves to ruin a newcomer, scoffing at his innocence and enticing him to their orgies? |
44450 | Have you never seen it? |
44450 | Have you read the memoir of Brainerd? |
44450 | He claimed to be God, and if His claim be not true, how can he be good? |
44450 | He knows his malady; now how shall he be cured of it? |
44450 | He said,"Was Paul crucified for you?" |
44450 | How came He to be the contemporary of all the ages? |
44450 | How came He to emancipate Himself from the sectarianism and sectionalism of His country and century? |
44450 | How can it be restored? |
44450 | How did such ideas come into the human mind? |
44450 | How do young people begin, most of them? |
44450 | How does the Gethsemane come? |
44450 | How far have you come in this pathway of faith? |
44450 | How have our liberties been secured? |
44450 | How long shall there be this suspense, as that of early dawn ere the sunshine fills the twilight? |
44450 | How much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | How shall we account for the height to which that stream rose? |
44450 | How, then, can you explain faith? |
44450 | How, then, will it be received by those into whose hand is placed the responsibility of its guidance? |
44450 | I may not deny that what the gospel says is true, but is that believing? |
44450 | I put then the question with the_ utmost_ directness,"What think ye of Christ?" |
44450 | I think an hour is the longest that anybody could bear it--"Could ye not watch with me one hour?" |
44450 | If that source were simply human, how can we account for the superhuman height which it reached? |
44450 | If we could ascend to heaven to- day and scan the ranks of the blest, should we not find multitudes among them who were once sunk low as man can fall? |
44450 | If we have no great masters, how shall we hope to have eager and loving disciples? |
44450 | If we leave half the race in ignorance, how shall we hope to lift the other half into the light of truth and love? |
44450 | If you wanted to make a man laugh, would you attempt to define laughter to him? |
44450 | If, then, we accept this view of life, what answer can we give to the question, how much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | In the event, or, perhaps, in the mental or moral constitution of the people who contemplate it? |
44450 | Invest it, and then what do you do? |
44450 | Is he a man, in fact, who can make his influence felt among the men of his day? |
44450 | Is he in touch with his time? |
44450 | Is it advancement? |
44450 | Is it conceivable that human error shall prevail against God''s truth? |
44450 | Is it long to wait, hard to fight, difficult to keep up the spirit during the discouragements that beset all missionary life? |
44450 | Is it merely the pursuit of happiness? |
44450 | Is it not rather a book of life, of literature, full of symbols and metaphors and poetry? |
44450 | Is it possible to look on the great, eager, yearning, doubting, and suffering life of man, and not to feel infinite desire to be of help? |
44450 | Is it promotion? |
44450 | Is not He the standard of humanity now, and is not He its Redeemer? |
44450 | Is not that conceivable? |
44450 | Is not that possible? |
44450 | Is not theology, like the other sciences, bound to accept facts? |
44450 | Is the Bible itself written with the rigid exactness of a mathematical treatise? |
44450 | Is this wise, and is it well? |
44450 | It appeared so, but was it so? |
44450 | Left? |
44450 | Mark how towers herald the approach to the towns and cities, and ask what they stand there for? |
44450 | My brethren, where do you stand? |
44450 | My brothers, if a few men can honestly say this to us in the future, will it not be better than Greek and Roman fame? |
44450 | My friend, what sort of a life are you living? |
44450 | Nay, Lord, to whom shall we go? |
44450 | Nevertheless, to the unsaved no question is more bewildering than this:"What shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?" |
44450 | Not only cunning casts in clay: Let science prove we are, and then What matters science unto men, At least to me? |
44450 | Now do you not think you can see how it is that the eternal Son shed His blood in Gethsemane, and offered Himself immaculate to God on Calvary? |
44450 | Now, as they journeyed southward through CÃ ¦ sarea Philippi, He asked them,"Who do men say that I am?" |
44450 | Now, what is it that should follow when we have parted with our life and lived our Gethsemane; what should be the effect upon our lives? |
44450 | O death, where is thy sting?" |
44450 | O loving and divine John, the Evangelist, what thinkest thou of the Christ? |
44450 | Oh, when shall our souls be at rest? |
44450 | Or had each its own due place at least in hastening the coming of the kingdom, and in determining when the fulness of time had arrived? |
44450 | Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
44450 | Shall we dread the results of historical research? |
44450 | So soon made happy? |
44450 | Suppose, then, that we come to Him with this question: How much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | The fiery moment arrives; do we stand; do we fall? |
44450 | The people who looked at the mob of Jerusalem, or the man who saw the coming generations? |
44450 | There is more of courage and manhood needed for them than for walking up to the cannon''s mouth? |
44450 | This brings us to the matter in hand: What shall I do to be saved? |
44450 | Tho all men forsake thee yet will not I; and in spite of all, I believe, and am sure that thou art the Christ, the holy one of God?" |
44450 | To die? |
44450 | To send Bibles, to deliver the message to everybody? |
44450 | To suffer? |
44450 | To the jailer of Philippi who, in sudden conviction, was moved to cry,"What shall I do?" |
44450 | To whom can I go? |
44450 | Was he not right? |
44450 | Was it the reaction of detecting the quiet tokens of deliberate purpose there, where all had seemed to him a very chaos of confusion? |
44450 | Was it the sudden sense that struck him of order and seemliness as of a thing premeditated, intended? |
44450 | We must learn to look upon ourselves and our fellow men purely from a business point of view and to ask only: What can this man make? |
44450 | Were not the Greek philosophers right in thinking that our ideals are eternal, and are kept with God? |
44450 | Were they then never to rise into the joy of clear and entire belief? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What book has been so misunderstood, and misinterpreted, even by honest and enlightened minds, even by theologians themselves? |
44450 | What did He mean by that? |
44450 | What did he mean by that? |
44450 | What did he notice? |
44450 | What does Paul mean when he talks about being justified? |
44450 | What hope is there of genuine progress, in the religious life especially, if we leave her uneducated? |
44450 | What is faith? |
44450 | What is faith? |
44450 | What is love? |
44450 | What is the purpose of life? |
44450 | What is there to fear? |
44450 | What is thy testimony? |
44450 | What is thy testimony? |
44450 | What more have I got left? |
44450 | What other answer can be given by one who judges everything by a money standard? |
44450 | What sayst Thou of Thyself? |
44450 | What shall be done about it? |
44450 | What shall we say of him who opens a haunt of temptation, sets out his snares and deliberately deals out death by the dram? |
44450 | What thinkest thou, O Channing, of Jesus Christ? |
44450 | What thinkest thou, O Herder, illustrious German thinker, broad scholar, and exquisite genius, of Jesus, the Christ? |
44450 | What was it that he saw and felt? |
44450 | What was it that so startled him? |
44450 | What was there in the peasant conditions of His family life to produce the uniqueness of His manhood? |
44450 | When men ask us, Are the doctrines of Christianity dead; are they played out? |
44450 | Whence do all light and all love come? |
44450 | Where did the imagination of the prophets and apostles catch fire? |
44450 | Where do you go to find the origin of the great principle of civil liberty? |
44450 | Where is the spring of the prayers and aspirations of the saints? |
44450 | Which is nearer to the truth, the Christ of the sorrowful way or the Christ at God''s right hand? |
44450 | Who can say? |
44450 | Who is He? |
44450 | Who is right? |
44450 | Who is there that has ever been brave enough to accept such a salutation without a whisper of protest, without a shadow of a scruple? |
44450 | Who is this strange visitant-- so quiet, so silent, so unobserved? |
44450 | Who shall deliver us from this spirit of bitterness? |
44450 | Who shall lead us out of this heavy, fetid air of the lazar- house and the morgue? |
44450 | Who shall separate us from Christ''s love? |
44450 | Who will have it? |
44450 | Who would not court a new- made grave rather than risk the perils of survivorship? |
44450 | Why could that little jet of blood and water never pass out of his sight? |
44450 | Why credible to the one, but incredible to the other? |
44450 | Why need you and I seek to disprove what no man has ever yet proved or will prove? |
44450 | Why not again with Christ as Captain? |
44450 | Why not always, why not everywhere? |
44450 | Why pay so great a price? |
44450 | Why pay so great a price? |
44450 | Why should it haunt him sixty years after, as still his heart wonders over the mysterious witness of the water and the blood? |
44450 | Why? |
44450 | Will He not continue to work till all men come to the stature of perfection? |
44450 | Will it be said to any of you? |
44450 | Will you fail as others failed me?" |
44450 | Yet had prayer no part in the plan of the Incarnation? |
44450 | You remember, in the story of the Garden of Eden, where the tree which represented temptation stood? |
44450 | and he begins to raise the question- the only question he thinks of after that-- What shall I do for them? |
44450 | could, I ask, all these be fruitless and in vain? |
44450 | how much can I get out of this man''s labor? |
44450 | how much has that man made? |
44450 | how much will that man pay for my services? |
44450 | is there anything which a man can fear ten times more than the fire that never shall be quenched? |
44450 | or How shall I become a Christian? |
44450 | why not? |
51370 | And what,said he,"is that?" |
51370 | But supposing, my dear sir, the Church to be in error, or even liable to err, how can we possibly profess to believe any mystery? 51370 But what will you take, my dear sir?" |
51370 | But,said he again,"what can we do? |
51370 | Did I not tell you I would shed the last drop of my blood to stop the progress of your religion? |
51370 | Look at his big mouth,he would say;"what in the world does he want it for? |
51370 | Mr. Spencer took out his handkerchief, wiped his face, and only said to the housekeeper:And how dare you be angry? |
51370 | My dear Father Ignatius,he half indignantly exclaimed,"why do_ you_ travel by{ 381} third class?" |
51370 | Under what title? |
51370 | Well, and what is it? |
51370 | What do you mean? |
51370 | What have we seen in our days? 51370 What is that?" |
51370 | What need of this? |
51370 | What will people say? |
51370 | What,thought he,"if the neighbours should see me carrying such a precious cargo?" |
51370 | Where are you, Johnny Doogan? |
51370 | Where does God know the truth to exist? 51370 Why do they not learn to leave off groaning over the present troubles? |
51370 | ''Do you think,''added the Prince,''I could see him? |
51370 | ''I have, indeed,''answered she;''but what is to follow?'' |
51370 | ''Under what title?'' |
51370 | ''What moment do you mean?'' |
51370 | ... What warrant have you that you are better inspired now than before? |
51370 | .... And is it I whom they would expect to give up my poor countrymen for hopeless? |
51370 | ...."It is certain that Jesus Christ founded a Church upon earth for the salvation of man; where, then, is it? |
51370 | 65:--"Enter: its grandeur overwhelms thee not; And why? |
51370 | About the Reformers she says:--"Can man reform the work of his Creator?" |
51370 | Am I not really mad on this point?'' |
51370 | And does that suit my purpose? |
51370 | And how can I know this but by the rule of obedience? |
51370 | And if a person loves them when he has them not, is it likely he would despise them if he had them? |
51370 | And might he not as well ask them to pray for that at once? |
51370 | And need I fear that I should be led into error by trusting to those guides to whom Christ himself thus directed me? |
51370 | And to what do the sects have recourse? |
51370 | And what has been the result of this Apostleship? |
51370 | And what if I did, to those who do know how far it is real, my ill- humour?" |
51370 | And what were my thoughts of that moment of which he spoke? |
51370 | And what, after all, does he ask? |
51370 | Are there no other emperors, or kings, or queens for Him to choose among, if emperors He has need of for the work? |
51370 | Are they not good ideas? |
51370 | At length he exclaimed,"Hilloa, George, what are you doing here?" |
51370 | But for what? |
51370 | But how shall sectaries take refuge in the mysterious predictions of the Apocalypse? |
51370 | But how stand Protestants? |
51370 | But is it not an error, it will be asked, a mistake to wish kings and emperors to interfere in such things? |
51370 | But the question comes, why not observe poverty, chastity, and obedience, without vowing them? |
51370 | But what if I did, to the gay people that do not, nor wish to, know? |
51370 | But where is the reason for this distinction? |
51370 | But where were such to be found? |
51370 | But why not? |
51370 | But will he, can he, be moved to take up the great cause? |
51370 | But will this remonstrance suffice to put an end to such insinuations from good Catholics? |
51370 | Can I go again?" |
51370 | Can we here again know the mind of Rome; and will not that have some weight in settling the question? |
51370 | Could I do otherwise than long to interest such a soul as this in the great cause I was supporting? |
51370 | Could he not ask for prayers as well as alms? |
51370 | Could he not do two things at once? |
51370 | Could it be expected that he would speak very agreeably and favourably{ 411} of the end I told him I was aiming at? |
51370 | Could n''t he eat enough with a smaller one?" |
51370 | Could that be wisdom? |
51370 | Did he know that repose was to be eternal? |
51370 | Did not the very plea of begging give him a right to go to different places, even from parish to parish, and speak publicly and privately? |
51370 | Do we find that they have done so?" |
51370 | Do we mean that every man may set up as an interpreter of Scripture, that every shoemaker and ploughman( as Catholics say) may become a preacher? |
51370 | Do we then_ wish_ that God should judge us by the standard of the wise who_ know_ their duty, or by that of the poor little ones? |
51370 | Do you not see that God is asking you for the dearest thing you can give? |
51370 | During the course of conversation, he asked Lord Lucan if he had not heard of his conversion? |
51370 | External or internal, or both? |
51370 | For what? |
51370 | Give it, then, freely, and thank Him for taking it, for do n''t you see that by this you are resembling Him more closely? |
51370 | He could bowl to a wicket, play cribbage, read Walter Scott, and shoot partridges, but where was his theology? |
51370 | He heard many say,"What will we do when he is gone?" |
51370 | He said with an incredulous smile:"And do you think the Irish pray for England?" |
51370 | He was bound to obey the Catholic Church-- how then should I not be equally bound to return to it? |
51370 | He was put several questions, such as"What do you think of Transubstantiation?" |
51370 | How are{ 424} we to account for the seeming alteration in his dispositions? |
51370 | How can I imagine myself more certain than you that I rightly interpret them, or that I have the assistance of Heaven? |
51370 | How d''ye do? |
51370 | How shall I ever be thankful enough for all this? |
51370 | How was it that I could have lived so long without being awakened to one sentiment of religious fear? |
51370 | How, then, can we solve the problem? |
51370 | However, should we differ, who is to decide which is in error? |
51370 | However, why should you have to bear this burden with us? |
51370 | How{ 5} easily, as it now appears to me, might my affections in those days have been weaned from the world, and made to value God alone? |
51370 | I answered,''Well, Monsignor, and why not try?'' |
51370 | I asked him did he remember and recognise the young English disputer? |
51370 | I asked,"Is Lord John Russell at home?" |
51370 | I did nothing but despise; and yet why should I, or other Protestants, look on it as a kind of impossibility that any relic can be genuine? |
51370 | I had bid him farewell, when my companion said,"May we see the Pope?" |
51370 | I had time to think with myself, after I had approached him,''Am I then to speak first? |
51370 | I said to them,''Will you allow me to offer you one word of advice? |
51370 | I said,"Do you remember me, my Lord?" |
51370 | I said,"Will you be so good as to say to him that Lord Spencer''s brother would wish to speak with him?" |
51370 | I slept none the worse, and why should I? |
51370 | I will recommend{ 419} it again; what more do you want? |
51370 | I would just say,"What do_ you_ say to this?" |
51370 | If after all we fail, what have we lost by trying and by hoping? |
51370 | If he did, how should I avoid a duel? |
51370 | If her energies could be turned in the right direction, what grand results might we not anticipate? |
51370 | If the Church be liable to error, may I not reply to our ministers:--''I doubt the truth of what you preach: I am not obliged to believe you''? |
51370 | If this Church be not_ The Church_ of Christ, I ask you where is it to be found? |
51370 | In my second audience I said to him:"Holy Father, may I repeat truly here what I am saying outside? |
51370 | In that memorable evening at Loughborough, I did not indeed altogether overlook the moral question-- Is a duel wrong? |
51370 | Is it, now, to be supposed that the Holy Father is averse to English and Irish Catholics praying especially for England, and praying much for it? |
51370 | Is that not enough?" |
51370 | Is there more to be got through before I am a perfect Catholic? |
51370 | Is this sincere and judicious conduct?" |
51370 | It is some years since I saw you?" |
51370 | Let us both, then, invoke the assistance of God, and do you candidly think our inspirations would agree as to the sense of the passage? |
51370 | Let us take up any young man''s journal of his age and read some pages of it, what shall we find? |
51370 | Lord Clarendon said:"Did you say that?" |
51370 | Matthew?" |
51370 | May I venture to call it a friendship? |
51370 | Might he not live to see this realized? |
51370 | Missions were the moving power, but how were they to enter into all the corners of a kingdom? |
51370 | Must we all put ourselves in a Cartesian doubt for a starting- point? |
51370 | Now I would ask you, Do you know Lord John Russell? |
51370 | Now how are the promises of Christ verified, if His Church could ever become idolatrous? |
51370 | Now what are the points on which this blasphemous repetition of national apostacy has fastened? |
51370 | Now, how stands the world in England on this question? |
51370 | Now, supposing you had not taken this unfavourable opinion of your past feelings and views, would you have adopted such regulations? |
51370 | Shall I succeed in the end? |
51370 | Smith?" |
51370 | The Bishop of course was pained, but merely said,''George, how could you preach such a sermon as that? |
51370 | The messenger[ query?] |
51370 | Then, let us make them; and how? |
51370 | This is fact, and who can gainsay it? |
51370 | This is my opinion, others have theirs; how shall we decide? |
51370 | This only fired her the more--"Why did n''t he tell the parish priest?" |
51370 | To be sure they did; but what was it? |
51370 | Twenty years might{ 499} do it, and were not his physical and mental powers fresh enough? |
51370 | Was he only inquiring his way, or did he utter the last words of his earthly mission to those young hearts? |
51370 | Was he satisfied or not? |
51370 | Was it not cool and thoughtful of him to mark out the time such a change of sentiment was likely to last? |
51370 | Was it to be conceived, I asked, that the Bishop of the first See was alone excluded from this recommendation? |
51370 | Was not the angel of God with me when He preserved me for so long from all attacks of this kind in such a place as Eton was in my time? |
51370 | What admirable methods does He employ in bringing sinners to himself? |
51370 | What can I return to Him for this blessing? |
51370 | What did he care about the opinion of the world? |
51370 | What did that mean? |
51370 | What have you to do at last? |
51370 | What is an illness in His sight? |
51370 | What kind of unity? |
51370 | What makes the difference? |
51370 | What right had he to be believed? |
51370 | What right have sects to the Bible? |
51370 | What right, then, thought I, had Luther and his companions to set themselves against the united voice of the Church? |
51370 | What was my conclusion here? |
51370 | What will Providence bring out of them?" |
51370 | Whenever Mr. Spencer asked him"Why was anything such a way in Catholic teaching?" |
51370 | Where am I to find it? |
51370 | Where did Calvin find this doctrine? |
51370 | Where were you, O my God, might I now exclaim, to leave me thus alone and unprotected on such a boisterous sea? |
51370 | Why did not this open my eyes, you will say, to the truth of Catholicity? |
51370 | Why should we pay any more tithes, and seat rents, and church rates, and Easter offerings, and the like? |
51370 | Will that evidence be weakened by fresh examination and discussion? |
51370 | Will you help me in this? |
51370 | Will you let me meet you at the station when you pass through London, and accompany you to the station for the Dover Railway?" |
51370 | Will you write me a line to say if you can come here? |
51370 | With a still more incredulous look, he added:"Do you think they pray for England at Maynooth?" |
51370 | Would your lordship think fit to mention the subject at Ushaw? |
51370 | and had he been where his spirit would be understood, or where one knew how to direct him, what might he not become? |
51370 | as poor Father Ignatius used to say,"shall these dry bones live?" |
51370 | at least, I think them so; and am I to think a person incapable of great and good designs because he is an emperor-- a prince? |
51370 | convert England with such a cope as that?" |
51370 | exclaimed the gentleman, making an effort to yawn,"have I not done yet? |
51370 | he continued,''do the same? |
51370 | how dare you spit in the face of Lord Spencer''s son, and he such a good gentleman? |
51370 | is this you? |
51370 | or"How will it look?" |
51370 | what say you?" |
51370 | who came to the door looked at my figure with some surprise, then said,"Yes, sir, but he is engaged at present?" |
51370 | who says that? |
51370 | { 445} Why not the same money drawn to effect the spiritual conquest? |
7033 | After all, why, indeed, yield up my soul in sadness? 7033 Could you not write the history of''Our Parish,''and also sketch briefly our country seats, marking out the spots connected with historical events?" |
7033 | Do you see,says Captain Hazen,"that fellow there, waving his sword to encourage those other fellows to come forward?" |
7033 | Have our readers ever remarked the peculiarly beautiful appearance of the pines at this season of the year? 7033 Hitherto, I have been enabled to act successfully on the defensive; but will a continuance in that course prove ultimately successful? |
7033 | How is the Duke? |
7033 | Qui a tué-- ces cariboo? |
7033 | Well,said the_ Grande Dame_,"what, then, am I to do?" |
7033 | Where''s the Highland Piper? |
7033 | Who was Miss Hannah MacCulloch? 7033 Would you like to learn how they dress-- how they marry-- how they are buried? |
7033 | ''I said I''d like to see you, for sure, but how am I to know you''re the right man?'' |
7033 | ''Ma foy,''exclaimed the bishop( of Ardagh,)''is that the hawthorn bush? |
7033 | ( born like himself in 1769), to commemorate his own release from the cares of State? |
7033 | --"But then how am I to sleep with my hair done up?" |
7033 | --"Has Davern sold out?" |
7033 | --"Where is Forbes?" |
7033 | Adieu, your daughters passing fair, In dancing, skating, who so rare? |
7033 | All these wondrous sights of our youth, where will we now find them? |
7033 | An unforseen hitch arose: the official hangman was dead; how then was Rathier to be hung? |
7033 | And how could it be otherwise? |
7033 | And how much of the precious metal would many an English duke give to possess, in his own famed isle, a site of such exquisite beauty? |
7033 | And what changes will not the next three hundred years bring about? |
7033 | Are they heraldic? |
7033 | Are they not glorious, handsome, manly fellows, our Sillery boys? |
7033 | Are you an admirer of nature, and sweet flowers? |
7033 | Are you anxious to possess the first- born of spring? |
7033 | Ask history? |
7033 | At what period did the most spacious highway of the ward("Crown"street, sixty feet in width), receive its baptismal name? |
7033 | But of those objects, viewed by moonlight, who would have dared becomingly depict the wild beauty? |
7033 | But the brave Captain Testu, the saviour of Champlain and of Quebec-- what became of him? |
7033 | But was he all that? |
7033 | But, you will say, how can he discover them under the snow? |
7033 | By whom and for what purpose, the robbery? |
7033 | C''est ça qui vous retape et vous refait un homme?" |
7033 | Can anyone tell us the pedigree of Barthélémy Coton? |
7033 | Can the world produce another? |
7033 | Cette plaque n''aurait- elle pas été destinée à une croix plantée à l''endroit que Giffard voulait défricher? |
7033 | Could she not teach them to warble sweetly, even from the roof which echoed the dying sighs of the Algonquin maid? |
7033 | Could we not make our_ friend_ our_ Garnishee_, And seize his chattels by a_ tiers saisi_? |
7033 | Cromie( Cramahé?) |
7033 | Dambourgès at the Sault- au- Matelot engagement? |
7033 | Did he dance? |
7033 | Did the locality get the name of_ Canardière_ on account of the_ Canards_, the ducks, he had bagged in his time? |
7033 | Did the manumitted blacks remain in Canada after their liberation, or did they seek a more congenial climate? |
7033 | Did the plate come out, ready prepared from France? |
7033 | Did there exist_ Tandems_, driving clubs, in 1665? |
7033 | Does the sacred fire still burn as bright? |
7033 | Doyle, who married at Quebec, a Miss Smith), for advice, saying:"How can I fight a girl?" |
7033 | Guion( Dion? |
7033 | Had he not without any trouble netted a gain of 50,000 half crowns? |
7033 | Had the_ Académie des Inscriptions, etc._, or any other_ académie_, any hand in the business? |
7033 | Has not each thoroughfare its distinctive feature-- its saintly, heathenish, courtly, national, heroic, perhaps burlesque, name? |
7033 | Have they not fed for the day their rabbits, their pigeons, their guinea- pigs? |
7033 | Have we not seen in our day a once warlike and princely race-- the Hurons-- dwindle down, through successive decay, to what_ now_ remains of them? |
7033 | Have you ever viewed its woods in all their autumnal glory, when September arrays them in tints of unsurpassed loveliness? |
7033 | Have you not a clergyman''s word for it-- his biographer''s? |
7033 | How could the poet do otherwise? |
7033 | How do matters now stand, Commander Ashe? |
7033 | How many balls at the Barons''Club? |
7033 | How many thrilling memories were recalled by this grim old structure? |
7033 | How many vicissitudes do they undergo before giving way to modern progress, the exigencies of commerce, the wants or whims of new masters? |
7033 | How much mysterious glamour does not relentless time shed over them in its unceasing march? |
7033 | How was Montmorenci Lodge furnished? |
7033 | How was his master the Intendant to manage the matter for him? |
7033 | How wretched your general affairs? |
7033 | If so, who were his partners? |
7033 | In fact, does not history meet you at every turn? |
7033 | Is it because a sailor, no doubt only partially relieved from the horrors of sobriety, there made a wild leap? |
7033 | Is it not incredible? |
7033 | Is there a town retaining more unmistakable vestiges of its rude beginnings-- of its pristine, narrow, Indian- haunted, forest paths? |
7033 | Is there not enough of nature''s charm around this sunny, truly Canadian home? |
7033 | Is there on American soul a single city intersected by such quaint, tortuous, legend- loving streets as old Quebec? |
7033 | It is that of Jean Guion( Dion?) |
7033 | It is well stocked with small trout, which seem to breed in great numbers in the dam near the Château-- a stream, did we say? |
7033 | Its peculiar origin? |
7033 | John Knox, or, possibly, under his own roof on the ramparts, near Hope Gate? |
7033 | Naturally, the question presents itself-- who were the individuals interred where these bones were found, and what was this place of sepulture? |
7033 | No one? |
7033 | One day a giant in a red shirt stood suddenly before him, saying--"''You''re Dick Dempsey, eh?'' |
7033 | QUERY.--Would I. H. S. stand for_ Jesus Hominum Salvator_? |
7033 | See disquisition in_ Album du Touriste_"Où est mort Montcalm?" |
7033 | Shall I tell you how, figuratively, if you should prefer, ended for Fréchette the"day of tumult"? |
7033 | Shall we confess that we ever had a fancy for historical contrasts? |
7033 | Snow Lake, over chasm, dale, mountain, pending that month dear above all others to King Hiems-- inexorable January? |
7033 | The building in which the Sovereign Council first held their meetings would appear to have stood on the south side of Fabrique street westward(?) |
7033 | The edifices, did we say? |
7033 | The matter was then proposed, and an answer returned very shortly, thus:_ Quaero an existimes_, vel,_ i d jus est, nec ne? |
7033 | The stars? |
7033 | The watch, did we say? |
7033 | Their origin, their progress, their decay, nay, their demolition by the modern iconoclast-- have they no teachings? |
7033 | Think you there was much"visiting,"much festivity, on that new year''s day? |
7033 | Thrilling-- jocund-- simple war- like time of 1837, where art thou flown?" |
7033 | Thy nameless graces, who can compass, serene majesty of Winter in the North? |
7033 | To what year can we fix the advent of wheeled vehicles? |
7033 | VERREAU?) |
7033 | Vous commencez à être dégoûté de ma cuisine_,"( Do you want me to tell you the truth? |
7033 | Was Cap Rouge and its quiet and sylvan bowers to him a haven of rest like St. Helena might have been to the_ Petit Caporal_? |
7033 | Was it 1646, 1647 or 1694? |
7033 | Was it Diana, the goddess of the chase, favoring one of her most ardent votaries with a glimpse of her form divine? |
7033 | Was it a sylph, the spirit of the wilderness? |
7033 | Was it built by Talon, or by Bigot? |
7033 | Was it intended to secure some of the Intendant''s plate or other portion of his ill- gotten treasure? |
7033 | Was the_ chère amie_, the elegant_ Baronne de St. Laurent_, of the party? |
7033 | Were Armida''s enchanted forests brighter? |
7033 | Were not these trying times for our worthy sires? |
7033 | Were the French fleet the first European keels which furrowed the Laurentian tide under Cape Diamond? |
7033 | Were these gentlemen all present? |
7033 | Were they all brothers? |
7033 | What a field here for investigation? |
7033 | What care could contract their brow? |
7033 | What cared the child of song if her innocent offspring were reared amidst these mouldering relics of the past, mayhap a guilty past? |
7033 | What could this have been built for, asked my romantic friend? |
7033 | What did the institutions of a free people, or the text of Magna Charta signify to them? |
7033 | What did they typify? |
7033 | What fatality, what calamity and how many events unknown to us have led to your downfall? |
7033 | What had brought it so far from home? |
7033 | What propitious turn of fortune? |
7033 | What took place at the interview between the French commander and the Huron potentate? |
7033 | What was it? |
7033 | What was the real state of the Colony on that identical 31st December, one hundred years ago? |
7033 | What were my sensations when I saw a tombstone, the reader can imagine? |
7033 | Whence the name Longwood? |
7033 | Where gone the Mures, Paynters, Munros, Matthew Bells, de Lanaudières, Lymburners, Smiths, Finlays, Caldwells, Percevals, Jonathan Sewells? |
7033 | Where is the Quebecer who has not noticed the neat cottage on the north of the St. Lewis road, where lived and died the Lord Bishop Mountain? |
7033 | Whether dancing ought to cease when their Lordships the Bishops entered, and made their bow to the representative of royalty? |
7033 | Whether la Baronne de St. Laurent would be admitted there or not? |
7033 | Which of the home products pleased, the most the worthy Mr. Galbraith? |
7033 | Who can describe all thy witchery? |
7033 | Who could approach such a city without emotion? |
7033 | Who cut on the lead the figure of the"flaming heart?" |
7033 | Who engraved the letters? |
7033 | Who has not heard of the Nestor of the Canadian Press, honest John Neilson? |
7033 | Who then was the Canadian Belle of former days? |
7033 | Who was the maker of his pistol- proof coats- of- mail? |
7033 | Who was, this Charland of 1759? |
7033 | Who will enlighten us on all these points? |
7033 | Who, then, attended this levée? |
7033 | Why did it bear that name? |
7033 | Why should I sorrow? |
7033 | With regard to the subject which has brought me to my feet, what am I to say? |
7033 | Would you like a few extracts from this curious old Sillery novel? |
7033 | Would you like a glimpse of domestic life as enjoyed at Sillery? |
7033 | Would you prefer to know him after he had left our shores and become Field Marshal the Duke of Kent? |
7033 | Wouldst thou fancy another view of winter less serene; a contrast such as glorious old KIT NORTH would have revelled in? |
7033 | [ 109] Did the dog belong to Champlain? |
7033 | [ 11] Did His Excellency use him as a saddle horse only? |
7033 | [ 287] Would this river be the Lairet or the St. Charles? |
7033 | _ Quien sabe?_ Who can unravel the mystery? |
7033 | _ Quien sabe?_ Who can unravel the mystery? |
7033 | how many annual dinners of the Veterans of 1775, at Menut''s? |
7033 | le C, si c''était un R? |
7033 | or are we to attribute the name to the circumstance of a dog named"Matelot"("Sailor") there taking a leap? |
7033 | replied the timber- tower,''and who are you?'' |
7033 | the letters at the top of the plate? |
7033 | we allude to that of Sir Edmund Head''s gifted son? |
7033 | what about the Holland Tree? |
7033 | which of the benign fairies who watched over his natal hour has Mr. Fréchette to thank for his present success? |
7033 | who would not forgive the frolicsome Bella all her flirtations? |
7033 | would ye prepare both for fox and fox- hunter? |
7033 | you a Quebecer and not to know about the Holland Tree? |
40058 | Am I she who once stood on that Crimean height? 40058 Am I the head of this household?" |
40058 | And suppose I do n''t return to eat one at all? |
40058 | But are your people better? |
40058 | Can you answer a plain question? |
40058 | Can you throw light,she was asked( June 21, 1866),"on the position of the medical officers of the_ Guards_? |
40058 | Could you send me a paragraph for Lord Hartington''s speech,she was asked,"to show the salient points of what the nation gets for its money? |
40058 | Did he walk? |
40058 | Did it ever occur to you,he had written( March 1867),"that you might write a short pamphlet or tract for the natives in India and get it translated? |
40058 | Do you know,wrote Miss Nightingale to Mrs. Clough( Nov. 7),"that he sometimes felt glad in the society of''Clough''during his last illness? |
40058 | Dr. Sutherland is so very etiquettish,she wrote to Captain Galton( June 24, 1867),"that he says, But how are you to have seen these papers? |
40058 | Have you got a copy of the Report of the Committee on the Organization of a Medical School? 40058 How can I thank you enough for your never ending kindness to me? |
40058 | I have been thinking,he wrote to her from Algiers( Jan. 28),"Will she be glad to hear from me? |
40058 | Is a man who buys bullocks the best man to be a banker? 40058 O my Creator, art Thou leading every man of us to perfection? |
40058 | Of the last party, all were married within a year; what is the use of sending out any more? |
40058 | Oh, are you my dearest Florence? 40058 Shall I royally discard it,"she asked,"or give them a buster?" |
40058 | The Son of God goes forth to war, who follows in his train? 40058 The dreaded letter has come,"she wrote to Dr. Sutherland;"what_ am_ I to answer; how to express sympathy with Prussia without alienating France?" |
40058 | Then do you think I might write to him? 40058 Was the luncheon good? |
40058 | What would Homer have been,she once said,"if he had had such heroes as the Lawrences to sing? |
40058 | Where is Florence? |
40058 | Which way,she wrote to friends likely to know,"do you think the storm is going?" |
40058 | Who are you? 40058 Who is he?" |
40058 | Why did you tell me that tremendous_ banger_? 40058 Why do I write to you,"he said,"about all these young men? |
40058 | Would Miss Nightingale oblige the Political Under- Secretary by suggesting an answer to Hawes''s points? |
40058 | Yes,she would say, leaning forward,"and what about this or that? |
40058 | _ Vexilla regis prodeunt_; yes, but of which King? |
40058 | are generally accommodated in the barrack without inconvenient overcrowding,and she asks,"What is_ convenient_ overcrowding?" |
40058 | ''What does the man mean by talking to me about style when I am thinking only of the sufferings and oppression of 100,000,000 of Ryots?'' |
40058 | ( 127)_ Cholera: What we can do?_ By George H. De''Ath, medical officer of health for Buckingham. |
40058 | ( 5) Do you mean really to live as a Patient? |
40058 | ( 89)"Who is the Savage?" |
40058 | ( Did you know the Baron Stockmar whom Sir Robert Peel called one of the most influential persons in Europe? |
40058 | ):--(1)_ It is a greater evil to do than to suffer injustice._ If you call this a"paradox,"why do you not call the 53rd Chapter of Isaiah a paradox? |
40058 | 309, 456_ Can we educate Education in India?_( 1879), ii. |
40058 | A little later, drawing a bow at a venture, Mr. Jowett wondered whether she was engaged about Indian sanitary matters? |
40058 | Algiers, indeed, she wrote tauntingly,"why not Astley''s?" |
40058 | Am I such a fool, I ask myself, as to do what she says I have done?" |
40058 | And Mrs. Cox wrote( July 15):"How can I ever thank you for the loving reception you gave me? |
40058 | And Woolwich, I suppose, is not on fire, or with the enemy at the gates?" |
40058 | And again:"What makes the difference between man and woman? |
40058 | And all for what? |
40058 | And during all those years, my great wish has been: would it be possible to ask Mr. Mill for his help and influence? |
40058 | And how can a woman be a Superintendent unless she has learnt to superintend herself? |
40058 | And how did she do all this? |
40058 | And how should it be done? |
40058 | And might I just ask one small question: whether you consider man has a little soul? |
40058 | And what was the end? |
40058 | And whatever am I to do?" |
40058 | And who am I that I should not choose to bear what my Master chooses to bear? |
40058 | And why should your Introductions be a sort of apology for recognizing that Socrates speaks the highest truth and no paradox? |
40058 | Another, comparing the proposals with what might exist in the future, asks, Does the Bill approximate to the ideal? |
40058 | Are not your sermons always a sort of apology for talking to them of God? |
40058 | Are there more of them, we may conceive him as saying, who have attained to the kingdom of heaven in their souls? |
40058 | Are these things now recognized at Head Quarters? |
40058 | Are they to have salt pork and beef? |
40058 | Because why? |
40058 | Blanchecotte is publishing her_ Impressions de Femme_--what is that? |
40058 | But could they ever be prevented until the Public Health Service was placed on a proper footing? |
40058 | But how? |
40058 | But if I am thinking and feeling and praying for you so much, how must the_ One_ Above feel for you? |
40058 | But it takes some time to make such an inquiry, or what would it be worth? |
40058 | But then Atalanta is not a sound incarnation of any''social or economic principle''--is she? |
40058 | But what was to be done? |
40058 | But what would you think of my opinion if I volunteered it about men whom I know only by name? |
40058 | But when is that year to come? |
40058 | But why should not he see you? |
40058 | But will you ride round first alone just as you are now at once and see whether what I have said is true?" |
40058 | But, Mr. Fraser, is life long enough for this? |
40058 | But, after all, how much does a minister know at first- hand of the business of a Department new to him? |
40058 | But, when we are ill, how can we be like God? |
40058 | Can we acquire this? |
40058 | Can you guess who wrote those words? |
40058 | Could not the existing disabilities as to property and influence of women be swept away by the legislature as it stands at present? |
40058 | Could they pay it? |
40058 | Could you have believed he was so much in earnest? |
40058 | Did Dr. Sutherland advise her to join a new"Central Philanthropic Agency"? |
40058 | Did I quote to you ever an expression which Neander used to me of Blanco White:_ einer Christ mehr in Unbewusstseyn als in Bewusstseyn_? |
40058 | Did he eat?" |
40058 | Did she succeed or fail herein? |
40058 | Did the War Office shrink from taking initiative in a matter which also concerned the India Office? |
40058 | Did you ever hear of Jack? |
40058 | Do men publish their_ Impressions d''Homme_? |
40058 | Do you know Lord Clinton, and does he know anything about it? |
40058 | Do you know that he was elected a scholar of Balliol with A. H. Clough? |
40058 | Do you know that there are thousands of girls about the ages of 18 to 23 named after you? |
40058 | Do you not think that woman may have been you in some former state of existence?" |
40058 | Do you remember the great London theatre which was burnt down at a Christmas pantomime? |
40058 | Do you suppose that if we were to offer £ 150 we should get a good article at once? |
40058 | Do you think I should have succeeded in doing anything if I had kicked and resisted and resented? |
40058 | Do you think it would be possible to write a mystical book which would also be the essence of Common Sense?" |
40058 | Do you think that he would be so good as to come and see me?" |
40058 | Do you think you are improving? |
40058 | Does Gen. Peel come to the War Office? |
40058 | Does it? |
40058 | Does this view of the matter seem a little transcendental? |
40058 | Every important letter is similarly sent to him with a note saying,"What am I to answer?" |
40058 | For what is Mysticism? |
40058 | Forgive me, dear Miss Z., do you think that you have the true_ love_ of the_ best_ in nursing? |
40058 | Have guarded statements, whether about God or any particular moral or truth, ever produced enthusiasm of religion or in morality? |
40058 | Have the little_ Lives of Gordon_ reached your men yet? |
40058 | He replied by quoting Homer:"[ Greek: amoton memauia], raging insatiably or without limit"-- adding wickedly"Whom did this represent?" |
40058 | He was lying in the way he liked-- silent, with Mr. Lewis Campbell sitting beside him-- when suddenly he opened his eyes and said,''Oh, is it you? |
40058 | Her amended report was to be circulated amongst the Army in India, but would it be read? |
40058 | Her sister was uniformly of the same opinion:"What_ can_ you know about such things, my dear?" |
40058 | How can I thank you properly for all your kindness and sympathy-- never failing-- when you had so many other things to occupy your mind? |
40058 | How can any undervalue business- habits? |
40058 | How can the owner and the master be the limit? |
40058 | How can you remember what you have never heard?... |
40058 | I am athirst to know_ your_ mind about these things.... Have you seen Stanley''s_ How I found Livingstone_? |
40058 | I am not blaming the past( who would blame you who devote your life to the good of others?). |
40058 | I can not bear to say: Compare him with the soldier in peace in barracks; for you will say, Then would you always have war? |
40058 | II The question had become instant thereupon, What was she to do next? |
40058 | If so, will he annihilate our Civil Sanitary element? |
40058 | If you answer( anonymously, as I hope, if at all), may I beg you to answer with facts only and without a trace of feeling?" |
40058 | In the meantime, if it is necessary to check outlay, should not the check be exercised on things that can stand over for a few years? |
40058 | In these circumstances might not some portion of the_ existing_ taxation( the village"cesses") be appropriated to sanitation as a first charge? |
40058 | Is Mr. Lowe to come in to the India Office? |
40058 | Is Sutherland to go all the same to Malta and Gibraltar this autumn? |
40058 | Is any one of us a_ stagnant woman_?" |
40058 | Is it even common sense? |
40058 | Is it not merely a hard word for"The Kingdom of Heaven is within"? |
40058 | Is it not the attempt to draw near to God, not by rites or ceremonies, but by inward disposition? |
40058 | Is it not the highest of truths? |
40058 | Is it not wonderful these men do not see this? |
40058 | Is it our Master''s command? |
40058 | Is it possible that, if woman suffrage is agitated as a means of removing these evils, the effect may be to prolong their existence? |
40058 | Is man only a constant repetition of himself? |
40058 | Is not the next thing for you to take no step till you know the results of this letter to him-- the next action he will take? |
40058 | Is not the thing of first importance to lay a statement of the whole case before your President? |
40058 | Is not this a thing to thank God about? |
40058 | Is that motive vain of being made perfect through suffering?" |
40058 | Is there any Dialogue, not even excepting the_ Phaedo_ and_ Crito_, where he is so much in earnest? |
40058 | Is there anything which you could do, or would wish to do, other than you are doing? |
40058 | It was always,"Is it right?" |
40058 | May I talk to you as I would to one of our undergraduates? |
40058 | May there not be some middle course whereby the men may be killed by neither?" |
40058 | May we ask for your advice and suggestions?" |
40058 | Miss Nightingale wrote Essays accordingly on"What is the Evidence that there is a Perfect God?" |
40058 | Most important: How the troops for Kumassi are to be supplied with water, day and night, fit to drink? |
40058 | Nay, would it not be breaking faith with him if it were not done? |
40058 | Nightingale?" |
40058 | No? |
40058 | Now is not all this the result of want of sympathy?... |
40058 | Now that she had"gone out of office,"was it not her duty to come into the open with her pen? |
40058 | Oh, daughters of God, are there so few to answer?" |
40058 | One man compares what is proposed with the existing state of things, and asks himself, Is there any decided improvement? |
40058 | One of her nursing friends paused in the talk to ask,"But am I not tiring you?" |
40058 | Or if some difficulty were propounded,"I wonder if I could help you at all? |
40058 | Or is this only a metaphysical idea for which there is no evidence? |
40058 | Or would it be necessary to provide others? |
40058 | Or, again, what is the effect of town life on offspring, in number and in health? |
40058 | Or,"Are you careful to take regular meals? |
40058 | People talked, he said, of"preventable diseases"; but"if preventable, why not prevented?" |
40058 | Perhaps Miss Nightingale would consider? |
40058 | Pray, if you speak of him, remember-- had it not been for him, where would our two Army Sanitary enquiries have been? |
40058 | Shall I tell you why I say this? |
40058 | Shall we be found wanting? |
40058 | She had provided means for bringing her horses to water, but who was to make them drink? |
40058 | Should he accept it, at risk of diverting some of his attention from these other reforms? |
40058 | Should she write to them? |
40058 | Spirit ration only as medicine? |
40058 | The War Office actually have_ no_ copy, and the Army Medical Department only a proof not signed and supposed to have been altered?" |
40058 | The case was sent to Dr. Sutherland, with a pressing appeal,"What_ shall_ I do? |
40058 | The last column inquired whether the householder was"Deaf- and- dumb, blind, imbecile, or lunatic?" |
40058 | The question was, How much did the Bill do? |
40058 | The subordinate officials were piling up what they were pleased to call"reasons"to the contrary, were they? |
40058 | The test,_ e.g._ even of a good doctor or of an acquaintance is, to which camp does he belong? |
40058 | Then about their shoes, stockings, and boots? |
40058 | Then, again, what boy has not heard in Chapel or in school- song a moral drawn from how things will look"forty years on"? |
40058 | There were difficulties in the way, were there? |
40058 | These great moral truths are( are they not? |
40058 | Those which are shown by her Papers to be hers are:"What is to be done with Netley?" |
40058 | VII Was Miss Nightingale''s life happy or unhappy? |
40058 | Voltaire said, did he not? |
40058 | Was a Sister returning to work in the North after a holiday in London? |
40058 | Was it to prevent my worrying you?" |
40058 | Was not the cultivator at the mercy of the usurers? |
40058 | Was the Minister hanging back? |
40058 | Was the oriflamme, which was now beginning to wave above the nursing sisterhood,"of heavenly fire, or of terrestrial tissue?" |
40058 | Were not the Zemindars rapacious? |
40058 | Were the ryots willing to pay a water- rate? |
40058 | What are the contributions of the several classes( as to social position and residence) to the population of the next generation? |
40058 | What are the laws therein concerned? |
40058 | What are the practical remedies for extortionate usury in India, and principally in the Bombay Deccan? |
40058 | What are they? |
40058 | What can be done for the health of the home without the woman of the home? |
40058 | What comes of them? |
40058 | What did Captain Galton advise? |
40058 | What had been the result of twenty years of compulsory education? |
40058 | What if Scientific Agriculture could be taught at Oxford?" |
40058 | What proportion of children forget all that they learnt at school? |
40058 | What result has the school- teaching on the life and conduct of those who do not forget it? |
40058 | What should I have been without her? |
40058 | What should be suggested? |
40058 | What signifies what becomes of me? |
40058 | What was I to my Master''s work? |
40058 | What will our Religion be in 1999?" |
40058 | What_ are_ the''higher motives''? |
40058 | What_ does_ it matter whether Voysey is defended or not, and whether Lord Derby has a memorial or not? |
40058 | What_ is_ to be done about that bust?" |
40058 | When she invited a nursing friend to her house, the formula was"Will you come and spend Saturday to Monday in bed with me?" |
40058 | When we have got to the top of the mountain, are we much nearer the stars or not?" |
40058 | Where shall I find God? |
40058 | Where will you find so perfect a man? |
40058 | Who are the"ministering angels"? |
40058 | Who can be surprised that we worshipped our Chief? |
40058 | Who has been so blest as you? |
40058 | Who is the King of Glory? |
40058 | Who should approach Lord Stanley on the details? |
40058 | Who was to be protected? |
40058 | Who was to pay for irrigation? |
40058 | Who were the heroes then? |
40058 | Why call these higher truths"paradoxes"? |
40058 | Why did she not try and explain? |
40058 | Why do we have Hospitals in order to cure, and Workhouse Infirmaries in order_ not_ to cure? |
40058 | Why should he not return to India in an unofficial character? |
40058 | Why should not some of it be used for education in the science of"Health at Home"? |
40058 | Why, she wanted to know, did not the Society advertise itself more? |
40058 | Why? |
40058 | Will Gen. Peel imperil the Army Sanitary Commission? |
40058 | Will you cast a look sometimes on my old friends, Miss Knight and Mrs.[ T. H.] Green, and my two young friends, F. and J.? |
40058 | Will you kindly give your opinion on the best kind of building?" |
40058 | Will you see them for me? |
40058 | Will you try to hope and be at peace; and just ask of God time to complete your work? |
40058 | Would I leave in three days''time for service in the Soudan? |
40058 | Would it be necessary to get the Returns for each Corps separately? |
40058 | Would it not be better to have a separate Treasurer for the Army to receive all moneys and issue them to all departments? |
40058 | Would it not be important to get the ages-- age and time of service at Death or Invaliding? |
40058 | Would the Treasury object to the cost? |
40058 | Would they, or would they not, accept her service? |
40058 | Would you like Mr. and Mrs. Smith, or any of their family, to join you?" |
40058 | Would you tell M. Mohl this, if you are writing, about the Queen of Holland''s proposed visit to me? |
40058 | Yes? |
40058 | You have been sitting up too late? |
40058 | [ 232] Do you remember that it is 30 years to- morrow since Sidney Herbert died?" |
40058 | and equal responsibilities be given, as they ought to be, to both men and women? |
40058 | and have you thought of doing so and so?" |
40058 | and was what it did, good or bad? |
40058 | and what would many have been without her? |
40058 | be better than any other, filled up for each station with the Diseases annually for a period say of 10 years? |
40058 | crush all those struggling young peoples, Sclav and Greek, back under the hideous massacres and oppression and corruption of the Turk? |
40058 | how can you certify the Hospital? |
40058 | if you precipitately resigned before he had had time even to consider the statement? |
40058 | is this the way to''human progress''? |
40058 | on"What is the Character of God?" |
40058 | or Will she swear? |
40058 | or you will ask him? |
40058 | or"What does all this come to?" |
40058 | she once asked, in the daughter''s absence;"is she still in her hospital? |
40058 | unable to control ourselves, therefore unable to control others? |
40058 | what would they say if_ we_ were to talk about''Gentlemen Doctors''?). |
18283 | ''What''s the use of your joining the Catholic Church? 18283 Am I impious to say that the language used in Scripture for Christ''s expresses the thoughts of my soul? |
18283 | April 28.--What shall I say? 18283 Are the Paulists Religious? |
18283 | Are we Christians if we act not in the spirit in which Christ acted? 18283 But if there is a great difference of spirit, can we live together? |
18283 | But whom do you think I met in his antechamber? 18283 Can I not adopt simple garmenture and diet without their doing so? |
18283 | Can I say it? 18283 Can a man repeat the past with genius? |
18283 | Did he believe in God? |
18283 | Do you know what God is? |
18283 | Do you know,he said long afterwards,"the thought that first loosened me from the life I led? |
18283 | Friday, June 29.--Am I led by something higher to the life to which I am tending? 18283 Had they no notion of the hereafter?" |
18283 | How about persons of dull minds or of little spiritual ambition coming into the use of this freedom? 18283 How am I now actualizing my spiritual life? |
18283 | How did he receive you at Fruitlands? |
18283 | How far will the body regain its former strength? 18283 How shall I escape this? |
18283 | How shall I make the sacrifice which shall accomplish the sole end I have, and should have, in view? 18283 How shall we hear the voices of angels? |
18283 | I put this question to Brownson:''How can I become certain of the objective reality of the operations of my soul?'' 18283 I turned my steps,"he writes,"to the general hospital; and why? |
18283 | If not this, what? |
18283 | Is this sufficient to keep me here? 18283 June 12.--At times I have an impulse to cry out,''What wouldst Thou have me to do?'' |
18283 | November 15.--How does Jesus commune with Humanity through the Church? 18283 That our real wishes are presentiments of our capabilities is a very true proverb, no doubt; but are we not most ignorant of what these are? |
18283 | That people understand liberty, at least,returned the king;"when will it be understood among us?" |
18283 | The Church is a great almoner,he says,"but what is she doing to ameliorate and improve the circumstances of the poorer and more numerous classes? |
18283 | The fundamental question is, Am I willing to submit my will to the guidance and direction of the Church? 18283 The question is_ how_ shall such souls co- operate with Him in preparation for this extraordinary outpouring of divine grace? |
18283 | Then change your church,said Father Hecker;"if you have come back to the right doctrine, why not come back to the true Church?" |
18283 | We have labored together in union for material wealth; can we now labor in the same way for spiritual wealth? 18283 We should be able to say,''Which of you convinceth me of sin?'' |
18283 | What about my health? |
18283 | What are the temptations which hold men back from following God and leading a divine life? 18283 What can one learn in forty years?" |
18283 | What did Alcott say when you left? |
18283 | What did I pray for? 18283 What did Thoreau say about it?" |
18283 | What if he had been a Catholic, and thoroughly sanctified? |
18283 | What is God? 18283 What is force? |
18283 | What is it to know? 18283 What is light? |
18283 | What is love? 18283 What is prayer? |
18283 | What is the effect of sin? 18283 What is the innermost of all? |
18283 | What is the most positive answer? 18283 What is the personality of man? |
18283 | What is the truest? 18283 What proof does a man give that_ he is_ if he does only what has been done? |
18283 | What shall I be led to? 18283 What should we desire? |
18283 | What will be the nature of this association and the_ special character_ of its work? 18283 What yet remains?" |
18283 | When are we with God? 18283 When did I know him first? |
18283 | When do we hear the music of heaven? 18283 When will you come back to Brook Farm? |
18283 | When you were in early life? |
18283 | Where does God dwell? 18283 Where does God dwell? |
18283 | Where shall we find God? 18283 Who is most like God? |
18283 | Who is the Lord? 18283 Who is the purest? |
18283 | Who loves God? 18283 Who was De Buggenoms?" |
18283 | Why do n''t you put me under obedience to do this? |
18283 | Why do n''t you read novels, as other people do? |
18283 | Why do n''t you talk English? |
18283 | Why not? |
18283 | Why, how long have you been here? |
18283 | You did n''t like it? |
18283 | You say he was Emerson''s master: what do you mean by that? |
18283 | _ Question._ How long were you unable to study? 18283 _ Then he questions himself:"What have I against the Catholic Church? |
18283 | ''But what can I do?'' |
18283 | ''But you intend to remain,''he inquired,''together in community?'' |
18283 | ''Father Hecker,''said he,''why ca n''t you make a Catholic of me?'' |
18283 | ''What truths were the stepping- stones that led you here?'' |
18283 | ''Wo n''t you go with me to hear the Fathers?'' |
18283 | ''Work?'' |
18283 | ''Yes,''he said;''has his wife become a Catholic?'' |
18283 | Am I less wilful? |
18283 | Am I more loving? |
18283 | Am I superstitious or egoistic in believing this? |
18283 | Am I to blame? |
18283 | Am I wrong? |
18283 | And even holiness, what is it? |
18283 | And how can He do this otherwise than by removing from our soul and its faculties all that is contrary to the divine order?" |
18283 | And how? |
18283 | And if not his, how those of other men? |
18283 | And is n''t that time enough to learn English in?" |
18283 | And such was his own settled conviction, as is shown by the following, written about the end of June:"Where could I find repose? |
18283 | And what if I could tell? |
18283 | And who more sympathizing with our movement than yourself? |
18283 | And why not? |
18283 | And why? |
18283 | And without them, what will be phalanxes, groups and series, attractive industry, and all the sublime words of modern reforms? |
18283 | And, Father Hecker was asked, whom are you going to get to write for the magazine? |
18283 | Are Americans of less worth in God''s eyes than pagans and Buddhists? |
18283 | Are my friends dear to me? |
18283 | Are not these, dear mother, blessings? |
18283 | Are these[ delights] never to return? |
18283 | Are they not implanted in us by the hand of our Creator? |
18283 | Are they not what go to constitute our very individuality?" |
18283 | Are we not in this state? |
18283 | As soon as one part is better another gets out of order? |
18283 | Be what? |
18283 | But by denying them, would not our life gain by flowing in a more heavenly direction?" |
18283 | But is it wise to go where there are the most difficulties to overcome? |
18283 | But is n''t Almighty God good? |
18283 | But now-- well, when a mosquito comes in I say, Mosquito, have you any good to do me? |
18283 | But one''s duties and responsibilities, what of these in the meantime? |
18283 | But to what end is all speculation, all dreaming, all questioning, but to advance humanity, to bring forward the manifestation of the Son of God? |
18283 | But what else should I speak of? |
18283 | But, after all, what is it? |
18283 | By no means E----"[ Emerson?] |
18283 | By remaining here and trying to bear it, or by travelling? |
18283 | Ca n''t you get along without hanging to her skirts?'' |
18283 | Can I adopt a course of life to increase and fulfil my present life? |
18283 | Can I not leave results to themselves? |
18283 | Can a man live in the world and follow Christ? |
18283 | Can not something be done to lead them to the knowledge of the truth? |
18283 | Can we do without you? |
18283 | Can you do without us? |
18283 | Did Christ and His apostles study languages? |
18283 | Did I believe in Unitarianism? |
18283 | Did he not find men here and there in his travels with whom he would take counsel and who could comfort him? |
18283 | Do I ask too much from you? |
18283 | Do I not feel that I have something to receive here, to add to, to increase my highest life, which I have never felt anywhere else? |
18283 | Do I sacrifice more than I did? |
18283 | Do they not convey to your heart joy and consolation? |
18283 | Do we not see the hidden worth, glory, and beauty of others as our own becomes revealed to us? |
18283 | Do you know that sometimes I am tempted to think that I am necessary? |
18283 | Do you really believe the Gospel? |
18283 | Do you really believe the Holy Catholic Church? |
18283 | Does He now commune with the Church? |
18283 | Does Protestantism? |
18283 | Does not like seek like? |
18283 | Does the study of Greek and Latin help a soul towards its salvation? |
18283 | For are not these peculiarities inborn? |
18283 | For why ask advice of men when the Holy Spirit is Himself our director? |
18283 | George Ripley said to me,''Hecker, what have you got to tell? |
18283 | George, shall we go arm- in- arm in our heavenly journey as we have done in our earthly one?" |
18283 | HECKER.--"Brook Farm, May 16, 1843.--DEAR MOTHER: You will not take it unkind, my not writing to you before? |
18283 | Have I acted unworthily? |
18283 | Have we any objective rule to compare our faith with which would give us the measure of our superstition? |
18283 | Have we the spiritual as well as the natural brotherhood? |
18283 | Have you seen the last_ Dial?_ The_ Present_ is good, but surely not good enough. |
18283 | He asked me,''Can you do all that any Catholic priest can do?'' |
18283 | He was asked:"Do n''t you think we might have a memorial tablet to Dr. Brownson in our church?" |
18283 | Hecker, I suppose it was the art, the architecture, and so on in the Catholic Church which led you to her?'' |
18283 | Hecker, do you think we have not got true religion? |
18283 | His answer to the question, What is the relation between the inner and the outer action of God upon my soul? |
18283 | How account for this weakness of character in Catholics? |
18283 | How can I doubt these things? |
18283 | How can I love my fellow- men and yet get rich by the sweat of their brows? |
18283 | How can I repay you? |
18283 | How can I stop my life from flowing on? |
18283 | How can it be purified of all other inordinate love except by dryness and bitterness? |
18283 | How can the heart be filled with the spirit of divine love while it contains any other? |
18283 | How can this be remedied? |
18283 | How canst thou love me? |
18283 | How many Catholic literary men and women do you know of? |
18283 | How much of to- day would have seemed miraculous or superstitious to the past? |
18283 | How shall I attain unto Him? |
18283 | How shall I live so that I may be the best I can be under any conditions? |
18283 | How shall I name it? |
18283 | How will it happen? |
18283 | How, he asked himself, shall the living word be framed anew for our new people? |
18283 | I ask, Who are you? |
18283 | I cry, who am I and what does this mean? |
18283 | I feel a double consciousness in this state, and think,''Now, is not this real? |
18283 | I have the life-- is not that the end?" |
18283 | I said to Père Othmann:''Why did you not give me this book when I first came? |
18283 | I say sincerely that I have lost all but this one thing, and how shall I speak it? |
18283 | I say to myself: 1st, How long will the machine keep working in this style? |
18283 | I would shout up into the empty vault of heaven:''Ah, why plaguest Thou me so? |
18283 | If my life is purer than that of those around me, can I not trust to its own simple influence? |
18283 | If not, then ask: Is the question of that importance that it requires defence, and the upsetting of attacks? |
18283 | If so, and I could remain there for a certain length of time, why should I not go? |
18283 | If there be such a work, and an associative effort be necessary, will not the Holy Spirit produce in souls, certain ones at least, such a vocation? |
18283 | If there is anything for me to do, why this darkness all around me? |
18283 | If those in which I now am are not the best, where shall I go or how shall I change them? |
18283 | In your novitiate? |
18283 | Is He not here in thy midst? |
18283 | Is He not here? |
18283 | Is He not our nearest friend? |
18283 | Is His presence not nearest of all to thee? |
18283 | Is any closer to us than He when we are good? |
18283 | Is any further from us when we are wicked? |
18283 | Is it not best for me to accept my own nature rather than attempt to mould it as though it were an object? |
18283 | Is it not better to make some return to God-- here in your own country-- for what He has done for you, rather than to be sucking your thumbs abroad? |
18283 | Is it not quite a different thing from grace? |
18283 | Is it not that which we consume on and in our bodies? |
18283 | Is it not the business of man to save his own soul, and this before all things? |
18283 | Is it not the very sacrifice you are appointed to make, to overcome this spiritual luxury and to become able to do that which is disagreeable? |
18283 | Is it our Father''s, or is it not? |
18283 | Is it to try my faith? |
18283 | Is it true that such grace is imparted? |
18283 | Is life dear to me? |
18283 | Is not our own existence more than this existence in the world? |
18283 | Is not the bond of unity in the Holy Spirit which will unite such souls all that is needed in the present state of things to do this work?" |
18283 | Is not this the first time since I have been here that I have recovered myself? |
18283 | Is not this the self- will which revolts against the involuntary will of the Spirit? |
18283 | Is the Lord instructing me for anything? |
18283 | Is the good we might do worth the labor? |
18283 | Is there a being whom I may marry and who would be the means of opening my eyes? |
18283 | Is there no bright hope at a distance which cheers me onward and beckons me to speed? |
18283 | Is this fancy on my part? |
18283 | It is the appointed medium of salvation, and how can we hope for any good except through it? |
18283 | It would be like asking,''Wherefore is that which is?'' |
18283 | Let me be but true to Him-- how then can I be false to either man or the world? |
18283 | Let us believe in Him, and clothe ourselves through faith in Him with His virtues, and who shall resist us? |
18283 | Like his great patron, St. Paul,"What wilt Thou have me to do?" |
18283 | Lord, I am silent, for who can speak in Thy presence? |
18283 | Must I commit that which in my sight is a crime, which I feel would make me miserable and be death to my soul? |
18283 | Must I needs have their concurrence? |
18283 | Must Protestantism finally triumph with the Saxon races? |
18283 | My highest convictions, my deepest wants, lead me to it; and should I not obey them? |
18283 | My soul is grieved-- for what? |
18283 | Need I assure those who have been interested in my history that I also have found a home in the same community, where I am consecrated to its use? |
18283 | Nor do we mean to say that they were purely in the natural order-- who can be said to be that? |
18283 | Now, does this show what one would naturally expect to flow from faith in the sacraments? |
18283 | Question: How were you told-- what words were spoken to you? |
18283 | Reader, would you be honest, and do no injustice? |
18283 | Shall I ever meet with one the windows of whose soul will open simultaneously with mine?" |
18283 | Shall I ever see thee nearer to my heart? |
18283 | Shall we say:''What shall we do?'' |
18283 | Should I cease from doing that which is contrary to my spirit, what else should I do? |
18283 | Should I submit and give myself up to that which does not engage my whole being? |
18283 | Should this life grow-- what? |
18283 | Speaking of diet a man said:''Why, what do you intend? |
18283 | Still, how could I help it?" |
18283 | TO GEORGE HECKER.--"Brook Farm, March 6, 1843.--What was the reason of my going, or what made me go? |
18283 | The Intellect says,''When you are all that you can be-- what then?''" |
18283 | The Spirit promises to teach us in all things: what more would it have me do in this way? |
18283 | The union of bodies? |
18283 | The union of souls? |
18283 | Then he said:"I know how to read English, but I have never heard it spoken; can you not speak a little piece for me?" |
18283 | Then the question came up, Which religion recognizes this element or want of our nature, and meets all its legitimate demands? |
18283 | This is not the life I would lead, but how shall I change it? |
18283 | Thus in a letter he said:"Why should we not form a league for the cause of our Lord, to whom we owe all? |
18283 | To leave them, to give up the thought of living with them again-- can I entertain that idea? |
18283 | Was he not right? |
18283 | Was not Bronson Alcott the greatest of all?" |
18283 | Was the life given by Him to His immediate disciples all that has been given and transmitted to us, or does He now commune with the visible Church? |
18283 | Was this light given for another and wider field of labor? |
18283 | We are treasuring up corruption for the day of death; is this not so? |
18283 | We find the following among the memoranda of conversations:"June 30, 1886.--Why did n''t I switch off from Christianity as Carlyle did? |
18283 | We find the following memorandum:"_ Question:_ What''s the matter with the back of your head? |
18283 | We must give them all up one day, and why not now? |
18283 | We saw a room, and what do you imagine they charged for it? |
18283 | Well enough; but why should one go to a weak and almost dried- up spring when there is one equally near, fresh, always flowing and full of life? |
18283 | Were these real? |
18283 | What better proof of this than the rage into which his lectures and writings threw the outright enemies of the Church? |
18283 | What could they_ not_ effect in a lifetime of well- directed work?" |
18283 | What does God desire from me? |
18283 | What future? |
18283 | What imprisons? |
18283 | What is imprisoned? |
18283 | What is it He has sent me into the world to do? |
18283 | What is it that costs so much labor of mind and body? |
18283 | What is that? |
18283 | What is the good of anything which is always to be sought and never found, and who can be strengthened with food ever craved but never tasted? |
18283 | What kind of piety do you call that?" |
18283 | What more do I want than this, and honest men and women who will listen to me?" |
18283 | What shall I do to receive these blessings again?" |
18283 | What shall I do? |
18283 | What shall I do? |
18283 | What shall I say? |
18283 | What should be my next step? |
18283 | What sins can I accuse myself of now? |
18283 | What substitute for a priest is equal to a good book? |
18283 | What vocation to the priesthood has not found its origin in the pages of a good book, or at any rate been fostered by its devout lessons? |
18283 | What will be the relation of the soul with its former occupations? |
18283 | What will that be? |
18283 | When shall we see them? |
18283 | Where am I? |
18283 | Where are our Isaiahs, our Ezekiels, our Jeremiahs? |
18283 | Where are you going to take me? |
18283 | Where canst thou place Him-- in what locality? |
18283 | Where is the sacrifice in following what the natural tendencies and fixed habits of our mind dispose us to do? |
18283 | Who but a fool would look for something out of doors which he knows he has within? |
18283 | Who can tell? |
18283 | Who ever tries to do something outside routine lines against whom hands are not raised and whose motives and acts are not misconstrued? |
18283 | Who knows?" |
18283 | Who takes all humanity into his heart, and with the past and present at once in his mind can inspire men to live and act for the divine future?" |
18283 | Who will deny that there were men not a few among the heathen in whom Prudence, Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance were highly exemplified? |
18283 | Who would have dreamed of this twenty years ago? |
18283 | Whom can I find like myself, whom can I speak to that will understand me? |
18283 | Whom could he pray to? |
18283 | Whom shall I cry to but Him who has given me life and planted this spirit in me? |
18283 | Why did Luther leave the company of the true reformers? |
18283 | Why is all this action a profanity to me? |
18283 | Why is it that all things seem to me to be instinct with prophecy? |
18283 | Why is this? |
18283 | Why me? |
18283 | Why not do this for our age? |
18283 | Why not some one else? |
18283 | Why prayest thou as if He were at a great distance from thee? |
18283 | Why should I not be satisfied when I am living, growing? |
18283 | Why should I now hesitate when I find the Catholic Church will do so? |
18283 | Why should others tell me that it is so, and will be so, in an unconscious way, as Larned did on Sunday last, and as others have before him? |
18283 | Why so? |
18283 | Why thump one''s own flesh here? |
18283 | Why torment and pain me so? |
18283 | Why? |
18283 | Will He not impart wisdom as well as love?" |
18283 | Will I be led home? |
18283 | Will this additional light require other conditions? |
18283 | Wilt Thou give me hope, strength, guidance?" |
18283 | Would it not be better to plant the tree in the soil where it can grow most in every direction? |
18283 | Would the Bible even in that case suffice to make any one man, woman, or child a Christian? |
18283 | Would the Son of God have been needed to ransom man if he were not of incomparable value?" |
18283 | Wouldst Thou have me to give up all? |
18283 | Yes, my brethren, it may be unnatural, but how shall I be natural? |
18283 | Yes; but how? |
18283 | Yes? |
18283 | Yesterday, as I was praying, the thought flashed across my mind, Where is God? |
18283 | You appear to ask this question: What object have you in contemplation? |
18283 | You will forgive me and love me none the less, will you not? |
18283 | _ Q._ But not all the details of your sufferings? |
18283 | _ Q._ When? |
18283 | _ Question:_ But suppose it to be God''s will that you should say Mass notwithstanding this difficulty? |
18283 | _ Question:_ Does this effect come at receiving Communion? |
18283 | and how soon? |
18283 | and when? |
18283 | days that once I used to prize, Are ye forever gone? |
18283 | dost thou show thyself in this shape? |
18283 | dost thou shudder? |
18283 | hast thou not heard in some bright moment a strain from heaven''s angelic choirs? |
18283 | hast thou passed like a cloud over men''s souls, making them blind, deaf and dumb? |
18283 | how long shall I be tried in this season of desolation? |
18283 | is this possible? |
18283 | or would you prefer the rule to be made only for a select body, composed of such men as----and----, and the like?''" |
18283 | or, as Father Hecker puts it,"Why did Luther change his base?" |
18283 | that they may be blotted out? |
18283 | thou eternal, ever- blooming virgin, the Future, shall I ever embrace thee? |
18283 | what is Thy mercy that Thou sufferest us to live? |
18283 | what is all this for? |
18283 | what might I not have been? |
18283 | where is one that can hear? |
18283 | where it will end? |
18283 | who has the conception of Jesus being his_ Friend?_ O ancient faith, how dear, how good is God in giving us sinners thee! |
18283 | why did you go into the snare? |
18283 | why is it that the noblest actions of humanity speak not to my soul? |
18283 | why was this deep, ever- burning life given me, unless it be that I might be slowly and painfully consumed by it? |
18283 | wilt Thou guide me and lead me, no matter what pain or distress I may have to pass through, to the true path Thou wouldst have me go in? |
19690 | Against Rome? |
19690 | Has not all our misery, as a Church, arisen from people being afraid to look difficulties in the face? 19690 Imprimis, why did I go up to Littlemore at all? |
19690 | Is not this a time of strange providences? 19690 It is easy to say,''Why_ will_ you do_ any_ thing? |
19690 | It may be said-- I have said it to myself--''Why, however, did you_ publish_? 19690 May I be allowed to say, that I augur nothing but evil, if we in any respect prejudice our title to be a branch of the Apostolic Church? |
19690 | Romanor"Romish?" |
19690 | Supposing the person who wrote Junius were asked whether he was the author, might he deny it? |
19690 | There is in the Church a vast tradition and testimony about miracles; how is it to be accounted for? 19690 Why do you meddle? |
19690 | Why? |
19690 | the wholewhat? |
19690 | ''How do you mean?'' |
19690 | ), for what is the life of you all, as day passes after day, but a simple endeavour to serve Him, from whom all blessing comes? |
19690 | ... How are we to avoid Scylla and Charybdis and go straight on to the very image of Christ?" |
19690 | ... Is it a point of conscience not to deceive them? |
19690 | ... Nay, suppose you yourselves were once to see a miracle, would you not feel the occurrence to be like passing a line? |
19690 | ... Would you rather have your sons and daughters members of the Church of England or of the Church of Rome?" |
19690 | 2. is it in its_ nature_ certainly miraculous? |
19690 | 3. has it sufficient_ evidence_? |
19690 | Again, a practical, effective doubt is a point too, but who can easily ascertain it for himself? |
19690 | Again, what is meant but this by St. Paul''s saying,"It is good for a man not to touch a woman?" |
19690 | Again,"When I read these outrages upon common sense, what wonder if I said to myself,''This man can not believe what he is saying?''" |
19690 | And he said to her, When any man doth inquire, Is there any man here? |
19690 | And how am I now to be trusted, when long ago I was trusted, and was found wanting? |
19690 | And moreover, I should here also ask the previous question, Have I any right to accept such a confidence? |
19690 | And thus I am led on to ask,"What head of a sect is there? |
19690 | And what is the consequence? |
19690 | And what was that political principle, and how could it best be kept out of England? |
19690 | And who had taught them? |
19690 | And, again, if all killing be not murder, nor all taking from another stealing, why must all untruths be lies? |
19690 | And, if they were unsettled already, how could I point to them a place of refuge, which I was not sure that I should choose for myself? |
19690 | Are all Protestant text- books at the University immaculate? |
19690 | Are text- books the ultimate authority, or are they manuals in the hands of a lecturer, and the groundwork of his remarks? |
19690 | Are_ you_ to suffer or_ I_? |
19690 | But for myself, I can not indeed prove it, I can not tell_ how_ it is; but I say,"Why should it not be? |
19690 | But is it an excellence which can be purchased? |
19690 | But they persisted:"What was I doing at Littlemore?" |
19690 | But what shall I say of the upshot of all this talk of my economies and equivocations and the like? |
19690 | But when he goes on to ask with sneers, why I should believe his denial, if I did not consider him trustworthy in the first instance? |
19690 | Can there be a plainer testimony borne to the practical character of my sermons at St. Mary''s than this gratuitous insinuation? |
19690 | Can you give a better than that it is a sin against justice, as Taylor and Paley consider it? |
19690 | Can, then, the infallible authority, with any show of reason, be said in fact to have destroyed the energy of the intellect in the Catholic Church? |
19690 | Controversies should be decided by the reason; is it legitimate warfare to appeal to the misgivings of the public mind and to its dislikings? |
19690 | Could not he say_ which_ they are? |
19690 | Did he forget that the sermon of which he thus speaks can be read by others as well as him? |
19690 | Did he value and feel tender about, and cling to his position? |
19690 | Did it? |
19690 | Do they force all men who go to their Churches to believe in the 39 Articles, or to join in the Athanasian Creed? |
19690 | Do you believe them all? |
19690 | Do you call a man a dupe or a block- head for believing them? |
19690 | Do you call an author a knave or a cheat who records them? |
19690 | Do you think she is displeased at them? |
19690 | Do you, on the other hand, think them incredible? |
19690 | Does the same argument tell in the House of Commons, on the hustings, and at Exeter Hall? |
19690 | Doing there? |
19690 | Dr. Newman does not signify,''I did not say it, but I did mean it''?" |
19690 | For what have I done that I am to be called to account by the world for my private actions, in a way in which no one else is called? |
19690 | For who can know himself, and the multitude of subtle influences which act upon him? |
19690 | Has he a single fact which belongs to me personally or by profession to couple my name with equivocation in 1843? |
19690 | Have we never thought lawyers tiresome who came down for the assizes and talked law all through dinner? |
19690 | He also asks, p. 14,"Why was it preached? |
19690 | He asks, p. 229,"_ If_ the stars are_ not_ suns, for what conceivable_ purpose_ were they created?" |
19690 | He gave up the charge of knavery; well and good: but where was the logical necessity of his bringing another? |
19690 | He is now only aiming to justify morally his original assertion; why is he not at liberty to do so?" |
19690 | He said,"The_ tone_ of your letters, even more than their language, makes me feel,_ to my very deep pleasure_,"--what? |
19690 | He that is able to receive it, let him receive it?" |
19690 | How am I to say all that has to be said in a reasonable compass? |
19690 | How can I make a record of what passed within me, without seeming to be satirical? |
19690 | How could I be considered in a position, even to say a word to them one way or the other? |
19690 | How could I ever hope to make them believe in a second theology, when I had cheated them in the first? |
19690 | How could I in any sense direct others, who had to be guided in so momentous a matter myself? |
19690 | How could I presume to unsettle them, as I was unsettled, when I had no means of bringing them out of such unsettlement? |
19690 | How could I remain at St. Mary''s a hypocrite? |
19690 | How could it? |
19690 | How could men act together, whatever was their zeal, unless they were united in a sort of individuality? |
19690 | How had I done worse, than the Evangelical party in their_ ex animo_ reception of the Services for Baptism and Visitation of the Sick? |
19690 | How many years had I thought myself sure of what I now rejected? |
19690 | How, for instance, does it tend to make a man a hypocrite, to be forbidden to publish a libel? |
19690 | How, then, could I be the dolt to say or imply that the celibacy of the clergy was a part of the definition of the Church? |
19690 | I asked, in the words of a great motto,"Ubi lapsus? |
19690 | I call the man who preached that Sermon a Protestant? |
19690 | I did believe what I said; but had I a good reason for saying it? |
19690 | I did nothing of the kind; and what effect has this had upon this estimable critic? |
19690 | I have no difficulty in receiving it: if_ I_ have no difficulty, why may not another have no difficulty also? |
19690 | I made answer,"What do you mean by''Rome''?" |
19690 | I should like to know what opinions, beyond those which relate to the Creed,_ are_ held by the"majority of English Churchmen:"--are his own? |
19690 | I then thought myself right; how was I to be certain that I was right now? |
19690 | I wish people to know_ why_ I am acting, as well as_ what_ I am doing; it takes off that vague and distressing surprise,''What_ can_ have made him?''" |
19690 | I would ask, by which of the commandments is a lie forbidden? |
19690 | I would ask, by which of the commandments is a lie forbidden? |
19690 | I would not do so for my own sake; for how could I acquiesce in a mere Protestant interpretation of the Articles? |
19690 | If Brewster may bring devotion into astronomy, why may not my friend bring it into history? |
19690 | If a beggar gets food at a gentleman''s house once, does he not send others thither after him? |
19690 | If he intended still to arraign me on the charge of lying, why could he not say so as a man? |
19690 | If they were inspired by Roman theologians( and this was taken for granted), why did they not speak out at once? |
19690 | If you are attacked by thieves once, do you forthwith leave your windows open at night? |
19690 | If you were_ sure_ that he wrote Junius, would you, if he denied it, think as well of him afterwards? |
19690 | In my Essay on Miracles of the year 1826, I proposed three questions about a professed miraculous occurrence, 1. is it antecedently_ probable_? |
19690 | In short, would not Hooker, if Vicar of St. Mary''s, be in my difficulty?" |
19690 | Indeed, is it possible( humanly speaking) that those, who have so much the same heart, should widely differ? |
19690 | Is it a mortal sin in_ me_, not joining another communion? |
19690 | Is it necessary to take for gospel every word of Aristotle''s Ethics, or every assertion of Hey or Burnett on the Articles? |
19690 | Is it right, or is it wrong, to begin with private judgment? |
19690 | Is it true moderation, instead of trying to fortify a middle doctrine, to fling stones at those who do? |
19690 | Is it wise to quarrel with this ground, because it is not exactly what we should choose, had we the power of choice? |
19690 | Is not my present position a cruelty, as well as a treachery towards the Church? |
19690 | Is not this almost a truism? |
19690 | Is the Tower of London shut against sight- seers, because the coats of mail and pikes there may have half- legendary tales connected with them? |
19690 | Is_ this_ my assailant''s definition of opinion,"a thing which_ can_ be proved?" |
19690 | It is difficult, impossible to imagine, I grant-- but how is it difficult to believe? |
19690 | It is the concrete being that reasons; pass a number of years, and I find my mind in a new place; how? |
19690 | It was thrown in our teeth;"How can you manage to sign the Articles? |
19690 | Mary''s?" |
19690 | May I take a case parallel though different? |
19690 | May not I consider my post at St. Mary''s as a place of protest against it? |
19690 | May we not leave to another age_ its own_ evil-- to settle the question of Romanism?" |
19690 | May we not try to leave it in His hands, and be content? |
19690 | May we not, on the other hand, look for a blessing_ through_ obedience even to an erroneous system, and a guidance even by means of it out of it? |
19690 | My difficulty was this: I had been deceived greatly once; how could I be sure that I was not deceived a second time? |
19690 | Nay, how could I, with satisfaction to myself, analyse my own mind, and say what I held and what I did not? |
19690 | Need I say that I am speaking of John Keble? |
19690 | Next, I stated_ what_ evidence there is for the miracles of which I was speaking; what is the harm of that? |
19690 | Next, how could I have come by them? |
19690 | Next, pray, what kind of a virtue is that, which is_ not_ done for its own sake? |
19690 | Now I ask, Why could not Mr. Kingsley be open? |
19690 | Now first he is speaking of my sermons; where, then, is his proof that in my sermons I dealt in matters dark, offensive, doubtful, actually forbidden? |
19690 | Now it may be asked of me,"Well, why should not Mr. Kingsley take a course such as this? |
19690 | Now what I ought to do for the author, may I not do for myself? |
19690 | Now why this_ coup de thà © âtre_? |
19690 | Now will it be believed that this writer suppresses the fact that the miracles of St. Walburga are treated by the author of her Life as mythical? |
19690 | Now, will it be believed that, so far from concealing this, I had carefully stated it in the sentence immediately preceding, and_ he suppresses it_? |
19690 | On this occasion I recollect expressing to a friend the distress it gave me thus to speak; but, I said,"How can I help saying it, if I think it? |
19690 | Or that Queen Victoria''s Government was to the Church of England, what Nero''s or Dioclesian''s was to the Church of Rome? |
19690 | Pusey?" |
19690 | Secondly, But, if I allow of_ silence_, why not of the method of_ material lying_, since half of a truth_ is_ often a lie? |
19690 | She does not teach that human nature is irreclaimable, else wherefore should she be sent? |
19690 | Some one, I think, asked in conversation at Rome, whether a certain interpretation of Scripture was Christian? |
19690 | Such being the object which I had in view, what were my prospects of widening and defining their meaning? |
19690 | Taylor:"Whether it can in any case be lawful to tell a lie? |
19690 | The one question was, what was I to do? |
19690 | The reader says,"What else can the prophecy mean?" |
19690 | The simple question is, Can_ I_( it is personal, not whether another, but can_ I_) be saved in the English Church? |
19690 | The vital question was how were we to keep the Church from being liberalised? |
19690 | The_ Supremacy_;--now, was I saying one single word in favour of the supremacy of the holy see, of the foreign jurisdiction? |
19690 | Then, when the Movement was in its swing, friends had said to me,"What will you make of the Articles?" |
19690 | They are asked, how can we trust you, when such are your views? |
19690 | They asked him, Have you seen Athanasius? |
19690 | To be certain is to know that one knows; what test had I, that I should not change again, after that I had become a Catholic? |
19690 | Very true; I do; but what on earth does this matter to my_ argument_? |
19690 | Was Elizabeth zealous for the marriage of the Clergy? |
19690 | We_ are_ keeping persons from you: do you wish us to keep them from you for a time or for ever? |
19690 | Well, is not that just what this writer would say of a great number of the facts recorded in secular history? |
19690 | Were the question asked of them,"Do you worship a Trinity?" |
19690 | What I needed was a corresponding antagonist unity in my defence, and where was that to be found? |
19690 | What can I say more to your purpose? |
19690 | What do I know of substance or matter? |
19690 | What do I know of the essence of the Divine Being? |
19690 | What do they gain by professing a Creed, in which, if my assailant is to be believed, they really do not believe? |
19690 | What do you say to the logic, sentiment, and propriety of this?" |
19690 | What does it matter to you who are going off the stage, to receive a slight additional daub upon a character so deeply stained already? |
19690 | What gain is it to be applauded, admired, courted, followed,--compared with this one aim, of''not being disobedient to a heavenly vision''? |
19690 | What gain is it to please the world, to please the great, nay even to please those whom we love, compared with this? |
19690 | What good can it do? |
19690 | What have I done? |
19690 | What have I gained in the argument, what has he lost, by my having said, not"an Anglican Sermon,"but"a Protestant Sermon?" |
19690 | What have been its great works? |
19690 | What hope was there of condensing into a pamphlet of a readable length, matter which ought freely to expand itself into half a dozen volumes? |
19690 | What is a lie? |
19690 | What is it I am"swallowing"? |
19690 | What is it that I really say? |
19690 | What is the fault of saying this? |
19690 | What is the harm of this? |
19690 | What is the matter with this statement? |
19690 | What is the meaning of the very word"Protestantism,"but that there is a call to speak out? |
19690 | What is the precise_ work_ which it is directed to effect? |
19690 | What is the_ definition_ of a lie? |
19690 | What is their reward for committing themselves to a life of self- restraint and toil, and after all to a premature and miserable death? |
19690 | What is there in it to make us hypocrites, if it has not that effect upon Protestants? |
19690 | What is wonderful in such an apology? |
19690 | What is your_ proof_? |
19690 | What march of opinions can be traced from mind to mind among preachers such as these? |
19690 | What more unclean and foul, as St. James says, than... that a fountain by the same jet should send out sweet water and bitter? |
19690 | What shall be said to this heart- piercing, reason- bewildering fact? |
19690 | What then, in fact, do they say more than this,_ If_ Protestantism be true, you Catholics are a most awful set of knaves? |
19690 | What then? |
19690 | What was that something else? |
19690 | What was the great question in the days of Henry and Elizabeth? |
19690 | What was the harm of all this? |
19690 | What was this, but to give up the Notes of a visible Church altogether, whether the Catholic Note or the Apostolic? |
19690 | What word_ should_ I have used twenty years ago instead of"Protestant?" |
19690 | What''s to hinder it? |
19690 | What, I ask, is the harm of saying this? |
19690 | What_ call_ have we to change our communion? |
19690 | When shall I pronounce him to be himself again? |
19690 | When will they know their position, and embrace a larger and wiser policy?" |
19690 | Who can account for the impressions which are made on him? |
19690 | Who can but feel shame when the religion of Ximenes, Borromeo, and Pascal, is so overlaid? |
19690 | Who can but feel sorrow, when its devout and earnest defenders so mistake its genius and its capabilities? |
19690 | Who can deny this? |
19690 | Who does not feel for such men? |
19690 | Who finds fault with these things? |
19690 | Who knows what the state of the University may be, as regards Divinity Professors in a few years hence? |
19690 | Who would ever dream of making the world his confidant? |
19690 | Who would not save his father''s life, at the charge of a harmless lie, from persecutors or tyrants?" |
19690 | Whom have I in heaven but Thee? |
19690 | Why am I on my trial?''" |
19690 | Why bring fear, suspicion, and disunion into the camp about things which are merely_ in posse_? |
19690 | Why could not he change back again, and say he did not know why? |
19690 | Why did they keep the world in such suspense and anxiety as to what was coming next, and what was to be the upshot of the whole? |
19690 | Why do we affirm, why do they deny? |
19690 | Why is it that I must pain dear friends by saying so, and kindle a sort of resentment against me in the kindest of hearts? |
19690 | Why may I not have that liberty which all others are allowed? |
19690 | Why must he"palter in a double sense,"and blow hot and cold in one breath? |
19690 | Why should I unsettle that sweet calm tranquillity, when I had nothing to offer him instead? |
19690 | Why should we seek our Lord''s presence elsewhere, when He vouchsafes it to us where we are? |
19690 | Why then do I not meet you in a manner conformable with these first feelings? |
19690 | Why then does he not deal out the same measure to Catholic priests? |
19690 | Why this reticence, and half- speaking, and apparent indecision? |
19690 | Why will you not let me die in peace? |
19690 | Why? |
19690 | With what sort of sincerity can I obey the Bishop? |
19690 | Would it not be plain to them that no certainty was to be found anywhere? |
19690 | Would not that be the case with many friends of my own? |
19690 | Would the Bishop of Oxford accept them? |
19690 | Yes, I said to myself, his very question is about my_ meaning_;"What does Dr. Newman mean?" |
19690 | Yet he has the assurance at p. 14 to ask,"Why was the Sermon preached? |
19690 | Yet how is it compatible with my holding St. Mary''s, being what I am?" |
19690 | Yet who can speak with patience of his enemy and the enemy of St. John Chrysostom, that Theophilus, bishop of Alexandria? |
19690 | [ 2] Why was I to be dishonest and they immaculate? |
19690 | [ 4]"Are we quite sure that the Bishops will not be drawing up some stringent declarations of faith? |
19690 | _ How can I tell that I shall not be the dupe of some cunning equivocation?_... What proof have I, that by''mean it? |
19690 | _ How can I tell that I shall not be the dupe of some cunning equivocation?_... What proof have I, that by''mean it? |
19690 | _ What proof have I, then, that by''mean it? |
19690 | _ What_ communion could we join? |
19690 | _ What_ has to be proved? |
19690 | a thousand? |
19690 | after the Bishops''charges? |
19690 | after the Jerusalem"abomination?" |
19690 | am I alone, of Englishmen, not to have the privilege to go where I will, no questions asked? |
19690 | am_ I_ in safety, were I to die tonight? |
19690 | and may we not leave them meanwhile to the will of Providence? |
19690 | and shall I lift up my hand against them? |
19690 | and startled innocence, and then one of smug self- satisfaction-- as who should ask,''What have I said? |
19690 | and"Anna too, who served God with fastings and prayers night and day?" |
19690 | and, if it be an unlawful promise, is it binding at the expense of a lie? |
19690 | but, if so, how can it be a sin at all, if your neighbour is not injured? |
19690 | did I, or my opinions, drop from the sky? |
19690 | did he disbelieve Purgatory? |
19690 | does any serious man abuse the Church of Rome, for the sake of abusing her, or because it justifies his own religious position? |
19690 | had he no friend to tell him whether I was"affected"or"artificial"myself? |
19690 | have I any right to make such a promise? |
19690 | have I not given up my position and my place? |
19690 | have I not retreated from you? |
19690 | how am I to act in the frequent cases, in which one way or another the Church of Rome comes into consideration? |
19690 | how came I, in Oxford,_ in gremio Universitatis_, to present myself to the eyes of men in that full- blown investiture of Popery? |
19690 | how could I be answerable for souls( and life so uncertain), with the convictions, or at least persuasions, which I had upon me? |
19690 | how could I ever again have confidence in myself? |
19690 | how could I range myself among the professors of a theology, of which it put my teeth on edge, even to hear the sound? |
19690 | how does this word"Protestant,"which I used, tend in any degree to make my argument a quibble? |
19690 | how had the Arians drawn up their creeds? |
19690 | how was I to be sure that I should always think as I thought now? |
19690 | how was I to have confidence in my present confidence? |
19690 | is it a phenomenon which depends on nothing else than itself, or is it an effect which has a cause? |
19690 | is it not our safest course, without looking to consequences, to do simply_ what we think right_ day by day? |
19690 | is it not what every one says, who speaks on the subject at all? |
19690 | is it not what he would be obliged to say of much that is told us about the armour and other antiquities in the Tower of London? |
19690 | is this what Moberly fears? |
19690 | it was answered that Dr. Arnold took it; I interposed,"But is_ he_ a Christian?" |
19690 | just as my accuser asks,"What, then, does Dr. Newman mean?" |
19690 | merely to disown"Popery"? |
19690 | murdered the little princes? |
19690 | or had she a conscience against the Mass? |
19690 | or say with what limitations, shades of difference, or degrees of belief, I held that body of opinions which I had openly professed and taught? |
19690 | or the miracles? |
19690 | quid feci?" |
19690 | religiously hold justification by faith only? |
19690 | shall we not be sure to go wrong, if we attempt to trace by anticipation the course of divine Providence? |
19690 | the evidence? |
19690 | they denounced the English as heretical? |
19690 | to insinuate that a Church which had sacramental confession and a celibate clergy was the only true Church?" |
19690 | what business had you to think of any such plan at all?'' |
19690 | who can admire or revere Pope Vigilius? |
19690 | who can have one unkind thought of them? |
19690 | why can not you let me alone? |
19690 | why may not a hundred? |
19690 | why then may not the country people come up in joyous companies, singing and piping, to see the Holy Coat at Trèves? |
19690 | why then may not the country people come up in joyous companies, singing and piping, to_ see_ the holy coat at Treves?" |
19690 | why wo n''t you keep quiet? |
19690 | with pity indeed, aye, and fear, but not with horror? |
19690 | with what face could I publish a new edition of a dogmatic creed, and ask them to receive it as gospel? |
19690 | would be the highest measure of devotion:--but who can really pray to a being, about whose existence he is seriously in doubt? |
19690 | would it not, on the contrary, predispose you to listen to a new report? |
19690 | would you, in consequence of it, declare,''I never will believe another if I hear of one?'' |
52106 | And what does it say to them? |
52106 | Do you not know,he exclaims,"that you are each an Eve? |
52106 | How do you do? |
52106 | If you ask a Kaffir why he does so and so, he will answer--''How can I tell? 52106 If you were to say to an Ainu,''You are old, are you not?'' |
52106 | Was''t Hamlet wrong''d Laertes? 52106 What do you call sin?" |
52106 | Why,says the Stoic,"do you bear with the delirium of a sick man, or the ravings of a madman, or the impudent blows of a child? |
52106 | Why,they would ask,"should a person not be{ 241} allowed to die, when he no longer desires to live?" |
52106 | [ 107] St. Paul asks with scorn,Doth God take care for oxen? |
52106 | [ 113] The Jain regards pleasure in itself as sinful:--What is discontent, and what is pleasure? |
52106 | [ 151] But why should the stranger have been more willing than the bridegroom to expose himself to this danger? 52106 [ 34] When St. Peter asked,"Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? |
52106 | [ 4] Tertullian asks,Can it be lawful to{ 346} handle the sword, when the Lord Himself has declared that he who uses the sword shall perish by it? |
52106 | [ 72] I often found the Beduins of Morocco extremely curious, but their curiosity consisted in the question, What? 52106 [ 89] The Moors ask,"What is your news?" |
52106 | ''Or savage, like wolves?'' |
52106 | ----''Besitzen die Naturvölker ein persönliches Ehrgefühl?'' |
52106 | 7:"Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?"] |
52106 | A fellow- countryman, a savage, a criminal, a bird, a fish-- all without distinction? |
52106 | Among the Burmese two relatives or friends who meet begin a conversation by the expressions,"Are you well? |
52106 | Among the Californian Miwok, when anybody meets a stranger he generally salutes him,"Whence do you come? |
52106 | An English sportsman, after firing at an antelope, inquired of his dark attendant,"Is it wounded?" |
52106 | And all the mourning customs, what are they if not tokens of grief? |
52106 | And does not this indicate that they have been neglectful of their duties to him? |
52106 | And for those who refuse to accept the gift of grace offered to them, could there be a juster punishment than death? |
52106 | And if it is a duty to recognise certain actions as indifferent how could it possibly at the same time be held a duty to perform them? |
52106 | And is there any reason to suppose that the unsuccessful offender is less dangerous to society than he who succeeds? |
52106 | And what is the cause of its original narrowness and of its subsequent extension? |
52106 | And why did he give the young men his_ daughters_? |
52106 | And why might not the{ 378} same law be applied to other relationships also, such as those constituted by a common descent or a common name? |
52106 | And yet is eating and drinking too much, is spending too much time in outdoor exercise, is lounging idly about, morally indifferent? |
52106 | And, if the theory referred to were correct, how could we explain the fact that the right of asylum is particularly attached to sanctuaries? |
52106 | And, on the other hand, why is there in many cases such a wide agreement? |
52106 | Are these phenomena less necessary or less powerful in their consequences, because they fall within the subjective sphere of experience? |
52106 | Are they not much more harmful to the human race than self- murder, which nature prevents from ever being practised by any large number of men? |
52106 | But an important question still calls for an answer, the question, Why is this so? |
52106 | But how shall we explain those elements in the moral emotions by which they are distinguished from other, non- moral retributive emotions? |
52106 | But how to account for this disposition? |
52106 | But then, shall we reckon each tribe as one{ 656} unit by itself, or, if not, into how many groups shall we divide them? |
52106 | But who does admit this? |
52106 | But why should it not, in conformity with other practices, be regarded as a means of purifying the air? |
52106 | But why the offender only? |
52106 | Can a man do more than his duty, or, in other words, is there anything good which is not at the same time a duty? |
52106 | Can we help feeling pain when the fire burns us? |
52106 | Can we help sympathising with our friends? |
52106 | Come, then, who would obey you if he saw his little child fall on the ground and cry? |
52106 | Could the moral consciousness approve of this? |
52106 | Delitzsch( Friedrich),_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ Leipzig, 1881. |
52106 | Delitzsch,_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ p. |
52106 | Did not Paley expressly define virtue as"the doing good to mankind, in obedience to the will of God, and for the sake of everlasting happiness"? |
52106 | Do they faithfully represent ideas of moral responsibility? |
52106 | Do you like it not? |
52106 | Do you like to be wretched? |
52106 | Does not experience show that those whose thoughts are constantly occupied with the prescriptions of duty are apt to become hard and intolerant? |
52106 | Does not public opinion in the midst of civilisation turn against the dishonoured rather than the dishonourer? |
52106 | Even suppose, however, that group marriage really was once common in Australia, would that prove that it was once common among mankind at large? |
52106 | First, how shall we explain their disinterestedness? |
52106 | First, why do men recognise proprietary rights at all? |
52106 | For when was the time that men were not used to act in this manner? |
52106 | Have the most draconic codes ever been able to suppress, say, homosexual love? |
52106 | Hence if you ask a Vaedda,''Do you marry your sisters?'' |
52106 | How can we get an insight into the moral ideas of mankind at large? |
52106 | How does Professor Durkheim know that totem clans once prevailed among all peoples who now prohibit the intermarriage of near relatives? |
52106 | How shall we explain all these facts? |
52106 | How then shall we explain this analogy? |
52106 | I am well,"if they have been some time separated; whereas those who are daily accustomed to meet say,"Where are you going? |
52106 | I ask: Is it reasonable to think that there is no causal connection between these three groups of facts? |
52106 | If it is the duty of animals to take vengeance upon men, is it not equally the duty of men to take vengeance upon animals? |
52106 | If urged to work, they have been heard to say:''Why should we resemble the worms of the ground? |
52106 | If war was allowed by God, could there be a more proper object for it than the salvation of souls otherwise lost? |
52106 | If you endeavour to shew them the folly of this conduct, they say,''Why should we hurt them? |
52106 | In Morocco, if a son or a daughter dies, it is customary to say to the afflicted parents,"Why are you sorry? |
52106 | In an infuriated crowd the one gets angry because the other is angry, and very often the question, Why? |
52106 | Is it due to defective knowledge, or has it a merely sentimental origin? |
52106 | Is it right to ignore the second group altogether, as does Frazer, and to look upon the coincidence of the first and the third as accidental? |
52106 | It may be an inquiry about the other person''s health or welfare, as the English"How are you?" |
52106 | It may be asked, why should{ 581} he be received at all? |
52106 | It seemed strange that the disagreement should be so radical, and the question arose, Whence this diversity of opinion? |
52106 | Lasch,''Besitzen die Naturvölker ein persönliches Ehrgefühl?'' |
52106 | Londini,[ 1555?]. |
52106 | Moreover, had not the Israelites fought great battles"for the laws and the sanctuary"? |
52106 | Mürdter- Delitzsch,_ Geschichte Babyloniens und Assyriens_, p. 38_ sq._ Delitzsch,_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ p. 86. |
52106 | Nay, why are there any moral ideas at all? |
52106 | Of course, he stands in need of protection and support, but why should those who do not know him care for that? |
52106 | Parkyns asks,"Who is more trustworthy than the desert Arab? |
52106 | Plato asks in his''Laws'':--"What ought he to suffer who murders his nearest and so- called dearest friend? |
52106 | Professor Ziegler ironically asks:--"Such outward matters as eating and drinking are surely morally indifferent? |
52106 | Selenoburgi,[ 1663?]. |
52106 | So, also, the Hebrew psalmist cries out,"Who can understand his errors? |
52106 | So, too, why should the moral law command less obedience because it forms part of our own nature? |
52106 | Stockholm,[ 1745?]. |
52106 | The best man even refuses to be called good by others:--"Why callest thou me good? |
52106 | The ordinary salutation of the Zulus is,"I see you, are you well?" |
52106 | The people, he argued, do not fear death; to what purpose, then, is it to try to frighten them with death? |
52106 | The question is, what evidence can Dr. Steinmetz adduce to support his theory? |
52106 | The single question asked is, Did the man kill the other? |
52106 | What are you at? |
52106 | What else could these mean but visits of their souls? |
52106 | What good man would hesitate to die for her if he could do her service? |
52106 | What happens? |
52106 | What have I done to incur so severe an accusation? |
52106 | What have you taken which belongs to him? |
52106 | What is here the"ought"that forms the totality of the indifferent? |
52106 | What is the source of the moral commandment,"Thou shalt not kill"? |
52106 | What more legal book than Chronicles? |
52106 | What? |
52106 | When he then asked of his Druids,"Whence this evil?" |
52106 | When the vassal objected that he could not subsist on such a soil, the archbishop answered,"Why do you complain? |
52106 | When was it not permitted? |
52106 | When was such conduct found fault with? |
52106 | When, in short, was the time when that which is lawful was not lawful? |
52106 | Who could affirm that every temperate, or charitable, or just man has acquired the virtue only as a result of inward struggle? |
52106 | Who does it, then? |
52106 | Who is that"Another"to whose greater good I ought not to prefer my own lesser good? |
52106 | Why are the blessings and curses of parents supposed to possess such an extraordinary power? |
52106 | Why are the moral opinions relating to it subject to so great variations? |
52106 | Why do the moral ideas in general differ so greatly? |
52106 | Why do they not deliver them up to justice through their earthly representatives? |
52106 | Why has sexual intercourse between unmarried people, if both parties consent, come to be regarded as wrong? |
52106 | Why is the standard commonly so different for man and woman? |
52106 | Why not? |
52106 | Why should I go shivering through all the ages and the distances of the next world? |
52106 | Why should not the indifferent be allowed to do the same? |
52106 | Why should the feeling against incest have survived in this case but not in others, if it had a purely conventional origin? |
52106 | Why should the gods or saints themselves be so anxious to protect criminals who have sought refuge in their sanctuaries? |
52106 | Why should the law refuse its protection to any sensitive being? |
52106 | Why were suicides buried at cross- roads? |
52106 | Why, then, could not the same have been the case with the aversion to incest and the prohibitory rules resulting from it? |
52106 | Why? |
52106 | Would anyone think himself to be in his perfect mind if he were to return kicks to a mule or bites to a dog? |
52106 | Would there be any sense in saying that you ought either to speak or not to speak? |
52106 | You say then,''What? |
52106 | Zoroaster asked,"What is the food that fills the Religion of Mazda?" |
52106 | [ 100] How, then, does the fact that two persons belong to the same totem influence their social relationships? |
52106 | [ 104] Is not this, in all probability, an instance of acquired inversion? |
52106 | [ 132] When their chief god"played"by thundering, the Amazulu said to him who was frightened,"Why do you start, because the lord plays? |
52106 | [ 142] And would it not, in many cases, be impossible to find impartial arbiters? |
52106 | [ 195] Indeed, had not God shown{ 280} indulgence for the offence committed by Lot when drunk? |
52106 | [ 208] How, for instance, are we to deal with the various tribes of Australia? |
52106 | [ 21] The question, however, is, Why was not his death avenged upon the actual culprit? |
52106 | [ 286] Jeremy Taylor asks,"Who will not tell a harmless lie to save the life of his friend, of his child, of himself, of a good and brave man? |
52106 | [ 30] Had not the Lord Himself commissioned them to attack, subdue, and destroy his enemies? |
52106 | [ 47] How shall we explain this connection between religious beliefs and the duties of veracity and fidelity to promises? |
52106 | [ 51] Is it not natural, then, that the savage should give like for like? |
52106 | [ 66] During my wanderings in the remote forests of Northern Finland I was constantly welcomed with the phrase,"What news?" |
52106 | [ 71] When Mungo Park asked some negroes, what became of the sun during the night? |
52106 | [ 9] Porphyry asks,"Who does not know that to this day, in the great city of Rome, at the festival of Jupiter Latiaris, they cut the throat of a man? |
52106 | [ Footnote 15: See_ infra_, on Suicide; Lasch,''Besitzen die Naturvölker ein persönliches Ehrgefühl?'' |
52106 | [ Footnote 165: Demosthenes(? |
52106 | [ Footnote 39:_ Ibid._ p. 147_ sqq._''Why is Single Life becoming more General?'' |
52106 | [ Westminster, 1484?] |
52106 | _ S.l._,[ 1834?]. |
52106 | and the Sabbath, that we may set forth wheat? |
52106 | are we not your children, do you not see our hunger? |
52106 | dost thou see, O Sky? |
52106 | he would answer{ 87}''Yes''; but if you asked the same man,''You are not old, are you?'' |
52106 | marry your own- sister- nagâ?'' |
52106 | or,"Is nothing wrong?" |
52106 | rather than in the question, Why? |
52106 | the Sinhalese interpreter is apt to say,''Do you marry your nagâ?'' |
52106 | they ask you,''to suffer either man or woman to languish any considerable{ 389} time under a heavy, motionless old age? |
52106 | till seven times?" |
52106 | will you have us to be silly creatures, like the sheep?'' |
3473 | Am I sipping the honey of the lips? 3473 Does love steal gently o''er our soul?" |
3473 | Have you no smile to welcome love with, Liebhaid? 3473 In his youth my youth renewing Pamper, fondle, die to serve him, Only breathing through his spirit-- Couldst thou not love such a father?" |
3473 | Master, if thou to thy prides''goal should come, Where wouldst thou throne-- at Avignon or Rome? |
3473 | Mother, shall we soon be there? |
3473 | See''st thou o''er my shoulders falling, Snake- like ringlets waving free? 3473 Tell me, tell me, my beloved, Didst thou not erewhile swear falsely?" |
3473 | Tell me, tell me, my beloved, Looks thy heart on me with favor? |
3473 | Tell me, tell me, my beloved, Wherefore all at once thou blushest? |
3473 | Think you words like these will touch me? 3473 Well thou knowest, thrice reverend master, This is not their first affliction, Was it not our Holy Office Whose bribed menials fired their dwelling? |
3473 | What good shall come, forswearing kith and God, To follow the allurements of the heart? |
3473 | What if he were such another As myself who stand before thee? |
3473 | Who may this miracle of learning be? 3473 With tears thy grief thou dost bemoan, Tears that would melt the hardest stone, Oh, wherefore sing''st thou not the vine? |
3473 | A vision of remembered joy Reveals itself to thee once more; Why fearest thou to live it o''er, Retracing it without annoy? |
3473 | Alas, I suffer from it still; What was this grief, this unknown ill, Which I have wept so bitterly? |
3473 | Am I drunk with the wine of a kiss? |
3473 | An alien in his land of birth, An outcast from his brethren''s earth, Albeit with theirs his blood mixed well When Plevna fell? |
3473 | And I shall smile, Live and rejoice in love, when ye are dead? |
3473 | And canst thou be My own immortal one? |
3473 | And forfeiting thy weal eternal, By thine own guilty heart misled? |
3473 | And his child? |
3473 | And now, at the end, we ask, Has the grave really closed over all these gifts? |
3473 | And seest thou not, within the moon''s pale ray, Her lovely form sink on thy breast again? |
3473 | And those light pleasures that give life its zest, How wouldst thou value if thou hadst not wept? |
3473 | And wilt thou of his trespasses inquire? |
3473 | And wilt thou punish him for sins inborn? |
3473 | Are his priests false? |
3473 | Are sail and mast and rudder gone? |
3473 | Are these ignoble relics all that live Of psalmist, priest, and prophet? |
3473 | Are these ignoble relics all that live Of psalmist, priest, and prophet? |
3473 | Are ye mad? |
3473 | Art thou not happy, young, a welcome guest? |
3473 | At set of sun to- day? |
3473 | Ay, when were you last In Nordhausen? |
3473 | Because his law is love, we tutor him In mercy and reward his murderers? |
3473 | Bid melancholy gaze upon the skies? |
3473 | Bring they fresh tidings of the pestilence? |
3473 | But first, or ere thy grief thou say, My poet, art thou healed thereof? |
3473 | But if this be according to Fate''s will, What may I do, but wander heavy- souled, With ever downcast head, eyes weeping still? |
3473 | But no whit abashed, Pedrillo,"What care I for curse of Talmud? |
3473 | But thou-- hast thou faith in the fortune of Israel? |
3473 | But would we break, if we could, that repose, that silence and mystery and peace everlasting? |
3473 | But-- do you wish him well? |
3473 | By a fair woman''s love art thou not blest? |
3473 | By what unhallowed thirst Darest thou allure me to thy jaded arms? |
3473 | By whom? |
3473 | Call''st thou that a Song? |
3473 | Can the breath Of very heaven bid these Bones revive, Open the graves and clothe the ribs of death? |
3473 | Can the breath Of very heaven bid these bones revive, Open the graves, and clothe the ribs of death? |
3473 | Children, is all in order? |
3473 | Could doubt have swayed thee, then I ask, How enters doubt within the soul of man? |
3473 | Could thy soul deflect? |
3473 | Coward? |
3473 | Crushed by the burden of my sins I pray, Oh, wherefore shunned I not the evil way? |
3473 | D''ye call me Jew? |
3473 | Did not He purge with fiery hail those twain Blotches of festering sin, Gomorrah, Sodom? |
3473 | Did you not tell me scarce a month agone, When I chanced in on you at feast and prayer, The holy time''s bright legend? |
3473 | Didst hear the fellow''s words who handed it? |
3473 | Didst mark a diamond lance flash from the roof, And strike him''twixt the eyes? |
3473 | Didst note, man, how they fixed me? |
3473 | Didst thou not say this folly long had slept? |
3473 | Didst thou not see the spies who dogged my steps? |
3473 | Do foes clasp hands in brotherhood again? |
3473 | Do not the people ask the same as I? |
3473 | Does Frederick know thou art in Eisenach? |
3473 | Does Nature causeless act, to no wise end? |
3473 | Does not the white wraith of the aspen- tree In that green palace, mark the path at night? |
3473 | Emaciate- lipped, with cavernous black eyes Whose inward visions do eclipse the day, Seems he not one re- risen from the grave To yield the secret? |
3473 | Exile? |
3473 | Father, be these The folk who murdered Jesus? |
3473 | Father, what news? |
3473 | Father, what wild and wandering words are these? |
3473 | Father, you called me? |
3473 | Fly? |
3473 | Follow the huntsman on the upland lawns? |
3473 | God''s chosen people, shall we stand a- tremble Before our Father, as the Gentiles use? |
3473 | Has Fortune smiled on thee? |
3473 | Has that eager, passionate striving ceased, and"is the rest silence?" |
3473 | Has the Destroying Angel passed the posts Of Jewish doors-- to visit Christian homes? |
3473 | Hast seen him yet? |
3473 | Hast thou forgot the Prince? |
3473 | Hast thou not heard Frederick sends Schnetzen unto Nordhausen, With fire and torture for the Jews? |
3473 | Hast thou, my daughter, served The needs o''the poor, suddenly- orphaned child? |
3473 | Hastes he not to aid? |
3473 | Have I culled the flowers of the cheek, Have I sucked the fresh fragrance of the breath? |
3473 | Have many of our tribe been stricken? |
3473 | Have you no smile to welcome love with, Liebhaid? |
3473 | He crumbles like a garment spoiled with moth; According to his sins wilt thou be wroth? |
3473 | He who bestows his wealth upon the poor, Has only lent it to the Lord, be sure-- Of what avail to clasp it with clenched hand? |
3473 | He will not hear of rest-- he comes anon-- Shall we within? |
3473 | Hear''st thou the word? |
3473 | Henry Schnetzen Shall be the Jews''destroyer? |
3473 | How can''st thou ever of the world complain, And murmuring, burden it with all thy pain? |
3473 | How know you That Susskind holds my bonds? |
3473 | How may he closely secret causes scan, Who learns not whence he comes nor where he goes? |
3473 | How may he ever bear Thine anger just, thy vengeance dire? |
3473 | How shall he make provision For the vast widowed, orphaned host this deed Burdens the state withal? |
3473 | I asked them( no one heard and none replied):"Do ye forsake me, too, oh father, mother?" |
3473 | If I remember Raschi? |
3473 | If thou shouldst meet with Fortune on thy way, Wouldst thou not follow singing, in her train? |
3473 | In the name of God, What has he done to HER? |
3473 | In what dread shape Approaches death? |
3473 | Is all hope lost? |
3473 | Is he alone? |
3473 | Is he in peril? |
3473 | Is it a door that opens, or a mask That falls? |
3473 | Is not our flesh as capable of pain, Our blood as quick envenomed as your own? |
3473 | Is not the fire real fire? |
3473 | Is not the people''s voice the voice of God? |
3473 | Is one among us brothers, would exchange His doom against our tyrants,--lot for lot? |
3473 | Is one who would not die in Israel Rather than live in Christ,--their Christ who smiles On such a deed as this? |
3473 | Is that God''s justice? |
3473 | Is there a God in heaven? |
3473 | Is there no bolt in heaven For the child murderer? |
3473 | Is this already hell? |
3473 | Is this meek, saintly- hypocrite, the firm, Ambitious, resolute Reinhard Peppercorn, Terror of Jews and beacon of the Church? |
3473 | Is this the House of Israel whose pride Is as a tale that''s told, an ancient song? |
3473 | Is this the House of Israel, whose pride Is as a tale that''s told, an ancient song? |
3473 | Is this the place where we shall find fresh steeds? |
3473 | Is this the portion of mine age? |
3473 | Is this the will of God? |
3473 | Know ye what burning is? |
3473 | Knowest thou, Susskind, Schnetzen''s cause of hate? |
3473 | Long in the lap of childhood didst thou sleep, Think how thy youth like chaff did disappear; Shall life''s sweet Spring forever last? |
3473 | Look forth, Claire; moves not some big thundercloud Athwart the sky? |
3473 | Lord Schnetzen, will you murder your own child? |
3473 | Master, if thou to thy pride''s goal should come, Where wouldst thou throne-- at Avignon or Rome? |
3473 | May I stand by thy side, And hold my hand in thine until the end? |
3473 | Mine eyes are full of grief-- who sees me, asks,"Oh wherefore dost thou cling unto the ground?" |
3473 | Mistress? |
3473 | Must we set forth, Haste- flushed and unprepared? |
3473 | Must your good friends of Prague break bolts and bars To gain a peep at this prodigious pearl You bury in your shell? |
3473 | My lamp''s spent ray upon the floor, Why does it dazzle me with light? |
3473 | My lord, what answer would you give your Christ If peradventure, in this general doom You sacrifice a Christian? |
3473 | My lords of Nordhausen, shall ye be stunned With sounding words? |
3473 | Neighbors, what wild alarm is this? |
3473 | Noble lords, Burghers, and artisans of Nordhausen, Wise, honorable, just, God- fearing men, Shall ye condemn or ever ye have heard? |
3473 | Not he, who faces death, Who singly against worlds has fought, For what? |
3473 | Not miracles I doubt, for how dare man, Chief miracle of life''s mystery, say HE KNOWS? |
3473 | O God, How shall I pray for strength to love him less Than mine own soul? |
3473 | Oh beautiful bride, what is the form of thy friend, that thou say to me, Release him, send him away? |
3473 | Oh why not now? |
3473 | Or am I mad? |
3473 | Or bathe in blood the settled, steel- clad ranks? |
3473 | Or fleck the wind with coursers''foaming flanks? |
3473 | Or shall we clothe soft elegies in white? |
3473 | Or shall we dive for pearls beneath the seas, Or find the wild goats by the alpine trees? |
3473 | Or shall we tell whose hand the lamps above, In the celestial mansions, year by year, Kindles with sacred oil of life and love? |
3473 | Our bird makes merry his dull bars with song, Yet would not penitential psalms accord More fitly with your sin than minstrels''lays? |
3473 | Our first embrace dost thou so soon forget? |
3473 | Peril? |
3473 | Rather, where shall we seek Secure asylum, if here be not one? |
3473 | Said you at sunset? |
3473 | Say, shall we sing of sadness, joy or hope? |
3473 | Say, wilt thou darken such a light, Wilt drag the clouds from heaven''s height? |
3473 | See lovers mount the ladder''s silken rope? |
3473 | Shall I gentler prove to others? |
3473 | Shall my heart crack for love''s loss That meekly bears my people''s martyrdom? |
3473 | Shall the smoke choke us, father? |
3473 | Shall this prayer be your first that he denies? |
3473 | Shall we desert snug homes? |
3473 | Shall we excel the Christ in charity? |
3473 | Shall we neglect God''s due observances, While He is manifest in miracle? |
3473 | Shall we not Debate and act in freedom? |
3473 | Shall we stand by and leave them unmolested, Till they have made our town a wilderness? |
3473 | Shalt thou have never done with folly, Still fresh and new must it arise? |
3473 | She sings"Matins:"--"Does not the morn break thus, Swift, bright, victorious, With new skies cleared for us Over the soul storm- tost? |
3473 | Sir, can you help me to the nighest way Unto the merchant''s house, Susskind von Orb? |
3473 | Sir, what''s that? |
3473 | So YOU are the accuser, my lord Schnetzen? |
3473 | Some one asked:"What of Jerusalem? |
3473 | Some strayed dove Lost from your cote, among our vultures caged? |
3473 | State at war with state, Church against church-- yea, Pope at feud with Pope In these tossed seas what anchorage for hope? |
3473 | Susskind von Orb, what think''st thou of these things? |
3473 | Susskind von Orb? |
3473 | Sweet master, You look the perfect knight, what can you crave Of us starved, wretched Jews? |
3473 | Tell me what golden dreams shall charm our sleep, Whence shall be drawn the tears that we shall weep? |
3473 | That I did say and sigh,"How came I hither, when and why?" |
3473 | That wrinkled flesh made to be pulled and pricked, Wounded by flinty pebbles and keen steel? |
3473 | The Abbot Lent him an impatient hearing, Then outbroke with angry accent,"We have borne three years, thou sayest? |
3473 | The Landgrave of Thuringia is our patron, True-- and our town''s imperial Governor, But are we not free burghers? |
3473 | The freedom broadening with the wars that cease? |
3473 | The pure man sinks in mire and slime, The noble shrinketh not from crime, Wilt thou resent on him the charms of sin? |
3473 | The red, dark year is dead, the year just born Leads on from anguish wrought by priest and mob, To what undreamed- of morn? |
3473 | The world belongs to man; dreams the poor brute Some nook has been apportioned for brute life? |
3473 | The years are ready- winged for flying, What crav''st thou still of feast and wine? |
3473 | These passionate tears? |
3473 | Think you he speaks before the service? |
3473 | Think''st thou a heedless God afflicted thee? |
3473 | Think''st thou that they have written poems? |
3473 | Those two fair lamps, even than the sun more bright, Who ever dreamed to see turn clay obscure? |
3473 | To the heart''s core a Jewess-- prop of my house, Soul of my soul-- and I? |
3473 | To- morrow, man? |
3473 | Truth? |
3473 | Very gently spoke the Rabbi,"Have a care, my son Pedrillo, Thou art orphaned, and who knoweth But thy father loved this people?" |
3473 | Wander ye not together, thou and she, Midst blooming woods, on sands like silver bright? |
3473 | Was Israel glad in Seville on the day Thou didst renounce him? |
3473 | Was it not the"Ewig- Weibliche"that allows no prestige but its own? |
3473 | Was that benignant, venerable face Fit target for their foul throats''voided rheum? |
3473 | Was that white beard a rag for obscene hands To tear? |
3473 | Well, and the end? |
3473 | Well, what''s your counsel? |
3473 | Well,''t was my fault-- one should be accurate-- Jews, said I? |
3473 | Were my white hairs, my old bones spared for this? |
3473 | Were you at Susskind''s house? |
3473 | Were''t not the better part To spare its innocence? |
3473 | What ailed thee then, O poet mine; What secret misery was thine, Which set a bar''twixt thee and me? |
3473 | What art thou, O Beauty, that thou shouldst inspire love? |
3473 | What avail grief and fasting, Where nothing is lasting? |
3473 | What can I do, the elements''poor slave? |
3473 | What cravest thou? |
3473 | What credence lend you to the general rumor Of the river poison? |
3473 | What do they carry? |
3473 | What does Prince William? |
3473 | What dost thou seek? |
3473 | What germ hast thou saved for the future, O miraculous Husbandman? |
3473 | What hast thou to regret? |
3473 | What is any life, even the most rounded and complete, but a fragment and a hint? |
3473 | What is her tribe to me? |
3473 | What is it to wanton with a Christ- cursed Jewess, Defy thy father and pollute thy name, And fling to the ordures thine immortal soul? |
3473 | What is it, father? |
3473 | What is the pleasure of the day for me, If, in its crucible, I must renew Incessantly the pangs of purifying? |
3473 | What is thine errand? |
3473 | What is this? |
3473 | What learn you of this evil through the State? |
3473 | What mean these contrary words? |
3473 | What mummery is this? |
3473 | What proof hast thou of this? |
3473 | What record speaks of placid, golden days, Matched each with each as twins? |
3473 | What redress in Prague For the inhuman murder? |
3473 | What said you of this pilgrim, Naphtali? |
3473 | What sets my seething blood aglow, And fills my sense with vague affright? |
3473 | What shall be said when such as he do pass? |
3473 | What shall we fear? |
3473 | What solace hast thou, God, in all thy heavens For such an hour as this? |
3473 | What stead our prudence or our wisdom? |
3473 | What''s new? |
3473 | What''s the matter, man? |
3473 | What, brother, came not one who prophesied This should betide exactly as it doth? |
3473 | What, can these dead bones live, whose sap is dried By twenty scorching centuries of wrong? |
3473 | When thou dost hold and clasp her hand in thine, Does not the thought of woes that once possessed, Make all the sweeter now her smile divine? |
3473 | Whence com''st thou? |
3473 | Whence come these radiant tints, these blended beams? |
3473 | Whence come you knowing not the high brick wall, Without, blank as my palm, o''the inner side, Muring a palace? |
3473 | Whence does he come? |
3473 | Where are the lion- warriors of the Lord? |
3473 | Where are the signs fulfilled whereby all men Should know the Christ? |
3473 | Where do you spy one now? |
3473 | Where flee? |
3473 | Where has this lovely form reclined till day, While I alone must watch and weep and wait? |
3473 | Where is he who lingered here, But a little while agone? |
3473 | Where is our Judas? |
3473 | Where is our father, Reuben? |
3473 | Where is the Hebrew''s fatherland? |
3473 | Where is the friend of reason and of knowledge? |
3473 | Where is the man who has been tried and found strong and sound? |
3473 | Where is the promised garden of increase, When like a rose the wilderness should bloom? |
3473 | Where is the truth and certainty of revelation?" |
3473 | Where is the wide- winged peace Shielding the lamb within the lion''s den? |
3473 | Where our five- branched palm? |
3473 | Where shall God''s servant cower from his doom? |
3473 | Where shall a man escape men''s cruelty? |
3473 | Where shall we find a more triumphant vindication and supreme victory of spirit over matter? |
3473 | Where shall we turn? |
3473 | Whither shall they turn? |
3473 | Who and how many of that harmless tribe, Those meek and pious men, have been elected To glut with innocent blood the oppressor''s wrath? |
3473 | Who are ye, villains? |
3473 | Who can attest, who prove we ever wrought Or ever did devise the smallest harm, Far less this fiendish crime against the State? |
3473 | Who can tell what is true, what is false, in a world where fantasy is as real as fact? |
3473 | Who enters? |
3473 | Who has told thee this? |
3473 | Who is this stranger? |
3473 | Who knows? |
3473 | Who raps upon my chamber- door? |
3473 | Who should go free where equal guilt is shared? |
3473 | Who tells me? |
3473 | Who tells thee of my son''s love for the Jewess? |
3473 | Who would divine the Knight of Nordmannstein In the Flagellants''weeds? |
3473 | Who''d gainsay Authority so clearly stamped divine? |
3473 | Who''d judge me with this paunch a temperate man, A man of modest means, a man withal Scarce overpast his prime? |
3473 | Who''s that, the Prince? |
3473 | Whom shall I send To bear my message to the council? |
3473 | Why all this vain debate? |
3473 | Why came they not with thee to massacre, Leaving no agony betwixt the sentence And instant execution? |
3473 | Why chant''st thou not the praise of wine? |
3473 | Why curse the pain that made thy soul expand? |
3473 | Why full of terror, Compassed with error, Trouble thy heart, For thy mortal part? |
3473 | Why hast thou ne''er Discovered her to Schnetzen? |
3473 | Why hate experience that enlarged thy scope? |
3473 | Why should you tremble? |
3473 | Why should you tremble? |
3473 | Why shouldst thou languish, With earthly pain? |
3473 | Why spare the time to warn? |
3473 | Why throbs my heart so fast, so low? |
3473 | Why, in this story of keen pain, my friend, Wilt thou refuse naught but a dream to see? |
3473 | Wilt make Thy princely name a stench in German nostrils? |
3473 | Wilt thou bear in mind his crime Unto all time? |
3473 | Wilt thou desert us for whose sake we perish? |
3473 | Wilt thou still court man''s acclamation, Forgetting what the Lord hath said? |
3473 | With what high title Please you to qualify it? |
3473 | Wouldst thou confide the truth to me, And yet those golden days disprove? |
3473 | Wouldst thou lighten the anguish of Jacob? |
3473 | Ye are men-- free, upright, honest men, Not hired assassins? |
3473 | Ye cross the Landgrave-- well? |
3473 | Ye shrink? |
3473 | Ye who nurse rancor haply in your hearts, Fear ye we perish unavenged? |
3473 | Yet who is he who pines apart, Estranged from that maternal heart, Ungraced, unfriended, and forlorn, The butt of scorn? |
3473 | Yon stir and glitter in the bush? |
3473 | You saw the day when Henry Schnetzen''s castle Was razed with fire? |
3473 | You think the Jews Keep such things secret? |
3473 | You''ll have your jest Now or anon, what matters it? |
3473 | a weed for lumpish clowns to pluck? |
3473 | am I like the autumn breeze for you, Which feeds on tears even to the very grave, For whom all grief is but a drop of dew? |
3473 | are we Jews and are afraid of death? |
3473 | can these dead bones live, whose sap is dried By twenty scorching centuries of wrong? |
3473 | canst thou come accurst, And offer to my kiss thy lips''ripe charms? |
3473 | could glory, gold, Or sated senses lure thy lofty love? |
3473 | did he not speak Of amulet or talisman? |
3473 | do dead men rise? |
3473 | lying In murderous ambush for the Prince of Meissen? |
3473 | my rose, Sole pure and faithful heart where glows A lingering spark of love for me? |
3473 | or are his doctrines weak That none obeys him? |
3473 | or the flame Consume our flesh? |
3473 | she asks;"What if he come, A cloud, a fire, a whirlwind?" |
3473 | she says, and why? |
3473 | speak, where hast thou been this night? |
3473 | that thy voice should ring like the voices of the bells upon the priestly garments? |
3473 | was that the vessel splitting? |
3473 | what is man? |
3473 | what is man? |
3473 | what is man? |
3473 | what is man? |
3473 | what is man? |
3473 | what is man? |
3473 | what is man? |
3473 | what maid is that? |
3473 | what woe has chanced? |
3473 | when wilt thou have done With rod and scourge? |
3473 | who brings thee here thus late? |
3473 | who is calling? |
3473 | who would offer less Heroic wrath and filial zeal to God Than to a murdered father? |
3473 | will ye teach your betters patience? |
3473 | will you see this nameless crime Brand the clean earth, blacken the crystal heaven? |
3473 | with what thick strange fumes Hast thou, o''the sudden, brutalized their sense? |
3473 | ye would avert your martyred brows From the immortal crowns the angels offer? |
9389 | A waiting- maid? 9389 And did her mother really let her roam away, alone, on such an errand, to a perfect stranger?" |
9389 | And suppose some of these terrible things should happen,--the last, for instance,--what would you do? |
9389 | And what kind of a frock, pray, does''papa''wear? |
9389 | And what name do you give to that white thing with blue sprigs in it? |
9389 | And who in the room opposite, on this floor? |
9389 | And who lives in the room just under mine? 9389 And you do n''t want the grapes?" |
9389 | And you have kept the girl safe in the shelter of your honest home all these years? 9389 And you thought my superfluous time and wisdom might be transferred to you, thus making a more equal division of property?" |
9389 | And you? |
9389 | Any strange cases among the scholars? |
9389 | Are you afraid to come up the ladder? |
9389 | Are you not happy, Basil? |
9389 | As much as if I went to school? |
9389 | Basil, what man? 9389 But how shall I get in?" |
9389 | But what do you wish, my friend? |
9389 | But you like me better now? 9389 Catharine, whose pass- key was that you found in the door? |
9389 | Did not they direct you to come to me to- day? |
9389 | Do n''t I always? |
9389 | Do n''t think to humbug any more, Shut up there in your shanty,-- But solve the problem, once for all,-- De Sauty, or De Santy? |
9389 | Do you always pity people, when they love you very much? |
9389 | Do you like me to be pretty, Sir? |
9389 | Do you really think I can learn? |
9389 | Friendless, when you are gone? 9389 Happy?" |
9389 | Horrid old, is n''t it? |
9389 | House or meadow? 9389 I? |
9389 | Is that reward enough for coming? |
9389 | Lady Gower? 9389 Matter? |
9389 | May I inquire how you propose to effect such an exchange? |
9389 | May I tell you another thing I do n''t like in you? 9389 May I?" |
9389 | Mr. Geer, how can you sleep away your precious time so? |
9389 | No, I do n''t mean that; but how shall I get in where you are, after I am up? |
9389 | Nor Dan Norris? 9389 Nor Music?" |
9389 | Possible? |
9389 | Pray, my good Sir,ask legions of fond parents,"what do you mean? |
9389 | Said? 9389 Sir?" |
9389 | Sir? |
9389 | Sleep? 9389 So you would not come and nurse me, and take care of me, and get me well again?" |
9389 | Suppose we take a vacation to- day, and investigate the state of the atmosphere? |
9389 | Then what can I do, Jean? |
9389 | This? |
9389 | What could put it into poor papa''s head? 9389 What do you think of that sample of mixed tobacco I gave you to try?" |
9389 | What in thunder? 9389 What is the difference between them? |
9389 | What is the use of telling it, then? |
9389 | Where did you get that flower, Elsie? |
9389 | Who is the tall lady who dined here yesterday with Miss Rocket, and talked so enthusiastically about woman''s rights? |
9389 | Who''d''a''thunk it? |
9389 | Why ca n''t we? |
9389 | Will you go, love? |
9389 | Wo n''t care? |
9389 | Would not an appeal to Mr. Lyndsay reach him now, think you? 9389 You are? |
9389 | You do know your letters? 9389 _ Savez- vous_,"asks an epicure,"_ ce qui a chassé la gaîté? |
9389 | ''"[ 2]"The diploma of Doctor of Music Marx received from the University at Marburg; and thereupon(?) |
9389 | After all, is there anything very strange in silly men writing silly books? |
9389 | Am I sufficiently obvious?" |
9389 | And Grammar?" |
9389 | And how about that other stupendous fiction of the harvest- moon? |
9389 | And what is the conclusion? |
9389 | And what was the end of all this? |
9389 | And when do you write?" |
9389 | And when this is both understood and felt, what rules shall be given to guide and control the construction and the delivery of discourses? |
9389 | And you are not in the least vexed that I spoke to you about it?" |
9389 | Are the Biddies given over to a reprobate mind, because you do n''t happen to like their vocalization? |
9389 | Are you willing to go with me as my wife?" |
9389 | Besides, nobody loves me enough to be pitied, except papa.--Isn''t it pleasant here? |
9389 | Blocks or a primer?" |
9389 | But as I ceased, joy conquered grief and wonder; for she clapped her hands like a glad child, exclaiming,--"Go with you, Sir? |
9389 | But if you like to write in the evening, you would just as soon I would come in the morning?" |
9389 | But know ye where she hides her nest, Beneath what balmy dropping eaves, The Dove that bears on her white breast The sacred green of olive- leaves? |
9389 | But this is not climbing the hill of science, is it?" |
9389 | But, Jean, you surely do not mean that Effie has no claim on any human creature, beyond the universal one of common charity?" |
9389 | Can I never be more to you than now? |
9389 | Can you be happy here, with no fortune but the little store set apart for you, and the knowledge that no want shall touch you while I live?" |
9389 | Can you heal a heart- ache with a syllogism? |
9389 | Can you plant a garden with weeds and then pull them up again in secure trust that no lurking burdocks and Canada thistle shall remain? |
9389 | Did the girls of a larger growth lose their dangerous qualities on arriving at belle- hood? |
9389 | Did the wilful girl go off without leave? |
9389 | Did you think I should shrink from sharing poverty with you who gave me all I own?" |
9389 | Do tell us_ what_ your name is,--come: De Santy, or De Sauty? |
9389 | Do you inquire, To what good purpose do you thrust the possibility of failure upon the attention of the candidate for the ministry? |
9389 | Do you like Arithmetic?" |
9389 | Do you really believe that the solar and stellar system was arranged to accommodate"the reapers reaping early"of the little island of Great Britain? |
9389 | Do you think you should like me for a teacher?" |
9389 | Drawing, for instance?" |
9389 | Effie bent suddenly, saying, with a look of anguish,"Do you regret that I am your wife, Sir?" |
9389 | Eh,--eh,--something about Ivy, was n''t it?" |
9389 | He greeted me as I passed in, addressing me in an interrogative manner with one word, the only one I ever heard him utter,--"Owasyerelthbin?" |
9389 | How could I forget that happy night, long years ago, when she and I went floating down the same bright stream, two happy lovers just betrothed? |
9389 | How long ought a sermon to be? |
9389 | How shall one know which is which?" |
9389 | I echoed, bitterly,--"how can I be happy, remembering what might have been?" |
9389 | IS THE RELIGIOUS WANT OF THE AGE MET? |
9389 | Is beatification dependent upon the platform- balance? |
9389 | Is it Dalby''s Carminative, Daffy''s Elixir, Brown''s Syrup of Squills, or White''s Magnetic Mixture? |
9389 | Is it of the soothing or the coercing system? |
9389 | Is it only the Piccolomini and Linds of the feathered kingdom who have a right to practise sacred music? |
9389 | Is there any reason why they should not? |
9389 | Love, then, is a_ sine qua non_ in stories; and if love, why not marriage? |
9389 | May not the command of a maximum speed of thirteen knots be obtained from the machinery now employed for a maximum speed of ten knots? |
9389 | Might not Effie go to him herself? |
9389 | Miss Ivy, what are you going to do?" |
9389 | Must our ways lie apart? |
9389 | No more you do n''t want to marry John Herricks, do you?" |
9389 | Oh, Jean, why did you leave me when you went?" |
9389 | Oh, Mr. Clerron, did you see the clouds this morning?" |
9389 | Oh, no,--not at all,--but as Republicans_ do n''t_ consider it necessary, is it strange that they should, vote as they think? |
9389 | Oh, that is it, then? |
9389 | On the whole, you are not particularly fond of books?" |
9389 | Pray, what set you--"The next morning the lady- teacher took to asking me this? |
9389 | Presently he said,--"Ivy, how old are you?" |
9389 | Shall I never know the blessedness of a return?" |
9389 | Shall we proceed to History? |
9389 | She cast a quick look into my face, asking, hurriedly,--"Am I to go alone?" |
9389 | Some sudden hope seemed born of my regretful words, for, with an eager glance, she cried,--"Was it that desire which prompted you to part from me? |
9389 | The enterprise of the more active spirits of our day is astounding; we begin to ask,"Will they stop at anything? |
9389 | Was n''t this a pretty dish to set before-- not a king- but a young republican, who fancied himself the equal of kings? |
9389 | Well, he is just as happy, and just as rich, and everybody likes him just as well, as if he knew the whole world full; and why ca n''t I do so, too? |
9389 | What else could I think, when you came so often and were so kind to us?" |
9389 | What has she to do with Effie, Jean?" |
9389 | What have the innocent heirs of our name done, that Hannah should continue under numberless_ noms- de- plume_ to cater for them? |
9389 | What have you studied?" |
9389 | What is the Nursery Blarney- Stone? |
9389 | What is the mission of the surviving Whigs? |
9389 | What is the reason?" |
9389 | What mattered it that slowly, almost unconsciously, I had learned to love her with the passion of a youth, the power of a man? |
9389 | What other branches have you pursued? |
9389 | What other city furnishes such a work as the Duchess D''Abrantes''"Histoire des Salons de Paris"? |
9389 | What shall I do?''" |
9389 | What shall we have next?" |
9389 | What the deuse brings you to Paris, then? |
9389 | What will they not undertake?" |
9389 | What''s John Herricks and Dan Norris hangin''round for all the time?" |
9389 | What''s the matter?" |
9389 | What''s the use havin''her, if she ca n''t stay at home with us? |
9389 | What, then, could she do? |
9389 | What_ shall_ I do? |
9389 | When will you go?" |
9389 | Where is it kept? |
9389 | Where is the child?" |
9389 | Where''s the use? |
9389 | Where, then, is the good of being opposed to it? |
9389 | Where, we repeat, is the Nursery Blarney- Stone? |
9389 | Whither? |
9389 | Who so dull as to require an interpreter for such plain speakings? |
9389 | Who was our geographer? |
9389 | Why are you sorry?" |
9389 | Why ca n''t we? |
9389 | Why do civic wood- rangers choose the ailantus- tree for a bouquet- holder to the close- pent inhabitants of towns? |
9389 | Why do our educated men of other professions so seldom and so reluctantly contribute to the addresses in our religious assemblies? |
9389 | Why is the life of little boys and girls in books always pictured on the foot- lights pattern? |
9389 | Why must we, then, be conscientiously constrained to mark out such a very different plan for our children at home? |
9389 | Why not? |
9389 | Why was I blind so long?" |
9389 | Why was it made a crime worthy of Draconian sternness to address our she- comrades in the pleasant paths of learning? |
9389 | Why was it-- except for the Blarney- Stone-- that we were always checked in any Sabba''day notes and queries of what we had noticed in the sanctuary? |
9389 | Would not this be obviated by having a gate or slide to fill out the dead- wood when the screw is lifted? |
9389 | Would you utterly discourage those who are already more alive to the perils of their undertaking than we could wish them? |
9389 | You detect signs of a moral reformation?" |
9389 | You do not see the connection? |
9389 | You think I improve on acquaintance? |
9389 | [ Footnote*: Might not a metallic stern- post, combining strength, lightness, and little resistance, be introduced?] |
9389 | _"What do you want of me, Elsie Venner?_"It was a strange question to put, for the girl had not signified that she wished the teacher to come to her. |
9389 | a bad habit?" |
9389 | a substitute for lollipops or for birch? |
9389 | but what can I do?" |
9389 | exclaimed Ivy, with a great gush of gratitude and happiness;"do I, can I, do_ you_ any good?" |
9389 | is it_ yesterday_ or_ to- morrow?_ LOVE AND SELF- LOVE. |
9389 | nor none of''em?" |
9389 | or rather, where is it not? |
9389 | rock candy or rock the cradle?" |
9389 | said Ivy, blushing, and quickly added,"Do you know I have discovered the reason why you like me this morning?" |
9389 | that all? |
9389 | upon your word of honor, Madam, you have not? |
9389 | without even informing her parents?" |
9389 | would you turn your Ivy out of doors and break her heart?" |
9389 | you were a Phi- Beta- Kappa man in college, and know that you can write better than many a man in a metropolitan pulpit? |
8918 | And was he excused? |
8918 | Ay, ay, man,said he,"pray where is the great wit in that speech?"'' |
8918 | But you think, Sir, that Warburton is a superiour critick to Theobald? |
8918 | But, Sir,( said Mr. Burney,) you''ll have Warburton upon your bones, wo n''t you? |
8918 | Very true, and where will you find such_ men_ and such_ horses_?'' |
8918 | What do you think of them? |
8918 | Who, Sir? 8918 Why, Sir, do you stare? |
8918 | ''And who are you,''asked Johnson,''that talk thus liberally?'' |
8918 | ''And who will be my biographer,''said he,''do you think?'' |
8918 | ''But why does my dear Mr. Warton tell me nothing of himself? |
8918 | ''Can I do any thing to promoting the diploma? |
8918 | ''Has heaven reserv''d in pity to the poor, No pathless waste, or undiscover''d shore? |
8918 | ''Has not----[1333] a great deal of wit, Sir?'' |
8918 | ''How does poor Smart do, Sir; is he likely to recover?'' |
8918 | ''How, Sir,( said Dr. Adams,) can you think of doing it alone? |
8918 | ''How, when competitors like these contend, Can_ surly Virtue_ hope to fix a friend?'' |
8918 | ''I know my Baretti will not be satisfied with a letter in which I give him no account of myself: yet what account shall I give him? |
8918 | ''I think in a few weeks to try another excursion[1102]; though to what end? |
8918 | ''I( says he) may surely be contented without the praise of perfection, which if I could obtain in this gloom of solitude, what would it avail me? |
8918 | ''Is there not imagination in them, Sir?'' |
8918 | ''Poor dear Collins[811]!--Would a letter give him any pleasure? |
8918 | ''Still to one bishop Philips seem a wit?'' |
8918 | ''Then when I come to talk of Greenwich-- Did you ever see it? |
8918 | ''Towards Mr. Savage''s_ Life_ what more have you got? |
8918 | ''Was there ever,''cried he,''such stuff as great part of Shakespeare? |
8918 | ''What do they make me say, Sir?'' |
8918 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
8918 | ''You perhaps ask, whither should I go? |
8918 | ''_ He''ll be of us_,( said Johnson) how does he know we will_ permit_ him? |
8918 | ''_ Langton_ is a good Cumæ, but who must be Sibylla? |
8918 | ( said Dodsley) do you think a letter from Johnson could hurt Lord Chesterfield? |
8918 | 236. Who touched old Northcote''s hand? |
8918 | 99):--''Does not one table Bavius still admit? |
8918 | After staring at each other in silent amaze, Dr. Francis asked how that speech could be written by him? |
8918 | Amid these names can BOSWELL be forgot, Scarce by North Britons now esteem''d a Scot[659]? |
8918 | And every publisher refuse The offspring of his happy Muse[356]?'' |
8918 | And would you have me cross my_ genius_ when it leads me sometimes to voracity and sometimes to abstinence?'' |
8918 | Aut, hoc si nimium est, tandem nova lexica poscam? |
8918 | Besides, Sir, what influence can Mr. Sheridan have upon the language of this great country, by his narrow exertions? |
8918 | But if a man can be supposed to make no provision for death in war, what can be the state that would have awakened him to the care of futurity? |
8918 | But what can I do? |
8918 | But what can you expect, as Lord Kames justly observes, from a school where boys are taught to rob on the highway?'' |
8918 | But what is success to him that has none to enjoy it? |
8918 | But what think you? |
8918 | But where shall we find them, and, at the same time, the obedience due to them? |
8918 | But why then does he not write now and then on the living manners of the times?'' |
8918 | But, Sir, how can you do this in three years? |
8918 | Can I help? |
8918 | Carmina vis nostri scribant meliora Poetae? |
8918 | Computation, if two to one against two, how many against five? |
8918 | Deteriora ei offerre cui meliorum ingens copia est, cui non ridiculum videtur? |
8918 | Did I ever tell you an anecdote of him? |
8918 | Do n''t you like it, Sir?" |
8918 | Do you know Mathematicks? |
8918 | Do you know Natural History?'' |
8918 | Ego cur, acquirere pauca Si possum, invideor; cum lingua Catonis et Enni Sermonem patrium ditaverit, et nova rerum Nomina protulerit? |
8918 | Garrick overhearing him, exclaimed,''eh? |
8918 | Have you any more notes on Shakspeare? |
8918 | He asked me, I suppose, by way of trying my disposition,''Is not this very fine?'' |
8918 | He behaved with perfect composure at his execution, and called out''_ Dulce et decorum est pro patriâ mori_?'' |
8918 | He continues:--''Such is the reason of our practice; and who shall treat it with contempt? |
8918 | He looked at me as if I had talked of going to the North Pole, and said,"You do not insist on my accompanying you?" |
8918 | He then addressed himself to Davies:''What do you think of Garrick? |
8918 | He then began to descant upon the force of testimony, and the little we could know of final causes; so that the objections of, why was it so? |
8918 | He then called to the boy,''What would you give, my lad, to know about the Argonauts?'' |
8918 | How are you to get all the etymologies? |
8918 | How goes Apollonius[844]? |
8918 | How other- wise was Johnson able to hire and furnish a large house for his school? |
8918 | How shall we determine the proportion of intrinsick merit? |
8918 | How would"disposition"do?... |
8918 | I am afraid my stay with you can not be long; but what is the inference? |
8918 | I ask him a plain question,''What do you mean to teach?'' |
8918 | I have already assumed the bee for my device, and who ever brought an action of trover or trespass against that avowed free- booter? |
8918 | If Mrs. Johnson had not money, how did she and her husband live from July 1735 to the spring of 1738? |
8918 | If you said two and two make four, he would say,"How will you prove that, Sir?" |
8918 | In all modern periods of this country, have not the writers on one side been regularly called hirelings, and on the other patriots?'' |
8918 | Is Boulter there?'' |
8918 | Is that not too strong? |
8918 | Is there not sad stuff? |
8918 | Is this the language of one who wished to blast the laurels of Milton[683]? |
8918 | Johnson has thus translated:--''Canst thou believe the vast eternal mind Was e''er to Syrts and Libyan sands confin''d? |
8918 | Johnson?'' |
8918 | Late in life, if any man praised a book in his presence, he was sure to ask,''Did you read it through?'' |
8918 | Lord Lansdowne was the Granville of Pope''s couplet--''But why then publish? |
8918 | May I enquire after her? |
8918 | May I fondly hope that to the maker of so large an Index will be extended the gratitude which Lord Bolingbroke says was once shown to lexicographers? |
8918 | May not this, however, be a poetical fiction? |
8918 | May there not be the same difference between men who read as their taste prompts and men who are confined in cells and colleges to stated tasks? |
8918 | Misfortune, indeed, he may yet feel; for where is the bottom of the misery of man? |
8918 | Mr. Burney asked him then if he had seen Warburton''s book against Bolingbroke''s_ Philosophy_[983]? |
8918 | Must helpless man, in ignorance sedate, Roll darkling down the torrent of his fate? |
8918 | No matter where; wise fear, you know, Forbids the robbing of a foe; But what, to serve our private ends, Forbids the cheating of our friends[948]?'' |
8918 | No peaceful desert yet unclaim''d by Spain? |
8918 | No peaceful desert, yet unclaimed by Spain?'' |
8918 | No secret island in the boundless main? |
8918 | No secret island in the boundless main? |
8918 | Now Temple, can I help indulging vanity?'' |
8918 | O where was the common sense of those who instituted such colleges? |
8918 | Omnia percurro trepidus, circum omnia lustro, Si qua usquam pateat melioris semita vitae, Nec quid agam invenio.... Quid faciam? |
8918 | On Oct. 10, 1779, Boswell told Johnson, that he had been''agreeably mistaken''in saying:--''What would it avail me in this gloom of solitude?'' |
8918 | Quid autem Cæcilio Plautoque dabit Romanus, ademptum Virgilio Varioque? |
8918 | Quis sanus hirtam agrestemque vestem Lucullo obtulisset, cujus omnia fere Serum opificia, omnia Parmae vellera, omnes Tyri colores latuerunt? |
8918 | Shall I come uninvited, or stay here where nobody perhaps would miss me if I went? |
8918 | Shall JOHNSON friendless range the town? |
8918 | Shall dull suspense corrupt the stagnant mind? |
8918 | Shall no dislike alarm, no wishes rise, No cries attempt the mercy of the skies? |
8918 | Shall the Presbyterian_ Kirk_ of Scotland have its General Assembly, and the Church of England be denied its Convocation?'' |
8918 | Sir, you may analyse this, and say what is there in it? |
8918 | That he would choose this waste, this barren ground, To teach the thin inhabitants around, And leave his truth in wilds and deserts drown''d?'' |
8918 | That it must be so soon quitted, is a powerful remedy against impatience; but what shall free us from reluctance? |
8918 | The Stuarts have found few apologists, for the dead can not pay for praise; and who will, without reward, oppose the tide of popularity? |
8918 | The passage is in Thomson''s_ Winter_, l. 116:--''In what far- distant region of the sky, Hush''d in deep silence, sleep ye when''tis calm?'' |
8918 | The visit was paid early in the year, and was over in February; what haymakers were there at that season? |
8918 | They would all have some people under them; why not then have some people above them?'' |
8918 | This most unlucky accident threw him into such a fit of shame and anger that he roared out like a bull,"What have I done? |
8918 | To either of these how could any answer be returned? |
8918 | To this circumstance Mr. Derrick alludes in the following lines of his_ Fortune, a Rhapsody_:''Will no kind patron JOHNSON own? |
8918 | Was Mallet anywise hurt by his publication of Lord Bolingbroke? |
8918 | Was there a single writer at that time who had objected to torture? |
8918 | Was there more than one? |
8918 | We can fit the two volumnes in two hours, ca n''t we?" |
8918 | What have I done?"'' |
8918 | What then can be the reason why we lament more him that dies of a wound, than him that dies of a fever? |
8918 | What was Johnson doing meanwhile? |
8918 | What? |
8918 | What? |
8918 | What?'' |
8918 | When the messenger who carried the last sheet to Millar returned, Johnson asked him,''Well, what did he say?'' |
8918 | When would that man have prepared himself to die, who went to seek death without preparation? |
8918 | Where hangs the new volume[821]? |
8918 | Where warbles to thy ear the sacred throng, Thy moral sense, thy dignity of song? |
8918 | Where was Mrs. Johnson living at this time? |
8918 | Where was the offence? |
8918 | Whether Roper''s? |
8918 | Why then should I suppress it? |
8918 | Why''out of the abundance of the heart''should I not speak[75]? |
8918 | Why, now, there is stealing; why should it be thought a crime? |
8918 | Will it not, Sir?" |
8918 | Will you believe me, when I assure you he told me"he had but one, and that he kept for_ his own reading_?"'' |
8918 | Will you now do my picture? |
8918 | With the debates, shall not I have business enough? |
8918 | Would your society[440], or any gentleman, or body of men that you know, take such a bargain? |
8918 | [ 1339]''Has heaven reserved, in pity to the poor, No pathless waste, or undiscovered shore? |
8918 | [ 247] Hawkins(_ Life_, p. 61) says that in August, 1738(? |
8918 | [ 275] May we not trace a fanciful similarity between Politian and Johnson? |
8918 | [ 372]''For who would leave, unbrib''d, Hibernia''s land, Or change the rocks of Scotland for the Strand? |
8918 | [ 715] Catherine Sawbridge, sister of Mrs.[? |
8918 | [ 926]''Et pourquoi tuer cet amiral? |
8918 | [ Page 126: Was Richard Savage Thales? |
8918 | an accingar studiis gravioribus audax? |
8918 | but wherefore alas? |
8918 | have not all insects gay colours[1448]?'' |
8918 | have they given_ him_ a pension? |
8918 | or why was it not so? |
8918 | or, to mention a stronger attraction, why not to dear Mr. Langton? |
8918 | tenebrisne pigram damnare senectam Restat? |
8918 | that''Johnson neither asked nor received from government any reward whatsoever for his political labours?'' |
8918 | what do you say? |
8918 | what gleam is that which paints the air? |
8918 | with two- pence half- penny in your pocket?'' |
8918 | ye little short- sighted criticks, could JOHNSON be envious of the talents of any of his contemporaries? |
26009 | A council of turkeys? |
26009 | A dragon? |
26009 | And are the donkeys laden? |
26009 | And are we really going to rest after a trifle like that? 26009 And did n''t you aim at it?" |
26009 | And pray why not? |
26009 | And so you risk his breaking his bones? |
26009 | And the birds? |
26009 | And we shall have to go without dessert? |
26009 | And what should you have done if they had sprung at us? |
26009 | And what takes place then? |
26009 | And what would have happened if the water- spout had reached the ship? |
26009 | And what''s the name of this plant? |
26009 | And whence did the meteor come which passed so close to us? |
26009 | And where is l''Encuerado? |
26009 | And where is l''Encuerado? |
26009 | And who is Juan? |
26009 | And you did n''t repeat any words? |
26009 | Are armadillos very scarce? |
26009 | Are not morning and night dews the same thing? |
26009 | Are not you ashamed to attack a child? |
26009 | Are otters really relations of Gringalet? |
26009 | Are peccaries carnivorous? |
26009 | Are the pods eatable? |
26009 | Are there such things as opossum- fishes? |
26009 | Are there such things as wild dogs? |
26009 | Are these stones luminous? |
26009 | Are they venomous? |
26009 | Are we going to cross that great plain? 26009 Are we going to eat these animals?" |
26009 | Are we in a savage country? |
26009 | Are we liable to catch these fevers? |
26009 | Are we lost? |
26009 | Are we now in a virgin forest? |
26009 | Are we to consider ourselves your guests? |
26009 | Are you all alone? |
26009 | Are you also a sportsman? 26009 Are you going to make as long a journey as you did last month?" |
26009 | Are you going to tie me? |
26009 | Are you speaking the truth? |
26009 | Are you the chief of the village? |
26009 | At a fox, which I missed; were you chasing it? |
26009 | At all events, it is n''t another relation of the rat-- is it? |
26009 | But I see thousands of holes; does each termite have a separate chamber? |
26009 | But eagles are much stronger than falcons? |
26009 | But from whence does all this moisture come? |
26009 | But how do they manage,asked Lucien,"to obtain from a plant those dark- blue stones that I have seen sold in the market?" |
26009 | But how many ants does it take to satisfy it? |
26009 | But if no one can discover our bivouac,remarked Lucien, casting a glance behind him,"how shall we manage to find it again?" |
26009 | But if they always lived in the shade? |
26009 | But was it really you that shot? |
26009 | But what are they composed of? |
26009 | But what do they say? |
26009 | But where are they? |
26009 | But where do these hungry wretches come from? |
26009 | But where''s the sugar? |
26009 | But why did n''t you offer him the instrument directly? |
26009 | But you are armed? |
26009 | But you have just told us that he stripped off all his clothes? |
26009 | But, papa, have n''t I heard you tell the Mexicans that in France they make sugar with beet- root? |
26009 | Ca n''t you understand that the evil spirit which you have in your body will be certain to make you commit some folly? |
26009 | Can any one understand the use of these horrible trees? |
26009 | Can he have discovered water? |
26009 | Can he have met with a stream? |
26009 | Can these animals fly for any length of time? |
26009 | Can they run as fast as squirrels? |
26009 | Can we be still in Mexico? |
26009 | Can we get water from this shrub by merely pressing it? |
26009 | Can you live without eating and drinking? |
26009 | Can you take us in for one night? |
26009 | Could n''t you have chosen a tree that was not so tall? |
26009 | Did n''t I tell you its tongue is poisonous? 26009 Did n''t those wolves frighten you?" |
26009 | Did n''t you know that lizards were harmless? |
26009 | Did n''t you know that some Indians are ant- eaters? 26009 Did you ever see one, papa?" |
26009 | Did you see that great insect that flew buzzing past us? |
26009 | Do n''t they say the same of the bats and swallows? 26009 Do n''t you find that the mosquitoes in the_ Terre- Chaude_ bite much sharper than those in the_ Terre- Tempérée_?" |
26009 | Do n''t you know that you must not trust to appearances? 26009 Do n''t you see that it is mounted upon long legs like stilts?" |
26009 | Do n''t you think it is nice, Tatita? |
26009 | Do n''t you wish Chanito to learn to climb? 26009 Do n''t young alligators know how to swim?" |
26009 | Do squirrels feed on flesh? |
26009 | Do streams often go under the ground like this? |
26009 | Do they always travel in flocks like this? |
26009 | Do you believe that they can understand you? |
26009 | Do you know the family of the animal we are going to have for breakfast? |
26009 | Do you know, then, why toucans have such exaggerated beaks? |
26009 | Do you mean crossing the_ Terre- Froide_? |
26009 | Do you notice, papa, those white specks one of the earwigs is covering with its body? |
26009 | Do you really think that I have done it enough? |
26009 | Do you see the long pods which hang on that tree? |
26009 | Do you speak Spanish, venerable father? |
26009 | Do you think any one will hurt us? |
26009 | Do you think that they will first devour l''Encuerado, and then attack us? |
26009 | Do you think we shall often have to go a whole day without eating? |
26009 | Do you think you are still in the town? |
26009 | Do you understand that phenomenon? |
26009 | Do you wish to persuade me that stones rain down from the sky? |
26009 | Do your legs feel like mine? |
26009 | Do_ jaquaretes_ ever attack men? |
26009 | Does he intend to eat them? |
26009 | Does it eat any thing but ants? |
26009 | Does it produce any fruit good to eat? |
26009 | Does the tick only attack dogs? |
26009 | For what reason do you wish for daylight? |
26009 | Have n''t these Indians any meat? 26009 Have we finished our day''s journey, then?" |
26009 | Have you been bitten by a serpent? |
26009 | Have you discovered any men? |
26009 | Have you killed any of them? |
26009 | Have you killed one? |
26009 | Have you lost your senses? |
26009 | Have you searched well under the stones? 26009 Have you suddenly gone mad?" |
26009 | He was not able to find his way back to the spot? |
26009 | Hours? 26009 How are they all to be recognized?" |
26009 | How came you not to think,I said,"that by struggling in this way you would only the more entangle yourself?" |
26009 | How can mountains like these be measured? |
26009 | How can they bear the weight of such an enormous beak? |
26009 | How could such a great mass as this fall down? |
26009 | How did it manage to eat with its mouth all awry? |
26009 | How did you kill this animal? |
26009 | How did you lose your left arm, pobricito? |
26009 | How did you suppose you would descend? |
26009 | How do the termites manage to build their dwellings? |
26009 | How do they manage to perch on a tree with feet of that kind? |
26009 | How do you explain Lucien''s having followed the trail so readily? |
26009 | How far off is it? |
26009 | How is it that the serpent does not poison itself? |
26009 | How is your arm now, l''Encuerado? |
26009 | How long will they take to carry away all the leaves off that great tree? |
26009 | How many hours shall we be in doing it? |
26009 | How much do they give you for watching this filtering- bag from morning till night? |
26009 | How shall we fasten it? |
26009 | How shall you feed them? |
26009 | How was it that that great bird allowed itself to be conquered by such a small adversary? |
26009 | How will it be then? |
26009 | How will you behave when you cross the savannahs? |
26009 | I hope so; do n''t you like the idea of it? |
26009 | I never thought of all that,said Lucien, shaking his head, and looking convinced;"but what shall we have to eat this evening?" |
26009 | I say, papa, did the woodpecker really want to pierce this big tree? |
26009 | I say,cried my friend,"what does this joke mean?" |
26009 | I say,said Lucien, archly, just as the Indian was hoisting his basket on to his back;"how would it have been if I had been perched on it?" |
26009 | I thought the lion was a beast by itself; but, at all events, it is the king of mammals? |
26009 | If I did, would the animal spring upon us? |
26009 | If I had eaten or drunk,he said, simply,"I should have wanted to go to sleep, and then what would have become of you? |
26009 | If it was n''t for that,I urged on him,"do you think I would permit Lucien to sleep in so dangerous a neighborhood?" |
26009 | If we happened to be caught in one of these whirlwinds would it carry us away? |
26009 | Is Gringalet a digitigrade? |
26009 | Is it a rattle- snake? |
26009 | Is it good to eat? |
26009 | Is it the smallest of the three? |
26009 | Is l''Encuerado asleep? |
26009 | Is n''t M. Sumichrast wrong in that, father? |
26009 | Is that true, father? |
26009 | Is that true? |
26009 | Is their flesh good to eat? |
26009 | Is this intended as an emblem of strength and courage? |
26009 | Is this tantalus going to fish? |
26009 | May I catch it? |
26009 | Nothing broken? |
26009 | Now do_ you_ understand this? |
26009 | Now what do you imagine the sun and moon really are? |
26009 | Of course, because of your white skin; what else should it be? 26009 Shall I walk first?" |
26009 | Shall we cross that great plain? |
26009 | Shall we see any people there? |
26009 | Shall we see any snow fall, now that we are in the_ Terre- Froide_? |
26009 | Shall we take our little captive with us? |
26009 | Should I die if I were stung? |
26009 | So these miserable brutes think they are going to frighten us? |
26009 | Suppose the charcoal went on burning? |
26009 | Suppose the fire went out? |
26009 | Surely your husband will not refuse the shelter of his roof to weary travellers? |
26009 | Take care it does not bite you,said I to the boy;"how did you manage to catch it?" |
26009 | That''s not at all generous,said I to him;"if Sumichrast did not carry the basket sometimes, what would become of us?" |
26009 | The Egyptian bird which devours serpents? |
26009 | The beast is justly mine, is n''t it, Tatita, and I am still the tiger- hunter? |
26009 | The flock just now surprised must have cried out:''What is this animal?'' 26009 The mouth sewn up?" |
26009 | The pigment? |
26009 | Then Europeans have no pigment? |
26009 | Then all Vulcanian rocks can be melted? |
26009 | Then do stones proceed from water? |
26009 | Then it can not eat any thing hard? |
26009 | Then shall we find nothing to shoot here? |
26009 | Then the centre of the earth has been once in a liquid state? |
26009 | Then the forests of the_ Terre- Tempérée_ are more beautiful than those of the_ Terre- Chaude_? |
26009 | Then the wind must be much stronger in forests than in towns? |
26009 | Then they do n''t bite? |
26009 | Then water- bugs are really able to fly, swim, and walk? |
26009 | Then we are not on any road? |
26009 | Then you do n''t love me? |
26009 | Then you''ve had some experience of them? |
26009 | There is no wind,observed Lucien;"how is it that the dust rises so high?" |
26009 | They are excellent; what family do they belong to? |
26009 | They are not Christians, then? |
26009 | They think it so very ridiculous? |
26009 | They will be sure to get within reach of Gringalet; are you sure that he will leave them alone? |
26009 | Till we meet again? 26009 To eat us?" |
26009 | To what order of insects do they belong? |
26009 | Was it a lion? |
26009 | Was it your own fault? |
26009 | Well done; but how did you recognize it to be so? |
26009 | Well, Lucien,asked Sumichrast,"what do you think now of rat''s flesh?" |
26009 | Well, Master''Sunbeam,''in what class will you place this mammal? |
26009 | Well, what happened to him? |
26009 | Well, will one of you sell us some maize- cakes, and give us some water? |
26009 | Were n''t you afraid of him? |
26009 | Were you much frightened? |
26009 | What are its good properties? |
26009 | What are meteors? |
26009 | What are these switches for? |
26009 | What are you asking the birds to do? |
26009 | What are you going to do with these poor orphans? |
26009 | What are you thinking of? |
26009 | What became of the mother? |
26009 | What birds are wild- ducks related to? |
26009 | What can you be thinking of? 26009 What could be made of these stalks, which are so delicate that they break if I merely touch them?" |
26009 | What could you give me? |
26009 | What did the cross matter to him? |
26009 | What did you expect to meet with? |
26009 | What did you fire at? |
26009 | What do they find to eat under the bark, in which they must lead a very gloomy life? |
26009 | What do you think of these little ogres? |
26009 | What do you think, shall we take Gringalet for our guide? |
26009 | What do you want? |
26009 | What does the name armadillo mean? |
26009 | What good are horses, then? |
26009 | What good is its great mouth? |
26009 | What has caused this nasty smell on my fingers? |
26009 | What is all this about a journey, for which my consent is the only requisite? |
26009 | What is that moving down below there? |
26009 | What is that? |
26009 | What is the good of killing a poor creature which would be of no use to us? |
26009 | What is the matter? 26009 What is the name of this wonderful plant?" |
26009 | What is the nearest town to this? |
26009 | What is the use of having forty- four feet,he cried,"if the centipede can not get on faster than a_ carabus_, which only has six?" |
26009 | What is the use of their wings? |
26009 | What is this molten matter composed of which is burning under our feet? |
26009 | What on earth has possessed you to chase useless game at this hour of the night? |
26009 | What on earth have you put in the saucepan? |
26009 | What part did you take in it? |
26009 | What precautions? |
26009 | What was it for? |
26009 | What would be the good, my boy? 26009 What would mamma say, if she was here? |
26009 | What''s the matter? |
26009 | What? |
26009 | When you are speaking of a bird, why do you often say it belongs to Brazil, Guiana, or Peru, when you actually find it in Mexico? |
26009 | Where are all the wild cattle and horses? |
26009 | Where are their feet, then? |
26009 | Where did you turn out this fellow, Gringalet? |
26009 | Where does the thread come from? |
26009 | Where is Popocatepetl? |
26009 | Where is the filter? |
26009 | Where''s my parrot? |
26009 | Whom are you calling to? |
26009 | Why are they trying to bury that mouse? |
26009 | Why are we not to continue to keep straight on? |
26009 | Why are you collecting this fat? 26009 Why ca n''t they keep their leaves to themselves? |
26009 | Why did M. Sumichrast call l''Encuerado? |
26009 | Why did n''t Torribio say at once that he was willing to exchange his powder for the telescope? |
26009 | Why did n''t you let me shoot at the_ tlacuache_? |
26009 | Why did you hang the shoes round your neck instead of putting them away in a corner? |
26009 | Why did you start without letting us know? |
26009 | Why do n''t the Mexicans live in such a varied and beautiful country as the_ Terre- Chaude_? |
26009 | Why do n''t they fly away, instead of running or tumbling over on the ground? |
26009 | Why do n''t they make an order for them by themselves? |
26009 | Why do n''t they serve the meat first? |
26009 | Why do n''t you ask for a cup and saucer as well? |
26009 | Why do they laugh so when they look at me? |
26009 | Why do they turn round and round like that? |
26009 | Why do you bend those poor plants like that? 26009 Why does n''t it grow in every forest?" |
26009 | Why not take him, dear? 26009 Why not?" |
26009 | Why should n''t we? |
26009 | Why,said Lucien, who came up to us just as the discussion began,"are not all men the same color? |
26009 | Why? 26009 Why?" |
26009 | Will a butterfly come from this caterpillar? |
26009 | Will he go alone? |
26009 | Will it come near us? |
26009 | Will spiders eat one another? |
26009 | Will they attack live creatures? |
26009 | Will you never be prudent? |
26009 | Will you really give the glass to me? |
26009 | Will you skin it? |
26009 | Wo n''t he open the gate for us? 26009 Yes,"I replied;"do n''t you feel tired?" |
26009 | Yet, surely the eagle is the king of birds; is it not able to look straight at the sun? |
26009 | You are not alone, I see; from whom do you come? |
26009 | You ca n''t mean that we have n''t walked far? 26009 You do n''t intend to take it away with you, I hope?" |
26009 | You do n''t mean to say,said Sumichrast,"that l''Encuerado ever wore blue slippers?" |
26009 | You do? 26009 You have seen them before, then?" |
26009 | You mean the forest which we can see from here? |
26009 | You quite forget the_ cochlearia_, or scurvy- grass, so useful to sailors as a remedy for scurvy? |
26009 | You see this animal, Chanito? |
26009 | You would like to find yourself at Orizava? |
26009 | You would rather, then, that I staid at Orizava? |
26009 | And taking the lad between my knees, I said,"You see that bright band of light which looks almost as if the horizon was on fire? |
26009 | Are they dead, then, for they do not move?" |
26009 | Are your boots well greased? |
26009 | But shall we live on beans the whole of our journey?" |
26009 | But what about Gringalet? |
26009 | But, Chanito, do you know what these mosquitoes are?" |
26009 | Did n''t you know that?" |
26009 | Did n''t you shoot a squirrel yesterday? |
26009 | Did n''t you sleep well?" |
26009 | Do cicindelas live in woods?" |
26009 | Do n''t you recollect that when we were walking over the mountain of Borrego, he often spied out insects that you had missed seeing?" |
26009 | Do they bite with those powerful jaws?" |
26009 | Do you see that beautiful large bird with a tuft on its forehead? |
26009 | Do you see that tree that stands in front of us? |
26009 | Don Luciano, where are you off to with all that train?" |
26009 | Had he then really understood us? |
26009 | Had it a mane?" |
26009 | Have we walked very far?" |
26009 | Have you forgotten our dinner yesterday?" |
26009 | How do you like the_ timbirichis_?" |
26009 | How should we make our way over it? |
26009 | How will they dine, then?" |
26009 | I answered,"you ought to have taken something to restore your strength; for if it had failed, what would have become of us?" |
26009 | I cried,"do n''t you hear the cock crowing, telling us we ought to be on our road? |
26009 | I cried,"what have you done with your provisions?" |
26009 | I cried;"how did you manage to get your trowsers in that state?" |
26009 | I cried;"will you sell us some?" |
26009 | I jumped up-- was it the fall of a tree? |
26009 | Is it Chéma?" |
26009 | Is it a prophet of some new dish in preparation?" |
26009 | Is it not a shame that so many of us sleep through the hour when this lovely prospect can only be enjoyed?" |
26009 | Just as we were going to start, an unforeseen difficulty arose-- how to cross the ravine and ford the river? |
26009 | M. Sumichrast, then you can never have examined their wings? |
26009 | Master''Sunbeam,''"cried Sumichrast, while helping me to construct our hut,"do n''t you recollect you are the one to provide the fire?" |
26009 | Seeing that we left behind us all our baggage, Lucien exclaimed,"Suppose any one came and stole our provisions?" |
26009 | Shall I be wrong?" |
26009 | Shall we be obliged to go home again? |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Sumichrast?" |
26009 | Surely you were not ignorant of all these transformations?" |
26009 | Swift did not first form his idea of''Gulliver''s Travels''from looking at the world from the top of a high mountain?" |
26009 | Was it Chanito you wanted to devour?" |
26009 | What do your legs say?" |
26009 | What was to be done? |
26009 | What would a Parisian say if he saw this_ viznaga_?" |
26009 | Why did you let it escape?" |
26009 | Wo n''t they die?" |
26009 | Would you like me to do it again?" |
26009 | You will think of me sometimes, will you not?" |
26009 | [ Illustration]"But why does it call the animals?" |
26009 | [ Illustration]"What is it?" |
26009 | asked Lucien;"what is that?" |
26009 | but is the young gentleman going with you?" |
26009 | but why?" |
26009 | cried Lucien,"are we in a cemetery?" |
26009 | cried Lucien,"are you going to break your word to me?" |
26009 | cried Lucien;"it looks as if it carried a garden on its back; what use are all these bushes?" |
26009 | cried Lucien;"why did n''t you take it alive?" |
26009 | cried Sumichrast,"are those beasts going to join in the concert made by the grasshoppers and mosquitoes?" |
26009 | cried Sumichrast,"lengthen your strides a little, if you please; do n''t you hear the murmur of a stream?" |
26009 | cried my friend;"is your beast come to life again?" |
26009 | did you remark its sudden movement? |
26009 | do n''t you know that the squirrel and the rat are very near relations, and that they both belong to the Rodent family?" |
26009 | do_ you_ take his part?" |
26009 | does the dragon- fly begin its life by living in water like a fish?" |
26009 | exclaimed Sumichrast, fatigued and cramped with his exertions;"but how am I to reach you, now that I have two guns and two bags to carry?" |
26009 | exclaimed Sumichrast,"does this wretch intend to give us a present to her children?" |
26009 | my fault?" |
26009 | my young scholar; you''ve heard that fable?" |
26009 | or was it a signal from one of our companions? |
26009 | repeated Lucien;"the knots are not seed?" |
26009 | said I to him;"do n''t you remember the noise made by the fall of a tree?" |
26009 | said Sumichrast;"does this fellow want to prove that a cougar will attack a man?" |
26009 | what are these horrid creatures?" |
26009 | what do you think of hurricanes?" |
26009 | what is that dreadful noise?" |
26009 | what is the matter?" |
26009 | what''s that?'' |
26009 | why did you disturb me? |
20450 | And how will you,said he,"after this approach the holy place? |
20450 | And what,said Cuthbert,"will be best for me to read, which may be finished in seven days?" |
20450 | And who is that insolent man,said the magistrate,"who durst insult such a gentleman''s wife?" |
20450 | Are you of the clergy? |
20450 | Do you imagine,said the other,"that eloquence is what they seek in your discourses? |
20450 | Do you know the imperial edicts? |
20450 | How do you hope,said he,"to see Constantinople delivered from the destroying angel of God, after such enormities authorized by laws? |
20450 | Moses, St. Paul, Christ, express tender charity for sinners; who then broached this doctrine? 20450 Of what family, and of what country are you?" |
20450 | Of what profession are you? |
20450 | The usurers answer me,says he,"then we will not lend; and what will the poor do? |
20450 | Upon what account? |
20450 | What employ can I have more honorable, or what better thing can I do in the world, than to live a Christian? |
20450 | What is your employ? |
20450 | What,said they,"while the secure gate of heaven is open, shall we shut it against ourselves? |
20450 | Who can express,he makes the soul exclaim with the same author,"the secret delights which God bestows on a heart thus purified and prepared? |
20450 | Who then were those that wept for you at your first examination? |
20450 | [ 21] Where shall we find such a faith in Israel? 20450 ''Are you then a Christian?'' 20450 17, n. 30, 31) from the Holy Ghost performing miracles by the handkerchiefs of St. Paul, how much more by the saints''bodies? 20450 24, p. 198,How many,"says he,"do you think there are in this city{ 268} who will be saved? |
20450 | 50, p. 517,)"What grace is not in our power to receive by touching and receiving his holy body? |
20450 | 63{?}. |
20450 | 82, p. 787, he writes:"How many now say, they wish to see his shape, his garments? |
20450 | ACACIUS.-"How can I sacrifice to a man whose sepulchre is unquestionably in Crete? |
20450 | ACACIUS.-"I am before the tribunal, and do you ask me my name, and, not satisfied with that, you must also know those of the other ministers? |
20450 | ACACIUS.-"Tell me who are those gods to whom you would have me sacrifice?" |
20450 | After this, what will he refuse to do for our salvation? |
20450 | Am I a saint, or a prophet like God''s true servants? |
20450 | Amidst such scandals, what hopes can we entertain of the salvation of many? |
20450 | And are not we excited to weep for our spiritual miseries? |
20450 | And could St. Austin, with the whole Catholic church, have ranked a Montanist among the most illustrious martyrs? |
20450 | And if you do well, what can afflict me? |
20450 | And if you stand fair for being such a gainer from men, what rewards may you not reasonably expect from God? |
20450 | And in good truth, who can peruse the life of Peter, and not be animated with a more lively faith? |
20450 | And to those about him:"Weep not, my children; must not the will of God be done?" |
20450 | And what example of a suffering Saviour so full, so perfect, and expressive, as that exhibited in the life of Jeremiah? |
20450 | And what is the nature and character of this work, which is thus placed within the reach of almost every family in Ireland? |
20450 | And what need of more words? |
20450 | Arcadius replied,"How can you propose to me such a thing? |
20450 | Are there no Herods now- a- days; persons who are enemies to the spiritual kingdom of Christ in their hearts? |
20450 | Are we then better informed in these matters than God himself?" |
20450 | Are we troubled when we hear ourselves praised? |
20450 | Are you yet willing to sacrifice?" |
20450 | Are{ 658} these our sentiments? |
20450 | As for me, why did you desire to see me? |
20450 | At this sight he cried out, trembling:"Who, O Lord, can escape them all?" |
20450 | At which Polemon said:"Is that another God?" |
20450 | At which she made him this reproach:"Cruel tyrant, do you not blush to torture this part of my body, you that sucked the breasts of a woman yourself?" |
20450 | Basil replied:"But I am now plunged in bitter sorrow and tears: and what protection can I seek? |
20450 | Being met by an old acquaintance, and asked what was become of it, he said"Could you believe it? |
20450 | Bene scripsisti de me, Thoma: quam mercedem addipies? |
20450 | Blinded by self- love, have we not sheltered our dastardly pusillanimity under the cloak of pretended necessity, or even virtue? |
20450 | But are they not at the same time subjects of our condemnation and confusion? |
20450 | But are we not confounded at our sloth in our spiritual warfare, when we look on the conflicts of the martyrs? |
20450 | But granting that I had, what can they allege for extending their insolence even to the dead? |
20450 | But how shall we justify our unfeeling hard- heartedness, that seeks every trifling pretence to exempt us from the duty of succoring the unfortunate? |
20450 | But if we are happy in despising the world, are not you miserable who live slaves to it?" |
20450 | But some may say, What edification can persons in the world reap from the lives of apostles, bishops, or recluses? |
20450 | But what name can we find for the pusillanimity of those who are not able so much as to look humiliations, poverty, or affliction in the face? |
20450 | But what ought you not to do for Jesus Christ, who is the master of the prophets? |
20450 | But what tongue can express the inward feelings and affections which then filled the glowing heart of the most pure Mother of God? |
20450 | But what will be the advantage either of your love for me or of mine for you, if the duties you owe to God are neglected? |
20450 | But when? |
20450 | But, my brethren, what is it we tell you? |
20450 | By what means? |
20450 | Can any insolence be found equal to this? |
20450 | Can any man endued with reason persuade himself that dumb statues are gods?" |
20450 | Can he forsake those he redeemed at so dear a rate? |
20450 | Can the devil enslave, and Christ not absolve his servants? |
20450 | Can they be tolerated? |
20450 | Can we sufficiently detest jealousy and pride, the fatal source of so great evils? |
20450 | Christ is with me: whom shall I fear? |
20450 | Culcian, after many other things, asked him,"Was Christ God?" |
20450 | Do not you see that, contemplating the glory of heaven, he makes no account of earthly things?" |
20450 | Do we never artfully praise ourselves, or willingly lend an ear to what flatterers say to applaud us? |
20450 | Do we never speak of ourselves to our own advantage? |
20450 | Do we not discover, by fatal symptoms, that we ourselves harbor this monster in our breasts? |
20450 | Do you hope to conquer many; you, whom I alone am able thus to confound? |
20450 | Do you not know the Christians, or do you believe that the fear of death will ever make me swerve from my duty? |
20450 | Does he not relate and approve the pilgrimages of his friend, the monk Olympius? |
20450 | Does the devil kill, and can not Christ relieve? |
20450 | Does the infernal serpent continually carry poison, and has not Christ a remedy? |
20450 | Emilian said,"Do you not know that there are gods?" |
20450 | Etsi occisus, non tamen coronatus: quidni? |
20450 | Festum Sanctà ¦ Virginis Genitricis dies, festivitas matris-- nam quod festum est matris nisi incarnatio Verbi? |
20450 | For how can this be long- lived after having lost all its guardians? |
20450 | For what comfort, what life, what hope can a pastor have, if his flock be perishing? |
20450 | For what did you grieve? |
20450 | For what hope or comfort can I have left, if you advance not in virtue? |
20450 | Francis, he said,"I have never asked a boon of you till now; do me the charity to pray to Almighty God for me, next Friday, do you hear? |
20450 | Had I ever injured them? |
20450 | Had he any prophets to learn it from? |
20450 | Had they received any wrong from them? |
20450 | Has not our blessed Lord given them his blood, and shall I refuse them my tears? |
20450 | Have you forgotten what we have sworn upon his body and blood, to suffer death together for his holy name?" |
20450 | He added:"God has appointed me a pastor and a preacher: and is not every one to follow his profession? |
20450 | He answered:"Is that probable? |
20450 | He asked further,"How is the king of that province called?" |
20450 | He complained to his sister, saying:"God forgive you, sister; what have you done?" |
20450 | He said to them:"I am a sinner, how can I presume to appear before God, who is angry at our sins? |
20450 | Here, according to Thomas of Kempis,( and what Catholic recuses his authority?) |
20450 | How comes it that so many sermons and pious books produce so little fruit in our souls? |
20450 | How comes this? |
20450 | How easy was the mistake of a copyist or bookseller, who ascribed the works of some modern Austin to the great doctor of that name? |
20450 | How much less can we understand this in secret and interior things, which fall not under our senses? |
20450 | How will he stand before God? |
20450 | How will you touch the heavenly food? |
20450 | I said to him:''Can that vessel, which you see, change its name?'' |
20450 | If he who scandalizes one brother is so grievously punished, what will be the chastisement of him who scandalizes so many? |
20450 | If it be his will, can we die in a better cause than that of justice and truth?" |
20450 | If such considerations move not our hearts to commiserate and assist the indigent, what share of mercy and relief can we hope for in the hour of need? |
20450 | Immediately from Christ? |
20450 | In one of the two nights which he survived, he was favored with a vision, in which one said to him:"Why do you grieve? |
20450 | Indeed, what is a pastor or superior but the servant of those for whom he is to give a rigorous account to God? |
20450 | Is he risen again?" |
20450 | Is it not notorious that I have given it the preference in my love and esteem to all others, even to that which gave me birth? |
20450 | Is it not, then, a part of wisdom to fly from these dangers, in order to secure our only affair in the best manner possible? |
20450 | Is not Moses the keystone, as it were, of the Jewish covenant? |
20450 | Is not he also that god who, with Neptune, turned mason, hired himself to a king,( Laomedon of Troy,) and built the walls of a city? |
20450 | Is not the life of a worldling more irksome and more painful than that of a mortified religious man? |
20450 | Is our constancy such as to bear evidence to our sincerity, that rather than to fail in the least duty to God, we are ready to resist to blood? |
20450 | Is there any thing in this contrary to reason? |
20450 | Is this given only to the apostles? |
20450 | Is this their return for my love? |
20450 | Is this what we promised to Jesus Christ? |
20450 | Ista felicibus: ego deliqui in Dominum, et periclitor in à ¦ ternum perire: quo mihi epulas qui Dominum là ¦ si? |
20450 | Jonas, after this, being brought out of his pool, the Magians said to him:"How do you find yourself this morning? |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"Are these the names of gods?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"If God hath no body, how can he have a heart or mind?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"Is God then corporeal?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"Is that his name?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"What chimeras are these? |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"What is a seraph?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"What is this God?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"What then is his name?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"Where are the magicians, your companions, and the teachers of this cunningly devised error?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"Who is this son of God?" |
20450 | MARTIAN.-"You now mention the error of your sect which I have long desired to be informed of: you say then that God hath a son?" |
20450 | Moreover, that they might not fear, or say, Shall we then drink his blood and eat his flesh? |
20450 | Nicephorus, sensibly afflicted at his apostacy, cried aloud to him:"Brother, what are you doing? |
20450 | Now that he descends in person, who would not expect that the whole heavens should be moved? |
20450 | One guilty of the blood of a man would not rest, and can he escape who has profaned the body of the Lord? |
20450 | Peccator timebit? |
20450 | Peter replied:"Do you call these torments? |
20450 | Romuald at length cried out:"Sweetest Jesus, dearest Jesus, why hast thou forsaken me? |
20450 | Saul answered:_ Who art thou, Lord?_ Christ said:_ Jesus of Nazareth, whom thou persecutest. |
20450 | Say rather, Who will give me wings as of a dove, and I will fly, and will be at rest?" |
20450 | Serenus seeing them come up to him, said,"What do you seek here?" |
20450 | Shall the disciples of Christ have other sentiments? |
20450 | Shall we be deaf to a cry calling us to the combat, and to a glorious victory?" |
20450 | Shall we be so faint- hearted as not to suffer for the name of Christ, who died for us? |
20450 | Shall we present a lively faith? |
20450 | Should not I accuse you at his terrible tribunal? |
20450 | Should we be surprised if thunder fell from heaven to punish such impiety?" |
20450 | St. Chrysostom answered, smiling,"In what can I serve you in your exalted station? |
20450 | St. Columban once said to him in his youth:"Deicolus, why are you always smiling?" |
20450 | The angels glory in it, saying, Whom do you seek? |
20450 | The burial- place being made, the abbot one day, when he had led his monks to it, said,"The grave is made, who will first perform the dedication?" |
20450 | The governor said to him:"Will you be insensible to such marks of tenderness and affection? |
20450 | The governor said:"How durst you have the insolence and boldness to affront the wife of this officer?" |
20450 | The governor said:"Where have you concealed yourself? |
20450 | The infant answered,''Where then would be your faith?'' |
20450 | The judge said:"Of what profession are you?" |
20450 | The judge will answer:"Why didst not thou check, command, and by laws restrain those that disobeyed?" |
20450 | The martyr answered:"Can you yourself believe it? |
20450 | The martyr answered:"You do nothing but threaten: why do n''t you proceed to effects?" |
20450 | The martyrs embraced them, saying:"Are not you our bishop, and you a priest of our Lord? |
20450 | The pagans said:"Dost thou laugh? |
20450 | The proconsul asked her if she would return with her brother? |
20450 | The proconsul asked him if the religion which the emperor had established was not the truth? |
20450 | The proconsul commanded him to be put on the rack; and while he was tortured, he said to him:"What do you say now, Irenà ¦ us? |
20450 | The saint retorts: What will faith avail without innocence and virtue? |
20450 | Then what beam of the sun ought not that hand to be more which divides this flesh? |
20450 | Thereupon Perpetua said to him:"Why do you not afford us some relief, since we are condemned by CÃ ¦ sar, and destined to combat at his festival? |
20450 | They cried out to him in the utmost consternation:"Apostolical father, what have you done? |
20450 | Those who drink the poison, or those who prepare and give the fatal draught? |
20450 | Thou hast renounced the world; what hast thou to do with its superfluous concerns? |
20450 | To their summons he returned this answer:"Who gave you this authority? |
20450 | Trajan replied:"And do not we seem to thee to bear the gods in our breasts, whom we have assisting us against our enemies?" |
20450 | Trajan said:"Do not you mean him that was crucified under Pontius Pilate?" |
20450 | Trajan said:"Dost thou carry about Christ within thee?" |
20450 | Trajan said:"Who is Theophorus?" |
20450 | Was his grief less filial, less poignant, because it was reasonable and Christian? |
20450 | We also pretend to love him: but what effect has this love upon us? |
20450 | What are profane histories better than records of scandals? |
20450 | What are the boasted triumphs of an Alexander or a CÃ ¦ sar but a series of successful plunders, murders, and other crimes? |
20450 | What cause of complaint had they against me? |
20450 | What did he do? |
20450 | What did she, not to see what all the world saw? |
20450 | What do I here, my God, distant from thee, separated from thee?" |
20450 | What do you do by deceiving the priest, or hiding part of your load? |
20450 | What does it avail me to be commended by any one, if he blasphemes our Lord, not confessing him to have flesh? |
20450 | What employment is better, more just, more sublime, or more advantageous than this, when done in suitable circumstances? |
20450 | What hath body to do with understanding?" |
20450 | What hopes can we entertain of a person to whom the science of virtue and of eternal salvation doth not seem interesting, or worth his application? |
20450 | What incomparable advantages does a wife bring to a house, when she enters it loaded with the blessings of heaven? |
20450 | What is love? |
20450 | What is now become of your angelical habit, of your tears and watchings in the divine praises?" |
20450 | What is so proper for sin as penance? |
20450 | What is that he says to his apostles? |
20450 | What is the name( proceeded he) of the province from which they are brought?" |
20450 | What shall we do in that day of terror, when the martyrs of Christ, standing with confidence near his throne, shall show the marks of their wounds? |
20450 | What shall we then show? |
20450 | What shall we then show? |
20450 | What shepherd ever fed his sheep with his own limbs? |
20450 | What tenderness have I not shown on all occasions for their city? |
20450 | What then have we to say? |
20450 | What to promote your glory? |
20450 | What was the unspeakable( spiritual, certainly, not corporal) pleasure he was filled with at their sight? |
20450 | What will he say? |
20450 | When he has pronounced and said of the bread:''This is my body,''who will, after this, dare to doubt? |
20450 | When he saw her alone, he took off his cap which disguised him, and with many tears said to her:"Daughter Mary, do n''t you know me? |
20450 | When shall I appear before his face? |
20450 | Wherefore, instead of discharging him, he began to question him on this head, saying:"Who are you, and what is your religion?" |
20450 | Wherefore, trembling and astonished, he cried out:_ Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?_ What to repair the past? |
20450 | Wherefore, trembling and astonished, he cried out:_ Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?_ What to repair the past? |
20450 | While every other part of the soil is daily raked up, shall the finest spot be left uncultivated? |
20450 | Who can read the life of Judith, and not wonder?--of Susanna, and not love chastity and confide in God? |
20450 | Who even now can read it, and not repose with more devotion on the providence of God? |
20450 | Who has read the prophecies of Isaiah, and not believed the gospel which he foretold? |
20450 | Who seeks nourishment from poisons? |
20450 | Who shall adequately conceive his feelings during the celebration of that mass? |
20450 | Who shall now have the boldness to abolish so ancient a tradition?" |
20450 | Who will envy the healing of wounds?" |
20450 | Who will snatch a plank from one lost by shipwreck? |
20450 | Who, therefore, is a Catholic, and would not possess such a treasure? |
20450 | Why do you delay? |
20450 | Why dost thou complain if thou art taken in a snare, by wandering in a strange land, who oughtest to restrain thy affections from straying from home? |
20450 | Why else did St. Gregory go over Calvary, Golgotha, Olivet, Bethlehem? |
20450 | Why this, if it was not given to men to bind and to loosen? |
20450 | Why were they to be insulted too? |
20450 | Will he draw back his wounds from the Lord, who is offering his hand to heal them? |
20450 | Will it not be to your honor that we appear well fed?" |
20450 | Will you sacrifice?" |
20450 | With what purity, with what sanctity ought he to be adorned, who exercises so sublime a function? |
20450 | With what sentiments did Mary bear in her womb, bring forth, and serve her adorable son, who was also her God? |
20450 | With which of these writers shall we class our author? |
20450 | Would you have me acknowledge for a deity that which has nothing in its nature of divine?" |
20450 | Would you{ 684} oblige me to sacrifice to such a divinity, or to Esculapius, thunderstruck by Jupiter? |
20450 | [ 13] Tell me, whom does the world condemn? |
20450 | a disengagement of our affections from earthly things? |
20450 | a perfect disengagement of our affections from earthly things? |
20450 | alms- deeds and compassion? |
20450 | alms- deeds? |
20450 | and how have you avoided sacrificing to the gods?" |
20450 | and in this unexpected juncture what shall these weary travellers to? |
20450 | and not rather that they are guilty of an untruth who say the contrary?" |
20450 | and that we are always upon our guard to keep our ears shut to the voices of those syrens which never cease to lay snares to our senses? |
20450 | and when he has assured and said,''This is my blood,''who can ever hesitate, saying it is not his blood? |
20450 | any proof of his revelation? |
20450 | are able to withstand such dangers? |
20450 | but seeing all disorders prevail in it, who can blame those who seek to shelter themselves from the storm? |
20450 | can you see so many tears shed for you without being moved? |
20450 | compunction, watchings, tears? |
20450 | could he raise the dead? |
20450 | did he prophesy? |
20450 | et offerenti manus Domino vulnera male tecta subducet?" |
20450 | every religious, every loving and faithful heart? |
20450 | had he the gift of tongues? |
20450 | hast thou entirely delivered me over to my enemies?" |
20450 | have you no more engines against a poor despicable servant of God?" |
20450 | holy and pure prayer? |
20450 | if I can not bear this weak fire, how can I endure that of hell?" |
20450 | in the swamps of Bruges, could produce an elegant and nervous translation of Cato, will their notes be less strong or less sweet in their native land? |
20450 | meekness? |
20450 | meekness? |
20450 | or how dare we presume to penetrate into his holy counsels? |
20450 | or of the modesty of Phocion, as the well- chosen circumstances of his disinterestedness and private life? |
20450 | or to Venus, whose life was infamous, and to a hundred such monsters, to whom you offer sacrifice? |
20450 | or who, finding several sermons of St. CÃ ¦ sarius annexed in the same copy to those of St. Austin, imagined them all to belong to one title? |
20450 | peccator erubeseet perpetuam vitam prà ¦ senti pudore mercari? |
20450 | prayers poured forth with clean hearts? |
20450 | restore to me my son; to the people, their governor: the church always protects widows; why then rob you me, a desolate widow, of my son?" |
20450 | retirement and peace of mind? |
20450 | shall we produce our love for God? |
20450 | silence and recollection? |
20450 | sincere compunction? |
20450 | souls freed from the tyranny of the passions? |
20450 | souls freed from the tyranny of the passions? |
20450 | that mouth which is filled with this spiritual fire? |
20450 | that thy daughter is made mine? |
20450 | that tongue which is purpled with this adorable blood? |
20450 | true charity towards God? |
20450 | true faith? |
20450 | was it the pope, or any of the patriarchs? |
20450 | watching and tears? |
20450 | what fruit does it produce in our lives? |
20450 | what is more of the nature of penance, than the sinner''s harshness and severity to himself? |
20450 | whom do judges punish? |
20450 | xi.,) adding,"Do not you tremble when you hear, he shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord? |
20450 | { 373} He sometimes insulted his spiritual enemies, and cried out:"Are all your forces spent? |
3303 | .. will you help me? |
3303 | A candle? |
3303 | A magic cap, hey? |
3303 | A man to see me? |
3303 | About that fellow, Steve O''Hagen? |
3303 | Alberich? |
3303 | All? |
3303 | All? |
3303 | Am I being punished for that? |
3303 | Am I to wear rose pink? |
3303 | An opera? |
3303 | And I ask you, man to man, what do you want? |
3303 | And Mr. Rutherford? |
3303 | And Prince Hagen? |
3303 | And besides, what do you want? |
3303 | And do you suppose the slump has hit father? |
3303 | And how go things? |
3303 | And is this he? |
3303 | And just to help me straighten things out... would you mind telling me... are you old or young? |
3303 | And may I ask... are you real, or is this a dream? |
3303 | And may I speak to him? |
3303 | And the king? |
3303 | And the orders... what are the orders? |
3303 | And these are Nibelungs? |
3303 | And virtue is its own reward? |
3303 | And what difference does it make? |
3303 | And what''s your name? |
3303 | And where, among the men that you know, will you find one who can feel for you what I feel... who would dare for you what I have dared? |
3303 | And who may this king be? |
3303 | And why did you come for me? |
3303 | And why do you want to see it? |
3303 | And you mean it is all full of gold? |
3303 | Any word yet? |
3303 | Anything else? |
3303 | Anything else? |
3303 | Are Plimpton and Rutherford better fitted to wield it than I? |
3303 | Are n''t you going to get any rest at all? |
3303 | Are n''t you satisfied when you''ve got us down? |
3303 | Are you a madman? |
3303 | Are you at leisure, sir? |
3303 | Are you expecting to get to the railroad to- night? |
3303 | Are you going to ruin everybody? |
3303 | But I will not have you talk to me about it... Do you understand me? |
3303 | But are you sure? |
3303 | But can it be true? |
3303 | But how much longer? |
3303 | But how? |
3303 | But suppose the troops would not fire? |
3303 | But then what would become of credit? |
3303 | But what can I do? |
3303 | But what can we do, my dear? |
3303 | But why, why? |
3303 | But, Hagen, your conduct is such... what can I do? |
3303 | Can it be that you love this man? |
3303 | Can you tell me how I find the road, sir? |
3303 | Did he resist? |
3303 | Did you ever see such frantic money- spending in your life? |
3303 | Did you see if they followed the proofs? |
3303 | Did you see this morning''s Record? |
3303 | Did you speak to him, Plimpton? |
3303 | Did you think I wanted them that badly? |
3303 | Did you think I was never coming back? |
3303 | Did you think I would like it? |
3303 | Did you think I''d come to this world to have my head stuffed with Latin conjugations and sawdust? |
3303 | Disappeared? |
3303 | Do n''t you know that he would never give me up? |
3303 | Do n''t you know the phrases? |
3303 | Do n''t you see? |
3303 | Do n''t you understand? |
3303 | Do n''t you? |
3303 | Do they expect to accomplish anything by that? |
3303 | Do you believe that in that mass of ignorance and corruption which you call the people there is the power to rule the world? |
3303 | Do you like the new poppies? |
3303 | Do you mean that everything here happens to music? |
3303 | Do you notice the titles? |
3303 | Do you realize that to- day I had to sell every dollar of my Transatlantic stock? |
3303 | Do you really think it''s worth that? |
3303 | Do you really think so? |
3303 | Do you think that I have not felt the difference? |
3303 | Do you think that you would like to go? |
3303 | Do you understand me? |
3303 | Do you understand now? |
3303 | Does he know? |
3303 | For what? |
3303 | From Washington? |
3303 | Gerald, what do you think he meant? |
3303 | Gerald... do n''t you understand? |
3303 | Gone? |
3303 | Ha? |
3303 | Hagen, you are still angry and rebellious? |
3303 | Has Gerald been tormenting you again? |
3303 | Has he come? |
3303 | Have I not been patient? |
3303 | Have n''t you discovered yet that you are mine? |
3303 | Have we not the militia and the regulars? |
3303 | Have you any idea what I will do? |
3303 | Have you been hit? |
3303 | Have you no mercy? |
3303 | Have you no shame... no conscience? |
3303 | Have you seen any orchestra here? |
3303 | Have you sent for me to preach at me again? |
3303 | Have you talked with father today? |
3303 | Hello, Gerald... how are you? |
3303 | Here? |
3303 | Hey? |
3303 | Hey? |
3303 | How about Intercontinental? |
3303 | How are you? |
3303 | How can I tell? |
3303 | How can anybody stay away? |
3303 | How d''ye do, Mr. Rutherford? |
3303 | How dare you? |
3303 | How dare you? |
3303 | How did he do it, anyway? |
3303 | How do you do it? |
3303 | How do you do, Lord Alderdyce? |
3303 | How do you do, Mrs. Bagley- Willis? |
3303 | How do you do, Mrs. Isman? |
3303 | How do you do? |
3303 | How do you know? |
3303 | How do you like it all? |
3303 | How do you mean? |
3303 | How do you mean? |
3303 | How do you mean? |
3303 | How goes the poem, Gerald? |
3303 | How is he dressed? |
3303 | How long will it be before you know it? |
3303 | How should I climb to you? |
3303 | How would it do to take Prince Hagen up to the world? |
3303 | How young? |
3303 | How? |
3303 | I fancy that''s the reason you invite her, is n''t it? |
3303 | I mean that literally... Plimpton? |
3303 | I see''More trouble in Fifth Avenue, hey? |
3303 | In your house? |
3303 | Indeed? |
3303 | Is it all of the Nibelung treasure? |
3303 | Is it for me that you are doing this? |
3303 | Is it some spell that you have woven? |
3303 | Is n''t that my right?" |
3303 | Is not life a dream? |
3303 | Is that Isman? |
3303 | Is that all? |
3303 | Is this part of the process? |
3303 | Is this the way? |
3303 | It stings, does it? |
3303 | It''s rather hard on the helpless people, is n''t it? |
3303 | Like this, hey? |
3303 | Look like me, hey? |
3303 | MRS. B.-W. Am I the first to arrive? |
3303 | MRS. B.-W. And did you ever know the public to take such interest in a social event? |
3303 | MRS. B.-W. And how is Estelle after her slumming adventure? |
3303 | MRS. B.-W. How do you do, Gerald? |
3303 | May I ask your name? |
3303 | May I look at it? |
3303 | Mimi, the smith? |
3303 | More than your power? |
3303 | My Motive? |
3303 | Nibelungs? |
3303 | No matter what I think about it? |
3303 | Nobody in there? |
3303 | Not yet? |
3303 | Now are you ready to go back to Nibelheim? |
3303 | Now? |
3303 | Oh, Gerald, Lord Alderdyce, what do you think I''ve just heard? |
3303 | Oh, he''ll get elected... what is it he''s to be... an alderman?... |
3303 | Or this, hey? |
3303 | Perhaps you would like to see our vaults of gold? |
3303 | Prince Hagen, may I have a few words with you? |
3303 | Prince Hagen, what do you want with me? |
3303 | Rich man, hey? |
3303 | Rutherford, have you learned any more about where his money comes from? |
3303 | Rutherford, you are with me? |
3303 | Shall I hand it back to those who had it before? |
3303 | Sir? |
3303 | Suppose I gave you a chance to civilize the place, to teach those wretched creatures to love beauty and virtue? |
3303 | The Life of St. Ignatius.... What does that mean? |
3303 | The coronation cup? |
3303 | The earth- man has come? |
3303 | The end? |
3303 | The gold? |
3303 | The king? |
3303 | The market continues to fall? |
3303 | The poets, hey? |
3303 | Their names? |
3303 | Then why did you do it? |
3303 | Then you will try it? |
3303 | This? |
3303 | Three millions to decorate his palaces... half a million for a single ball? |
3303 | To bring you here... to make you sit down before me, and ask, What do you want?... |
3303 | Truly? |
3303 | Virtue is virtue, is it not?... |
3303 | We can trust you? |
3303 | We know what they are worth, and everyone else knows; and what difference does it make how they look? |
3303 | We may beat them yet... who can tell? |
3303 | Well, Calkins? |
3303 | Well, are the regulars there? |
3303 | Well, really, you know, was n''t it... ah... quite a feat to make society swallow this adventurer? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Well? |
3303 | Were all the orders for the London opening gone over? |
3303 | What am I to do? |
3303 | What are their names? |
3303 | What are they? |
3303 | What are you doing here... in this house? |
3303 | What are you trying to do? |
3303 | What are you trying to do? |
3303 | What are you-- a peddler? |
3303 | What are your plans? |
3303 | What can I do? |
3303 | What can that mean? |
3303 | What can that mean? |
3303 | What did he look like? |
3303 | What do they want? |
3303 | What do they want? |
3303 | What do you know of love? |
3303 | What do you mean? |
3303 | What do you mean? |
3303 | What do you mean? |
3303 | What do you suppose he expects to do? |
3303 | What do you suppose will come of it? |
3303 | What do you want for your ring? |
3303 | What do you want with us? |
3303 | What do you want? |
3303 | What do you want? |
3303 | What do your poets tell you? |
3303 | What does he do? |
3303 | What does it mean? |
3303 | What does that mean? |
3303 | What does the word mean to you? |
3303 | What does this mean? |
3303 | What else can I do? |
3303 | What for? |
3303 | What good would it do? |
3303 | What has that to do with it? |
3303 | What have you to do with love? |
3303 | What in the world did he mean, anyhow? |
3303 | What is all that to me? |
3303 | What is he like? |
3303 | What is it but your gold? |
3303 | What is it that has kept them in ignorance? |
3303 | What is it that has made the people corrupt? |
3303 | What is it? |
3303 | What is it? |
3303 | What is it? |
3303 | What is it? |
3303 | What is it? |
3303 | What is it? |
3303 | What is more likely, my dear? |
3303 | What is that? |
3303 | What is that? |
3303 | What is that? |
3303 | What is the matter? |
3303 | What is the secret of your power? |
3303 | What is this? |
3303 | What opportunity can you offer him? |
3303 | What shall I tell him, sir? |
3303 | What shall we do? |
3303 | What sort of a man is he? |
3303 | What they tell you about them? |
3303 | What you call her? |
3303 | What you think they look like, hey?... |
3303 | What''s it about? |
3303 | What''s it like? |
3303 | What''s that? |
3303 | What''s that? |
3303 | What''s the end of it all? |
3303 | What''s the matter? |
3303 | What''s there to consult about? |
3303 | What''s this I hear about your adventure last night? |
3303 | What''s this? |
3303 | What''s to be the end of it? |
3303 | What... what do you mean? |
3303 | What... what does he look like? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | What? |
3303 | Where did you learn it? |
3303 | Where do you want to go? |
3303 | Where does he come from? |
3303 | Where have you been these two years? |
3303 | Where he hear it? |
3303 | Where is Mimi? |
3303 | Where is Prince Hagen? |
3303 | Where is he? |
3303 | Where is the earth- man? |
3303 | Where is the king? |
3303 | Where is your mother? |
3303 | Where you hear it? |
3303 | Where you learn that? |
3303 | Who are you? |
3303 | Who can tell? |
3303 | Who cast the halo of righteousness about it... who sanctified it by the laws of God and man? |
3303 | Who could think of a poem at a time like this? |
3303 | Who is the woman? |
3303 | Who is this? |
3303 | Who is to take up the power? |
3303 | Who lives in the big house? |
3303 | Who made the rules of this game... you or I? |
3303 | Who''s your father? |
3303 | Why did n''t you let me know? |
3303 | Why did you not consult me? |
3303 | Why do n''t they fire? |
3303 | Why do n''t you live there? |
3303 | Why do you suppose mother invited them? |
3303 | Why do you think that? |
3303 | Why have an end? |
3303 | Why not? |
3303 | Why not? |
3303 | Why, what can it mean? |
3303 | Why- what''s the matter? |
3303 | Why... what is it? |
3303 | Why... what makes you think that? |
3303 | Why... where did you get such things? |
3303 | Why... who are you? |
3303 | Why? |
3303 | Will that do? |
3303 | Will you excuse us, please, Gerald? |
3303 | Will you see more of the vault? |
3303 | Wo n''t you be seated? |
3303 | Wo n''t you come in? |
3303 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3303 | Would it not still be right to teach them? |
3303 | Would you like that? |
3303 | Would you like to see those Nibelungs? |
3303 | Yes, mother? |
3303 | Yes... do n''t I do it well? |
3303 | Yes... what ones do you know about? |
3303 | Yes? |
3303 | Yes? |
3303 | You asked me what I wanted? |
3303 | You believe in such people? |
3303 | You buy? |
3303 | You did n''t like the boarding school? |
3303 | You did not know, I presume, that Hagen, too, had a son, by one of the daughters of earth? |
3303 | You do n''t agree with me? |
3303 | You do n''t know? |
3303 | You ever see them? |
3303 | You got lost? |
3303 | You know, my dear sir, that I had a son, Hagen, who was the slayer of the great hero, Siegfried? |
3303 | You like music? |
3303 | You live here all alone? |
3303 | You mean that you yourself would see to it that proper care was given to him? |
3303 | You play little quick tune... so? |
3303 | You play music, hey? |
3303 | You play so very bad? |
3303 | You remember four months ago I offered you a business alliance? |
3303 | You think the Nibelungs can beat that, hey? |
3303 | You understand? |
3303 | You will go? |
3303 | You would like to meet old King Alberich, and Mimi the smith? |
3303 | You would like to see that cavern yawn open...[ points to right] and fire and steam break forth, and all the Nibelungs come running out? |
3303 | You would like to see them dancing in the moonlight, and hear the clatter of their trinkets and shields? |
3303 | You would n''t be afraid? |
3303 | You wrote to the mayor, as I told you? |
3303 | You''re not coming to dinner? |
3303 | You''re putting the screws on, are you? |
3303 | You''ve been here before? |
3303 | You''ve heard the news? |
3303 | Your name? |
3303 | ha? |
3303 | ha? |
3303 | is this Morality... this absolutely sublimest invention, this most daring conception that ever flashed across the mind of man? |
10095 | ''Did I not tell you so? 10095 ''Hast thou come,''said I,''to solicit me to abet thee in any new imposture? |
10095 | ''How knewest thou this, my son?'' 10095 ''How many?'' |
10095 | ''I would not have taken fifty bezants for that shield, and what good is it now?'' 10095 ''O Abdallah,''I exclaimed,''wherefore this atrocity?'' |
10095 | ''O Abdallah,''I inquired,''where is thy beard?'' 10095 ''Or helmets?'' |
10095 | ''Pythagoras, then,''said Euphronius addressing me,''did not resort to India to be instructed by the Gymnosophists?'' 10095 ''Surely,''said he,''thou would''st not take away her husband without giving her another in his stead?'' |
10095 | ''Think you I can not pass through a stone wall?'' 10095 ''Well,''said Euphronius in a disdainful tone,''and what about this vaunted wisdom of the Indians?'' |
10095 | ''Whence are these weals and scars?'' 10095 ''Whence this sleekness of body, my son?'' |
10095 | A bishop, then,inquired Gaddo,"may be guilty of any enormity sooner than wedlock, which money itself can not expiate?" |
10095 | According to you, then,said Euphronius,"the fates of men are not spun for them by Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, but by their predecessors?" |
10095 | Am I not the modern Coriolanus? 10095 Am I,"he questioned,"ending where Polyphemus began?" |
10095 | An enemy of Zeus, then? |
10095 | And Liberty? |
10095 | And am not I? |
10095 | And for thee, Prometheus? |
10095 | And how are the people taking it? |
10095 | And how did the Bee learn, do you suppose, unless by imbuing her mind with the elementary principles of mathematics? 10095 And now, mistress, what further? |
10095 | And that is? |
10095 | And the citizens are really ready for this? |
10095 | And the gold? |
10095 | And therefore your Holiness has brought these rats upon us, enlisted, I nothing doubt, in the infernal regions? |
10095 | And this palace is? |
10095 | And what becomes of us while this prodigious moonshine is concocting? |
10095 | And what can they want with an amphitheatre? |
10095 | And what demanded they? |
10095 | And what skills what I do with a piece of common glass? |
10095 | And when comes it? |
10095 | And why in the name of Zernebock should we carry_ you?_demanded some, while others ran off to lug forth the image, the object of their devotion. |
10095 | And why should not Mantua have a tyrant? |
10095 | Are not his entrails burned up with fire? 10095 Are we not the heads of the Virgilian party?" |
10095 | Art thou at this present time betrothed to a Vampire? |
10095 | Art thou not a sorcerer? |
10095 | But the imputation of cruelty which might attach to your majesty''s proceedings? |
10095 | But who shall be Regent? |
10095 | But, Pan, how can any one think thoughts without something to think them with? 10095 By what process are these merits acquired?" |
10095 | By whom? |
10095 | Call you chess an amusement? |
10095 | Can a God feel hunger and thirst? |
10095 | Can the source of his being originate in himself? |
10095 | Can this indeed be but a trance? |
10095 | Can you possibly be plunged into such utter oblivion of your embryonic antecedents? |
10095 | Canst thou balance our city upon an egg? |
10095 | Could n''t we leave him to mind himself? 10095 D''ye think I''m not a thousand times more afraid of your mistress than of all the saints in the calendar? |
10095 | Daniel,said the Lord,"what answerest thou?" |
10095 | Dear friend,said the Princess,"thou dost not imagine that I have part or lot in these odious imputations? |
10095 | Declare now, wherein consists my sin? |
10095 | Deems your Highness that Bishop Addo will send another cupful, once he is assured of my death? |
10095 | Did you really know nothing of that sliding panel? 10095 Didst thou not say that if thou couldst discover her who had wronged thee, thou wouldst wreak thy vengeance on her, and molest Basil no further?" |
10095 | Do I not sufficiently indicate the followers of Epicurus? |
10095 | Do n''t you know_ that_? |
10095 | Do you actually mean to say you do n''t know that? |
10095 | Does your Lordship think that one might venture to go so far as a little unweaned child? |
10095 | Fettered and manacled? |
10095 | For a library, perhaps? |
10095 | For example? |
10095 | For example? |
10095 | Gerbert,said the devil, with tears in his eyes,"I put it to you-- is this fair, is this honest? |
10095 | Good monk,said the fiend,"what dost thou here?" |
10095 | Has not my immortality been one of pain? |
10095 | Hast thou never heard of the priest Eubulides? |
10095 | Hast thou sacrificed thy mother and sister to the infernal powers? |
10095 | Hast thou swallowed the ninety- nine poisons? |
10095 | Hast thou undergone the seven probations? |
10095 | Hast thou wedded a Salamander, and divorced her? |
10095 | Heavens,exclaimed Mnesitheus and Rufus,"can the life of a man suffice to study all this?" |
10095 | How a beginning? |
10095 | How can I feel, if I have no feeling? 10095 How can I other? |
10095 | How could I compromise Epimetheus, Prometheus? |
10095 | How else should François Rabelais have affirmed it? |
10095 | How has it all come about? |
10095 | How many gladiators, said you? |
10095 | How shall this be accomplished? |
10095 | How shall we henceforth exchange the sweet tokens of our undying affection, my Otto? |
10095 | How so, father? |
10095 | How so? 10095 How so? |
10095 | How so? |
10095 | I am not happy,rejoined the Firefly;"what am I, after all, but a flying beetle with a candle in my tail? |
10095 | I can have the blood of a goat? |
10095 | Indeed? |
10095 | Is Man, then, the maker of Deity? |
10095 | Is the Lady Adeliza''s loveliness in sooth so transcendent? |
10095 | Is there nought else? |
10095 | Is this indeed sooth? |
10095 | Is this no sorrow to thee? |
10095 | It is true, then? |
10095 | It seems likely to rain,he said,"have you an umbrella?" |
10095 | Look here, what do you call this? |
10095 | May I,inquired Ananda of the fiend he had before addressed,"presume to ask the signification of Kammuragha and Damburanana?" |
10095 | May we not,said one at last,"may we not cast lots, and each take a phial in succession, as destiny may appoint?" |
10095 | Miraculously kept alive to this day? |
10095 | Must we then part? |
10095 | Nay, sister, or sister- in- law,responded Prometheus,"if it comes to that, where were you while I was on Caucasus? |
10095 | Needs it not that I should renounce my baptism? 10095 No? |
10095 | No? |
10095 | Nonnus,said Phoebus, passing noiselessly through the unresisting wall,"the tale of thy apostasy is then true?" |
10095 | Not even in consideration of the benefit which will accrue to thee by this event? |
10095 | Not if I know it,sharply replied Madam Lucifer,"You ca n''t bear to part with her, ca n''t you? |
10095 | Nothing? |
10095 | Now, how go things in the city? |
10095 | O Emperor,he murmured, deeply abashed,"what can I urge? |
10095 | O King,urged Mithridata,"how could this countenance do thy son any good? |
10095 | O Majesty,said his wisest counsellor,"is there any sect in thy dominions that possesses the secret of perpetual youth?" |
10095 | O dear master,remonstrated Porphyry,"thou didst not deem that philosophers could be induced to settle in a spot devoid of these necessaries? |
10095 | Of course,said the student,"Hast thou attestations of all these circumstances under the hands and seals of a thousand and one demons?" |
10095 | Of what nature are these? |
10095 | Oh, father,urged they,"savoureth not this of vaingloriousness? |
10095 | Or I, until I have had speech of the man in the moon? |
10095 | Or in the irregularity of my deportment? |
10095 | People say,she continued--"What say they?" |
10095 | Peradventure,hesitatingly interrogated the youth,"peradventure you are_ he_?" |
10095 | That aged crone thy daughter, daughter to thee so youthful and so fresh? 10095 The conclusion of the whole matter, then,"summed up the sage,"is that not one of you will make a venture for the cup of immortality?" |
10095 | The most notorious character in Rome, who, finding her charms on the wane, has lately betaken herself to philosophy? |
10095 | Then why does the Plato of our age hesitate to welcome his Diotima? |
10095 | Then will not the crops be burned up? 10095 There? |
10095 | This, at least,asked the student,"is not devoid of virtue?" |
10095 | Thou didst bear away the tincture? 10095 Thou didst elude them? |
10095 | Thou didst leave it this morning a heathen? |
10095 | Thou hast discovered that, my son? |
10095 | Thou hast obtained it? |
10095 | Thou returnest a Christian? |
10095 | Thou wert the priestess of this temple? |
10095 | Thy predecessor? |
10095 | To my utility to mankind? |
10095 | To what cause do they attribute the public calamity? |
10095 | To what condition were you pleased to allude? |
10095 | To what then? |
10095 | To whom belongeth it then? |
10095 | To whose service, Phoebus? |
10095 | Tortured, of course? |
10095 | Well,demanded Aboniel at length, with real or assumed surprise,"wherefore tarry ye thus? |
10095 | Well,rejoined the Governor,"what say you to the twenty- second?" |
10095 | Were it not better to circumcise me? |
10095 | What ails thee, child? |
10095 | What caldron? |
10095 | What does the man mean? |
10095 | What else should I speak? |
10095 | What else? 10095 What fear you?" |
10095 | What have ye found so exceedingly reprehensible in the Emperor''s conduct? |
10095 | What have you, Pan? |
10095 | What is that? |
10095 | What is the occasion of thy imprisonment? |
10095 | What is winter? |
10095 | What manner of woman was thy mother? |
10095 | What may these virtues be? |
10095 | What meanest thou? |
10095 | What means all this, Porphyry? |
10095 | What of her? |
10095 | What of quarter- day? |
10095 | What seest thou here? |
10095 | What shall be done with him, mistress? |
10095 | What the guy dickens be a concatrenation, Geoffrey? |
10095 | What trash have we here? |
10095 | What was that, my Lord? |
10095 | What was the impediment? |
10095 | What would you be? |
10095 | What''s o''clock? |
10095 | What''s this? 10095 Whatever will happen next?" |
10095 | Whence comest thou to be ignorant of that? |
10095 | Where dwells Louis the Disesteemed? |
10095 | Where shall I find another great king? |
10095 | Wherefore not to- day? |
10095 | Wherefore? |
10095 | Wherefore? |
10095 | Wherein, then,demanded the agonized apostle,"doth the path of safety lie?" |
10095 | Which be they? |
10095 | Who art thou, thou pantaloonless one? |
10095 | Who art thou? |
10095 | Who art thou? |
10095 | Who but we? |
10095 | Who could have believed it? |
10095 | Who is Homer? 10095 Who is that person?" |
10095 | Who is thy daughter? |
10095 | Who then has persuaded thee to renounce Apollo? |
10095 | Who was with thee just now? |
10095 | Who would have thought it? |
10095 | Who? |
10095 | Whose book is this? |
10095 | Whose virtue then? |
10095 | Why not consult Manto, the alchemist''s daughter, our prophetess, our Sibyl? |
10095 | Why not, indeed? |
10095 | Why not? |
10095 | Why not? |
10095 | Why should I harm you? 10095 Why tarries Cardinal Barbadico thus?" |
10095 | Why the devil, if I may so express myself,pursued Anno,"did not your Holiness inform us that you_ were_ the devil? |
10095 | Why,he exclaimed,"why was I ever an apostle? |
10095 | Will it ever rain again? |
10095 | Wilt thou then first be healed, and moreover become the instrument of converting the entire realm of Magadha? |
10095 | Would have outraged my daughter, would he? |
10095 | Ye would learn the secret of my celebrated dilemma,said he,"which no sophist can elude? |
10095 | You probably refer to my agility,suggested the Caterpillar;"or perhaps to my abstemiousness?" |
10095 | You? |
10095 | A further and more awkward question arose, how on earth was he to get back to Paradise? |
10095 | A tremendous stroke caught him on the hand; his blade dropped to the earth; why did not the fingers follow? |
10095 | About your age, I think?" |
10095 | Am I inferior to Aspasia in beauty?" |
10095 | Am I to lose the reward of my incredible sufferings?" |
10095 | An early martyr, doubtless?" |
10095 | And as the amazed priest preserved silence, she pursued:"Can aught be more shameful in a religious man than ignorance of the very nature of religion? |
10095 | And fair female forms came veiled with drooping heads, and murmured,"We are thy virtues, and would be rewarded-- would''st thou cheat us?" |
10095 | And he said,"Against what wilt thou write first, Daniel?" |
10095 | And how knowest thou,"added he, striving to soothe her,"that I will not give thee to drink of the miraculous potion?" |
10095 | And know I not that even if I would accept the boon, thou would''st never give it?" |
10095 | And now I ask thee, art thou yet minded to go forth as a missionary of the truth?" |
10095 | And now, Holy Father, your Holiness''s resolution? |
10095 | And others said,"We are thy memories-- wilt thou live on till we are all withered in thy heart?" |
10095 | And others said,"We are thy strength and thy beauty, thy memory and thy wit-- canst thou live, knowing thou wilt never see us more?" |
10095 | And the man in black reasoned with Daniel, and said,"Thou seest this multitude of people, but which of them shall deliver thee out of my hand? |
10095 | And this other? |
10095 | And were you ignorant that whatever one says in the blue chamber is heard in the green?" |
10095 | And who will feed_ you_?" |
10095 | And, it being a red mouse as it indubitably was, to what end fancy it a tawny- throated nightingale?" |
10095 | Are there no means by which the course of study may be accelerated?" |
10095 | Are they not withering already? |
10095 | Are your intentions really honourable?" |
10095 | As soon as the room was clear, he repeated:"What_ does_ the man mean?" |
10095 | At length the youngest exclaimed:"O Emperor, how can we tell thee, unless we know what thou thinkest thyself?" |
10095 | Burned you? |
10095 | But a sorcerer hath arisen, saying,"Why follow ye Abdallah, seeing that he breathes not fire out of his mouth and nostrils?" |
10095 | But how?" |
10095 | But if I can feel no pain, how can I feel any pleasure? |
10095 | But indeed, why few? |
10095 | But where was it? |
10095 | But who was to profit by his communicativeness? |
10095 | Can I consent to lay it down ere I have sounded the seas of the seven climates?" |
10095 | Canst thou counterfeit her signature?" |
10095 | Could it be the ticking of watches? |
10095 | Could the Muses speak with their own voices as they had spoken by Sappho''s? |
10095 | Dared men believe that their shadows were actually lengthening? |
10095 | Daughter Truth, is this a befitting manner of presenting yourself before your divine father? |
10095 | Deemest thou that I will brook being thus cheated of my dear- bought talisman? |
10095 | Did I ever promise any disciple any recompense for his enlightenment and good deeds, save flogging, starvation, and burning?'' |
10095 | Did I understand you to mention my name in connection with those flutterers?" |
10095 | Did Narses experience blacker ingratitude than I? |
10095 | Do I not hear that that creature Pannychis has obtained the freedom of the philosophers''city, and the right to study therein?" |
10095 | Do you pretend not to know that the hussey forsook Olympus ten years ago, and has turned Christian?" |
10095 | Do you really mean to say that you do not know me?" |
10095 | Even could I deem them true, should I not think charitably of thee, but yesterday a heathen, and educated in impiety by a foul sorcerer? |
10095 | For what saith the Scripture? |
10095 | From whom save thee, since I closed my father''s eyes, have I heard the tongue of Homer and Plato?" |
10095 | Gallienus was often cruel, but could he intend such a revolting massacre? |
10095 | Had she really nothing else to do? |
10095 | Has not his skin already peeled off his body? |
10095 | Has your Holiness forgotten your Rabelais?" |
10095 | Hast thou peradventure any subtleties in perfumery? |
10095 | Hearest thou not the moaning and pelting of the rising storm, and the muttering and scraping of my imprisoned goblins? |
10095 | How am I to live without anything alive about me? |
10095 | How did she acquire her sting, think you? |
10095 | How indeed was he to prove to them that he_ was_ Euschemon? |
10095 | How shall it be dedicated to Desmotes in Desmotes''lifetime? |
10095 | How shall this be accomplished?" |
10095 | How should this be, seeing that there is no such person? |
10095 | How so?" |
10095 | How to choose the new consuls?" |
10095 | How would my own skin appear in the temple of Jupiter Capitolinus? |
10095 | How, then, shall she be terrible as an army with banners? |
10095 | I deemed it had been determined long ago in favour of Aspasia?" |
10095 | I did but even now open his sacred volume at hazard, and on what did my eye first fall? |
10095 | I exclaimed,''hast thou dared to espouse more wives than one? |
10095 | I see, indeed, people looking up from the earth by night towards me, but how do I know that they are looking at me?" |
10095 | If I think with nothing, and about nothing, is that thinking, do you think?" |
10095 | If the oracle of Dorylà ¦ um was an imposture, hadst thou no oracle in thine own bosom? |
10095 | If the voice of Religion was no longer breathed from the tripod, were the winds and waters silent, or had aught quenched the everlasting stars? |
10095 | If there was no power to impose its mandates from without, couldst thou be unconscious of a power within? |
10095 | If they existed, would they tolerate this vile mockery? |
10095 | If thou hadst nothing to reveal unto men, mightest thou not have found somewhat to propound unto them? |
10095 | If you take away my hands, and my heart, and my brains, and my eyes, and my ears, and above all my tongue, what is left me to live in Elysium?" |
10095 | Is he not suffering from the effects of seventy- two poisons?" |
10095 | Is he not tormented by incessant gripes and vomitings?" |
10095 | Is it a bargain? |
10095 | Is it error or malignity? |
10095 | Is it not thence manifest that the virtue resides solely in the bell of the blessed Euschemon?" |
10095 | Is it possible that the accounts connected with the installation of a few abstemious lovers of wisdom can have swollen to such a prodigous bulk? |
10095 | Is man more conceited than woman, or more confiding? |
10095 | Is not his flesh in a state of deliquescence? |
10095 | Is not the ideal of creation impersonated in me already?" |
10095 | Is the Church to frame herself after the prescriptions of heathen philosophers and profane jurists? |
10095 | Is the storming column ready?" |
10095 | Is there another judge of morals than the Pope speaking_ ex cathedra_, as I always did? |
10095 | Is there indeed no hope?" |
10095 | John?" |
10095 | Know you not that no good man can enter my dominions? |
10095 | Knowest thou not that the inestimable blessings of religion are of an inward and spiritual nature? |
10095 | Legions of little black imps surrounded him crying,"We are thy sins, and would be punished-- would''st thou by living for ever deprive us of our due?" |
10095 | Must I not subscribe an infernal compact?" |
10095 | Needs there, peradventure, any greater miracle for the decipherment of these epistles than a hot needle? |
10095 | No? |
10095 | O Majesty, whence these republican and revolutionary pantaloons?" |
10095 | Otto''s blood ran chill, but he mustered sufficient courage to inquire hoarsely:"What of its further virtues?" |
10095 | Plotinus, how can you? |
10095 | Rememberest thou not what is written in the Book of the prophet Ad?'' |
10095 | Said I not so?" |
10095 | Seest thou these scrolls? |
10095 | Shall I look on and see him murdered? |
10095 | Shall I, an innocent proprietor, be mulcted of my right by thy fraud and covin? |
10095 | Shall I, having first unwittingly done my friend the most grievous injury, proceed further to betray her, and doom her to a cruel death? |
10095 | Shall matter prevail over mind? |
10095 | Shall medicine, the most uncertain of sciences, override law, the perfection of human reason? |
10095 | Shall we not appear like foxes, vilipending the grapes that we can not reach? |
10095 | Should he execrate her, or her venerable grandmother, or some unknown person? |
10095 | THE DEMON POPE"So you wo n''t sell me your soul?" |
10095 | That enormous serpents infested her cradle, licking her face and twining around her limbs? |
10095 | That her tiny fingers patted scorpions? |
10095 | That muffled sound from the vast, silent multitude was, doubtless, the quick beating of innumerable hearts; but that sharper note? |
10095 | The city of the Emperor Apollyon? |
10095 | Thou art surely yet a votary of Zeus?" |
10095 | Thou desirest to gather all sorts of philosophers around thee, but to what end, if they are restrained from manifesting their characteristic tenets? |
10095 | Thou hast done some bishoping in thy time, peradventure?" |
10095 | Thou hast never practised riding a broomstick? |
10095 | Thou hast no evidence but her threats, I suppose? |
10095 | Thou hast not caught her tampering with poisons? |
10095 | Thou preferrest the mitre to the laurel chaplet, and the hymns of Gregory to the epics of Homer?" |
10095 | To be misjudged and haply reviled by thy fellows for failing to do what it is not given thee to do? |
10095 | To pine with fruitless longings for good? |
10095 | Was Aurelia deceiver or deceived? |
10095 | Was he about to use it? |
10095 | Was the sun''s rim really drawing nigh yonder great edifice? |
10095 | Were it not a most blissful and appropriate coincidence if the day of the consecration were that of the saint''s migration to a better world? |
10095 | Were it not therefore fitting that thou shouldst encounter the first risk in my stead?" |
10095 | What Deity could die for Olympus, as Leonidas had for Greece? |
10095 | What boots it to describe Otto''s feelings upon this revelation of Aurelia''s sentiments? |
10095 | What could the bishop do but salute them? |
10095 | What did they? |
10095 | What else can Heaven render? |
10095 | What is her name? |
10095 | What name bears she? |
10095 | What of wells and rivers, and the mighty sea itself? |
10095 | What passed? |
10095 | What reply did he vouchsafe to these admonitions? |
10095 | What room hath she for more? |
10095 | What said you to them? |
10095 | What say ye?" |
10095 | What say you to this?" |
10095 | What should she do now? |
10095 | What then? |
10095 | What will the vulgar think when they see the sty of Epicurus sumptuously adorned, and the porch of Zeno shabby and bare? |
10095 | What wonder if they suspect your Holiness of familiarity with Beelzebub, the patron of vermin, and earnestly desire that he would take you to himself? |
10095 | What''s this? |
10095 | Whence this mistrust of your faithful Anno, who has served you so loyally and zealously these many years?" |
10095 | Whence, in the name of the Naiads, do you come? |
10095 | Where abides he now?" |
10095 | Where would the temporal power be but for me? |
10095 | Wherefore have I been true to thee, if not that our ashes might mingle at the last? |
10095 | Wherefore speaks he not?" |
10095 | Which of them could raise his fellows nearer to the source of all Deity, as Socrates and Plato had raised men? |
10095 | Which of them could, like Iphigenia, dwell for years beside the melancholy sea, keeping a true heart for an absent brother? |
10095 | Who cares about the thirteenth book? |
10095 | Who could portray himself as Phidias had portrayed Athene? |
10095 | Who gave the Popes to dwell quietly in their own house? |
10095 | Who is Plato?" |
10095 | Who shall describe the conflict in Lucifer''s bosom? |
10095 | Who smote the Colonna? |
10095 | Who so pleased as Theocles now? |
10095 | Who squashed the Orsini? |
10095 | Who will feed your cattle? |
10095 | Who will want breast- plates now?'' |
10095 | Why can not you store up honey, as she does?" |
10095 | Will the fair Euphronia also have undergone fifteen transmigrations, and will her charms have continued unimpaired?" |
10095 | Will the fruits mature? |
10095 | Will they not deem that the Epicureans are highly respected and the Stoics made of little account? |
10095 | Will you die for me? |
10095 | Will you lie for me? |
10095 | Wilt thou take from me my Pannychis, an object pleasing to the eye, and leave yonder fellow his tatters and his vermin?" |
10095 | Would Prometheus lend him half a talent? |
10095 | You are going to marry that poor young fellow''s betrothed, are you? |
10095 | You are not really such an ass as to imagine that your virtue has anything to do with the virtue of this bell?" |
10095 | You can catch our rats, can you? |
10095 | You have committed sundry rascalities, no doubt? |
10095 | You probably next addressed yourself to the middling orders of society? |
10095 | You returned, then, to the latter with this design? |
10095 | You want a patent or a privilege for your ratsbane? |
10095 | You would intrigue with her under my nose, would you? |
10095 | _ To put the devil into a hole_.--"Then sayd Virgilius,''Shulde ye well passe in to the hole that ye cam out of?'' |
10095 | a hundredth? |
10095 | a quarter? |
10095 | a tenth? |
10095 | and afterwards?" |
10095 | and tied knots in the tails of vipers? |
10095 | and to consume with vain yearnings for usefulness? |
10095 | and what am I to do without it?" |
10095 | and what shall hinder me?" |
10095 | any secrets in confectionery? |
10095 | any skill in the preparation of soup?" |
10095 | asked I,''and what signifies this protrusion of thy bones?'' |
10095 | asked he,"and wherefore makest thou this lamentation?" |
10095 | asked the Emperor,"is not that a name dear to those misguided creatures?" |
10095 | exclaimed Ananda, weeping bitterly,"and is all the work undone, and all by my fault and folly?" |
10095 | exclaimed Ananda,"whither shall I fly?" |
10095 | exclaimed Chrysostomus,"is this thy grief for thy daughter?" |
10095 | exclaimed Eubulides,"how was that?" |
10095 | exclaimed he in extreme perturbation,"whither shall I turn? |
10095 | exclaimed he, with equal surprise,''know ye not that this is the Palace of Illusion, where everything is inverted and appears the reverse of itself? |
10095 | exclaimed the Emperor;"but wherewithal shall it be executed?" |
10095 | exclaimed the Lamp,"am I not shining by my own light?" |
10095 | exclaimed the youth,"was Abdallah the Adite thy disciple?" |
10095 | he gasped, as audibly as she would let him,"is this the way it welcomes its own Lucy- pucy?" |
10095 | or but the wanton freak of an idle imagination?" |
10095 | or here?" |
10095 | or is it rather that none can set bounds to the licence of romancers? |
10095 | replied Lucifer contemptuously;"do you imagine that Adeliza would look at_ you_?" |
10095 | said he to the latter,"would ye rob me of my reputation? |
10095 | she exclaimed,"must ye learn your duty from a woman?" |
10095 | she exclaimed;"who cares? |
10095 | shouted the exasperated youth,"is this the way in which the treasures in thy custody are protected by thee? |
10095 | that, were such a thing possible, my empire would become intolerable to me, and I should be compelled to abdicate?" |
10095 | thou hast it now?" |
10095 | what am I to do?" |
10095 | what''s that?" |
10095 | whence this forlorn semblance? |
10095 | whence this osseous condition?" |
10095 | wherefore?" |
10095 | why didst thou not disclose that thou wert a Jogi? |
46909 | ''Our Father, who art in heaven,''what does that mean? |
46909 | And what was he doing before that? |
46909 | Are you crazy with your cocoanut? 46909 Are you ill?" |
46909 | Are you unwell? |
46909 | Barberou, I believe? |
46909 | But if the father is an idiot? |
46909 | But if we see metaphors everywhere, what will become of the facts? |
46909 | Care of what? |
46909 | Do you believe,said Bouvard,"that he composed the''Pentateuch''?" |
46909 | Do you understand it? |
46909 | Do you wish to defend the emperors? |
46909 | For stains? |
46909 | Good? |
46909 | Have you read him? |
46909 | How can we distinguish them from the genuine ones? 46909 How do you know whether He sets them aside?" |
46909 | How do you make out that God spoke? |
46909 | How? |
46909 | However, sir, the morality of the Gospel? |
46909 | I? 46909 If this drama is not a success, might not the erection of a public monument to his literary talent[ Bouilhet''s] be looked upon with disfavour?" |
46909 | Is n''t she pretty? |
46909 | Marriage having been established by Jesus Christ----Pécuchet stopped him:"In which Gospel? |
46909 | On whom does her infallibility depend? |
46909 | Once again, who affirms it? |
46909 | Perhaps there was at the bottom a little yellow colour caused by humidity? |
46909 | Perhaps they needed family life-- the care of a mother? |
46909 | Since the flesh is accursed, how is it that we are bound to thank God for the boon of existence? |
46909 | So you are at these fooleries? |
46909 | Their country? |
46909 | Well, it discharges you-- what next? |
46909 | Well? |
46909 | What do you say? |
46909 | What is it they want, these creatures? |
46909 | What is the meaning of that word? 46909 What proportion must be observed between the fear indispensable to the salvation and the hope which is no less so?" |
46909 | What would you have? |
46909 | What? |
46909 | Where is the sign of grace? |
46909 | Where was their father?'' 46909 Why do you groan during mealtime?" |
46909 | Why do you wish to define it? 46909 Why foolery?" |
46909 | Why is it wrong? |
46909 | Why this novel, this drama? 46909 Why? |
46909 | Why?--eh?--why? |
46909 | You are witnesses, are you not? |
46909 | You will accompany me? |
46909 | You? |
46909 | Your prudent Apollo, no doubt, passed through the stock exchange to reach the Parnassus? 46909 ''Mid all that I have seen and known,--peoples and thrones, loves, glories, sorrows, virtues-- what have I ever loved? 46909 ''s dragoons regarded decency? |
46909 | ***** What didst thou say? |
46909 | A gentleman who asked me, on my voyage:"What kind of museums have they in Egypt? |
46909 | A mark of submission towards the Church? |
46909 | A matter of the proprieties? |
46909 | A voice rejoined:"Where would be the harm?" |
46909 | Admire here one of the polite ways of Providence which would be hard to believe: in whose house have I lodgings? |
46909 | After Cannes, does not one usually return to Paris? |
46909 | After such a scandal, why keep a young girl so corrupted? |
46909 | Also, why did they adopt the children of a convict? |
46909 | Am I imaginative? |
46909 | Am I not good, eh? |
46909 | Am I right? |
46909 | And Sainte- Beuve-- do you see him? |
46909 | And about_ La Servante_? |
46909 | And how goes the volume of verse? |
46909 | And of whom is he the pupil? |
46909 | And then, why encumber ourselves with so many souvenirs? |
46909 | And what besides all this? |
46909 | And what devil possessed him to induce him to seek such a subject? |
46909 | And what kind of philosophy? |
46909 | And you, dear master, what has become of you and yours? |
46909 | And you, good muse, dear colleague in all( colleague comes from_ colligere_, to bind together), have you worked well this week? |
46909 | And, after all, what risk would they run? |
46909 | Are there not two worlds entirely distinct? |
46909 | Are to suffer and to think the same thing, then? |
46909 | Are we in the twilight or in full dawn? |
46909 | Are we to assume that there are as many stomachs in the stomach as there are varieties of taste? |
46909 | Are you amusing yourself? |
46909 | Are you in Paris, Nohant, or where? |
46909 | Are you pleased? |
46909 | Besides, has not research been exhausted? |
46909 | Besides, how do you know? |
46909 | Besides, what does one failure prove? |
46909 | But does a previous injustice authorise subsequent wrongs? |
46909 | But have you not noticed of how little value is the correspondence of the great men of that time? |
46909 | But how can unjust men understand the cruelty of such a refusal? |
46909 | But others-- have they also been solved? |
46909 | But the other? |
46909 | But what amusement could be provided for them? |
46909 | But what is the use of living if one may not indulge in dreams? |
46909 | But where shall you be? |
46909 | But who did not love her? |
46909 | But"Chic,"that modern religion, what would become of that? |
46909 | Can you guess what occupies me at present? |
46909 | Certain natures suffer not so much, and people without nerves are happy; but of how many things are they not deprived? |
46909 | Corneille a celebrity? |
46909 | Could it be that an intelligent country would cause these billows of blood? |
46909 | Could it be that the children had no idea of justice? |
46909 | Did he regret in the last years of his life that he had not followed the common route? |
46909 | Did he think there would be as much interest taken in them as there was later in his own? |
46909 | Did not one of your colleagues of the Academy of Rouen, at the meeting of Aug. 7th, 1862, praise Louis Bouilhet in flattering terms? |
46909 | Do I make verses? |
46909 | Do they mean to arrest Victor? |
46909 | Do you base your changeable faith and your flexible probity on the mobility of the weather?" |
46909 | Do you believe-- yes or no?" |
46909 | Do you employ your preservatives, impure man? |
46909 | Do you keep yourself informed as to the works of Renan? |
46909 | Do you know that in the last number of the_ Review_ our friend Leconte was very badly treated? |
46909 | Do you know what I found out to- day from his photographs? |
46909 | Do you know whither the sadness of all this has led me, and what I should like to do? |
46909 | Do you know, my boy, what I have had to endure to give you the extreme pleasure of watching, lyre in hand, which way the winds blow? |
46909 | Do you not feel the perturbation of your soul, although its outward covering seems calm and happy? |
46909 | Do you not find that, since''89, we struggle with trifles? |
46909 | Do you not suppose that the soul of a Veronese imbibes colour like a piece of stuff plunged into the boiling vat of a dyer? |
46909 | Do you remember when we wrote_ Solus ad solum_? |
46909 | Do you think you may die on the way? |
46909 | Do you understand? |
46909 | Do you wish it?" |
46909 | Do you wish me to speak of myself, my dear Edmond? |
46909 | Dost thou complain,--thou, the most fortunate creature under heaven? |
46909 | Dost thou repine, who some day in thy turn shalt disappear forever, after thou hast crushed the universe beneath thy horse''s feet? |
46909 | Ezekiel devouring a book has nothing extraordinary in it; do we not speak of devouring a pamphlet, a newspaper? |
46909 | First objection( I use the words as they were printed):"Can the committee modify the intention and substitute a fountain for a tombstone? |
46909 | HAVE you still your tooth? |
46909 | HOW goes it, dear old master? |
46909 | Had Victor obeyed a sentiment of honour or of revenge? |
46909 | Have I told you what a curate of Trouville said one day after I had dined with him? |
46909 | Have we any time to write?" |
46909 | Have you had a good laugh at the fast ordered by Her Majesty Queen Victoria? |
46909 | Have you read it, and what do you think of it? |
46909 | Have you read the third philippic of Sainte- Beuve? |
46909 | Have you received my letter? |
46909 | He has written this of me:"Can no one persuade M. Flaubert not to write any more?" |
46909 | Hear ye the fanfares, whose sound reached even to Ostia; the clapping of the hands, the cries of joy? |
46909 | How about Houssaye? |
46909 | How about the_ Botanique_? |
46909 | How comes on the_ Fracasse_? |
46909 | How goes_ La Jeune Bourgeoise_? |
46909 | How is it to be solved? |
46909 | How is your health? |
46909 | How long do you remain at Cannes? |
46909 | How you love her, do you not? |
46909 | How? |
46909 | I say to myself; Is art worth so much trouble, so much weariness for me, so many tears for her? |
46909 | I should much like to know, and with many details, why Saulcy refused Leconte''s article; what are the motives alleged? |
46909 | I suppose''tis from the house below you were just coming?" |
46909 | I, A MYSTERIOUS being, dear master? |
46909 | IS THIS handsome conduct, dear master? |
46909 | If it had been intended for one of the capitalists of our district, whose fortune runs into the millions, would you have refused it? |
46909 | If the exceptions themselves are not true, what are we to put any reliance on?" |
46909 | If the genuine ones, given as proofs, have themselves need of proofs, why perform them?" |
46909 | If the value of a martyr depends on the doctrine, how could he serve to demonstrate its existence?" |
46909 | If your good men have a hundred feet, your mountains should be twenty miles high; and what is the ideal if it is not a magnifying? |
46909 | Ignatius?" |
46909 | Is genius, after all, only a refinement of pain, that is to say, a meditation of the objective through the soul? |
46909 | Is it because you are a great"man"or simply a charming being? |
46909 | Is it expedient to teach them languages? |
46909 | Is it not possible that I might dine with you? |
46909 | Is it on this account that the illustrious Turgan calls me"the major?" |
46909 | Is it understood, then-- Saturday? |
46909 | Is it you?" |
46909 | Is my request indiscreet? |
46909 | Is that agreeable? |
46909 | Is that all, sir?" |
46909 | Is there anything new to say about that young person? |
46909 | Is this a coincidence, or is it because when I was eighteen years old I read only Montaigne during a whole twelvemonth? |
46909 | Is this not a great defect? |
46909 | Is this presumption on my part,--an excessive sympathy that I feel for you? |
46909 | It is not kind to say I do not think of my"old troubadour;"of what else should I think? |
46909 | Look through your telescope, do you not see Guizot waning and Thiers coming to light? |
46909 | M. de Mahurot seemed satisfied with it, and Madame de Noares said to him:"You will remember my_ protégés_?" |
46909 | Many times, in the stillness of night, will he look vainly for his friend''s shadow, ready to question him:"Am I doing right? |
46909 | May I expect you the day after to- morrow? |
46909 | Must I die, now? |
46909 | Must I give up my days of feasting and delight, my spectacles, my triumphs, my chariots and the applause of multitudes? |
46909 | Must it not be from his worship of the true? |
46909 | My head troubles me too much for me to continue now, and besides, what more can I say? |
46909 | Nevertheless, while I was looking at the poor Pouchet, who was in torture, shaking like a reed in the wind, do you know what came up before me? |
46909 | No doubt there were impediments? |
46909 | Now that they had learned to read and write, what should they be taught? |
46909 | Now, what do you remember from yesterday?" |
46909 | O Rabelais, where is thy vast mouth? |
46909 | Of obstructing your public by- ways? |
46909 | Of what use is all this effort, perhaps to arrive only at mediocrity in the end? |
46909 | Of what use is it? |
46909 | On the other hand, is it not stupid? |
46909 | One day Victorine asked,"How is it that wood burns?" |
46909 | Passing to the Middle Ages, shall we compare the epics of the twelfth century, the comic and the morality plays? |
46909 | Perhaps irony might have success with him? |
46909 | Perhaps they were distressed by it? |
46909 | Pierre?" |
46909 | Poetry, is n''t it? |
46909 | Pécuchet at first talked about indifferent subjects, then, having slipped out the word"martyr":"How many do you think there were of them?" |
46909 | Science furnished a subject for sarcasms on his part:"Will it make an ear of corn sprout, this science of yours? |
46909 | Shall I have a letter from you on awakening? |
46909 | Shall I have the courage to live absolutely alone in a solitary place? |
46909 | Shall you be in Paris from the first of August to the 25th? |
46909 | Shall you remain at Nohant? |
46909 | Should it be Nôtre Dame de Fourviers, de Chartres, d''Embrun, de Marseille, or d''Auray? |
46909 | Since his time, what has been done? |
46909 | Sometimes I would stop him and ask:"Was he good?" |
46909 | Suppose his birthplace were unknown( history is not always decisive on this point),--what would you do? |
46909 | That would have been a great compliment, eh? |
46909 | The Bovary? |
46909 | The justice of the peace made him sit down; then, addressing himself to the gamekeeper:"Do you persist in your declarations?" |
46909 | The third was an invective to"An author who sold his poems": Why seek a famished passion to revive? |
46909 | Then why not erect it in the street, house, or even room where he was born? |
46909 | There creaks a pump which wets your legs; two boys are rinsing decanters; a parrot repeats from morning till night:"Have you breakfasted, Jacko?" |
46909 | There is a certain ingenuousness about them, but why call the_ sperchius_,_ sperkhios_? |
46909 | They say that_ Cadio_ is being rehearsed at the Porte Saint- Martin( are you very sorry, you and Chilly?). |
46909 | This is all very easy to say in cold blood, is it not? |
46909 | Under what constellation were you born, to have united in your person qualities so diverse, so numerous, and so rare? |
46909 | Vindex revolts, my legions fly, my women flee in terror? |
46909 | WHAT a charming article, my dear Théo, and how can I thank you for it? |
46909 | WHAT has become of you? |
46909 | Was it not enough that a thing was true and beautiful? |
46909 | Was it only chance that had kept them from death? |
46909 | Was it possible for them really to have such recreations? |
46909 | Was it possible? |
46909 | Was it their fault if they owed their birth to a convict father? |
46909 | Was not Ronsard forgotten before Sainte- Beuve? |
46909 | Was that a good way, after all? |
46909 | Was this a hygienic measure? |
46909 | We understand each other well, do we not? |
46909 | What are we coming to?" |
46909 | What are you doing now? |
46909 | What are you doing? |
46909 | What are you writing? |
46909 | What can this phrase in your letter this morning mean in speaking of De Lisle? |
46909 | What care should one take sometimes, in expressing an opinion on things of this world, not to risk being considered an imbecile later? |
46909 | What could anyone say after you? |
46909 | What could he laugh at, then? |
46909 | What could he laugh at? |
46909 | What do we know?" |
46909 | What do you intend to do next? |
46909 | What do you intend to do this evening? |
46909 | What do you think of_ Salammbô_? |
46909 | What does the form of belief matter? |
46909 | What good is there in discussing, replying to, and angering him? |
46909 | What good will it do? |
46909 | What has become of the good Leconte,--is he progressing with his Celtic poem? |
46909 | What has he out of the ordinary? |
46909 | What have we? |
46909 | What hurricane has hurled us into this abyss? |
46909 | What is your price? |
46909 | What must I do? |
46909 | What news of your wife? |
46909 | What shall you do now? |
46909 | What tempest soon shall bear us away towards the forgotten planets whence we came? |
46909 | What was that? |
46909 | What was the gentleman"who has special charge of the fine arts"afraid of? |
46909 | What was to be done? |
46909 | What were they to do? |
46909 | What would he not do to raise my spirits when I was sad or ill? |
46909 | What''s this here?" |
46909 | What, then, was the Emperor occupying his time with? |
46909 | When shall I be able to do so? |
46909 | When shall we meet again? |
46909 | When wilt Thou cease creating? |
46909 | When, Lord, shall thy great trumpet sound? |
46909 | Whence come the black moods that sometimes sweep over us? |
46909 | Whence comes this seduction of the past? |
46909 | Where are there any prostitutes like Fantine, convicts like Valjean, and politicians like the stupid donkeys of the A, B, C? |
46909 | Where are we? |
46909 | Where did it come from? |
46909 | Where has the rage for philosophic prose conducted him? |
46909 | Where is his rival to be found? |
46909 | Where is the bishop who asks a benediction from a convention? |
46909 | Where is the factory that turns away a girl because she has a child? |
46909 | Where now was the ardent desire of knowing quickly the thought that springs from the brain of a friend? |
46909 | Where shall we see each other? |
46909 | Where shall you be at five minutes before midnight? |
46909 | Where were those beautiful years of youth? |
46909 | Where will they lead us? |
46909 | Where will you stop? |
46909 | Where would you find readers? |
46909 | Where, then, is the inspiration?" |
46909 | Wherefore a public administration? |
46909 | Who asked you to defend them? |
46909 | Who is there that has not made a parody on the mediocre? |
46909 | Who speaks in rhymes? |
46909 | Why are we here? |
46909 | Why can you not understand that it would be very painful to me to go to Mantes? |
46909 | Why do you persist in irritating my nerves by saying that a field of cabbages is more beautiful than a desert? |
46909 | Why have you made me fall in love with the mistresses of Louis XV.? |
46909 | Why have you not sent me any news of yourself, you rascal? |
46909 | Why is she at Versailles? |
46909 | Why is this so? |
46909 | Why not confess that we desire none at all? |
46909 | Why seek you me in the dust?" |
46909 | Why was I afraid that it would not be long? |
46909 | Why? |
46909 | Will Madame your mother devote herself always to the occupations of Thalia? |
46909 | Will all the subscribers accept the substitution?" |
46909 | Will that be convenient and agreeable? |
46909 | Will you be kind enough to inform yourself discreetly of the state of the case when you are in Paris? |
46909 | Will you believe me when I tell you that the ignoble realism you find in my story, the reproduction of which disgusts you, revolts me quite as much? |
46909 | With what shall we sustain ourselves, then, if pride fails us, and what man can feel more of that for his mother than yourself? |
46909 | Would you believe that even while following his coffin, I realised keenly the grotesqueness of the ceremony? |
46909 | You practical? |
46909 | You try to be polite to a scamp like that? |
46909 | Yours?" |
46909 | [ A] Who is this Mrs. Opie? |
46909 | _ What is the condition of their public libraries?_"And when I demolished his illusions, he was desolate. |
46909 | and St. Bartholomew? |
46909 | and the massacres of the Albigenses? |
46909 | and the revocation of the Edict of Nantes?" |
46909 | and where have you found out these nice things?" |
46909 | do not the wheels smoke yet? |
46909 | of rhetoric?" |
46909 | shall I sleep in my turn? |
46909 | the champagne? |
46909 | two thousand?" |
46909 | where was the faith in each other? |
33133 | Ah yes; and how does that scoundrelly Priest explain his invitation? |
33133 | Ah, the Magister meanest thou? 33133 And do you imagine to be able to bring the heretics back to the cause of God with such miserable casuistry?" |
33133 | And dost thou really wish to die a Calvinistic preacher? |
33133 | And is there no help, none? |
33133 | And never to the hollow Chestnut- tree, Dachsbau, or the Nistler? |
33133 | And that is? |
33133 | And the Magister''s sermon, did that find grace in your sensitive ears? |
33133 | And the parson of Schönau? |
33133 | And the schoolmaster? |
33133 | And then you became a Lutheran? |
33133 | And to the Auerkopf? |
33133 | And to you, Sir Italiano, shall I bring once more a bucket of water and a thimbleful of wine? |
33133 | And what do you say? |
33133 | And when the Pfalzgraf Ludwig becomes Kurfürst, what will you be then? |
33133 | And wherefore dost thou not break loose from these bonds? |
33133 | And wilt thou be equally lenient,asked Lydia timidly,"if I marry Paul?" |
33133 | And you never went out there, to drink and to dance with the fiends, and to whore with the Devil? |
33133 | And your brother is still one at heart? |
33133 | Are these your exercises, Magister Laurenzano? |
33133 | Are you astonished at that? 33133 Are you willing to sail thither, to preach the Word, and to die, if such be the will of God?" |
33133 | As_ Wegewarte_? |
33133 | Bad characters, are they not? |
33133 | But how can''st thou prefer the horrible Priest, this pale man broken down in health to the straightforward, happy young Maestro? |
33133 | But how did you manage to bring about this miracle? |
33133 | But what is your creed, as you are neither catholic, lutheran, zwinglian, or calvinist? |
33133 | But what made you mention those names? |
33133 | But you promise to do me no harm? |
33133 | Can I now relate to you, what we know in Italy about the enchanted Klytia? |
33133 | Can his heart really be dried up,thought Felix,"or is he only inwardly miserable?" |
33133 | Can you imitate this official hand- writing? |
33133 | Can you tell me what all this means? 33133 Can your conjunctions have anything to do with death, plague and pestilence?" |
33133 | Canst thou see nothing? |
33133 | Could I have offended him? |
33133 | Detestable murderer, what has this poor creature then done to you, that you should slay it? |
33133 | Did I? |
33133 | Did you change willingly? |
33133 | Did you discover anything else? |
33133 | Did you entice Lydia by night to the Holtermann? |
33133 | Did you ever before see Heidelberg in such a state of excitement? |
33133 | Did you not attend the preliminary meetings as to the result of the inquiry? |
33133 | Did you not lead them; who bade you cut off an old woman''s escape? |
33133 | Did you not tell carroty Frances that you practised magic? |
33133 | Did you write this yourself? |
33133 | Did you write this, Erastus? |
33133 | Do not the pointed spikes of the drawn up portcullis project over the round, dark moat as do the teeth of an open- mouthed shark? 33133 Do those gentlemen really wish to introduce stoning into the Palatinate?" |
33133 | Do you feel insulted at my asking about that gentleman? |
33133 | Do you not know, Sir Counsellor? |
33133 | Do you then believe that the chanted word is not the word of God? 33133 Dost thou permit me then to marry a Catholic?" |
33133 | Dost thou really take the pretty fair- haired creature to be a witch? |
33133 | Dost thou see the young lady, coming out of that gate? 33133 Dost thou think, father, that she can bewitch?" |
33133 | Even against the fever of love? |
33133 | For whom is the water? |
33133 | Glad? |
33133 | Had I not better go up to- day and separate them? 33133 Hallo, Neuser, how does the early rising agree with you?" |
33133 | Hast thou in truth chosen the Papist, the stranger as the companion of thy life- time? |
33133 | Have you also turned heretic? 33133 Have you managed to finish this measure by yourself, reverend Sir?" |
33133 | Have you much to do in this dangerous situation? |
33133 | Have you no one to help you? |
33133 | Have you turned the Church into an hospital? |
33133 | How did I get here? |
33133 | How did the Maiden explain the note? |
33133 | How did you find out where I was? |
33133 | How didst thou manage that? |
33133 | How do you know that Magister Laurenzano is my brother? |
33133 | How is that, what mean you? |
33133 | How the largest congregation? |
33133 | How the vipers of repentance, which for a time had curled up in some dark corner, bite once more? 33133 How,"rejoined Probus,"have you not read the Geneva ordinances, which prescribe what the Genevese are allowed to eat and drink? |
33133 | I do n''t blame thee, but only wish I could put a stop to the design of this Priest of Baal? 33133 I only wish to know in which room the father of my affianced bride is confined?" |
33133 | If I could do that would I be lying here? |
33133 | If the man however is Kurfürst? |
33133 | In the Rector''s reports is not your wondrous skill in imitating handwriting mentioned? |
33133 | Is Lydia with you? |
33133 | Is it you, Erastus? |
33133 | Is not the Counsellor Erastus here? |
33133 | Is that really the whole of the discipline? |
33133 | Is that your handwriting? |
33133 | Is the discussion at an end? |
33133 | Is yonder house the convent? |
33133 | Klaus will also be of your company? |
33133 | Klaus,cried Parson Vehe in his coarse voice to the waiter,"why have asses such long ears?" |
33133 | Knowest thou,he asked,"where tarries the soul that used to gaze from these empty sockets?" |
33133 | Lydia, dost thou see the sweet smiling lips of the Saviour? |
33133 | Magister Laurenzano preaches? |
33133 | Magister Laurenzano,said the wretched father in a husky voice,"is there any truth in the statement made by the witch?" |
33133 | Marnix, quite right, but who can remember all the foreign names? 33133 May one ask what damped that zeal?" |
33133 | Mother Sibylla,shouted the Miller loudly in her ear,"what has become of the maiden, who was waiting here this evening?" |
33133 | Must you go back already? |
33133 | No Devil? |
33133 | Not even last summer, when Neuser used his vacation, in endeavoring to obtain an office in Transylvania? |
33133 | Not wait till morning? 33133 Of what is she accused?" |
33133 | On which of the young ladies have you thought to essay these exercises? |
33133 | Parson Neuser? |
33133 | San Giuseppe, what have I now said? 33133 She is innocent, I will testify in her favor, where are the judges?" |
33133 | Silly Fool, dost thou not know that Laurenzano is a catholic Priest and neither can nor will marry? |
33133 | So you will chisel no lions? |
33133 | So, the beauteous Lydia will also gather herbs by the cross roads, and dig out roots at sunset? 33133 That is what they all say, but did you not go to the Holtermann at night?" |
33133 | The clergyman? |
33133 | The schoolmaster? |
33133 | Then dost thou renounce her? |
33133 | There is no one here any longer,said old Werner sadly,"why should she be? |
33133 | Thoroughly a woman''s decision,said Felix laughing,"or shall I rather say: a judgement of Solomon?" |
33133 | Thou art certain,said the miller to his redheaded offspring,"that it was Erastus''daughter?" |
33133 | Thou art willing to bind thy happy destiny to that of a cripple? |
33133 | Thou didst read the note thyself? |
33133 | Thou would''st sacrifice thyself, my good Felix,he cried,"but how could I accept such a sacrifice?" |
33133 | Thus was it here also,replied Paolo,"but who is to blame for this state of things? |
33133 | To set fire to the Tower, kill her, kill yourself, what is the use of such help for the poor child? 33133 Was it a spell?" |
33133 | Was it not Klaus, that I saw in your company lately in the ante- chamber of the new hall? |
33133 | Well and why should Erastus''daughter have been one of those masks? |
33133 | Were you not already known as the bewitched maiden at the Stift? |
33133 | What advantage would it have been to me? |
33133 | What are the people crying about? |
33133 | What difference would there be between me and those bloody men at Paris and Madrid, if I were to follow out such advice? 33133 What do you know about that?" |
33133 | What has become of the maiden? |
33133 | What has the poor Klytia done to you, that you thus treat it? |
33133 | What is in fact really known concerning this matter? 33133 What is she guilty of now?" |
33133 | What mean those leaves? |
33133 | What mean you? |
33133 | What must I do, what must I do? |
33133 | What right would I have to forbid? 33133 What sayest thou of my daughter?" |
33133 | What sort of French scholar are you? |
33133 | What sort of miracle, mother? |
33133 | What sort of test is that? |
33133 | What took thee to the Holtermann? |
33133 | What would we do, without the Counsellor? |
33133 | What, another Superintendent,said he,"who requires a covenant? |
33133 | What, do witches''conventicles take place in my dominions? |
33133 | When do you wish to begin? |
33133 | When shall we meet again? |
33133 | Whence moreover does she get this supernatural beauty? |
33133 | Where are your laborers? |
33133 | Where can Laurenzano be spending his holiday? |
33133 | Where could that be possible? 33133 Where is Lydia?" |
33133 | Where is Lydia? |
33133 | Where is she? |
33133 | Where is the Mayor? |
33133 | Where is the Mayor? |
33133 | Where will you go then? |
33133 | Who are you, who know everything? |
33133 | Who can that be? |
33133 | Who has been the cause of all this trouble? |
33133 | Who has told thee, that this can be thine only vocation? 33133 Who has told you that this pestilence is the work of witchcraft?" |
33133 | Who indeed could believe her to be guilty? |
33133 | Who is he? |
33133 | Who is it then keeps order? |
33133 | Who is the rough looking man with the huge forehead? |
33133 | Who looks after you then? |
33133 | Who ordered it? |
33133 | Who says so? |
33133 | Who taught you then to air the houses, and apply wet cloths to the head? |
33133 | Why did you not rather pray to God? |
33133 | Why did you sell yourself to the Devil? |
33133 | Why did you so desire to see me? |
33133 | Why do you attain your good intentions by deception and evident quackery? 33133 Why do you sit here, instead of being in bed?" |
33133 | Why do you think evil of Master Laurenzano? |
33133 | Why dost thou hide thyself behind the clouds, thou love- sick Apollo, and sufferest thy flower to mourn? 33133 Why have you accused those two men?" |
33133 | Why must thou be resigned? 33133 Why not?" |
33133 | Yes,replied Felix smiling,"and do you know when?" |
33133 | You admit then, that she is here? |
33133 | You are a Bavarian, Sir? |
33133 | You are no peasant? |
33133 | You are not satisfied with your position? |
33133 | You can not have heard much about Heidelberg,said the old man,"if you do not know where the Neuburg lies? |
33133 | You do not appear to be a friend to the Catholics? |
33133 | You do not then belong to any Heidelberg communion? |
33133 | You have completed the search of the papers belonging to my Counsellor? |
33133 | You have heard him? |
33133 | You have not examined the chief witness? 33133 You know my father? |
33133 | You must be very glad that the Heidelberg clergyman came among you? |
33133 | You must find me very heavy, good father? |
33133 | You will certainly never lock up a mere child in the witch''s tower for a boyish trick for which he has been already punished? |
33133 | You will find the Counsellor in the village, but could you not tell us, where to find the old witch, who lives in this hole? |
33133 | You wish to rescue her? |
33133 | Your wife? |
33133 | _ Sanguinaccio di Dio_, whether I wish it? |
33133 | A new horror; how was she to pass by these strange men, who moreover appeared to her to be drunk? |
33133 | After a sad pause, he began anew in a serious tone:"What thinkest thou does the old woman yet earn by her nightly arts?" |
33133 | After that he plunged us all in this misery, can''st thou not sever thy heart from him?" |
33133 | Again she returned to the question of the previous night, as to whether she were really guilty? |
33133 | And did not the compasses in the middle refer to Felice''s art? |
33133 | And does not even your Church Counsellor Ursinus himself state, that he scarcely knows six Christian clergymen in the Palatinate?" |
33133 | And in the meantime you destroy the character of an innocent maiden simply on the testimony of an old quean and of rascally scoundrels? |
33133 | And the church discipline?" |
33133 | And the haggard looking man, who behaves in so condescending a manner, as if he feared to tread unawares upon us poor worms with his leonine paws?" |
33133 | And you have no idea of the contents of these papers?" |
33133 | Are not your bands as a clergyman of the reformed church, and your now hidden tonsure, forgeries? |
33133 | Are you mad when it is a question of Lydia''s life and happiness?" |
33133 | Besides who could vouch for the fact of his having been placed on that side? |
33133 | But above those he saw a man''s figure leaning close to the cross- bars; could that be the Counsellor? |
33133 | But art thou indeed innocent?" |
33133 | But how, by all the Saints, did Lydia manage to comply with his bidding? |
33133 | But suddenly he laughed ironically to himself:"And the fool''s daughter at the Hirsch was she also a witch? |
33133 | But then if all being known her father, instead of the terrible uncertainty, put an end to the whole affair? |
33133 | But what has Your Gracious Highness decided upon?" |
33133 | But who indeed had bidden him perform miracles? |
33133 | But whom do they then wish? |
33133 | But why not put an end to these deceits and frauds?" |
33133 | But with whom should he begin? |
33133 | Can you now tell me, I ought to have acted otherwise? |
33133 | Come along with me, you wish to visit your brother, the Italian parson?" |
33133 | Confide in me, I will save them, do you also wish this?" |
33133 | Could Laurenzano have been there already, and been disturbed by the witch, or should she wait for him? |
33133 | Could any man rejoice in life for a single instant, if he were always thinking of those to whom at that instant some wrong were happening...? |
33133 | Counsellor?" |
33133 | Did anything of this sort ever happen to your knowledge, young man?" |
33133 | Did he mean the betrayal, did he mean the appointment with Lydia, or the affair with the daughter of the former court fool? |
33133 | Did he not make it a law, that no Genevese should invite more than ten persons to dinner? |
33133 | Did you not on the day that the storm which uncovered the roof, broke loose, draw water from the well at sunrise?" |
33133 | Did you not promise to obey your superior, silently, unconditionally, submissively as the stick in his hand? |
33133 | Do you consent? |
33133 | Do you differ from this opinion?" |
33133 | Do you know anything of this science?" |
33133 | Do you know why I left Rome? |
33133 | Do you know, what that Silesian Ursinus lately wrote in a report to the Kurfürst, when His Grace stopped at Amberg? |
33133 | Do you understand?" |
33133 | Do you understand?" |
33133 | Do you wish for a Cupid without a head, and a Charity without a nose?" |
33133 | Do you wish to end your days thus tortured?" |
33133 | Do you wish to try Mother Sibylla?" |
33133 | Does Your Highness now believe that a conspiracy of the Arians exists in Your Highness''lands, to lead the Palatinate to Talmudism and Mahommedanism?" |
33133 | Does not her appearance quite coincide with the story of the mad dog at Ephesus, which Apollonius of Tyana ordered to be stoned to death?" |
33133 | Dost thou not hear the wail of the damned, their meanings, their screams, their shrieks, their blasphemies against Christ? |
33133 | Dost thou see how the blue flames flare upwards? |
33133 | Dost thou see them shaking in fresh pitch, and the red column of flame now rising upwards? |
33133 | Dost thou smell the sulphurous vapor, the breath of corruption, the stink of the slimy pool, reeking upwards? |
33133 | Dost thou taste on thy tongue the salty bitterness of the tears wept by those below? |
33133 | Each of us strove after the right doctrine, but who can tell in this day of shattering of opinions and ideas what the right doctrine may be? |
33133 | Erastus looked at her in amazement:"How? |
33133 | Erastus replied:"To strangers? |
33133 | Feelest thou on thy fingers the flames, by whose glow the souls of the damned are now burning?" |
33133 | Had Paolo really sought an interview on her father''s account? |
33133 | Had he not even risked his life in an attempt to set her free, as Frau Belier had once whispered to her? |
33133 | Had he quitted the town forever, in which he had caused so much misery? |
33133 | Had not the holy fathers, Abraham, Isaac, Lamech, Gideon, and David more than one wife, why not thou also? |
33133 | Have they whacked him, thought I, or broken his windows, or stolen his cabbages? |
33133 | He might have been so happy, wherefore had he repelled this happiness? |
33133 | Her father looked steadily at her and said:"Hast thou broken thy bonds towards Felix?" |
33133 | How about that miracle on the Kreuzweg?" |
33133 | How again the old chain works its way into the flesh?" |
33133 | How came you to know this so- called surgeon?" |
33133 | How comes it however that your brother Paul fills a protestant pulpit, when inwardly he appears to me as Roman as yourself?" |
33133 | How could his child, the darling of his heart, have been drawn into all these horrors? |
33133 | How do you wish to manage the affair?" |
33133 | How long is an eternity?" |
33133 | How many state prisoners like Erastus may have perhaps breathed in the dread silence their last sigh? |
33133 | How many thousands of years would it require ere the mountain was pecked to pieces? |
33133 | How often have you ridden out to the White Stone on a broom?" |
33133 | How would it be if I brought about a great revival? |
33133 | I a Frenchwoman, tell women''s secrets to men? |
33133 | I am a man, what necessity have I for concealment?" |
33133 | I am better off in Ladenburg; are you not also of my opinion, Neuser?" |
33133 | I looked upwards to see whether the Greek father of the Gods was about to enter into conversation with the Egyptian Serapis? |
33133 | I should like to hear what you think about it?" |
33133 | If I, as did the Archbishop Borromeo in Veltlin, could only effect a great conversion among heretics, of women especially?" |
33133 | If Paul could really save him, and she had rendered the aid of no avail by not meeting him at the cross- roads? |
33133 | If he unsparingly, in his sinister ascetic humor, denounced his crimes, should therefore his rivals make themselves out to be better than they were? |
33133 | If yonder man betrayed me, whom indeed can I trust?" |
33133 | In fact what had the young clergyman done that was so bad? |
33133 | In the matter of lights and choirs you have not even the excuse of misuse, or has the organ also tended towards idolatry?" |
33133 | In what does it consist? |
33133 | In what terrible hands might his child find herself? |
33133 | Is he not a splendid man?" |
33133 | Is it not so?" |
33133 | Is it not true that you meant something of this sort when you said that Colins''figures could not endure one another? |
33133 | Is that wrong?" |
33133 | Is this harmless sweet young creature to be considered a devils''harlot? |
33133 | Klytia sat once more alone pondering what it might be that the Magister had to tell her concerning her father''s welfare? |
33133 | Most certainly those two can not go unpunished, but the only question is what punishment those gentlemen consider fitting?" |
33133 | Mother, it is not true?" |
33133 | Must I take her by the hand and lead her to thee?" |
33133 | Nevertheless the look she gave the flowers was cold and inanimate, whilst she asked:"Where will you take him to?" |
33133 | Now how must I go?" |
33133 | Of what use is your sculptor, when you desire no image or allegory?" |
33133 | Once arrived in the upper gable rooms, he considered, how he could make an easy passage from Erastus''window to the opposite gable end? |
33133 | Or are you thinking of his brother?" |
33133 | Or is it not then a fact, that immediately after the disclosure of the heresy, the magic arts came to the fore?" |
33133 | Peace- breaker,"called out the voice of old Werner,"is that the way you ask for bread?" |
33133 | Perhaps Paul had something he might wish to say to her? |
33133 | Perhaps did he at last feel in earnest, anxious to begin a new life, if she would only stretch forth a hand to help him? |
33133 | Perhaps she might meet the artist there, who would request his brother to tell her in the presence of Frau Belier what he had to say? |
33133 | Promise me, will you not?" |
33133 | Quotes this ruffianly fox any scriptural authority for such a proceeding?" |
33133 | Rather give me a more gracious farewell, by telling me at what hour evening service begins in the Castle- Chapel? |
33133 | Shall I mend up the mutilated verses of old poets? |
33133 | Shall the old Sibylla help? |
33133 | Shall this continue, noble Sir? |
33133 | She might meet her on the way? |
33133 | Should he again appear among the people who now all knew his shame and would point their fingers at him? |
33133 | Show me how I can prove my gratitude to the College for its kindness? |
33133 | Stop, some one sat here, and beyond do I not see something white?" |
33133 | The Baptist entered and asked whether his boy was still there? |
33133 | The Churches look sad since robbed of their images, shall the castles of the Great also look as bare? |
33133 | The Lady Superior turned over the leaves of the book, and asked somewhat doubtfully:"In what do these_ exercitia_ differ from other christian books?" |
33133 | The disappointed police- officers looked at each other, was that really a witch''s kitchen? |
33133 | The following morning she could not withstand the temptation of seeing whether the two angels''heads really resembled the brothers? |
33133 | The old man''s heart sank within him, then he said sternly:"When was that?" |
33133 | Then he called out ten of the pupils by name and asked them:"Are you willing to go to those heathen coasts, to teach Christ, to preach and to die?" |
33133 | Then said:"What shall I write?" |
33133 | Through what devilish arts could the Jesuit have succeeded in enticing the modest child to the cross- roads at a late hour of the evening? |
33133 | To the Hanseatic towns? |
33133 | To the Saxons? |
33133 | Was it the same after all?" |
33133 | Was not Lydia''s acceptance of the kerchief an infallible token, that she assented to the_ rendez- vous_? |
33133 | Was she in reality as well acquainted with the Holtermann, as the witch asserted? |
33133 | Was she the sort of girl with whom an appointment could be made at evening in the loneliest cross road of the whole neighbourhood? |
33133 | Was this an emissary of Pigavetta, or had the magistrate sent this soldier after him to watch that he did not escape? |
33133 | Was this the celebrated Church of the Heidelberg castle, the wealthiest at that time of all the Rhenish provinces? |
33133 | Were you also brought up in the Collegium?" |
33133 | What could all this mean? |
33133 | What could have prevented Paolo from coming to the very place chosen by himself? |
33133 | What could he preach to them? |
33133 | What could the good architect have to do with this matter? |
33133 | What do you think of me? |
33133 | What has Justice in common with self- righteousness? |
33133 | What is this life worth, that we should not lay it down in the breach for our flag?" |
33133 | What mattered it to him? |
33133 | What mean these caprices?" |
33133 | What means a fire in the middle of the Kreuzweg?" |
33133 | What more?" |
33133 | What prevented him even now from at all events asking her father about the health of his pupil? |
33133 | What should he do? |
33133 | What should our failings teach us, but charity towards others?" |
33133 | What think you of the spy?" |
33133 | What think you?" |
33133 | What was it that used formerly to terrify me? |
33133 | What was the use of answering people who were determined to destroy him, and made use of forged letters to that end? |
33133 | When did you attend the black mass?" |
33133 | Where did you find these papers, Amtmann?" |
33133 | Where then is a refuge, salvation, a sure foundation on which we may depend?" |
33133 | Wherefore have you brought me from Innsbruck, where I was the right hand of the Master, if I am to do him here a deadly injury? |
33133 | Which was the veritable Antonio? |
33133 | Who are the three witnesses, before whom she rendered herself invisible?" |
33133 | Who can be safe, if such a child is tried by torture?" |
33133 | Who could know what the relation of this deep well was to the clouds? |
33133 | Who had driven Erastus to jail? |
33133 | Who had hurried Klytia to the witches''tower? |
33133 | Who had spilt this blood, which the executioner was washing away? |
33133 | Whom hast thou therefore most grievously injured by thy deception? |
33133 | Whom shall I believe, you or Olevianus?" |
33133 | Why am I not yet private physician to this fat gentleman? |
33133 | Why had the heartless priest chosen such a spot? |
33133 | Why is it that the Church Council has not been able to introduce its regimen, which would certainly have driven the population into our net? |
33133 | Why should he not become like Sylvan, Neuser and hundreds of others, who in spite of their sins rejoiced in the approval of their fellow citizens? |
33133 | Why willst thou not prove which is stronger, a fate, which years ago seized upon a mere boy, or the riper will of a man?" |
33133 | With a feeling akin to superstition she looked up to see whether the beautiful rose had not fallen out of the wreath encircling the lovely children? |
33133 | With the old dames? |
33133 | You are a Romanist?" |
33133 | You have broken some to pieces because they were popish, others because they were heathen or immoral-- what remains besides? |
33133 | and how about the young girls in the Chapel?" |
33133 | have you named them all?" |
33133 | he called out in a rage,"why did you lie to me and tell me you were Erastus?" |
33133 | he!? |
33133 | in that case the Madonna sends you to my aid,"answered the artist,"Pray, noble Sir, which is Erastus''room?" |
33133 | or pile up some other learned dung- heap? |
33133 | or tinker together the fragments of some forgotten sophist? |
33133 | said Lydia impatiently,"is this the place to think about gold and riches?" |
33133 | so you are back, noble maiden?" |
33133 | who shall deliver me out of the body of this death?'' |
33133 | why had she not destroyed it sooner? |
18183 | What can I do for hardy pears? |
18183 | What crop do you consider the best green manure? |
18183 | What experiments are being conducted by the University of Minnesota with orchard and other horticultural crops? |
18183 | 1 and 2? |
18183 | 1017 everbearing strawberry plants? |
18183 | 4? |
18183 | 5 What is Hardiness? |
18183 | 8 How May University Farm and the Minnesota State Horticultural Society be Mutually Helpful in Developing the Farms and Homes of the Northwest? |
18183 | A Member: Are your trees still as far apart as they were at first? |
18183 | A Member: Common corn land, is that fit for raising asparagus? |
18183 | A Member: Did I understand some one to say that the mulberry was not hardy? |
18183 | A Member: Did you ever grow any Crusset Wax? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t they break right off from the main stalk in laying down? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t they form new branches on the sides when you pinch off the ends? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t you recommend testing your seeds before you plant them? |
18183 | A Member: Do n''t you think in covering them with a plow you might disturb the roots? |
18183 | A Member: Do you advise spraying for them? |
18183 | A Member: Do you face both ends of the barrel? |
18183 | A Member: Do you pack all one- size of apples in a barrel? |
18183 | A Member: Do you use clear cider for vinegar? |
18183 | A Member: Do you use very nearly the same size apples in a barrel, or do you put large ones at the top and bottom? |
18183 | A Member: Does n''t most of that trouble arise from the low prices? |
18183 | A Member: Does the German? |
18183 | A Member: Have you ever tried mulching them with corn stalks? |
18183 | A Member: Have you tried out the Baroness Schroeder? |
18183 | A Member: How about cowpeas? |
18183 | A Member: How about the hairy vetch? |
18183 | A Member: How large do the trees have to be to be of benefit? |
18183 | A Member: How many years have you maintained a bed? |
18183 | A Member: How much distance would you allow for the roots? |
18183 | A Member: How would you start a new planting? |
18183 | A Member: I mean in preparing your patch for the new planting? |
18183 | A Member: I mean seeds generally, corn, etc.? |
18183 | A Member: I want to ask if many put salt on asparagus? |
18183 | A Member: I would like to ask if a person on clay soil could use sawdust to work in? |
18183 | A Member: I would like to ask if you have any difficulty in getting your cider vinegar up to the requirements of the law? |
18183 | A Member: If you were going to do it again would you put them 30x30? |
18183 | A Member: Is it practicable to grow soy beans in this soil? |
18183 | A Member: Madam President, why should it not be the flag itself and not a picture of the flag? |
18183 | A Member: The heavy land I suppose would n''t be good for it? |
18183 | A Member: What are the majority of your forest trees? |
18183 | A Member: What causes the rot in the iris? |
18183 | A Member: What do these apple graders cost? |
18183 | A Member: What fertilizer is good? |
18183 | A Member: What grader do you recommend? |
18183 | A Member: What is the best of the green kind? |
18183 | A Member: What is the matter with the Hardy? |
18183 | A Member: What kind is that? |
18183 | A Member: What kind of heaters do you use? |
18183 | A Member: What kind of varieties would you suggest for the ordinary home garden, best dozen varieties? |
18183 | A Member: What sort of apples go to the canneries? |
18183 | A Member: When do you cut those sucker canes? |
18183 | A Member: When do you spray? |
18183 | A Member: Where can ground bone be obtained? |
18183 | A Member: Where do you buy your heaters? |
18183 | A Member: Will it improve that land by fertilizing with top dressing? |
18183 | A Member: With the soy bean do you have to plow in the whole of it? |
18183 | A Member: Would it be practicable to feed soy beans in an orchard? |
18183 | A Member: Would n''t fertilize the first season? |
18183 | A Member: You do n''t ship them, so do n''t consider the packing? |
18183 | A Member: You mean to say you could grow them for fifteen years without fertilizing? |
18183 | A Member: Your manure would be all gone then? |
18183 | A born farmer assumes that everybody knows how to handle a hoe or a plow, but why should they, not having had practical experience? |
18183 | A good rainfall is one inch, which is a thousand barrels to the acre, so what can you do with a sprinkling cart? |
18183 | A member: How far apart do you plant your beans in the row? |
18183 | And spray them every year? |
18183 | And the question naturally comes, why any new ones? |
18183 | And what have we learned from the"summer in our garden?" |
18183 | Another question: How many rows of trees make a good windbreak? |
18183 | Are the anthers well or poorly formed? |
18183 | Are the blossoms pistillate or staminate? |
18183 | Are the children of the farmers looking forward with interest to farming as a business, and life in the country as attractive? |
18183 | Are the petals large or small? |
18183 | Are the petals pure white or slightly crimson? |
18183 | Are the stamens long or short? |
18183 | Are there any other questions? |
18183 | Are there any other questions? |
18183 | Are there any remarks? |
18183 | Are there many fruit buds to the stalk, or but few? |
18183 | Are there many runners, or few, or none? |
18183 | Are they golden wax? |
18183 | Are we sure, as has been said, that God forgot to put a soul in flowers? |
18183 | Are you a member of the Garden Flower Society? |
18183 | Are you ready for the question, that those gentlemen suggested be made honorary life members? |
18183 | But how is it down here? |
18183 | But where are they today? |
18183 | But why do you come to me with this? |
18183 | By advertising? |
18183 | Ca n''t we make it an even hundred for this year? |
18183 | Can they be gotten at a reasonable price, and can we mature them here? |
18183 | Can they be successfully cultivated? |
18183 | Can we use a deformed apple? |
18183 | Can you think of the possibilities of Minnesota? |
18183 | Did you attend the 1915 meeting of this association, held in the West Hotel, Minneapolis, four days, December 7- 10 inclusive? |
18183 | Did you ever pass a farm home in the winter that was protected by a good evergreen grove and notice how beautiful it looked? |
18183 | Did you ever sit down in your kingdom and see what a royal throne you occupied? |
18183 | Did you ever think of the royal position of the florist and horticulturist? |
18183 | Did you have any trouble like that? |
18183 | Do n''t you glut the market unless you have cold storage? |
18183 | Do n''t you think so, Mr. Brackett? |
18183 | Do n''t you use dormant sprays? |
18183 | Do n''t you want your name added to this life roll? |
18183 | Do the children in your school know what flower is common in the northern part of the state as well as in the southern part of the state? |
18183 | Do the new runners bear blossoms and fruit? |
18183 | Do they need anything besides drainage?" |
18183 | Do they understand the conditions required in the state and the purpose of the selection sufficiently well to enable them to select intelligently? |
18183 | Do you find it the best way to hoe them after you get through cutting? |
18183 | Do you know what the state flag of Minnesota looks like? |
18183 | Do you plow them after you get them down or do you cover them with a shovel? |
18183 | Do you really know what a delicious beverage can be made from the juice of rhubarb mixed in cool water? |
18183 | Do you sell all the fruit you raise on the place? |
18183 | Do you think I was gwine to have that money around the house wid dat strange nigger there? |
18183 | Do you understand that? |
18183 | Do you wish to ask him any questions? |
18183 | Does it grow here? |
18183 | Does it include simply marketing alone? |
18183 | Ever troubled with the mice at your place, Mr. Weld? |
18183 | First, what kind of covering? |
18183 | For instance, do the canners in your country buy deformed apples-- I mean lacking in roundness? |
18183 | Has any one tried anything new in the garden that will stand our climate? |
18183 | Have they responded to Cultivation? |
18183 | Have you had any difficulty in raising them? |
18183 | Have you taken any photographs of your garden, its individual flowers, or wild flowers for our photographic contest? |
18183 | Have you the following all ready for use? |
18183 | Have you tried planting your bulbs with any of the ground cover plants that will take away the bare look that most bulb beds have? |
18183 | He said:"Is that so? |
18183 | He said:"Where are your passengers?" |
18183 | He was trying to bore a beetle head and could not hold it; a foolish boy came along and said,"Why do n''t you put it in the hog trough?" |
18183 | How Can the Garden Flower Society Co- operate with It? |
18183 | How May the State University and the Horticultural Society Best Co- Operate? |
18183 | How can those roots send up the golden tints, the snowy white and the red, and never have the colors mixed? |
18183 | How do you get these bushy bushes to lie down? |
18183 | How is it possible to pick out of the dull soil, Nature''s eternal drab, that brilliant color for your peony? |
18183 | How many members have you? |
18183 | How much of each? |
18183 | How often do you hear concerning some gardener, that if he"only touches a thing, it is bound to live?" |
18183 | How was that sweetness and purity ever extracted from the scentless soil? |
18183 | I could not raise anything-- Mr. Alway: Did the plants grow? |
18183 | I have another question here: What would you plant around the garden? |
18183 | I submit to you the question: Are school children qualified to choose a flower as an emblem of the state? |
18183 | I think I have reason to ask what would we have for apples today if there had not been any seedlings raised? |
18183 | I would like to ask what success you have had with growing tritoma, the flame flower? |
18183 | If he used that, why does he need props? |
18183 | If so, when do they commence to bud and bloom? |
18183 | In regard to iris, did any one have any trouble with their iris coming a little ahead of time last year and being frozen? |
18183 | In regard to the variety proposition, is n''t it true that you are growing too many perishable apples in Minnesota? |
18183 | Is Professor Mackintosh in the room? |
18183 | Is anyone going to allow weeds to outdo him? |
18183 | Is bone meal good? |
18183 | Is he in the room? |
18183 | Is it entirely the work for men? |
18183 | Is it entirely the work for women? |
18183 | Is it necessary to burn the tops when they are cut off? |
18183 | Is n''t that considered a rather short- lived tree? |
18183 | Is n''t this really a wonderful thing where so many are concerned, emphasizing as it does the large interest felt in the work of the society? |
18183 | Is that sufficient for a winter protection without the straw or leaves? |
18183 | Is the garden to receive the undivided attention of one or more members of each family, so that all members and guests may share its fruits? |
18183 | Is the plum curculio causing much damage to the fruit growing industry of this country? |
18183 | Is the receptacle on which the pistils sit well formed and capable of being developed into a perfect berry, or do they look ungainly in shape? |
18183 | Is there any kind better than those two? |
18183 | J. Kimball, Duluth Opening Song Trafford N. Jayne, Minneapolis Why Wake Up the Dreamers-- Aren''t They Getting Their Share? |
18183 | May I ask if Mr. Peterson, of Chicago, is here? |
18183 | Miss White: Madam President, if we could not vote as a society, could we not vote to recommend this resolution to the Horticultural Society? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Dandelions? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Did they make lots of runners? |
18183 | Mr. Alway: Was it any deeper than that? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Are your returns satisfactory shipping to the Minneapolis market? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Do n''t you take out any dirt on the sides? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Do you bend them north or south or any way? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: How far have you got yours planted apart? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: How late can you plant them and be sure of a crop? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: I would like to ask what you pay for beans for canning purposes? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: What are your gross receipts per acre for beans? |
18183 | Mr. Anderson: Where are you located? |
18183 | Mr. Andrews: Are the roots exposed in some cases? |
18183 | Mr. Baldwin: How deep do you put the plant below the surface in transplanting? |
18183 | Mr. Baldwin: You mean to say that putting manure on top makes the asparagus crooked? |
18183 | Mr. Berry: Do you fertilize and how and when? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Are they still in business? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Have you ever found any ground with too much leaf mold on it to grow good strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Have you got any pocket- gophers that do not make mounds? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: How many of those large limbs could you cut off in one year and graft? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: If you had Virginia trees twelve years old would you top- work them? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: In other words, they ca n''t pay over 35 or 30 cents a bushel? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Is n''t that a general opinion in the West where they make a business of planting large orchards? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Is that in the nursery row? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Suppose the limbs were too big on the stock you are going to top- work, how would you do then? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: What age do you commence the grafting? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: What can a cannery afford to pay for apples? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Where you put in more than one scion in a limb, is it feasible to leave more than one to grow? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: Would you advocate the extensive planting of apples in this climate? |
18183 | Mr. Brackett: You showed the difference in size there, those top- worked and those not-- don''t you think that is because of cutting the top back? |
18183 | Mr. Cadoo: Do angleworms hurt house plants? |
18183 | Mr. Cashman: Have you had any experience in using orchard heaters to save plums in cold nights? |
18183 | Mr. Cashman: You said a pressure of 200 pounds ought to be used? |
18183 | Mr. Clausen: Do n''t you have trouble with the mice? |
18183 | Mr. Cook: What number do you hold that red grape under? |
18183 | Mr. Cook: Which is that for, for the brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Crawford: Can you raise asparagus successfully in the shade or a partial shade? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: How would you keep those scions? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: In getting scions are there any distinguishing marks between a vigorous scion and one not vigorous? |
18183 | Mr. Crosby: What kind of a graft do you usually make? |
18183 | Mr. Durand: What is the best spray for leaf- spot and rust in strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: Do you know anything about it? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: I would like to ask if you have ever used arsenate of lead for spraying plums? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: I would like to know about what quantity of arsenate of lead and lime- sulphur combined would you recommend? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: In connection with that I would like to ask if you have used or would recommend pulverized lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Dyer: What pressure would you recommend in spraying for codling moth where arsenate of lead is used? |
18183 | Mr. Erkel: Is the Duchess a good stock to graft onto? |
18183 | Mr. Erkel: Would it be practical to use water shoots for scions? |
18183 | Mr. Glenzke: What would be the consequence of the berries being planted after tomatoes had been planted there the year before? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: Did you ever try capsicum, sprinkling that on the heads? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: The cabbage butterfly, does that come from the same maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: What do you do for that? |
18183 | Mr. Goudy: What is your method of harvesting your beans? |
18183 | Mr. Graves( Wisconsin): Do you use your black leaf 40 in conjunction with your Bordeaux or lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Graves: Does n''t it counteract the result? |
18183 | Mr. Graves: You say you got the same results from black leaf 40 in that mixture? |
18183 | Mr. Hall: I would like to ask you what you spray with and when you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Hansen: Do you know of any plum that has never had brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Hansen: What distance apart ought those apple trees to be? |
18183 | Mr. Harrison: Any special rule about multiplying or dividing? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: Has any one had experience in raising trollius? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: Mrs. Gould, can you give us any enlightenment? |
18183 | Mr. Hawkins: What would you recommend? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Have you ever carried over lime- sulphur from one year to another? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Is there much danger of evaporation so it would be too strong to use next year? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: What proportion of the lime- sulphur and arsenate of lead do you use? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: What would you advise for plants that are infected with aphis? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Would n''t you have an open space in those trees? |
18183 | Mr. Horton: Would you have an open space outside of those twenty trees for the snow to lodge in? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Do you know whether the mulberry is hardy in Minnesota or not? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Do you think that it weakens the stem of the apples? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: Does Mr. Dunlap attribute the general dropping of apples to the scab fungus? |
18183 | Mr. Huestis: How would the golden elder do as a hedge? |
18183 | Mr. Ingersoll: Is there anything you can suggest to control the yellows in asters? |
18183 | Mr. Ingersoll: You think that irregular watering might make any difference or very solid rooting? |
18183 | Mr. Johnson: Is it doing well now? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Are those honest representations of the different apples from the dwarf and the standard? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Did you ever hear of them dying? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Do you find any trouble with too much protection for orchards? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Does it blight any? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Does spraying injure the bees? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Have you tested the Douglas spruce? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How do you get rid of the waste apples that would rot in the orchard? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How large were the wagons? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: How soon do your dwarf trees pay for themselves? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Is n''t it better to dehorn it and get some new shoots to graft? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Is there such a thing as a pedigreed strawberry plant that is taken from runners? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Too big a growth on the graft is liable to be injured in the winter, is it not? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What do you know about the Surprise? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is the best spray you know of, how often do you apply it and when? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is the matter with the old Wilson strawberry? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What is your best windbreak? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What was the condition of that tree where Dartt put in four scions? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: What was the trouble where I could n''t raise strawberries on new wood soil? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: Would scions from bearing trees with the blossom buds on do you any good? |
18183 | Mr. Kellogg: You have been surprised with it? |
18183 | Mr. Latham: Do you wish to have the report read or have it published later? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Are the rings put on the outside or the inside of the trees? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Do I understand that you have to lay down and cover up those red raspberries? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Do you mulch the ground? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How far do you put them apart in the hedge row? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How many years is the planting of the King raspberry good for? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: How old are your Wealthys? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: I want to ask if you recommend the bamboo poles for general propping of trees? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: I would like to know what you advise for that commercial orchard, what varieties? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: It was n''t embalmed? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What has been your experience with the Ocheeda? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What is the difference between the brown rot and the plum pocket fungus? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What is your average cost per tree for thinning? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: What peculiar method have you for keeping those apples? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: When do you do that? |
18183 | Mr. Ludlow: Would it be policy to leave that on and let the strawberries come up through, to keep them clean? |
18183 | Mr. M''Clelland: Have you anything as good? |
18183 | Mr. Maher: It spread too much? |
18183 | Mr. Marien: I think that is a wax bean? |
18183 | Mr. McCall: What is peat lacking in? |
18183 | Mr. McClelland: What time do you uncover your strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. McClelland: Will they come through the mulch all right? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: I should think the germination of that seed would run out? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: I suppose the idea of putting that in the bottom is that it is so hard to cultivate the manure on the top without doing as you mentioned? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg if he advises covering the strawberries in the winter after snow has fallen and with what success? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: In saving your seed from year to year, is there any danger of the seed running out in time? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: Then you can use the black leaf forty? |
18183 | Mr. Miller: What do you do for root aphis? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: The radishes and turnips are attacked and the cabbages are not? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: What variety do you raise? |
18183 | Mr. Moore: Which do you raise, early cabbages? |
18183 | Mr. Moyer: What do those black soils in the western part of the state need? |
18183 | Mr. Pfeiffer: Your location is where? |
18183 | Mr. Philips: Which was blighted, the Hibernal? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen( Wisconsin): What trouble have you experienced with overhead irrigation with the strawberries in the bright sunshine? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen: Did you say the same fly attacks the onion and the cabbage? |
18183 | Mr. Rasmussen: What is the spray for the cabbage and onion maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Reckstrom: Would bone do that was bought for the chickens? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: Did you ever know the plum pocket to come unless we had cold weather about the time of blossoming and lots of east wind? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: How many apple trees have you? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: How many growers are there in your neighborhood growing fruit commercially? |
18183 | Mr. Richardson: Is the mulberry hardy with you? |
18183 | Mr. Rogers: Do you plant in the hedge row or in the hill system? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: About how long would you cook them? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: And what next? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Can the everbearing and the common varieties be planted together? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do n''t the flat ones bring a little more than the round ones? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do you cover the King? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Do you have any trouble with those bursting the cans? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How about the Globe? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How does the powdered arsenate compare with the paste? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How far apart must they be planted? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How is the Malinda? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: How long must they stand dissolved? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: I want to set out 500 trees; what kind shall I set out? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: I would like to know which is the best beans for canning, the yellow or the green? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is it a good seller? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Malinda and the Northwest Greening all right? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Okabena better than the Duchess? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What do you know of the paper cartons instead of flower pots? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What do you think of the Red Pear? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What form of packing for apples will bring the best prices? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What is your best raspberry? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What kind do you think is the best for an early variety? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: What tomato do you find the best for canning? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: Which is the best, the flat or the round of the wax? |
18183 | Mr. Sauter: You think it best for anybody with a small orchard to make his own lime- sulphur solution? |
18183 | Mr. Simmons: What is the cost? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Did the whole leaf turn brown? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Did you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: How strong did you use the lime- sulphur? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: The flower or leaf? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: There was a perfect crop of new leaves? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: Were you spraying for the pocket or brown rot? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What did you use? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What does your oil cost? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: What kind of soil were they on? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: When did it happen? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: When did you spray? |
18183 | Mr. Stakman: You did n''t get any injury to the plum trees? |
18183 | Mr. Street: But the second year would you keep all of the growth in the graft? |
18183 | Mr. Street: Have you had any experience in budding in August or first of September on those trees? |
18183 | Mr. Street: How about the Brier''s Sweet crab? |
18183 | Mr. Street: Would you put it on the top or bottom side of the limb? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: Did you have any red grapes growing there? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: Is n''t it as good now as it was? |
18183 | Mr. Waldron: What do you think the male parent was of the red grape? |
18183 | Mr. Wallace: Is the Patten Greening a good tree to graft onto? |
18183 | Mr. Wedge: Forest soil or prairie? |
18183 | Mr. Wedge: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg and I think we would all be interested in knowing when he began growing strawberries? |
18183 | Mr. Wellington: Have you been able to cross the European plum with the Japanese? |
18183 | Mr. Whiting: That is a hard question, but is n''t it a fact that you grow too many Wealthys? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: How thick do you leave those canes set apart in the row, how many in a foot? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: I would like to ask the speaker, the way I understood him, why he could n''t raise as good strawberries on new ground as on old ground? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: So it would be better to plant on old ground or old breaking than new? |
18183 | Mr. Willard: You pinch the end of the tops, I think? |
18183 | Mr. Willis: Would it improve the plants, fertilize the plants, this lime? |
18183 | Mr. Wintersteen: The maggots that attack the radishes and turnips are the same as the cabbage maggot? |
18183 | Mr. Wintersteen: Why is it I have no trouble with the cabbages, and yet I can raise no radishes or turnips in the same ground? |
18183 | Mrs. Cadoo: Can you graft onto a Martha crab and have success with that? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Do you cover them winters? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Will yucca filamentosa ever blossom in a garden in St. Paul? |
18183 | Mrs. Countryman: Would n''t the hollyhock come under the heading of being perennial but not a permanent perennial? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Did you ever try poisoning them? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Do you put a canvas over the tree or leave it uncovered? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Have they a string on the back? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Have you ever tried Golden Pod? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: How do you manage to get the farmers to bring them in? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: What vegetables do you can? |
18183 | Mrs. Glenzke: Will you tell me the color of your beans? |
18183 | Mrs. Gould: Will you make that motion? |
18183 | Native Plants in the Garden Shall We Collect or Grow Our Native Plants? |
18183 | Now, the distance apart? |
18183 | Older: If you are going to mow it, why not mow the sweet clover same as the other? |
18183 | Older: What do you consider the best to seed down with, clover or alfalfa? |
18183 | Older: Where you have an orchard ten years old, is it best to seed it down or still continue to cultivate it? |
18183 | Older: Which kind of seeding down would you prefer, what kind of clover? |
18183 | One prominent Minnetonka fruit grower said this to me about them:"Mr. Cook, what is the use of making all of this fuss about these new plums? |
18183 | Or does the success of it depend principally upon the varieties of fruit set out together with the after cultivation, pruning and spraying? |
18183 | President Cashman: Anything further before we pass to the next subject? |
18183 | President Reeves: Is Mr. Hegerle in the room? |
18183 | Question: If the above treatment had been given every second or third row throughout orchard, what would the results have been? |
18183 | SEND IN A NEW MEMBER.--Have you noticed the advertisement on the inside of the back cover page of this and also the January issues of our monthly? |
18183 | Second, how much? |
18183 | Some may ask, why not use the Virginia crab? |
18183 | The President: Any one wish to make any comments on this report? |
18183 | The President: Can you tell us something more about your experience in marketing direct? |
18183 | The President: Do you accept that as a substitute? |
18183 | The President: Do you add any Paris green at any time or arsenate of lead? |
18183 | The President: Do you break off many canes by covering them? |
18183 | The President: How did you get it? |
18183 | The President: How is your wild strawberry? |
18183 | The President: How many years ago? |
18183 | The President: How much? |
18183 | The President: I suppose that is automobile trade? |
18183 | The President: Is Professor Waldron in the room? |
18183 | The President: That is, 2- 1/2 pounds to 50 gallons of water with the other ingredients? |
18183 | The President: What is the remedy, Mr. Kellogg? |
18183 | The President: What temperature do you keep in your cellar? |
18183 | The President: What will you do with the report of the treasurer? |
18183 | The President: You have a heater in your cellar? |
18183 | The President: You take out all the old wood every year? |
18183 | The Reverend Mr. Reisenour(?) |
18183 | The first question I will read is--"What would you advise about covering in the garden in a season like this?" |
18183 | The mystery of the selection in this state is, why was a flower chosen which is not common to any part of the state? |
18183 | The next question is--"Are the black peat or muck soils first class? |
18183 | The next question is--"Should apple raisers use commercial fertilizers?" |
18183 | The question with pears is, will they stand blight or not? |
18183 | Then I thought,"What if I had planted forty acres?" |
18183 | Then did you vow once more to destroy the beetles when you saw the roses begin to wither from punctures made by the beetle in the stem? |
18183 | There is still room in this list for others, and why not instead of paying annual membership year after year make one payment and have done with it? |
18183 | This thing is to go on, and how? |
18183 | Tucker; 388 Gray, A. N., Marketing Fruit by Association; 27 H Hansen, Prof. N. E., What is Hardiness? |
18183 | Virginia crab is an early bloomer, and would grafting it with Wealthy make it bloom earlier? |
18183 | Was it the new soil? |
18183 | Was it your idea that we report next year or that the plan be put in operation? |
18183 | Was n''t that a great thing to make a fuss about? |
18183 | We have members, I think, in every county of the state, have n''t we, President Cashman? |
18183 | What about the farm and home garden for 1916? |
18183 | What are the results? |
18183 | What can we say about the crowning event of our meeting, the annual banquet? |
18183 | What do we raise and how do we do it? |
18183 | What is blight? |
18183 | What is it and is there a remedy?" |
18183 | What is the best in this country? |
18183 | What is the occasion of this? |
18183 | What is the reason? |
18183 | What is the second one? |
18183 | What is your opinion of the Delicious? |
18183 | What shall I do? |
18183 | What shall be done with the old bed? |
18183 | What variety shall I choose? |
18183 | What was the beginning of the civic league and the city beautiful? |
18183 | What was the matter, was it the mixture or the sprayer? |
18183 | What was the result? |
18183 | What would be the consequence as to the white grub that follows the tomatoes, and other insects? |
18183 | When do the berries begin to ripen? |
18183 | Where is the grocer who would go back to those days, and where is the public that would patronize him? |
18183 | Who are the people that are going to take your places? |
18183 | Who can do better than that? |
18183 | Who is to have a gold watch given him fifty years from now-- or given to her fifty years from now? |
18183 | Who would have thought it possible that in spite of all the frost and cold rains we would get a pretty good crop of cherries? |
18183 | Why Should We Grow Seedling Apples? |
18183 | Why do n''t you come and enjoy this most entertaining event of the meeting? |
18183 | Why not grow evergreens in the place of willows? |
18183 | Why not others? |
18183 | Will not each member make an especial effort to bring in a new member at that time or before? |
18183 | Will some one enlighten me? |
18183 | Will that be all right? |
18183 | Will they take nitrogen the same as clover? |
18183 | With over 2,000 varieties should n''t we be satisfied? |
18183 | Would it be five or six years before I receive any benefit, or seven or eight years? |
18183 | Would it be policy to put that on? |
18183 | Would it be worth while to put that on or would that overdo the thing? |
18183 | Would you want the Alsike clover or sweet clover for an apple orchard? |
18183 | You have got to punish the whole on account of the few? |
18183 | You may ask why? |
18183 | You throw a heavy growth in there, which makes the fruit that much larger? |
18183 | You would n''t put them all together? |
18183 | [ Illustration: American Elm windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] Mr. Kellogg: What is the reason there are so few of them really blue? |
18183 | [ Illustration: Norway Poplar windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] I have a question here: How long should a shelter- belt be cultivated? |
45464 | Jesus, what are you going to do? |
45464 | The mind of man-- the immortal spirit-- where did it come from? |
45464 | Was,did I say? |
45464 | What is the name of angels in the pure language? |
45464 | What is the name of men? |
45464 | What is the name of the Son of God? |
45464 | Who shall deliver me from this body of death? |
45464 | [ A] Then, in further attestation of the reality of his existence, as if to put away all doubt, he said,Have ye here any meat?" |
45464 | ( Whoever heard of a dark light? |
45464 | *** Again, how can the relative be conceived as coming into being? |
45464 | *** Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
45464 | *** Was the world[ universe], always in existence and without beginning? |
45464 | *** What did Jesus say,"Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are Gods? |
45464 | **** And the Lord said unto him, arise, why hast thou fallen? |
45464 | **** Jesus, if they were called Gods unto whom the word of God came, why should it be thought blasphemy that I should say I am the Son of God? |
45464 | **** The scriptures inform us that Jesus said,"As the Father hath power in himself, even so hath the Son power"--to do what? |
45464 | **** What sort of a being was God in the beginning? |
45464 | 9:3), and accept this as a reasonable interpretation of the passage stating so definitely that"God is a fire"? |
45464 | And as the Psalmist says also:"Whither shall I flee from_ thy face_? |
45464 | And have you not read too in the same chapter that"God created man in his own image; male and female created he them?" |
45464 | And he said unto me: What desirest thou? |
45464 | And his disciples asked him, saying, Master, who did sin, this man, or his parents, that he was born blind?" |
45464 | And if this was not the case, I would ask, how did Paul know so much about Abel, and why should he talk about his speaking after he was dead? |
45464 | And is Jesus, now in his resurrected, immortal body of flesh and bones, less"infinite"than before his spirit was united to his body? |
45464 | And now I arraign them before their favorite text, and I ask them, What think ye of Christ? |
45464 | And now I ask, as I did in my discourse,_ is Jesus God_? |
45464 | And now, is Jesus Christ without form? |
45464 | And the Lord said: Whom shall I send? |
45464 | And the earth itself, then, what of that? |
45464 | And where was the beginning of such proceedings? |
45464 | And where was there ever a father without first being a son? |
45464 | And why do thoughts arise in your hearts? |
45464 | And why does he retain any conception of God at all, but that he retains some portions of an imperfect humanity? |
45464 | Are there any limits that can be conceived? |
45464 | Are they not all ministering_ spirits_ sent to minister for them who shall receive the inheritance of salvation?" |
45464 | As for the spirit of man-- the mind-- who can say what its metes and bounds are, much less what they shall be? |
45464 | Born there? |
45464 | But I have a text to propose to them:_"What think ye of Christ? |
45464 | But even had the light lacked brightness, would the gods have been powerless to comprehend it?) |
45464 | But how came Orson Pratt acquainted with Hebrew? |
45464 | But how was this to be accounted for? |
45464 | But in order to illustrate this, let us inquire, What is our destiny? |
45464 | But to resume our inquiry: Is Jesus Christ immutable, unchangeable? |
45464 | But what is the sum of my argument thus far on Mr. Van Der Donckt''s premise of God''s absolute"simplicity"or"spirituality?" |
45464 | But where does this leave Jesus? |
45464 | But, says one,"Does not that oneness mean one person?" |
45464 | By the way, should we not also conclude that David had wings? |
45464 | Can any one, can Mr. Van Der Donckt himself, be quite sure of all this? |
45464 | Can it be? |
45464 | Conclude we, then, with the Psalmist:"All my bones shall say: Lord, who is like to thee?" |
45464 | Could plainer words be found to teach that angels, both good and bad, are spirits, devoid of bodies? |
45464 | Did he create any of these things out of nothing? |
45464 | Did the finite body, taken on by the spirit of Jesus, communicate its limitations to God? |
45464 | Did the materials then originate? |
45464 | Did they not converse, have knowledge, read books? |
45464 | Do we ascribe to him a fixed purpose? |
45464 | Do we conceive him as knowing and determining? |
45464 | Do we speak of him as continuing unchanged? |
45464 | Do you believe it? |
45464 | Do you believe it? |
45464 | Do you mean to say we were all in existence on the sixth day? |
45464 | Do you not believe that the spirit will endure forever? |
45464 | Do you not believe that_ I am in the Father and the Father in me? |
45464 | Does he possess body, parts and passions? |
45464 | Does not that bespeak a pre- existence of another personage besides the Almighty? |
45464 | Does this refer to the birth of the body of flesh and bones? |
45464 | Else of what significance are the following passages? |
45464 | For unto which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my son, this day have I begotten thee? |
45464 | For who is there of all flesh, that had heard the voice of the living God speaking out of the midst of the fire, as we have, and lived?" |
45464 | Grant immortality to man and God for his guide, what is there in the way of intellectual, moral, and spiritual development that he may not aspire to? |
45464 | Had God a body(_ Latin corpus_) what sense would there be in St. Paul''s corporally or bodily? |
45464 | Has God a body then? |
45464 | Has any man received a fulness at once? |
45464 | Has he? |
45464 | Has it life and intelligence and power to think and reflect? |
45464 | Has not the Reverend gentleman placed for comparison here the most dissimilar passages that perhaps could be found in the whole Bible? |
45464 | Have we reached a point wherein we may receive the fulness of God, of his glory and his intelligence? |
45464 | Have you any further proof of God''s being in the form of a man? |
45464 | Have you not also read in the New Testament that he is called our elder brother? |
45464 | Have you not read, in the New Testament, that Jesus Christ was the first- born of every creature? |
45464 | He said to him,"Where wast thou when I laid the foundation of the earth? |
45464 | He said: Many good works have I shown you from the Father; for which of these works do ye stone me? |
45464 | He said:"_ In what then_[ in whose name then]_ were you baptized_?" |
45464 | He was born according to man in the flesh, and why not his younger brethren have a similar birth with him in the spirit? |
45464 | Hence, if Jesus had a Father, can we not believe that he[ that Father] had a Father also? |
45464 | How can the infinite become that which it was not from the first? |
45464 | How do you learn this? |
45464 | How does it read in Hebrew? |
45464 | How doth he yet speak? |
45464 | How have we come at the Priesthood in the last days? |
45464 | How is it, then, that he is your elder brother? |
45464 | How long will they inhabit it? |
45464 | How long? |
45464 | How, then, can God be like man? |
45464 | If God is a person, how can he be everywhere present? |
45464 | If I ascend into heaven, thou art there; If I descend into hell thou art there?" |
45464 | If Mr. V. holds to the God of his creed, what becomes of all his"philosophy?" |
45464 | If any one of them be right, which is it, and how shall I know it? |
45464 | If man may not rise to the height of divinity, how shall this prayer of the Christ be realized? |
45464 | If so, then what advantage has the Christian over the Hindoo whom he has called a heathen for so many generations? |
45464 | If there may be two or four things infinite after their kind, because not limited by anything of the same nature, are many infinites inconceivable? |
45464 | If we are now the sons and daughters of God, what will be our future destiny? |
45464 | In the face of these scriptures, will anyone who believes in the Bible say that it is blasphemy to speak of God as being possessed of a bodily form? |
45464 | In the light of these clear, revealed statements, how shall we explain the various apparitions of God mentioned in the Bible? |
45464 | In what do faith and law of Christ consist? |
45464 | In what state do these considerations leave the argument? |
45464 | In what way? |
45464 | Is God everywhere present? |
45464 | Is Jesus Christ God? |
45464 | Is Jesus Christ God? |
45464 | Is Jesus Christ illimitable? |
45464 | Is Jesus Christ in form like man? |
45464 | Is Jesus Christ without parts? |
45464 | Is Jesus Christ without passions? |
45464 | Is Mr. V. ready to believe on these solemn assertions of scripture-- hence of the Lord-- that God is a fire, and therefore that fire is God? |
45464 | Is Mr. Van Der Donckt prepared to accept the inevitable conclusion of his own exposition of John 10:30? |
45464 | Is any man perfect? |
45464 | Is he God? |
45464 | Is he God? |
45464 | Is he God? |
45464 | Is he Plato''s"that which always is and has no becoming?" |
45464 | Is he a manifestation of God-- a revelation of him? |
45464 | Is he an exalted man? |
45464 | Is he man? |
45464 | Is he man? |
45464 | Is he possessed of a body of flesh and bone which is eternally united to him-- and now an integral part of him? |
45464 | Is it Physical Identity? |
45464 | Is it Physical Identity? |
45464 | Is it a strange and blasphemous doctrine, then, to hold that men at the last shall rise to the dignity that the Father has attained? |
45464 | Is it logical to say that the intelligence of spirits is immortal, and yet that it had a beginning? |
45464 | Is it not likely, nay, would it not be so? |
45464 | Is it not said that God is a spirit? |
45464 | Is it thinkable that this change was a deterioration? |
45464 | Is it"heathenish"to believe that the offspring shall ultimately be what the parent is? |
45464 | Is not this the necessary corollary of Spinoza''s definition of the"finite after its kind?" |
45464 | Is not this to be so with the children of men? |
45464 | Is that true? |
45464 | Is the Son, then, like the phonograph or the machine, the instrument of the Father? |
45464 | Is the atmosphere visible? |
45464 | Is the person of God very glorious? |
45464 | Is there any doubt about men being the sons of God? |
45464 | It is correct enough, but who told you that man did not exist in like manner upon the same principle? |
45464 | It is written that God can not look upon sin with the least degree of allowance, and that is true, he can not; but how about the sinner? |
45464 | Jesus answered, referring to Psalm 82:6,"Is it not written in your law: I said you are Gods? |
45464 | Jesus, observing that something had happened to him, turned to the apostles and said,"Who touched me?" |
45464 | Jesus, what are you going to do? |
45464 | Joshua approached him and said:"Art thou for us, or for our adversaries?" |
45464 | Let us ask, rather, how did Jesus Christ-- God-- deal with sinners? |
45464 | Love is an attribute of mind, of spirit; must one conclude then from this definition that God is a mere attribute of mind? |
45464 | Now Moses in the law commanded us, that such should be stoned: but what sayest thou?" |
45464 | Now ask yourselves this simple question upon natural principles, has the species altered? |
45464 | Now had he been flesh or man before, as the''Mormons''hold, how could he become what he was already from all eternity?" |
45464 | Now, had he been flesh, or man, before, as"Mormons"hold, how could he become what he was already from all eternity? |
45464 | Now, therefore, why should we die? |
45464 | On one occasion he was asked how the"spirits could be served,"to which he made answer,"If we are not able to serve men, how can we serve the spirits?" |
45464 | Or was it placed in the word of God because it is simply true? |
45464 | Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
45464 | Or would he find an interpretation, or explanation necessary? |
45464 | Or would he insist upon interpreting these passages by others, and by reason? |
45464 | Presently two personages in white apparel stood beside them and said:"Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? |
45464 | Says he,"Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are Gods? |
45464 | See Genesis 3rd chap., 9th and 10th verses--"And the Lord called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? |
45464 | Seest thou that thou art created after mine own image? |
45464 | Shall he come again in that form? |
45464 | That is not so gentle, is it? |
45464 | The first question is,"What is the name of God in the pure language?" |
45464 | The question is often asked, Is there any difference between the Spirit of the Lord and the Holy Ghost? |
45464 | Then what may not be done in eternity by one of these God- men? |
45464 | They replied,"Master, the multitude throng thee and press thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me?" |
45464 | Thus you may continue and trace the human family back to Adam and Eve, and ask,"are we of the same species with Adam and Eve?" |
45464 | To state the question fairly in other words we might say, Master, was this man born blind because he had sinned? |
45464 | To what heights of power and glory may they not ascend? |
45464 | To which of the angels said he at any time:"Sit on my right hand till I make thy enemies thy footstool? |
45464 | To whom then have you likened God, or what image will you make for him? |
45464 | Very well, then; as God, the Father, begot Jesus, the Son, may not the Son in time also beget a son or sons? |
45464 | Was and is Jesus God-- true Deity? |
45464 | Was he God as he stood there among his disciples in his glorious and, to use Mr. V.''s own word,"sacred,"resurrected body? |
45464 | Was that done to make human beings or certain truths more intelligible to God? |
45464 | Were not the people who landed at Plymouth Rock the same species with us? |
45464 | Were not their countenances similar to ours? |
45464 | Were there not mechanics among them, and did they not understand agriculture, etc., as we do? |
45464 | Were they not organized as we are? |
45464 | What are all these beings taken together, or summed up under one head? |
45464 | What are angels? |
45464 | What are knowledge and determination but modes of human consciousness? |
45464 | What are men? |
45464 | What are spirits? |
45464 | What did Jesus do? |
45464 | What do these words imply but that Seth was like his father in features and also doubtless in intellectual and moral qualities? |
45464 | What do we understand heaven to be? |
45464 | What does he mean when he prays that the disciples that God had given him should be one, as he and the Father are one? |
45464 | What idea does this language convey to the mind of man, except that man, when his creation was completed, stood forth the counterpart of God in form? |
45464 | What if that power of effort should be slowly aggrandized until man, now a little higher than the monkey, became a really great being?" |
45464 | What is God? |
45464 | What is Jesus Christ? |
45464 | What is it? |
45464 | What is meant by creation? |
45464 | What is the God who does not listen, but the likeness of human obstinacy? |
45464 | What kind of a being is God? |
45464 | What limits can you venture to fix as marking the boundary of his development, of his progress? |
45464 | What may they not do in eternity? |
45464 | What more is truth? |
45464 | What of it? |
45464 | What of the blind, the lame, the halt? |
45464 | What think ye of Christ? |
45464 | What think ye of Christ? |
45464 | What was it? |
45464 | What was the reply? |
45464 | What, resurrected Saints have children? |
45464 | When Jesus looked around, and saw none but the woman, he said to her,"Woman, where are thine accusers? |
45464 | When the Son of God, Jesus, took on a human body of flesh and bone, was not that which is finite, his body, added to the infinite in Jesus Christ? |
45464 | When? |
45464 | When? |
45464 | When? |
45464 | Whenever did a tree or anything spring into existence without a progenitor? |
45464 | Where did we exist before we came here? |
45464 | Where does he exist? |
45464 | Where was there ever a son without a father? |
45464 | Where wast thou when the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?" |
45464 | Which in their teaching presents the true doctrine of God''s unity,"Mormons"or orthodox Christians? |
45464 | Which is most in harmony with sound reason and the scriptures,"Mormon"doctrine, or the commonly accepted Christian philosophy? |
45464 | Who can define the difference? |
45464 | Who can perceive the nice shades of difference between the one and the other? |
45464 | Who comprehends its powers? |
45464 | Who dare say that it is not potentially infinite? |
45464 | Who knows how the infinite is constituted? |
45464 | Who of all these parties are right; or, are they all wrong together? |
45464 | Who then did compound the Eternal? |
45464 | Who told you so? |
45464 | Why by him? |
45464 | Why did not Job so answer the Lord? |
45464 | Why do the New Testament writers lay so much stress upon the taking of flesh by Jesus Christ? |
45464 | Why not? |
45464 | Why not? |
45464 | Why not? |
45464 | Why ought they not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold or silver, graven by art and man''s device? |
45464 | Why should there be any limits thought of? |
45464 | Why should we not work forever as well as now? |
45464 | Why? |
45464 | Will he annihilate it? |
45464 | Will he become an impersonal, incorporeal, immaterial God, without body, without parts, without passions? |
45464 | Will it be? |
45464 | Will we ever become gods? |
45464 | With his body of flesh and bones, with the marks in his hands and in his feet? |
45464 | Would Mr. V. from that definition of God believe and teach that God is light, mere cosmic light? |
45464 | Ye fools and blind: for whether is greater, the gift, or the altar that sanctifieth the gift? |
45464 | Ye fools and blind: for whether is greater, the gold, or the temple that sanctifieth the gold? |
45464 | Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
45464 | You ask, What is truth? |
45464 | You may ask, what becomes of the spirit, separated from the body of flesh and bones, when this body lies in the grave? |
45464 | [ A] What is the conclusion to be drawn from this? |
45464 | [ Footnote C: Quoted thus by Mr. V. In both Catholic and Protestant Bibles it stands:"Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"] |
45464 | and shall be hereafter actually infinite after its kind? |
45464 | and what know we of consciousness itself, but as the contrast between successive mental states? |
45464 | and where will be the end of them? |
45464 | hath no man condemned thee?" |
45464 | is not a thing_ infinite_ after its kind, then, when it is_ not_ limited by anything of the same nature? |
45464 | or created and having a beginning? |
45464 | or shall we say that man was made in the image and likeness of the angels, when God said,"_ Let us make_"etc.,"_ in our image_?" |
45464 | we have three Gods anyhow, and they are plural; and who can contradict it? |
4937 | ( Quoth she) Mum budget Think''st thou''twill not be laid i''th''dish Thou turn''dst thy back? |
4937 | -- How would''st th''have us''d her, and her money? |
4937 | -- Quoth Wizard, So In Virgo? |
4937 | ------------------------------------------------- When civil dudgeon< a> first grew high, And men fell out they knew not why? |
4937 | 110 For what can earth produce, but love To represent the joys above? |
4937 | 120 Or heav''n itself a sin< f> resent, That for its own supply was meant? |
4937 | 1220 Why did thou chuse that cursed sin, Hypocrisy, to set up in? |
4937 | 1270 What makes y''encroach upon our trade, And damn all others? |
4937 | 1280 What makes the breaking of all oaths A holy duty? |
4937 | 1290 But yet we are beside the question Which thou didst raise the first contest on; For that was, Whether Bears are better Than Synod- men? |
4937 | 140 Was not the cause at first begun With perjury, and carried on? |
4937 | 150 For having freed us first from both Th''Allegiance and Supremacy Oath, Did they not next compel the Nation To take and break the Protestation? |
4937 | 170 Do not nor great Reformers use This SIDROPHEL to forebode news? |
4937 | 170 For Protestant Religion vow, That did that vowing disallow? |
4937 | 180 Made Mars and Saturn for the Cause The moon for Fundamental Laws? |
4937 | 210 To run from those t''hast overcome Thus cowardly? |
4937 | 230 For what romance can show a lover, That had a lady to recover, And did not steer a nearer course, To fall a- board on his amours? |
4937 | 330 But though you can not Love, you say, Out of your own fanatick way, Why should you not at least allow Those that love you to do so too? |
4937 | 330 Mould''em as witches do their clay, When they make pictures to destroy And vex''em into any form That fits their purpose to do harm? |
4937 | 340 Can they not juggle, and, with slight Conveyance, play with wrong and right; And sell their blasts of wind as dear As Lapland witches bottled air? |
4937 | 380 Why is''t not damn''d and interdicted, For diabolical and wicked? |
4937 | 40 Nor putting pigs t''a bitch to nurse, To turn''em into mungrel- curs, Put you into a way, at least, To make yourself a better beast? |
4937 | 505 The Cause for which we fought and swore So boldly, shall we now give o''er? |
4937 | 555 And is this all? |
4937 | 585 Have they invented tones to win The women, and make them draw in The men, as Indians with a female Tame elephant inveigle the male? |
4937 | 625 Shall we that in the Cov''nant swore, Each man of us to run before Another, still in Reformation, Give dogs and bears a dispensation? |
4937 | 630 What will malignants say? |
4937 | 650 Prevent what he designs to do, And swear for th''State against him? |
4937 | 700 When fiends agree among themselves, Shall they be found the greatest elves? |
4937 | 730 Made mountains with our tubes appear, And cattle grazing on''em there? |
4937 | 750 What can our travellers bring home, That is not to be learnt at Rome? |
4937 | 760 Or do they teach to sing and play O''th''gittar there a newer way? |
4937 | 770 And if w''out- do him here at home, What good of your design can come? |
4937 | 840 What med''cine else can cure the fits Of lovers when they lose their wits? |
4937 | 840 Who made the Balance, or whence came The Bull, the Lion, and the Ram? |
4937 | 845 Or who made Cassiopeia''s chair? |
4937 | 880 Was not young FLORIO sent( to cool His flame for BIANCAFIORE) to school, Where pedant made his pathic bum For her sake suffer martyrdom? |
4937 | 965 Cou''d not the whipping- post prevail With all its rhet''ric, nor the jail, To keep from flaying scourge thy skin, And ankle free from iron gin? |
4937 | 970 Are not these fine commodities To be imported from the skies, And vended here amongst the rabble, For staple goods and warrantable? |
4937 | < a> Meet with the Parliament''s Committee 165 At WOODSTOCK on a pers''nal treaty? |
4937 | < m> When CAESAR in the senate fell, Did not the sun eclips''d foretel, And, in resentment of his slaughter, Look''d pale for almost a year after? |
4937 | < x> Like money by the Druids borrow''d, 975 In th''other world to be restor''d? |
4937 | A just comparison still is Of things ejusdem generis; And then what genus rightly doth Include and comprehend them both? |
4937 | Ad what would serve, if those were gone, To make it orthodox? |
4937 | Address and compliment by vision; 115 Make love and court by intuition? |
4937 | Am not I here to take thy part? |
4937 | And HUDIBRAS or me provoke, Though all thy limbs, were heart of oke, And th''other half of thee as good To bear out blows, as that of wood? |
4937 | And as they please, make matter of fact Run all on one side, as they''re pack''t? |
4937 | And burn in amorous flames as fierce As those celestial ministers? |
4937 | And do they not as triers sit, To judge what officers are fit Have they--? |
4937 | And has not he point- blank foretold Whats''e''er the Close Committee would? |
4937 | And if they use their persons so, 955 What will they to their fortunes do? |
4937 | And set th''a task, with subornation, To stitch up sale and sequestration; 725 To cheat, with holiness and zeal, All parties, and the common- weal? |
4937 | And shall all now be thrown, away In petulant intestine fray? |
4937 | And shall we turn our fangs and claws Upon our own selves, without cause? |
4937 | And sung, as out of tune, against, As Turk and Pope are by the Saints? |
4937 | And that which was prov''d true before, Prove false again? |
4937 | And when the work was carrying on, Who cross''d it, but yourselves alone? |
4937 | And where''s your liberty of choice, And our unnatural No Voice? |
4937 | And with bull''s pizzle, for her love, Was taw''d as gentle as a glove? |
4937 | And with their consorts consummate 845 Their weightiest interests of state? |
4937 | And yet do nothing in their own sense, But what they ought by oath and conscience? |
4937 | Are not our liberties, our lives, The laws, religion and our wives, Enough at once to lie at stake 735 For Cov''nant and the Cause''s sake? |
4937 | Are sweating lanthorns, or screen- fans, Made better there than th''are in France? |
4937 | Are there not myriads of this sort, 705 Which stories of all times report? |
4937 | Are things of superstitious function Fit to be us''d in Gospel Sun- shine? |
4937 | As seamen, with the self- same gale, Will sev''ral different courses sail? |
4937 | Bribe chamber- maids with love and money, 865 To break no roguish jests upon ye? |
4937 | But didst thou scourge thy vessel thus, As thou hast damn''d thyself to us? |
4937 | But didst thou see no Devils then? |
4937 | But granting now we should agree, What is it you expect from me? |
4937 | But what a vengeance makes thee fly From me too, as thine enemy? |
4937 | But what cou''d single valour do Against so numerous a foe? |
4937 | But what malignant star, alas Has brought you both to this sad pass? |
4937 | By sauntring still on some adventure, And growing to thy horse a< a> Centaure? |
4937 | Can I bring proof Where, when, by whom, and what y''were sold for, And in the open market toll''d for? |
4937 | Can not the learned counsel there Make laws in any shape appear? |
4937 | Can they make plays there, that shall fit The public humour, with less wit? |
4937 | Canst thou refuse to hear thy part I''th''publick work, base as thou art? |
4937 | Commit the censure of its cause To any but its own great laws? |
4937 | Could they not tell you so as well As what I came to know foretell? |
4937 | Could thine impertinence find out To work t''employ itself about, Where thou, secure from wooden blow, 700 Thy busy vanity might''st show? |
4937 | Did Saints for this bring in their plate, And crowd as if they came too late? |
4937 | Did he not help the< x> Dutch to purge At ANTWERP their Cathedral Church? |
4937 | Did no committee sit, where he Might cut out journey- work for thee? |
4937 | Did not a certain lady whip 885 Of late her husband''s own Lordship? |
4937 | Did not our Worthies of the House, Before they broke the peace, break vows? |
4937 | Did not th''illustrious Bassa make Himself a slave for Misse''s sake? |
4937 | Did not the Devil appear to MARTIN 155 LUTHER in Germany for certain; And wou''d have gull''d him with a trick, But Martin was too politick? |
4937 | Did not the great LA MANCHA do so 875 For the INFANTA DEL TOBOSO? |
4937 | Did not we here the Argo rig, Make BERENICE''s periwig? |
4937 | Did they for this draw down the rabble, With zeal and noises formidable, And make all cries about the town 530 Join throats to cry the Bishops down? |
4937 | Did we not bring our oaths in first, 145 Before our plate, to have them burst, And cast in fitter models for The present use of Church and War? |
4937 | Did you not lose? |
4937 | Didst thou not love her then? |
4937 | Discover''d sea and land, COLUMBUS And MAGELLAN cou''d never compass? |
4937 | Discover''d th''enemy''s design, And which way best to countermine? |
4937 | Do not your juries give their verdict 365 As if they felt the cause, not heard it? |
4937 | Does not in chanc''ry ev''ry man swear What makes best for him in his answer? |
4937 | Dost not remember how this day, Thou to my beard wast bold to say, That thou coud''st prove bear- baiting equal 1085 With synods orthodox and legal? |
4937 | Else why should tumults fright us now, We have so many times come through? |
4937 | For Privilege of Parliament, In which that swearing made a rent? |
4937 | For in what stupid age, or nation, Was marriage ever out of fashion? |
4937 | For lilies limn''d on cheeks, and roses, With painted perfumes, hazard noses? |
4937 | For what bigot durst ever draw, By inward light, a deed in law? |
4937 | For what can we pretend t''inherit, Unless the marriage- deed will bear it? |
4937 | For what design, what interest, Can beast have to encounter beast? |
4937 | For what mad lover ever dy''d To gain a soft and gentle bride? |
4937 | For what secures the civil life, But pawns of children, and a wife? |
4937 | For who first bred them up to pray, And teach, the House of Commons Way? |
4937 | For why should ev''ry savage beast Exceed his great lord''s interest? |
4937 | Has Saturn nothing to do in it? |
4937 | Have all these courses, these efforts, 620 Been try''d by people of all sorts, Velis& remis, omnibus nervis And all t''advance the Cause''s service? |
4937 | Have freer pow''r than he in grace, And nature, o''er the creature has? |
4937 | Have its proceedings disallow''d, or 305 Allow''d, at fancy of Pye- Powder? |
4937 | Have not the handmaids of the city Chose of their members a committee, 810 For raising of a common purse Out of their wages to raise horse? |
4937 | Have these bones rattled, and this head 205 So often in thy quarrel bled? |
4937 | Have they told Prov''dence what it must do, 590 Whom to avoid, and whom to trust to? |
4937 | Have we not enemies plus satis, That Cane& Angue pejus hate us? |
4937 | Have you not power to entertain, And render love for love again; As no man can draw in his breath 315 At once, and force out air beneath? |
4937 | He gave him first the time o''th''day, And welcom''d him, as he might say: 500 He ask''d him whence he came, and whither Their bus''ness lay? |
4937 | He that imposes an oath, makes it, Not he that for convenience takes it: Then how can any man be said To break an oath he never made? |
4937 | He who was us''d so unlike a soldier, Blown up with philters of love- powder? |
4937 | How durst th'', I say, oppose thy curship 960''Gainst arms, authority, and worship? |
4937 | How easy is it to serve for agents, 1355 To prosecute our old engagements? |
4937 | How shall I answer hue and cry, For a roan gelding, twelve hands high, All spurr''d and switch''d, a lock on''s hoof, 695 A sorrel mane? |
4937 | How will Dissenting Brethren relish it? |
4937 | I grant, all courses are in vain, Unless we can get in again; The only way that''s left us now; 1325 But all the difficulty''s, How? |
4937 | If matrimony and hanging go By dest''ny, why not whipping too? |
4937 | If nothing can oppugn love, 385 And virtue invious ways can prove, What may he not confide to do That brings both love and virtue too? |
4937 | If that were all, for some have swore As false as they, if th''did no more, Did they not swear to maintain Law, In which that swearing made a flaw? |
4937 | Is it not ominous in all countries When crows and ravens croak upon trees? |
4937 | Is not the winding up witnesses And nicking more than half the bus''ness? |
4937 | Is there a constellation there, That was not born and bred up here? |
4937 | Is there an officer of state 315 Untimely rais''d, or magistrate, That''s haughty and imperious? |
4937 | Is this the end To which these carr''ings on did tend? |
4937 | Is''t fitting for a man of honour To whip the Saints, like Bishop Bonner? |
4937 | Is''t not ridiculous, and nonsense, A Saint should be a slave to conscience, That ought to be above such fancies, As far as above ordinances? |
4937 | It is a kind of rape to marry One that neglects, or cares not for ye: For what does make it ravishment, 325 But b''ing against the mind''s consent? |
4937 | Leap''d headlong int''Elysium, Through th''windows of a dazzling room? |
4937 | Look on this beard, and tell me whether Eunuchs wear such, or geldings either? |
4937 | Made all the Royal Stars recant, Compound and take the Covenant? |
4937 | Make wicked verses, treats, and faces, And spell names over with beer- glasses 860 Be under vows to hang and die Love''s sacrifice, and all a lie? |
4937 | Marriage, at best, is but a vow, 155 Which all men either break or bow: Then what will those forbear to do, Who perjure when they do but woo? |
4937 | My''Squire, or that bold Sprite That took his place and shape to- night? |
4937 | Not true? |
4937 | Now whether I should before- hand, 645 Swear he robb''d me? |
4937 | Only to stand by, and look on, But not know what is said or done? |
4937 | Or bring my action of conversion And trover for my goods? |
4937 | Or could hold forth, by revelation, 495 An answer to a declaration? |
4937 | Or do you love yourself so much, To bear all rivals else a grutch? |
4937 | Or does the man i''th''moon look big, And wear a huger perriwig, Shew in his gait or face more tricks, Than our own native lunaticks? |
4937 | Or for a lady tender- hearted, 25 In purling streams or hemp departed? |
4937 | Or from the pillory tips of ears 825 Of Rebel- Saints and perjurers? |
4937 | Or if''tis better to indite, And bring him to his trial? |
4937 | Or what relation has debating 855 Of church- affairs with bear- baiting? |
4937 | Or what, but riches is there known, Which man can solely call his own In which no creature goes his half; Unless it be to squint and laugh? |
4937 | Or whether he that is defendant In this case has the better end on''t; Who, putting in a new cross- bill, 655 May traverse th''action? |
4937 | Or who but lovers can converse, Like angels, by< e> the eye- discourse? |
4937 | Or wilt thou rather break thy word, And stain thine honour than thy sword? |
4937 | Or witches simpling, and on gibbets Cutting from malefactors snippets? |
4937 | Or, vent''ring to be brisk and wanton, Do penance in a paper lanthorn? |
4937 | Pledge? |
4937 | Possess''d with absolute dominions 855 O''er brethren''s purses and opinions? |
4937 | Prescrib''d what ways it hath to work, Or it will ne''er advance the Kirk? |
4937 | Quis miretur ejusmodi convicia homini Epicureo atque Pagano excidisse? |
4937 | Quoth HUDIBRAS, I''m beforehand 665 In that already, with your command For where does beauty and high wit But in your constellation meet? |
4937 | Quoth TRULLA, Whether thou or they 905 Let one another run away, Concerns not me; but was''t not thou That gave CROWDERO quarter too? |
4937 | Quoth he, O whither, wicked Bruin Art thou fled to my-- Eccho, Ruin? |
4937 | Quoth he, That honour''s very squeamish That takes a basting for a blemish; For what''s more hon''rable than scars, Or skin to tatters rent in wars? |
4937 | Quoth she, I grant the case is true And proper''twixt your horse and you; But whether I may take as well As you may give away or sell? |
4937 | Quoth she, What does a match imply, But likeness and equality? |
4937 | Rack''em until they do confess, 335 Impeach of treason whom they please, And most perfidiously condemn Those that engag''d their lives for them? |
4937 | Say, will the law of arms allow I may have grace and quarter now? |
4937 | Shall SAINTS in civil bloodshed wallow Of Saints, and let the CAUSE lie fallow? |
4937 | Shall love, that to no crown gives place, Become the subject of a case? |
4937 | Shall precious Saints, and secret ones, Break one another''s outward bones, And eat the flesh of Brethren, Instead of Kings and mighty men? |
4937 | Some busy indepenent pug, 105 Retainer to his Synagogue? |
4937 | Tell all it does, or does not know, For swearing ex officio? |
4937 | The Ram, the Bull, and Goat declare Against the Book of Common- Pray''r? |
4937 | The Scorpion take the Protestation, 185 And Bear engage for Reformation? |
4937 | The fundamental law of nature, 95 Be over- rul''d by those made after? |
4937 | The question then, to state it first, 1265 Is, Which is better, or which worst, Synods or Bears? |
4937 | Then how can any thing offend, In order to so great an end? |
4937 | Then what has quelled thy stubborn heart? |
4937 | Then when he is compell''d by her T''adventures he would else forbear, 200 Who with his honour can withstand, Since force is greater than command? |
4937 | Then wherefore should they not b''allow''d In love a greater latitude? |
4937 | Then wherefore way not you be skipp''d, And in your room another whipp''d? |
4937 | Then why should more bewitching clamour Some lovers not as much enamour? |
4937 | Then why should we ourselves abridge And curtail our own privilege? |
4937 | Then, HUDIBRAS, why should''st thou fear To be, that art a conqueror? |
4937 | This any man may sing or say, I''th''ditty call''d, What if a Day? |
4937 | Thought he, how does the Devil know 1385 What''twas that I design''d to do? |
4937 | To Spirit her to matrimony? |
4937 | To change the property of selves, As sucking children are by elves? |
4937 | To keep the Good Old Cause on foot, And present power from taking root? |
4937 | To pass themselves away, and turn Their childrens''tenants e''re they''re born? |
4937 | To stuff thy skin with swelling knobs 1345 Of cruel and hard- wooded drubs? |
4937 | To swear, and after to recant 155 The solemn League and Covenant? |
4937 | To wait on drunkards, thieves, gold- finders, And lovers solacing behind doors, 820 Or giving one another pledges Of matrimony under hedges? |
4937 | To write of victories next year, And castles taken yet i''th''air Of battles fought at sea, and ships 175 Sank two years hence, the last eclipse? |
4937 | Was no dispute a- foot between The caterwauling Brethren? |
4937 | Was there an oath the Godly took, But in due time and place they broke? |
4937 | Was there no felony, no bawd, Cut- purse, no burglary abroad; 715 No stolen pig, nor plunder''d goose, To tie thee up from breaking loose? |
4937 | We, who have nothing but frail vows Against your stratagems t''oppose; 170 Or oaths more feeble than your own, By which we are no less put down? |
4937 | Were the stars only made to light Robbers and burglarers by night? |
4937 | What churches have such able pastors, And precious, powerful, preaching masters? |
4937 | What fate can lay a greater curse Than you upon yourself would force? |
4937 | What hast thou gotten by this fetch; 1340 For all thy tricks, in this new trade, Thy holy brotherhood o''th''blade? |
4937 | What honours or estates of peers, Cou''d be preserv''d but by their heirs 840 And what security maintains Their right and title, but the banes? |
4937 | What laws and freedom, persecution? |
4937 | What made thee break thy plighted vows? |
4937 | What made thee pick and chuse her out, 1195 T''employ their sorceries about? |
4937 | What made thee venture to betray, 1175 And filch the lady''s heart away? |
4937 | What made thee, when they all were gone, And none but thou and I alone, 150 To act the Devil, and forbear To rid me of my hellish fear? |
4937 | What makes a church a den of thieves? |
4937 | What makes a knave a child of God, And one of us? |
4937 | What makes all doctrines plain and clear? |
4937 | What makes morality a crime, The most notorious of the time; 1290 Morality, which both the Saints, And wicked too, cry out against? |
4937 | What makes rebelling against Kings 1275 A Good Old Cause? |
4937 | What politicks, or strange opinions, That are not in our own dominions? |
4937 | What renders beating out of brains, 1265 And murder, godliness? |
4937 | What revelations, or religions, That are not in our native regions? |
4937 | What science can he brought from thence, 755 In which we do not here commence? |
4937 | What then( quoth HUDIBRAS) was he 135 That play''d the Dev''l to examine me? |
4937 | What time,( quoth RALPHO), Sir? |
4937 | What trade from thence can you advance, But what we nearer have from France? |
4937 | What''s liberty of conscience, I''th''natural and genuine sense? |
4937 | What''s orthodox, and true, believing Against a conscience? |
4937 | What''s tender conscience? |
4937 | Where had they all their gifted phrases, 635 But from our CALAMYS and CASES? |
4937 | Who gave thee notice of my danger? |
4937 | Who shall wonder that this kind of cutting caused an outcry by Epicureans and Pagans? |
4937 | Who would not rather suffer whipping, Than swallow toasts of bits of ribbon? |
4937 | Whose liv''ry does the Coachman wear? |
4937 | Why are you fair, but to entice us To love you, that you may despise us? |
4937 | Why didst thou forge those shameful lies Of bears and witches in disguise? |
4937 | Will not fear, favour, bribe and grudge 345 The same case sev''ral ways adjudge? |
4937 | Will you employ your conqu''ring sword To break a fiddle and your word? |
4937 | With china- oranges and tarts And whinning plays, lay baits for hearts? |
4937 | With that he rouz''d his drooping heart, And hastily cry''d out, What art? |
4937 | Without whose sprinkling and sowing, Who e''er had heard of NYE or OWEN? |
4937 | Write wittier dances, quainter shows, 765 Or fight with more ingenious blows? |
4937 | Yes,''tis clear 455''Tis Saturn; but what makes him there? |
4937 | Your lives are now at my dispose, To be redeem''d by fine or blows: But who his honour wou''d defile, To take or sell two lives so vile? |
4937 | is it to us, 745 Whether i''th''Moon men thus or thus Do eat their Porridge, cut their corns, Or whether they have tails or horns? |
4937 | quoth he, what dreadful wonder 425 Is that appears in heaven yonder? |
4937 | quoth she, can that be true? |
4937 | to fancy Thyself, and all that coward rabble, T''encounter us in battle able? |
4937 | what fury Doth you to these dire actions hurry? |
4937 | what is''t t''us, Whether''twas said by TRISMEGISTUS, 660 If it be nonsense, false, or mystick, Or not intelligible, or sophistick? |
41078 | Admitted,I said testily;"but what''s that to do with us at this precise moment, when none of us know whether we are quite dead or alive? |
41078 | After all, what is it, really, that makes them all so bitter against us? 41078 Ah, Mr Glynn,"he said as I advanced to meet him, handing him my card,"this is an extraordinary business, is n''t it?" |
41078 | Ah, you''ve come, then? |
41078 | Ah,said I, picking up my coat,"so it was you who was stalking me, was it? |
41078 | All of them or some? |
41078 | And did you find him? |
41078 | And he does all this for England, and so do you? |
41078 | And how about Miss Napier? |
41078 | And may I take it that you are prepared, as far as lies in your power, to assist His Majesty''s Government in this direction? |
41078 | And shall I be entitled to similar consideration? |
41078 | And the documents you asked her to bring? |
41078 | And the man found dead in the colonel''s bed? |
41078 | And then? |
41078 | And what are those terms? |
41078 | And what is that? |
41078 | And what,asked Jose,"has become of my father and brother?" |
41078 | And what? |
41078 | And when that morning you saw your brother,I went on, breaking away on a new tack,"why did you go after him?" |
41078 | And you will stand the tests? |
41078 | And, pray, how,queried Casteno, with obvious incredulity,"shall you communicate with them? |
41078 | Answer me one question before I decide, and answer it to me with the most solemn truth: Do all the candidates join you in as deep ignorance as I? |
41078 | Any answer? |
41078 | Any other advice? |
41078 | Are not your actions calculated to excite distrust? 41078 Are you mad, man? |
41078 | Are you quite sure of that? |
41078 | Are you quite sure of that? |
41078 | Besides, professor,I cut in,"are not you really the one to take charge of operations at this juncture? |
41078 | But after the sale where shall we meet? 41078 But am I to understand you decline my suggestion? |
41078 | But are you any good at shadowing a man as artful and slippery and suspicious as Zouche? |
41078 | But do you realise what you have done? 41078 But do you think your brother Paul will be discovered?" |
41078 | But for what purpose? |
41078 | But how about his studies? |
41078 | But how can I hope to work successfully in the dark? |
41078 | But how on earth shall I watch Zouche? 41078 But how shall I know how you get on? |
41078 | But surely,I gasped,"you do n''t mean to show yourself in public until night is fallen? |
41078 | But that''s scarcely the point just now, is it? 41078 But the town-- what is its name?" |
41078 | But what on earth can he want with you? |
41078 | But where can he be? |
41078 | But why is the place so unlike a monastery? |
41078 | But why,I queried,"is the value of its treasure always so firmly insisted on?" |
41078 | But you call yourself Casteno? |
41078 | But you will save me, wo n''t you? |
41078 | Ca n''t you recollect? |
41078 | Can you climb? |
41078 | Did n''t I suggest Miss Napier had been inveigled into this business to help Lord Fotheringay out of his difficulties? 41078 Did n''t you see it on the milestones?" |
41078 | Did you say you had other keepers with you? |
41078 | Do n''t you see that this is the plot Don Jose Casteno warned you against? 41078 Do n''t you see we are arguing in a circle and that we have arrived again at the point why the Order exists?" |
41078 | Do you mind showing me the authority under which you are acting? |
41078 | Do you not deceive yourself rather than me? 41078 Do you see that fine mastiff in there?" |
41078 | Do you think I am a born fool or idiot, or what? 41078 Do you want them, or are they to go into the archives of the Order of St Bruno as quaint but interesting curiosities?" |
41078 | Does that, sir, mean you decline? |
41078 | Excuse me, Prior,I said firmly,"but have we not met before?" |
41078 | Fotheringay? |
41078 | Good wishes? 41078 How about the king?" |
41078 | How did you come to forgive us? |
41078 | How-- what the dickens do you mean? |
41078 | How? 41078 How? |
41078 | Is it Cooper- Nassington? |
41078 | Is not that your own fault? |
41078 | Is that why you have that statue in the entrance hall? |
41078 | Just meet me at the main entrance to the House in thirty minutes, will you? 41078 Just take this turn at the keyhole to oblige me, will you? |
41078 | Look here, both of you, how will this do, to be sent to each one''s last known place of address? |
41078 | Look, there is Miss Napier making signals to us with her handkerchief? 41078 Make a note of that offer, Fotheringay, will you?" |
41078 | Man,she stormed, as soon as she saw what I had done, springing to her feet and grabbing me by the arm,"are you mad?" |
41078 | Must-- must this curator be a Spaniard? |
41078 | My God,he muttered, wiping the great beads of perspiration that had gathered about his temples,"is n''t this chase stern-- awful? |
41078 | My good wishes, I repeat,I said with a good deal of firmness, for was I not about to play my last and most triumphant trump card? |
41078 | No? |
41078 | Nor is that all,he proceeded the next moment;"just cast a glance in this direction, will you?" |
41078 | Now, gentlemen, what offers? |
41078 | Now, my brother Hugh,he said, with a comprehensive theatrical gesture,"just take some observations for yourself, will you? |
41078 | Or High Church? |
41078 | Quite so,I returned lightly,"but just now we are not in a mood for conversation, are we? |
41078 | Tell me,I said, passing a tremulous hand over my throbbing forehead,"what has happened? |
41078 | That may be,I reasoned;"but, after all, are you not patriots first, and men with mere human passions like jealousy and revenge afterwards?" |
41078 | That you will not reveal without our permission any of the things that we communicate to you in the course of this initiation? |
41078 | Then to whom do they belong? |
41078 | Then what would be the most discreet step to take? |
41078 | Then why do you fight the hunchback, you a Spaniard,I queried,"when all the benefit will go to England if you succeed, not to Spain?" |
41078 | Then why ever did n''t you bid for the manuscripts yourself? |
41078 | Then you did n''t even see the flying machine fall? |
41078 | Then you did n''t see anything of Colonel Napier''s clumber spaniel? |
41078 | Then you mean actually to walk off to the railway station with all the Worcester police on the alert and to take the next express up to town? |
41078 | Then you think the machine is perfectly safe? |
41078 | Tricked, do you see? 41078 Was that his name? |
41078 | Well, and how did you get on with Miss Velasquon? |
41078 | Well, first, who was the man that put you on the track of my discovery, eh? 41078 Well, there is not much in that, is there?" |
41078 | Well, we must take all those risks, must n''t we? 41078 Well, what is it?" |
41078 | Well, what of that? |
41078 | What about those? |
41078 | What can it mean? |
41078 | What do you mean? |
41078 | What do you want, eh? |
41078 | What does your mother want to wash? |
41078 | What friend have I in the force? |
41078 | What is he doing? 41078 What limit may I go to?" |
41078 | What of that? 41078 What on earth can have happened?" |
41078 | What on earth can he be up to? |
41078 | What seek you, my son? |
41078 | What the deuce are you doing here at this ungodly time of night? 41078 What the dickens do you mean?" |
41078 | What town? |
41078 | What was my business to him? |
41078 | Where have you sprung from? 41078 Where?" |
41078 | Who can that be? |
41078 | Who knows? 41078 Who lives in this house?" |
41078 | Who on earth can she have come to meet? |
41078 | Why did you let them go without a protest? |
41078 | Why do I tell you these things? 41078 Why do you refuse? |
41078 | Why need we stand by and let other people like Fotheringay come in and benefit by our labours? 41078 Why on earth did n''t you tell me I was safe when we reached town? |
41078 | Why puzzle with riddles a man that is but half aroused? 41078 Why should he?" |
41078 | Why should two men ever strive after the same sweetheart? |
41078 | Why, what was that? |
41078 | Why, would you, Mr Glynn, have liked my brother to make an attempt on his uncle''s life? |
41078 | Why,questioned I,"should they, or you for the matter of that, struggle for a few old parchment documents of an obscure Spanish priest? |
41078 | Why,said I suddenly to my companion,"do you fear the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs getting wind of this discovery of yours?" |
41078 | Why? |
41078 | Why? |
41078 | Why? |
41078 | Why? |
41078 | Women, I suppose? |
41078 | Would you care to slip off? |
41078 | Yes,said I eagerly;"and what must those be?" |
41078 | You are quite determined? |
41078 | You did n''t expect to see me about, did you? 41078 You fool,"he cried,"what are you up to now?" |
41078 | You mean Bernard Delganni? |
41078 | You see? 41078 You wo n''t object to that, will you? |
41078 | After all, had I not taken my fee from Don Jose? |
41078 | After all, those manuscripts are the real object of our expedition, are n''t they? |
41078 | After all, why should the Spaniard kill Colonel Napier''s dog? |
41078 | Again the problem stated itself: Who would triumph? |
41078 | And I pretended to shiver as I added:"It seems to me, Naylor, there is always a cold streak in the air on Hampstead Heath; do n''t you think so?" |
41078 | And where can I hide myself without any undue risk of being found out?" |
41078 | And who else could have made that ugly gash in his side save Jose Casteno? |
41078 | Another thing-- where can we hide ourselves? |
41078 | Are they love letters?" |
41078 | Are they what I have been led to expect?" |
41078 | As a matter of fact, he is a friend of yours--""And pray who is that?" |
41078 | Because it belongs to England? |
41078 | Besides, are n''t we told there''s a tide in the affairs of men? |
41078 | Besides, did not every move I made then take me just a little nearer to the solution of that mysterious appearance of Doris? |
41078 | But as he hastened back I could not help two questions recurring to me with startling distinctness: What"fiends"were those we had got to face? |
41078 | But what were those plans to be? |
41078 | But why should she go at all? |
41078 | By what right do you come here demanding to know what I have learned, and shall learn, with infinite patience, expense, and labour?" |
41078 | By what right should we seize it? |
41078 | By whom? |
41078 | Call on them, and ask them? |
41078 | Can she have mixed herself up in this manuscript hunt-- under pressure from Lord Cyril Cuthbertson or the Earl of Fotheringay, for instance? |
41078 | Could I, therefore, trust him? |
41078 | Did you happen to see a clumber spaniel heading in that direction? |
41078 | Do either of you gentlemen understand anything about air- ships?" |
41078 | Do n''t you see that there must, in a quest like this we are engaged upon, be a hundred details about which I can not give you my confidence? |
41078 | Do n''t you see the molten gleam of water under the summer sun?" |
41078 | Do you agree, Glynn?" |
41078 | Do you mind, now that the train is stopping, inviting them to come into this carriage?" |
41078 | Familiar names? |
41078 | For what? |
41078 | Got something good professionally on, eh?" |
41078 | Had I not passed him the sacred pledge of my word? |
41078 | Had he heard something that had put him on his guard as he sat crouched over the fire in my arm- chair? |
41078 | Had he not paid me all that I asked? |
41078 | Had he seen something or somebody that meant mischief to me? |
41078 | Had we better grin and bear it, or ought we to try if we ca n''t find out for ourselves what is happening in this place?" |
41078 | Have you had a serious accident here while I have been in this cell?" |
41078 | Have you not made a bit of a mistake in that contention? |
41078 | Have you prepared those dummies?" |
41078 | Here it was: MURDER IN WHITEHALL COURT ANOTHER MYSTERIOUS CRIME But what was that? |
41078 | How came the dog to die in a passage near Stanton Street?" |
41078 | How could I do this with those burning words of the old hermit in his cell ringing even then in my ears? |
41078 | How did you get on at the House of Commons with Cooper- Nassington?" |
41078 | How shall I gain admission to his shop without his knowledge? |
41078 | How would the vessel behave in a wild upward dash like ours? |
41078 | How? |
41078 | I cut in suddenly,"what of those? |
41078 | I have actually seen the things I have pictured?" |
41078 | I put it to you now quite pointedly whether it is to the welfare of England that this interview should not take place? |
41078 | I see, now, that you have two assistants from Broadmoor, but why do n''t they wear Broadmoor uniforms?" |
41078 | I wonder, now, how she came to have missed all news of her father''s death? |
41078 | In answer to the usual question: Did we wish to communicate with any legal advisers or friends? |
41078 | In that case, let him have the honour of buying the spurious deeds, do you see? |
41078 | Indeed, I might as easily have been taken in as he was, for was there not at work that strange, compelling moral suasion of the handcuff? |
41078 | Inwardly I was assailed with one question:"Where had I heard that voice before?" |
41078 | Is it a success?" |
41078 | Is it not race time, and is not the city full of strangers? |
41078 | Is it real, or assumed? |
41078 | Is it to frighten you? |
41078 | Is that you? |
41078 | Is there any advance?" |
41078 | Is there anything else you would like to ask?" |
41078 | It is n''t love for me that''s making you look so precious uneasy, now, is it? |
41078 | It must be a friend of some sort, but then who would, or could, be a friend to so diabolical a creature as that is, even to look at?" |
41078 | Just get this clear, will you? |
41078 | Knowing this, I ask you, was it wise of you to want to link yourself with them? |
41078 | Meanwhile, everybody is asking: Who is the man who has been found stabbed to death in Colonel Napier''s bed? |
41078 | Now all we have got to do is to compare the two-- and then?" |
41078 | Now how shall we manage it?" |
41078 | Now the point is this: will you make a bold stand if I do? |
41078 | Now was that bond good or evil? |
41078 | Now you have got your lesson by heart, have n''t you? |
41078 | Now, are you aware to what those deeds relate?" |
41078 | Now, remembering the existence of Mr Cooper- Nassington, why should we go and put our necks in jeopardy, eh?" |
41078 | Now, what are we to do, Glynn? |
41078 | Now, what can that be? |
41078 | Now, what did they contain?" |
41078 | Now, what on earth can have happened to have made him give it up so suddenly and dress himself up as though he were going for a long journey?" |
41078 | Now, what''s your game dogging my footsteps, eh? |
41078 | Now, who is it to be? |
41078 | On what charge, pray?" |
41078 | Once again I demand of him: What has he deciphered from those three queer- looking manuscripts which he purchased this afternoon?" |
41078 | Or had he suddenly resolved to take advantage of those early morning hours to avenge himself on some enemy who lived near at hand? |
41078 | Picture an invasion of England by a large armed force-- where would they be? |
41078 | Put a pair of handcuffs on him and take him up to Bow Street, will you? |
41078 | Shall I take you with me or shall I send you back?" |
41078 | Still, I think I have done very well to book up the only two seats they offered for sale to the public, do n''t you? |
41078 | Still, that is something, is n''t it? |
41078 | Suppose he were not the Professor Stephen Leopardi that Doris had pretended but some other spy sent by Cuthbertson to keep an eye on the hunchback? |
41078 | Tell me who was this foe?" |
41078 | That being so, who are we, his disciples as it were, to judge him? |
41078 | The hunchback called him Paul--""Then,"I gasped in amazement,"you-- you are the hunchback''s son?" |
41078 | Then one terrible question stared up at me with awe- inspiring distinctness: Was this crime the work of Jose Casteno? |
41078 | Then seeing he had put me to some confusion he went on with great earnestness:"Look here, man, why do n''t you trust me a little more? |
41078 | Then why fight amongst ourselves?" |
41078 | Then, if we put away this ceremony of initiation of his, what ceremony could we devise to take its place?" |
41078 | Through what channel can we arrange a course of combined action?" |
41078 | To whom? |
41078 | Wait until our companions recover themselves and my friend and I have had a little fresh air, will you? |
41078 | Was I discreet to rely on him when great stakes, not only mine but England''s, hung in the balance? |
41078 | Was that accident-- or conscience? |
41078 | Well, the point will next arise-- can anybody else, or any other country, produce an earlier proof of ownership? |
41078 | What I want to know is: What business is it of yours what I have bought and what I have discovered? |
41078 | What about that dagger of yours? |
41078 | What about your luggage?" |
41078 | What are they to you, or to anyone?" |
41078 | What are you doing here? |
41078 | What could these monks be? |
41078 | What did I tell you?" |
41078 | What did you do to poor Sparhawk when he got hot and angry and struck out in my defence?" |
41078 | What do you mean?" |
41078 | What do you mean?" |
41078 | What do you say to slipping over this wall and stealing across the grounds? |
41078 | What do you think of the transformation? |
41078 | What do you think, Glynn?" |
41078 | What excuse could I make to Jose Casteno? |
41078 | What had happened? |
41078 | What happened then?" |
41078 | What if she did not know me in that disguise? |
41078 | What is the reason of it? |
41078 | What is this Order of St Bruno?" |
41078 | What on earth, then, can this Order of St Bruno be?" |
41078 | What was I to do? |
41078 | What was at the bottom of it?--a secret of State or of life? |
41078 | What was it?" |
41078 | What was that you said?" |
41078 | What was that?" |
41078 | What would happen then? |
41078 | What''s up?" |
41078 | What, dearest, I want to hear from you is this"--and I smiled into her eyes--"On what mad pretext were you lured here? |
41078 | What, for instance, is the name or position of Mr Glynn''s employer?" |
41078 | When shall I hear from you? |
41078 | Where do they come from?" |
41078 | Where does Worcester happen to be?" |
41078 | Where have you been to at this ungodly hour?" |
41078 | Where will you come that I may report to you?" |
41078 | Where, then, should they be placed? |
41078 | Where, though, is the hunchback? |
41078 | Whither was he bound? |
41078 | Who else could have any interest in the stabbing of that poor, faithful brute than the murderer of his master? |
41078 | Who else have we to fear?" |
41078 | Who would triumph? |
41078 | Why are you Jesuits so heartily disliked, not only in England, but in Italy, in Spain, in France, in Germany, and also in South America?" |
41078 | Why be a merely passive instrument in this great struggle between nations and persons for this Lake of Sacred Treasure? |
41078 | Why did n''t you call yourselves something less Catholic, more indicative of your real object?" |
41078 | Why did you get up and sharpen it on the hearthstone directly you thought I should not see you?" |
41078 | Why do n''t you tell this big, bullying, aggressive friend of ours what those three deeds contained? |
41078 | Why does n''t he come forward and tell the police as much as he knows of the affair?" |
41078 | Why go on? |
41078 | Why not be content to labour in the dark until the time for the light comes? |
41078 | Why should you cloak yourselves in mystery, in doubt, in veiled hints, in suspicion? |
41078 | Why should you people, here in the very heart of a busy modern city like London, not practise the same candour? |
41078 | Why the deuce did n''t you leave me in peace for a time?" |
41078 | Why wo n''t you tell me?" |
41078 | Why, after all, should I fall into that very common error and get enraged with the truth? |
41078 | Why, therefore, Glynn, do n''t you apply yourself for admission to the Order of St Bruno?" |
41078 | Why? |
41078 | Why_ Saint_ Bruno if you have no religious object and significance? |
41078 | Will he honour us by occupying that?" |
41078 | Will you answer our plain question?-- will you give up those manuscripts to the British Government, or will you not?" |
41078 | Will you join?" |
41078 | Would Lord Cyril Cuthbertson forgive you all the old enmities-- the bad quarters of an hour he has suffered from you since he and you quarrelled? |
41078 | Would n''t it be better if pressure were placed on him?" |
41078 | Would you respond to this and renounce your birthright, or not? |
41078 | You do n''t think I''m a young monk who has got spoiled in the making, do you? |
41078 | You or I?" |
41078 | You play the avaricious fool, do you see? |
41078 | You''re here late, are n''t you?" |
41078 | Your father and I are old friends; how is it he did n''t warn me?" |
41078 | ` What do you want?'' |
41078 | we can all be wise after the event, ca n''t we? |
41078 | what a stupid I was not to think of that before? |
47127 | [ 125][ 125] Is notNum"cognate to"Numen?" |
47127 | [ 12] How are men of this stamp to be affected by any exclamations of pleasure or pain? 47127 ''Where is Num? 47127 ( Query, Noah''s ark?) 47127 ( Query, eight dead kings?) 47127 ( Query, of water?) 47127 (_ vide infra_, p. 332), will not the matter begin to wear a different aspect? 47127 ), and the Roman(?) 47127 ), the Grecian(? 47127 )[]]_ sic._? 47127 170) says:--The stones changed then into men by Deucalion and Pyrrha, are they not their children according to nature? |
47127 | 19), does not this solve all difficulties? |
47127 | 27); and Kashmir and Dongan, gau; Icelandic, ku? |
47127 | 2d, Is there no clue in the name,_ official_ name, of Dank- li- ke? |
47127 | :--"He begins to lift up his eyes, he stares at the tent of heaven, and asks who supports it? |
47127 | Again, why are_ stripes_, in a variety of combination of colour, the characteristic symbol of flags? |
47127 | Am I, then, in contradiction with myself? |
47127 | And who knows if these people are not destined yet to contemplate sights which will be refused to the cavilling genius of Europe? |
47127 | And why does conscience prescribe_ one kind_ of actions and condemn another kind? |
47127 | At what period does Sir J. Lubbock suppose the custom of inheritance through females arose? |
47127 | Besides, if it be allowed that it might apply to Saturn and Janus through the connecting idea of Chronos, how does it apply to_ Bacchus_? |
47127 | But above and beyond it, do we not here also get a glimpse of more celestial light? |
47127 | But are they explicable on any solar theory? |
47127 | But does Mr Max Müller profess to have brought the various legends into harmony? |
47127 | But does not Sir H. Maine himself supply similar testimony? |
47127 | But does this settle the question? |
47127 | But first, how does Mr Hunter account for this bitter feeling? |
47127 | But how can Hercules, who frees Prometheus from the rock, be the same as Prometheus who is bound to the rock? |
47127 | But if in one instance what_ à priori_ reason is there that it should not be so in others? |
47127 | But if natural, it would have been natural from the commencement,_ quid vetat_? |
47127 | But if the human intellect can not prevent or control corruption, can not it disenchant vice of its evil, and so counteract its effects? |
47127 | But if they married out of their tribe, was the property to go with them? |
47127 | But if we have not the memory of mankind, does not mankind possess it? |
47127 | But if"kinship through females"was not discovered by the first children of the first mothers, how was it subsequently discovered? |
47127 | But is not this only when it is regarded from the point of view of"organised constraint? |
47127 | But is there no consciousness of this inferiority in the true negro? |
47127 | But is this so? |
47127 | But may not the old and primitive idea still lurk in the name? |
47127 | But what are these verses from the ends of the earth which are identical? |
47127 | But what are we to say about the alternative name of Enu? |
47127 | But what have we just heard? |
47127 | But what if these four figures should all be accounted for? |
47127 | But what is[ Greek: anthrôpos]?" |
47127 | But what mattered the contravention of treaties in comparison with the scenes which followed? |
47127 | But what portion of mankind do they influence? |
47127 | But what, again, is the force of all this buzzing if it is the mere expression of"pleasure,"or"pain,"of satisfaction or dissatisfaction in the masses? |
47127 | But why a symbol or token at all? |
47127 | But why is darkness called the parent of the sun, and not rather light the parent of darkness? |
47127 | But why not? |
47127 | Can this symbol, common to these three, combine even congruously with any solar or astral legend? |
47127 | Corn=_ As_lek( Kirghish) and Ashlyk(?) |
47127 | Did not France, the great culprit of all, who both cast its own responsibility to the winds and sowed the hurricane, conquer at Solferino? |
47127 | Did not Solferino, after some ten years of delusive prosperity, lead up to Sedan? |
47127 | Did not the English Cabinet summon all the most distinguished jurists to advise them what the law of nations was? |
47127 | Do bodies-- so far as the exterior senses tell us-- return to dust, or to other forms of life? |
47127 | Do not all our difficulties begin exactly where, owing to the complications of modern civilisation, tradition ceases? |
47127 | Does Sir H. Maine deny either of these facts? |
47127 | Does not Nature herself proclaim it, in her contrast of light and darkness? |
47127 | Does not this complete the chain of her connection with Juno? |
47127 | Does not this point to a traditional knowledge of these things? |
47127 | Does not this tradition of the tortoise decide the_ Oriental_ origin of the North American Mandans? |
47127 | Does the key fit the lock? |
47127 | Does tradition give any clue out of this labyrinth? |
47127 | Exteriorly, with the exception of the four images, it differed only in dimensions from the other wigwams, which are thus described? |
47127 | Finally, if man commenced with the knowledge of the devil, how did they proceed on to the idea of God? |
47127 | Had man no control over the domestic animals? |
47127 | Has not the greater intellect ever been on the side of philosophy? |
47127 | Has not_ so_ analogy with eau, augr( Chittral),_ water_? |
47127 | Have we not just seen that Bacchus, according to mythology, travelled from the_ west_ into India? |
47127 | He opens his eyes to the winds, and asks them whence and whither? |
47127 | How come they there? |
47127 | How did the population of those islands get there? |
47127 | How long will these Gentile sentiments remain in force? |
47127 | How many thousand years did it take to transform Lucifer into Satan? |
47127 | How many years, then, may we suppose that it took the Chinese to progress from the black state of the Egyptian? |
47127 | How then did they advance to the knowledge of the God of purity and love, or even of"the Great Spirit"of the Indians? |
47127 | How then, supposing the Roman element to have become predominant, did it come to contemn the Latin element and the law of the Latins? |
47127 | How was the succession to be regulated? |
47127 | How, then, did the others come to know nothing of baskets? |
47127 | How, then, do we find traces of the latter custom so prevalent? |
47127 | If Ana is Adam, and Hoa Noah, why should not Enu, in another point of view, be Enoch? |
47127 | If by his own mental vigour he can out of the primitive idea of evil generate the idea of good-- what may we not expect? |
47127 | If not from tradition, then from reflection? |
47127 | If some race in the countries where tin was procured, where is it now? |
47127 | If we do reason on that supposition, where is the discovery?" |
47127 | In Mexico also there was"that remarkable league, which indeed has no parallel in history(?) |
47127 | In the first marriage contract recorded,_ i.e._ of Isaac and Rebecca? |
47127 | In the midst of this struggle for existence, what is there in the greatest happiness principle to bind the individual to abnegation? |
47127 | Is it a forced paraphrase to construe this to mean-- The rainbow is the sign that the world shall stand? |
47127 | Is it merely accidental that the metaphor is not reversed? |
47127 | Is it not another way of affirming the position which I maintain against Sir John Lubbock? |
47127 | Is mankind without memory, without tradition?... |
47127 | Is not the Japanese god Amida= Adima, or perhaps to Adamon--_i.e._, confused in relationship to Hoang- ti or Noah? |
47127 | Is not this a reminiscence of the communications of the Almighty to man through Noah? |
47127 | Is not this everywhere also the mark of the Turanian race? |
47127 | Is there any other key producible? |
47127 | Is there any phrase which the human mind could invent in which it could be more adequately defined? |
47127 | Is there anything which makes it probable that they came? |
47127 | Is there no new conception of virtue with which to allure mankind? |
47127 | Is there, however, any instance known to us? |
47127 | It is perfectly congruous with the tradition of Noah; but who will tell us its appropriate solar or astral application? |
47127 | It is simply this,"How did the savage come by the knowledge of fire?" |
47127 | It is so_ now_, because of the traditional sentiments and principles which still retain their force-- but how long will it continue? |
47127 | It is, to use a French phrase,''in the air,''"[ Is not Sir H. Maine here hunting for a phrase which shall not imply that it is in tradition?] |
47127 | It may appear to us a natural emblem, but it is not so from association of ideas with the scriptural dove and olive branch? |
47127 | Might they not have anticipated the discovery if they had duly trusted tradition? |
47127 | No second decalogue which will attract by its novelty, or convince by logical cogency and force? |
47127 | Now is this tradition of morals identical with utilitarian precept? |
47127 | Now, is it improbable that the Latin''ferrum''and the English''iron''spring indirectly from the same Celtic root? |
47127 | On any theory of growth or development how could he("the lowest savage") have got the idea? |
47127 | On the other hand, I ask, in those ages when men were supposed to live exclusively on acorns, was not flesh meat eaten,--were there no hunters? |
47127 | Query-- Can this be"the ark or big canoe"in the Mandan celebration? |
47127 | Query-- is our word barge a corruption of baris? |
47127 | Quoi, tout entier? |
47127 | Supposing the primitive knowledge, is not pottery one of the arts which would be most likely to be lost in a migration across the seas? |
47127 | The question which I ask is, how does it account for these old notions of morality obtaining among mankind? |
47127 | The_ white flag_ is our own symbol; but what is the white flag but the development and refinement of the staff and white wool? |
47127 | This leads me to the final question, When was this custom instituted? |
47127 | Thus shone out Môt[ the luminous vault of heaven? |
47127 | To Austria? |
47127 | To England? |
47127 | To Europe? |
47127 | To despise this treasure, what is it but to despise life, and that which constitutes its connection, its unity, its light, as we have just seen?... |
47127 | To whom would they trace back more naturally than to Adam? |
47127 | Was it not this,''Is this act conformable to the law of nations, or is it not?'' |
47127 | Was it the waters''fathomless abyss?" |
47127 | Was it the whole descent of Ham, or only the posterity of Chanaan? |
47127 | We ask why did they capture wives? |
47127 | Were we not all one, and with one country, when we were first created? |
47127 | What are men if you take away the notion of right and wrong but"the flies of a summer?" |
47127 | What are the most brilliant of our chemical discoveries compared with the invention of fire and the metals? |
47127 | What became of those old traditions? |
47127 | What do we find at the commencement? |
47127 | What does the reader guess the meaning to be? |
47127 | What else will account for the different recognitions of philosophy and religion-- priests and sophists? |
47127 | What else would have prevented mankind from resorting in their difficulties to where the greatest intellect was found? |
47127 | What has been the result to France of its Italian policy? |
47127 | What if we shall find works similar of those to Yao or Yu, ascribed to the original founders in Egypt and Cashmere? |
47127 | What is it? |
47127 | What more natural than to associate the Almighty with the heaven where He dwelt? |
47127 | What, then, was the Amphictyonic Council? |
47127 | What, then, was this idea, unless the traditional idea? |
47127 | When it thundered, a Bonzi, whose head was adorned with consecrated leaves[ Query, the olive or willow?] |
47127 | When or where has monotheism been more explicitly declared? |
47127 | When the most sacred of all treaties were thus trampled upon, how would they have the others respected? |
47127 | When the news of the affair of the_ Trent_ reached England, what was the first question that every one asked? |
47127 | When will there be? |
47127 | Whence comes it that in the primitive language of every ancient people, we find words which necessarily suppose a knowledge foreign to these people? |
47127 | Where have they taken the still more singular epithet of''philomate''( liking or thirsting for blood), given to this same earth in a tragedy? |
47127 | Where, then, may we ask, is the monotheism,"the glory of the Semitic race,"to be found, if not in the time of David? |
47127 | Who again will say what ideas are traditional in different minds? |
47127 | Who taught them to call fever the"purifier,"or the"expiator"? |
47127 | Who upholds this evidence now? |
47127 | Who will say what facts are traditional in different localities? |
47127 | Why do we obey conscience or feel pain in disobeying it? |
47127 | Why more than a simple gesture of salutation? |
47127 | Why should he postpone his certain and immediate gratification to the remote advantage of others, or of distant and contingent advantage to himself? |
47127 | Why should this have been? |
47127 | Why then the indefinite lapse of time? |
47127 | Why this diversity of theories of the Creation if these people brought their traditions of the Deluge from the land of inspiration? |
47127 | Will any Englishman maintain the proposition that victory is always on the side of the big battalions? |
47127 | Will this not tend to identify their institution with that epoch? |
47127 | Will you find in European history twelve years so fruitful in pledges and perjuries?" |
47127 | Would the enchained eagle ask for a balloon to raise himself into the air? |
47127 | Yet why should force adequate to its purpose seek to cloak itself in the forms of law? |
47127 | You allow it? |
47127 | You assume that there is a uniformity in progress, but may not there be the same uniformity in the processes of degradation? |
47127 | Zelophahad had left no sons, but only daughters, and what was to become of the property? |
47127 | [ 13]"Utiles esse autem opiniones has quis neget, quum intelligat quam multa firmentur jure jurando, quantæ salutis sint f[oe]derum religiones? |
47127 | [ 142] I conclude by asking why this should be? |
47127 | [ 232] And why should it not have been so? |
47127 | [ 303] A feeling of disappointment necessarily supervened, and it was asked, if not a federation, what was it? |
47127 | [ 349]"Does the faith of treaties, the right of treaties, still exist? |
47127 | [ Query, a reference to the peacock? |
47127 | [_ Query_, What is the nature of the evidence that they have survived, and have not degenerated?] |
47127 | [_ Query_--apportioned by_ the eighth_?] |
47127 | _ Vide supra_, 197, Cabiri? |
47127 | _ sic._'':''? |
47127 | _ sic._? |
47127 | and I may add, how came it about that their ideas of justice were inseparably connected with the notions of morality? |
47127 | and are they not in Asia, as in Africa, in a state of subjugation or dependence? |
47127 | and is there not the presumption that they have lost it through degeneracy? |
47127 | and their worship of trees and worn stones worship of memorials of the Deluge? |
47127 | and why not a contrary legend founded on this surmise? |
47127 | and, also, is his instance to the point? |
47127 | are not these conflicts in primitive life always with the Turanian race? |
47127 | dit Cicéron, qui le refute; et qui font au pontife le droit des mers, le droit des eaux, ou d''autres droits semblables?" |
47127 | he replies, useful to whom? |
47127 | in order to wean his people from the corruption into which the whole Egyptian ceremonial had sunk? |
47127 | or is it simply taken, with a slight alteration by Eusebius, to the fourteenth and fifteenth dynasties( 435)? |
47127 | or the primitive Adam into the Adam feeling shame, and conscious of decay, want, and the doom of death? |
47127 | or the word[ Greek: kakos] to that which is morally good? |
47127 | p. 262 which are thus described[?] |
47127 | psalm, in the expression,"ante faciem frigoris ejus quis sustinebit"? |
47127 | quam multos divini supplicii metus a scelere revocaverit? |
47127 | quamque sancta sit societas civium inter ipsos diis immortalibus interpositis tum judicibus tum testibus?" |
47127 | says, that the question which first suggested itself to him was--"To what Sothic cycle are these 443 years or xv generations said to belong?" |
47127 | unless the symbol embodied some idea which conveyed a pledge over and above? |
47127 | what conceal''d? |
47127 | what shall I say to them? |
47127 | what shelter''d? |
47127 | why the progressive advance of the idea through successive generations of mankind? |
47127 | you believe in the Deluge?" |
7977 | And wherefore knowest thou me? |
7977 | Are these I hear Spirits, O Master? |
7977 | But in that other prison? |
7977 | Dost thou not see that Christ wishes to release thee from thy terrible abode? |
7977 | For, what way is there,says this holy Doctor,"to verify so great a paradox, without sounding reason, and destroying the infinite mercy of God? |
7977 | Have not the boldness to say:''I will go to confession and gain a plenary indulgence, and thus I shall be saved?'' 7977 If, in Thy sight, scarce e''en the perfect whiteness Of seraph- robe is pure, Shall mortals brave Thine eye''s eternal brightness? |
7977 | Is it a long drive to the church? |
7977 | Knowest thou well that thou now seest nothing with the eyes of the body? |
7977 | On what days? |
7977 | Seest thou him face to face? |
7977 | Speak from whence ye stand,He cried;"What would ye? |
7977 | Was it in a dream, or awake, that you saw and heard what struck you then? |
7977 | What dost thou? |
7977 | What is it? |
7977 | Where is your body now? |
7977 | Who is the man? 7977 Will you honor your dead?" |
7977 | With what eyes, then, dost thou see me? |
7977 | ''And how?'' |
7977 | ''But, sire'', answered the widow,''should you be killed in battle, who will then do me justice?'' |
7977 | ''Indeed? |
7977 | ''What association?'' |
7977 | ***** Again, what devotion is more justly dear to Christians than the devotion to the Sacred Humanity of Jesus? |
7977 | --''What to thee is others''good, If thou neglect thine own?'' |
7977 | --''Why, have you already rented your house?'' |
7977 | --''Will you allow me,''said I,''to give you a little advice? |
7977 | ... What purest mouth"Presses a new- made grave, and through the blades Of grass wind shaken, breathes her piteous prayer? |
7977 | ... Who will not refuse me comfort, when my own children, my very bowels, do their best to forget me? |
7977 | A sudden and unaccountable feeling of terror came over her, and she cried out:"Jesus, Mary, what can it be?" |
7977 | Ah, dost thou grudge thy poor mother a Mass, a slight alms, a sigh, or a tear? |
7977 | And even as His Divine breast knew keenest sorrow, did not a sword of sorrow pierce her soul? |
7977 | And how does any one know whether he will stay days, months, or years? |
7977 | And she said,''What will it signify to you, great emperor, that any other than yourself should do me justice? |
7977 | And she, as one Made hasty by her grief:''O, sire, if thou Dost not return?'' |
7977 | And upon what does all this rest, except on a simple, child- like trust in God''s fidelity, which is the supernatural motive of hope? |
7977 | And what did not the Saints of God''s Church for them in those days? |
7977 | And what will happen when we die? |
7977 | And why? |
7977 | And yet, who dare oppose St. Augustine, St. Thomas, St. Anselm, St. Gregory the Great? |
7977 | Another night he likewise beheld in sleep the same young man, who said to him:"Knowest thou me?" |
7977 | Are any plans abandoned? |
7977 | Are you doing nothing for them? |
7977 | As he was going away, the Pope demanded of him:"Whither goest thou, simple man? |
7977 | But have you thought sufficiently about God? |
7977 | But how long hast thou been here?" |
7977 | But how was this to be done, when he had no revenue, often not means enough for necessary expenses? |
7977 | But is it really true that the least pain in Purgatory exceeds the greatest here upon earth? |
7977 | But is this a satisfactory method to treat a grave matter of faith, coming down to us from the olden times? |
7977 | But let me ask you what is done for the_ poor living soul_? |
7977 | But then, sir, their Masses for the dead? |
7977 | But what then? |
7977 | But what we call glory, has it any claims in Thy eyes? |
7977 | But where is the word Trinity to be met with? |
7977 | But why must this be? |
7977 | Can the Sacred Humanity be honored more than by the Adorable Sacrifice of the Mass? |
7977 | Can the holy souls in Purgatory assist us by their prayers? |
7977 | Can you refrain from crying out, with the Prophet Isaias:"Who can dwell with such devouring fire, and unquenchable burnings?" |
7977 | Comfort thyself: what comfort is in me? |
7977 | Could he neglect her, if by the will of God she went to Purgatory? |
7977 | Do we fully realize the meaning of that particular article of our faith? |
7977 | Do you desire this assistance for your own soul? |
7977 | Do you forget them all the day long? |
7977 | Do you long for His glory? |
7977 | Do you remember the promise Our Lord made to St. Gertrude? |
7977 | Do you take God''s side? |
7977 | Do you think, sir, it is wrong in a man who holds the doctrine of Purgatory to pray for the souls of his deceased friends? |
7977 | Does the following passage throw any light upon it? |
7977 | Does the machinery stagger? |
7977 | Dost thou demand So strange and dread a promise from me? |
7977 | For did not I know that in the grand business of saving my soul, I was to have trusted none but myself? |
7977 | For is it not always a favor when God deems us worthy to do something for Him? |
7977 | For what have we to do on earth but faithfully to exercise charity towards each other? |
7977 | For who can sum up the infinite number of souls who have been freed out of Purgatory by this invention? |
7977 | For, what to us, either in interest or importance, is the world we see, to the world we do not see? |
7977 | God sees them; how can He, then, look on us as we desire He should? |
7977 | Has a great and irreparable calamity fallen on the churches? |
7977 | Has anything extraordinary happened to you? |
7977 | Hast thou clothed the naked? |
7977 | Hast thou consoled the orphan? |
7977 | Have I not, sir?'' |
7977 | Have you forgotten them? |
7977 | Have you forgotten them? |
7977 | Have you no pity for them now, no natural piety, no spirit of love for them? |
7977 | Have you put sin alongside of our dear Saviour''s Passion, and measured the one by the other? |
7977 | Have you tried to realize His holiness and purity in assiduous meditation? |
7977 | Have you wedded His interests? |
7977 | He added:"And now, what advantages have you, who are seated on the shore of an ocean, over those who sit by a little rivulet?" |
7977 | He gives me everything: how could I give Him everything?" |
7977 | He is our helper: how can we help Him? |
7977 | He replied:"What can I do more for one who has thus deprived herself of all things through charity, than to cover her immediately with charity?" |
7977 | How devoted was their affection; and shall we now requite it by a cruel forgetfulness? |
7977 | How does friendship serve others less public and less popular? |
7977 | How has all that been done? |
7977 | How long is it since I rented your house?'' |
7977 | How many have forsaken the shores of Europe, with the bright hope of a better future awaiting them in America? |
7977 | How many now are there whom we have known in life? |
7977 | How shall he meet that dreadful day? |
7977 | How, then, could he have heard the bell? |
7977 | How, then, stands the case with the souls in the suffering Church? |
7977 | I cried,''could I not at least efface some of these images?'' |
7977 | I said to that ascending angel:"''Whither goest thou?'' |
7977 | I say, souls of our parents and dearest friends; souls that are predestinate to eternal glory, and extremely precious in the sight of God? |
7977 | If a single hair of our head can not fall unless He will it, what have you to fear? |
7977 | If one is enough, why two? |
7977 | If such be the dispensation of God to His creatures in this world, why may it not be also after death? |
7977 | In the wide world where can the ear of man catch such harmonies? |
7977 | Is it not a greater service to place souls in heaven than to bury bodies in the earth? |
7977 | Is it not better that you should do this good action yourself than leave another to do it?'' |
7977 | Is it not to feed the hungry, to aid in their deliverance by the means which faith suggests? |
7977 | Is it not truly to clothe the naked, to procure for them a garment of light, a raiment of glory? |
7977 | Is it not truly to ransom prisoners? |
7977 | Is it not, he said, in some manner, to visit the sick, to obtain by our prayers the relief of the poor suffering souls in Purgatory? |
7977 | Is it that he loves him less than when he lavished on him the tenderest caresses? |
7977 | Is it the ivy as it creeps Against the gray church tower? |
7977 | Is it the sound of the wandering breeze, Or the rustling of the grass, Or the stooping wing of the evening birds As home to their nests they pass? |
7977 | Is it, indeed,"out of sight, out of mind"? |
7977 | Is it, perhaps, to the mercy of God? |
7977 | Is the policy affected? |
7977 | Is there a real divorce between you and the world, which you know is God''s enemy? |
7977 | Is there not in all this a semblance of belief in our doctrine of Purgatory? |
7977 | It is said that it is in the time of affliction that we know our true friends; but what affliction could be compared to ours? |
7977 | Like many others, however, he had seen bad days; and to the commonplace question,''How goes business?'' |
7977 | Must there not, in the very nature of Christ''s system, be a middle state, wherein souls can be purged from their lesser sins? |
7977 | No more than this? |
7977 | Now does this disappointment await the souls in Purgatory upon their deliverance? |
7977 | Now, I ask, when could those Eastern sects have commenced to adopt the Catholic practice of praying for the dead? |
7977 | Now, where is there more necessity, or more obligation, than to run to the fire, and to help those that lie there, and are not able to get out? |
7977 | Outside the Church who believes in the Communion of Saints?--who rejoices in the glory of the glorified, or invokes their intercession with God? |
7977 | Please tell me, then, what induces you to give so handsome a sum every year, without being asked?'' |
7977 | Prayer? |
7977 | Saw you ever a Roman Pontiff lying in state? |
7977 | Shall man its search endure? |
7977 | Shall our eyes gaze on and on, and feast themselves on that sight for all eternity? |
7977 | Shall we see it forever? |
7977 | Shall you be obliged to change them before we get to our proposed stopping- place?'' |
7977 | She asks,"What has he done for God and for man?" |
7977 | She kept asking herself,"How could I help God? |
7977 | She replied:"How many are they?" |
7977 | Should he return home? |
7977 | Some say, like Lessing in his"Treatise on Theology,""What hinders us from admitting a Purgatory? |
7977 | Such- a- one?'' |
7977 | Suppose, then, a man speak an idle word, and die suddenly, before he has time to repent and confess his sin, will he be lost everlastingly? |
7977 | Tell me, if you please, what seems to cause you so much joy?'' |
7977 | The Angel replied:"How many years? |
7977 | The Bishop said to him:"You make mementoes now and then, for friends of yours that are dead-- do you not?" |
7977 | The day of wrath, that dreadful day, When heaven and earth shall pass away, What power shall be the sinner''s stay? |
7977 | The doors were closed-- he was still and fair, What sound moved up the aisles? |
7977 | The idolatry of the Mass? |
7977 | The religious, though surprised and trembling, recognized distinctly the voice of Sister Teresa; she plucked up courage and asked her"Why?" |
7977 | Then Gertrude said to Our Lord:"Is this soul now entirely freed from its sufferings?" |
7977 | Thereupon the poor soul asked the angel:"How many years am I now here in these terrible flames?" |
7977 | They were torn, mangled, dismembered, flayed alive, racked, broiled, burnt-- and tell me, was not this to live in a kind of hell? |
7977 | Thy truth, thy trust, thy chivalry; As thine? |
7977 | Till earliest morn Glimmered through sleet that twain wept on, prayed on:-- Was it the rising sun that lit at last The fair face upward lifted? |
7977 | To whom is it they should have recourse? |
7977 | WHEN WILL THEY LEARN ITS SECRET? |
7977 | Was ever contrast so wide or suggestive? |
7977 | Was not Jesus the Man of Sorrows? |
7977 | We all of us have often had in our hand Damian''s little piece of money, but have we known how to make a treasure of it? |
7977 | We have inherited from them the same faith in all its integrity, and how does our_ practice_ correspond with it? |
7977 | We see in Scripture that Dives still retained an anxious concern about his brethren? |
7977 | What are they, those abodes that hold thee now? |
7977 | What are we doing for that army of holy captives who can not leave their prison till the uttermost farthing be paid? |
7977 | What assurance hast thou of that which thou hast obtained?" |
7977 | What consolation does the poor suffering soul find in the superb coffin, in the splendid funeral? |
7977 | What do you, think, sir, of Purgatory, as believed by the Roman Catholics? |
7977 | What hand is that which our Lord wants us to lay upon His dead children? |
7977 | What happens? |
7977 | What has to be done?'' |
7977 | What if to fault of ours those pains be due, To ill example shown, or lack of counsel true? |
7977 | What if we should behold the face of Divinest Majesty gaze upon us even for one moment in tenderness? |
7977 | What if we should indeed be saved, we who have so trembled and feared, and known not whether we were worthy of love or hatred? |
7977 | What is it? |
7977 | What pleasure does the soul derive from the costly marble monument, from all the honors that are so freely lavished on the body? |
7977 | What was it he held in his hand?" |
7977 | What? |
7977 | When shall we learn? |
7977 | When will they Learn its Secret? |
7977 | Where are many other terms, held most sacred and important in the Christian religion? |
7977 | Where can you find an object of more compassion, than where there is the greatest misery in the world? |
7977 | Where can you have more merit, than to have a hand in raising up Saints and servants of God? |
7977 | Where have you more assurance than where you are sure to lose nothing? |
7977 | Where is the word_ Incarnation_ to be read in Scripture? |
7977 | Where is there seen more of God''s glory, than to send new Saints into heaven to praise God eternally? |
7977 | Where is your escort? |
7977 | Where shall I hide my forehead and my eyes? |
7977 | Where wilt thou lead me? |
7977 | Whether it be better to pray for a few at once, or for many, or for all the souls together, and for what souls in particular? |
7977 | Who believes in that state of probation whereby the earth- stains are washed from the souls of men? |
7977 | Who can be in a poorer or more pitiful condition than those who are buried in fire? |
7977 | Who can remember the kind faces which have gone out of our families and not shed tears at their absence? |
7977 | Who can so minister to the inherent, perhaps barbaric remnant, love for display? |
7977 | Who can tell, who can understand, who can even faintly guess, what will be the anguish of longing which shall consume our very being? |
7977 | Who else can have such processions and vestments and music? |
7977 | Who has compassion on"the spirits who are in prison?" |
7977 | Who has not wavered in the darksome paths into which the straight road so often deviates? |
7977 | Who must bury us with the wonted ceremonies of the Church when we are dead? |
7977 | Who must give us absolution for our sins? |
7977 | Who shall refund to Him that innocent blood He shed for us? |
7977 | Who shall repay Him the price with which He bought us, that so he may take us away from Him? |
7977 | Who will remember thee when thou art dead? |
7977 | Who will watch o''er the dead young priest, People and priests and all? |
7977 | Who would not bear thy load, Where every throb expels a stain, And draws us nearer GOD? |
7977 | Why does love, infinite, tender love, inflict such intense pain? |
7977 | Why does the parent turn away from his child, and forbid him his presence for a time? |
7977 | Why had they only taught me,"Believe, and you shall be saved?" |
7977 | Why? |
7977 | Will St. Raphael, who was so faithful to Tobias, be less faithful to his clients there? |
7977 | Will aggression cease? |
7977 | Will you allow me to place this 500 francs at your disposal, and to recommend my intentions to your prayers?" |
7977 | Will you say it is because the body is the medium of suffering in this life? |
7977 | You think, then, that there are Protestants who admit Purgatory and others who deny it? |
7977 | [ Footnote 1: Cod Diplom( double S?) |
7977 | and did He not constitute Mary the Mother of suffering and sorrowing humanity? |
7977 | and if two are sufficient, why three?... |
7977 | and who will pray for thee? |
7977 | and who will take care to pray for our souls?" |
7977 | art thou far from me? |
7977 | did I not know that with the sight of their friends, at their departure, men used to lose all the memory and friendship they had for them?.... |
7977 | did that person not come back, then?'' |
7977 | does not your heart tremble, when you hear that the poor souls in Purgatory are tormented with the same, or the like flames to those of the damned? |
7977 | dost thou hear me? |
7977 | how can we but remember The loved and lost? |
7977 | how can you suffer such sharp and biting cold?" |
7977 | if you leave us so, what will become of us? |
7977 | is it really thou, dear son? |
7977 | my Lord Arthur, whither shall I go? |
7977 | or when the blessed Father Clavers''soul was for the first time moved by a casual mention, perhaps, of the sufferings of the negro race? |
7977 | what sound is that which breaks The stillness of the hour? |
7977 | your little share? |
7977 | your own little share?'' |
59991 | And what may he be called? |
59991 | And when they were come to Capharnaum, they that received the didrachmas came to Peter, and said to him: Doth not your Master pay the didrachma? 59991 Are we not children of Abraham?" |
59991 | Are you determined not to commit this sin again? |
59991 | But rather who are you? |
59991 | Do you not see,said he,"that these rich and powerful persons are in possession of a wonderful elixir? |
59991 | Does he? |
59991 | My people, what have I done unto thee, or in what have I grieved thee? 59991 Simon Peter, lovest thou Me more than these?" |
59991 | Then these poor, misguided souls are only grasping at shadows of happiness, and losing the reality in the meanwhile? |
59991 | Who are you that takes the place of Brother John? |
59991 | Why, do n''t you know,said he,"I''m the mighty hard case?" |
59991 | Again:"Know ye not that the unjust shall not possess the kingdom of God? |
59991 | Alone with what? |
59991 | Am I not right in saying that the dram- seller sins against justice? |
59991 | Am I worthy of the name? |
59991 | Am I, this moment, in a state of salvation or of damnation? |
59991 | And I wish to know if a man must remain a thief because he has been brought up a thief, and never learned an honest trade? |
59991 | And if you salute your brethren only, what do you more? |
59991 | And is not the referring of any or all of the states of our being to Him an act of religion? |
59991 | And tell me, how now? |
59991 | And what are they? |
59991 | And what can better represent repentance than the fine dust of which they are composed? |
59991 | And what is signified by myrrh? |
59991 | And what is this fountain? |
59991 | And when he was come into the house, Jesus prevented him, saying: What is thy opinion, Simon? |
59991 | And who are some of the other false prophets? |
59991 | And who has done all this? |
59991 | And why do men prize these beautiful scenes? |
59991 | And why so? |
59991 | And yet, what do we see? |
59991 | And, before the priest pours the sanctifying water on the brow of the person, he says,"Dost thou renounce Satan and all his works and all his pomps?" |
59991 | And, first, what is the pure gold which is acceptable to our God and Creator? |
59991 | Answer me, dram- shop, where is the girl gone? |
59991 | Are not innumerable graces and virtues waiting for us, ready to be given, if we will only take the trouble to ask for them? |
59991 | Are the children of darkness always to be wiser than the children of light? |
59991 | Are you a victim to human respect? |
59991 | Are you all ready for the last preparations? |
59991 | Are you at peace with God and men? |
59991 | Are you hard- hearted, stubborn, and resentful, easy to take offence? |
59991 | Are you ignorant of the truths of faith, or do they seem difficult to you and beyond your grasp? |
59991 | Are you ignorant of the ways of God''s providence? |
59991 | Are you in ignorance of what is best for you here and hereafter? |
59991 | Are you moved with that deep emotion such a memory should awaken? |
59991 | Are you poor? |
59991 | Are you proud? |
59991 | Are you timid and shamefaced in your service to God? |
59991 | Are you, then, half- minded to go back to your old sins? |
59991 | Art thou to us above all price? |
59991 | Ask not with Pilate,"What is truth? |
59991 | At any moment His eye may fall upon us, and we may hear the words,"Friend, why camest thou in hither with out having on a wedding garment?" |
59991 | At certain seasons they cross the seas, endure fatigue, spend a great deal of time and money-- and what for? |
59991 | At last the disciples and brethren who were present, getting tired of always hearing the same thing, said: Master, why do you always repeat this? |
59991 | But did God absolve him? |
59991 | But how long did you remember it to any profit to yourself or praise to God? |
59991 | But how many objections are raised against this plain and heavenly doctrine? |
59991 | But what are the motives for all this self- denial? |
59991 | But what did St. John the Baptist say? |
59991 | But what good will all this do if we have not the wedding garment on? |
59991 | But why are the clergy especially fitted to exercise this office of prophet or teacher? |
59991 | But why this desire? |
59991 | Can I ask you to quit it? |
59991 | Can we not live for it? |
59991 | Could there be a more outrageous insult? |
59991 | Did He who has said,"Son, give me thy heart,"ask for a corrupt and treacherous heart? |
59991 | Did He who made the human heart make it ungrateful? |
59991 | Did He who so loves us make those He loves selfish? |
59991 | Did I not say well, my brethren, that the mystery of the Holy Trinity is an illumination of the mystery of creation? |
59991 | Did he put his house in order? |
59991 | Did the ruins of your land and the graves of your ancestors awaken in your bosoms no longer any feelings of attachment and veneration? |
59991 | Did your native hills lose their charms for you? |
59991 | Do not also the heathen the same? |
59991 | Do not even the publicans the same? |
59991 | Do the sins and offences of others destroy your peace of mind, and dry up within you the fountains of mercy and pity for sinners? |
59991 | Do they consider their present state a true one in all respects-- true before their conscience, and without doubt before their intelligence? |
59991 | Do they not appear occasionally in the tribunal of penance? |
59991 | Do they not go to Mass? |
59991 | Do they regard their religion as a sure religion? |
59991 | Do they want to get back the lost love of God? |
59991 | Do we follow Christ when we are covetous and hard hearted? |
59991 | Do we follow Christ when we go to places of drunkenness and debauchery? |
59991 | Do we follow Christ when we refuse to forgive our enemies? |
59991 | Do we prize thee, O divine gift, as these have done? |
59991 | Do you hope for heaven? |
59991 | Do you know anything of a husband''s affection or of a father''s love? |
59991 | Do you love your own immortal soul? |
59991 | Do you love your religion? |
59991 | Do you not hear a righteous God, your judge, demanding in tones of wrath,"Dram- shop, where are my children? |
59991 | Do you not know that to suffer for any one is to give a better proof of love than to confer favors and benefits? |
59991 | Do you not remember? |
59991 | Do you remember all that? |
59991 | Do you remember when Sunday morning comes, and the priest is ascending the altar, that you are a Catholic, and where a Catholic should be found then? |
59991 | Do you see in him Jesus Christ? |
59991 | Do you tremble no more when you hear of justice, of chastity, and of the judgment to come? |
59991 | Do you wish you could feel more like God, kind and long- suffering, and less like Satan, watching for the falls of others, and exulting over them? |
59991 | Does God not feel that heartless coldness and neglect of theirs? |
59991 | Does He say to you as He said to that lost disciple,"Friend, dost thou betray the Son of Man with a kiss?" |
59991 | Does he receive it in as good dispositions as would make it a worthy Communion if he were well, and had received it in the church at the altar? |
59991 | Does he receive it worthily? |
59991 | Does it seem to us, as it is, a great thing-- a precious gift? |
59991 | Does the demon of intemperance, of anger, or of lust creep stealthily into your breast, and leave foul traces of his presence there? |
59991 | For can anything be more dismal, more barren, more pointless, than a Christianity in which the Blessed Sacrament and the Blessed Virgin have no place? |
59991 | For if you love those that love you, what reward shall you have? |
59991 | For it were better for thee to enter lame and blind into life everlasting, than, having two hands or two eyes, to be cast into hell- fire"? |
59991 | For what could we do so real and true as this? |
59991 | For what happens? |
59991 | Had he time to do it? |
59991 | Had we not all in having Him? |
59991 | Hark to that outburst of generous love from his undaunted heart--"Who, then, shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
59991 | Has not God provided the Holy Sacrament of Penance, where, with little trouble, the soul can be washed and cleansed from all its defilements? |
59991 | Have I any real, well- grounded hope of salvation? |
59991 | Have I considered this matter, and looked it steadily in the face? |
59991 | Have I the principle, the fixed, well- grounded principle, which ought to govern all the actions of a Christian? |
59991 | Have they now that truth which shall stand the trial at the coming of Jesus Christ? |
59991 | Have they the true faith? |
59991 | Have they undertaken to deny themselves anything they had a strong desire for, in order not to commit mortal sin? |
59991 | Have you a human heart yet left beating in your bosom? |
59991 | Have you any manly pride left? |
59991 | Have you no affection left for those parents, those brothers and sisters and kindred, left in the old home? |
59991 | Have you not, after all, given up the devil and his works? |
59991 | Have you really come back to make up with Him, or have you come-- O horrible thought!--only like Judas to betray Him? |
59991 | Have you received the Easter Communion? |
59991 | He is deeper than hell, and how wilt thou know?" |
59991 | He is higher than heaven, and what wilt thou do? |
59991 | Here it might become me to enumerate some of these gifts, but where would I begin, or where could I end? |
59991 | How can God give Himself to the man who is absorbed in money- making and heaping up possessions? |
59991 | How could we realize in a better way the simplest and at the same time the most sublime of all truths? |
59991 | How do your neighbors speak of you? |
59991 | How does the sight of it affect you? |
59991 | How is that? |
59991 | How shall I conduct myself and order my life, so as constantly to preserve and increase it? |
59991 | I am not forcing upon your notice a subject out of place at this joyous season, am I? |
59991 | If it is not yours also, is it proper to call you by His name, Christians? |
59991 | Is he signed and consecrated to God, and are his senses purified, and his soul strengthened? |
59991 | Is it enough to remember that? |
59991 | Is it hard for you to think of God? |
59991 | Is it in sorrow for their sins? |
59991 | Is it not so? |
59991 | Is it pride and love of fame, or selfishness? |
59991 | Is she not our pride, our glory, our comfort? |
59991 | Is that the reason, I wonder, why there are no new toys and presents now at Christmas or at Easter, as in the days gone by? |
59991 | Is the majesty, the power, the holiness of that God to whom you belong forgotten? |
59991 | Is there anything that we are, or have, or can be that is not of God? |
59991 | Is your confession made for this year? |
59991 | Is your life to- day such as you would like it to be, if to- morrow you are to die? |
59991 | It is a fearful thought to be in that Presence, for it must compel us to ask ourselves-- Are we indeed the image and likeness of the Living God? |
59991 | It is the development of the response to the question that every Catholic child can answer-- Why did God create you? |
59991 | It is the question of the Psalmist,"Who is wise, and will keep these things in mind, and will understand the mercies of the Lord?" |
59991 | It is to be saved from death; it is to be cured of their diseases; and what does it all amount to, but that they are trying to make a truce with God? |
59991 | Let each one ask himself this question: Do I come up to the standard? |
59991 | Let us ask ourselves whence does God receive the life of His Divine Being? |
59991 | No word of thanks at your Communion-- not a grateful thought in your heart? |
59991 | Now, we may ask what is the reason the Lord showed this marked preference and especial affection for St. John above the other Apostles? |
59991 | Now, whence do these objections arise? |
59991 | Of what value are your prayers it you lead such a life? |
59991 | Of whom do the kings of the earth take tribute or custom? |
59991 | Or, are you one who dares do great things for the God who has done so much for you? |
59991 | Shall all we hold sacred be caricatured, calumniated, and we sit with folded arms in silence? |
59991 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or persecution, or the sword? |
59991 | Shall we not turn their own weapons against them? |
59991 | Should you not rather be called, according to His way of naming, heathens and publicans? |
59991 | St. John tells us in his epistle:"How can we love God whom we have not seen, when we love not our neighbor whom we have seen?" |
59991 | Tell me, can you lift your heart to Him to- day, and say in truth-- My God, Thou knowest that I have not forgotten Thee? |
59991 | That it should simply distinguish us from those who do not possess it, and to lie idle and fruitless in our soul? |
59991 | The Holy Sacrament of the altar, where the soul is nourished, and strengthened, and adorned by feeding on the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ? |
59991 | The boy, his eldest boy, that was to be sent to college, was sent up last week to prison for shoplifting; and the girl-- where is she gone? |
59991 | The question is not-- Am I growing in the field of the Church? |
59991 | The servants asked their lord,"Shall we not go out and pull up the tares?" |
59991 | Then comes the natural thought What shall I do to acquire this treasure? |
59991 | Then shall the just answer: Lord, when did we see Thee hungry, and fed Thee; thirsty, and gave Thee drink? |
59991 | Then why is it that we give way under our sufferings, our daily trials and crosses? |
59991 | They come to pray to God for forgiveness of their sins; and what do they say? |
59991 | They pray, it is true, but how? |
59991 | This promise is recorded in the sixteenth chapter of St. Matthew''s Gospel:{ 202}"Jesus saith to them: But whom do you say that I am? |
59991 | To what end has he blessed us with the gift of faith? |
59991 | To whom does the Holy Ghost come in His fulness? |
59991 | Was Jesus, the Lamb of God, slain for our sins, to be eaten, and with unleavened bread? |
59991 | Was he in a fit state to do it? |
59991 | Was it merely because we had done so in past years? |
59991 | Was it when He went about doing good, working miracles, preaching His divine doctrine? |
59991 | We are cunning enough in the ways of the world, but why so slow to understand the ways of God? |
59991 | Well, and what is the business of the clergy? |
59991 | What are the sins of the dram- seller? |
59991 | What did He say? |
59991 | What do I mean by this sacrifice? |
59991 | What does this signify? |
59991 | What explains this cold forgetfulness, this heartless indifference, that steals over us so soon? |
59991 | What good to have had the sacraments in life, or even at the hour of death, if we have not on the wedding garment? |
59991 | What good will it do us to have gone to the church and heard the sermons, if we have not on the wedding garment? |
59991 | What is He as cause, and what is this divine life of His being which is the effect of that cause? |
59991 | What is Truth? |
59991 | What is his story? |
59991 | What is it that stimulates them in their pursuits? |
59991 | What is it? |
59991 | What is one to do? |
59991 | What is the consequence? |
59991 | What is the reason of a central government, with a president at its head, in Washington? |
59991 | What is the reason, my dear brethren, that you are all here to- night? |
59991 | What is the secret of this apparent contradiction? |
59991 | What is the story of such people in the confessional? |
59991 | What is this wedding garment? |
59991 | What of your present remembrance? |
59991 | What other Comforter is there in heaven to give that will be better than He? |
59991 | What other Comforter of our souls would we ask or could we need than Him? |
59991 | What other light and grace could we desire both to detect and shun all evil, and to delight in what is pure and true? |
59991 | What pays them for all their trouble? |
59991 | What shall I say? |
59991 | What shall the presence of the All- Holy be unable to do? |
59991 | What sustains these men of science? |
59991 | What was all that for? |
59991 | What, dear brethren, is the end and object for which we live in this world? |
59991 | What, then, shall we do to spend Lent well? |
59991 | When I read the Gospel for to- day, which describes the raising of the widow''s son to life, I ask myself the question-- Did he die prepared? |
59991 | When his soul had departed, could his widowed mother console herself with the thought-- He lived a good life, and he died a good death? |
59991 | When the Father in His love sent Him to us, did he not send all He could give? |
59991 | When was Jesus Christ the Master of the world? |
59991 | When will He come around? |
59991 | Where is the house and lot gone to? |
59991 | Where was it that He drew all things to Himself by the cords of Adam and the bands of love? |
59991 | Who are the false prophets we have the most need to be warned against at this present time? |
59991 | Who are the people of God? |
59991 | Who does not see here that pre- eminence of St. Peter over his colleagues which is expressed by the title, Prince of the Apostles? |
59991 | Who is the author of His life? |
59991 | Who is this Divine Comforter? |
59991 | Why all these studies-- why so much time, energy, patience, and devotion to the sciences? |
59991 | Why are our souls enlarged and raised above the senses in listening to strains of music composed by a Palestrina or a Beethoven or a Mozart? |
59991 | Why did we do so? |
59991 | Why do men love poetry, music, architecture, painting, and sculpture? |
59991 | Why do people despair of ever being happy? |
59991 | Why do so many grow faint- hearted, and think that there is no rest, no peace, for them? |
59991 | Why do you love vanity, and seek after lying?" |
59991 | Why does He not reveal Himself? |
59991 | Why does he not go to work? |
59991 | Why forever trying to lie to ourselves, and leave Him out of account? |
59991 | Why has the faith been stolen from the nations? |
59991 | Why have the verses of a Homer, a Dante, a Shakespeare, been the delight of ages? |
59991 | Why is it to be esteemed above liberty, the possession of wealth, more than friends, parents, the whole world, and even more than life itself? |
59991 | Why is she holy? |
59991 | Why not? |
59991 | Why should they interfere with private or family affairs? |
59991 | Why should they meddle with questions of politics or government? |
59991 | Why should they not? |
59991 | Why should they say anything about a man''s business, or try to interfere with his personal liberty to do this or that? |
59991 | Why should this be repeated all over the world? |
59991 | Why this sacrifice of the body and blood of Jesus Christ? |
59991 | Why was St. Peter willing to be bound and imprisoned for the faith of Christ? |
59991 | Why, then, have you renounced all that men hold so dear? |
59991 | Why? |
59991 | With holy Job, he exclaims:"If we have received good things at the hand of God, why should we not receive evil?" |
59991 | With how much devotion does he receive the Holy Viaticum and the Extreme Unction? |
59991 | Would you like to hear the approval of your Divine Lord and Master on the Last Great Day of Account? |
59991 | Yes; but do you not see that it is just in the Blessed Sacrament that He brings that proof home to us? |
59991 | Yes; but what avails such a heartless remembrance as yours has been? |
59991 | [ Footnote 19] Where is your Christian faith and trust in God? |
59991 | [ Footnote 29] To whom, then? |
59991 | [ Footnote 61] In Job it is asked,"Peradventure thou wilt comprehend the steps of God, and find out the Almighty perfectly? |
59991 | and when did we see Thee a stranger, and took Thee in? |
59991 | because it is a Catholic custom? |
59991 | because others did so, and we were expected to do the same? |
59991 | but-- Am I the wheat? |
59991 | how is this? |
59991 | how long will ye be dull of heart? |
59991 | made no life- preparation of this solemn account, and it is too late now? |
59991 | of their children or of strangers? |
59991 | or naked, and covered Thee? |
59991 | or the tares, fit only for the burning? |
59991 | or when did we ever see Thee sick or in prison, and visit Thee? |
59991 | that''s the way you manage it, is it?" |
59991 | what is truth?" |
59991 | who is proud of the gifts of God? |
59991 | why have you stayed so long away?" |
59991 | why is it? |
59991 | { 101} Who is there that can approach here without crying out with the Psalmist,"What shall I render to the Lord for all that He has rendered to me? |
59991 | { 110} But who among men belong thus entirely to God? |
59991 | { 115} Does your heart burn to offer Him a glorious and complete sacrifice, and yet you can not summon up the courage to accomplish it? |
59991 | { 167} And what are we but cold and unsympathizing, selfish and thankless, toward our best Friend? |
59991 | { 16} Would we like to enter upon a new year wholly ignorant of the past one? |
59991 | { 178} The mind of man can not long blind its sight to the illumination of the truth; but who shall subdue and win the hardened heart? |
59991 | { 184} What is it that gives to faith its priceless value? |
59991 | { 190} Most of you, my dear brethren, are from the old country, and have come to this strange land-- and why? |
59991 | { 277} Do you wish to escape such a lamentable end? |
59991 | { 289} Could anything be more wanton and impudent than such conduct? |
59991 | { 29} I am not asking too much, my brethren, am I? |
59991 | { 301} Why are you sick, you who have no grievous crimes to expiate-- you whose whole heart has belonged to God this many a day? |
59991 | { 316}"Scandals must needs come,"said our Saviour; but is it, therefore, necessary for us to think about them and brood over them? |
59991 | { 323} Now, what was the characteristic virtue of this great Apostle, which rendered him so like to Christ and so dear to Him? |
59991 | { 38} How can we love God if we be absorbed in a love of good eating and drinking? |
59991 | { 67} What kind of Christians are we? |
59991 | { 82} Where is the furniture gone to? |
59991 | { 87} Do you love your good name as a citizen? |
59991 | { 93} What was that a type of? |
59991 | { 96} Is it not the moment of supreme happiness, and of such happiness that nothing else is like it in the world? |
26732 | A cat? |
26732 | A little car? 26732 Afraid of me, eh? |
26732 | And will you jolly Mr. Kloh for me? 26732 And-- now that we''re just the family here together-- how goes the financial side? |
26732 | Are you Miss Boltwood? |
26732 | Are you going to let me in on the secret? |
26732 | Are you thinking hard? 26732 Aw, how d''you get that way? |
26732 | But get who? |
26732 | But how did---- Who is this extraordinary Milt Daggett? |
26732 | But suppose he''d had a revolver himself? |
26732 | But what''d you do? |
26732 | But what? 26732 But why does the town stand either of them? |
26732 | But wo n''t Adolph dig it out again? |
26732 | But you had a gun-- a revolver-- didn''t you, lad? |
26732 | But you''ll make him come? |
26732 | Come from New York, eh? 26732 Could n''t you heat some?" |
26732 | Dare? 26732 Dead? |
26732 | Desert her? 26732 Did I-- did I wash my paws and sit up and beg?" |
26732 | Do n''t you find business exciting? 26732 Do n''t you mind?" |
26732 | Do n''t you see that carpet? 26732 Do n''t you suppose we might pay him?" |
26732 | Do n''t you think Georgie is wonderful? |
26732 | Do n''t you think you better? |
26732 | Do n''t you think you''d better get somebody to help us? |
26732 | Do n''t you want me think you''re hero? |
26732 | Do we have to get back soon? |
26732 | Do you get up there much now? |
26732 | Do you like to camp with me? |
26732 | Do you need anything, with your office and your club? |
26732 | Do you suppose for one second I''d give up my feeling of free air? 26732 Do you suppose it''s dangerous?" |
26732 | Do you want to go back to Brooklyn Gilsonses? |
26732 | Do you? 26732 Drive through with the hotels like this? |
26732 | Exciting? |
26732 | Expensive car? |
26732 | Father,she exclaimed,"do you realize that this lad did n''t tell us he was going to have the hole filled? |
26732 | Friends there, no doubt? |
26732 | Gee, did I touch you, girlie? 26732 Glad to see me?" |
26732 | Going far? |
26732 | Going to stay there long? |
26732 | Good heavens, Claire, you are n''t taking us to see Aunt Hatty, are you? |
26732 | Got an oil can? |
26732 | Got any folks there? |
26732 | Have to? 26732 Have you had any dinner?" |
26732 | He-- cut you? 26732 Heh? |
26732 | Hello? 26732 Hhhhhhhhow did you get here?" |
26732 | Him? 26732 Honest, will you?" |
26732 | Honest? 26732 Honest? |
26732 | Honest? 26732 Honestly? |
26732 | Honestly? 26732 Honestly? |
26732 | How about a nice Tuxedo? |
26732 | How could he get away with a dress- suit? 26732 How did she ever fix it like that?" |
26732 | How did you know we needed you? |
26732 | How do you like my new bug, Claire? 26732 How much is Adolph charging you?" |
26732 | I beg pardon? |
26732 | I do n''t quite follow you, dolly, but---- Where was I? 26732 I do n''t think I quite understand----"Mr. Boltwood interposed,"Are the ham and eggs ready?" |
26732 | I know but-- what can we do? |
26732 | I wonder if I may have some hot water for my father? 26732 I wonder what lies beyond the top of this climb?" |
26732 | I''m immensely grateful to you, but-- do you know much about motors? 26732 If you will wait in there?" |
26732 | In-- Alaska? |
26732 | Is it because you resent the decent things I have managed to do? |
26732 | Is she? |
26732 | Jess who? |
26732 | Like you to? 26732 M- mine?" |
26732 | May n''t I gi-- lend you these two that I happen to have along? 26732 Me? |
26732 | Me? 26732 Me? |
26732 | Me? |
26732 | Merely because I am lighter of spirits than this lugubrious old world? 26732 Miss Boltwood?" |
26732 | More trouble? |
26732 | Mr. G- g- geoffrey Saxton? |
26732 | Mrs. Barmberry, wo n''t you cook some eggs or steak or something for these boys? |
26732 | My ticket? 26732 Night of sadness and regrets? |
26732 | No, but----"Dear, ca n''t we be crazy once, while we''re youngsters? |
26732 | No, he is n''t that---- He---- Why did you lead spades? |
26732 | No, you wo n''t, sweetheart,''cause why? 26732 Not exactly but---- Say, did you study rhetoric in Normal School? |
26732 | Now will you be ready to put on all your power as I begin to pull? |
26732 | Now!? |
26732 | Oh now, with your fine old doctor father? 26732 Oh, really? |
26732 | Oh-- no-- well----"You wanted same? |
26732 | Our waitress? 26732 Pack a cannon, do n''t you?" |
26732 | Per each? 26732 Quite a ways from home, are n''t you?" |
26732 | Really? 26732 Really? |
26732 | Safe to go out alone? |
26732 | Say, lady, how''s the chance for borrowin''a couple of dollars? 26732 Scared?" |
26732 | Schoenstrom? |
26732 | Small? 26732 So nice of you-- just a little way, perhaps?" |
26732 | So you knew Mr. Daggett at home? 26732 Speaking of which, did you know that I have a tiny bit of money-- it''s about five thousand dollars-- of my own?" |
26732 | Stuck? |
26732 | That''s-- that''s flattering, but---- Do you always make up your mind as quickly as this? |
26732 | That? 26732 Then you do n''t really like adventuring?" |
26732 | Though I s''pose I''d have to eat-- what is it?--pickled fish? 26732 Toast? |
26732 | Trip do him good? |
26732 | Try Gopher Prairie maybe? |
26732 | Uh, enjoying Seattle? |
26732 | Uh, w- when are we going to see you? 26732 Uh, where----?" |
26732 | Uh, you said-- didn''t Miss Boltwood tell me that you are going to Seattle, too? |
26732 | Uh? |
26732 | Usually? 26732 W- well, w- will you g- get''em for me?" |
26732 | W- who''s there? |
26732 | Well, I didn''t----"Make Glendive tonight? |
26732 | Well, ca n''t you make it? |
26732 | Well, then, will you drive my car in? 26732 Well?" |
26732 | What are they? |
26732 | What are we going to do? |
26732 | What can I do? |
26732 | What do you know about Rodin? |
26732 | What do you know about them? |
26732 | What is her name? |
26732 | What is it? 26732 What kind of a car do you call that, Milt?" |
26732 | What''s been eatin''you lately? |
26732 | What''s his line? 26732 What''s his line?" |
26732 | What''s the idea? 26732 When did he tell you that? |
26732 | Where do you live? |
26732 | Where do you want the car? |
26732 | Where was that? |
26732 | Where you folks think you''re going? |
26732 | Which one was---- Oh, the boy you met on the road? 26732 Who you calling destitute? |
26732 | Why not? 26732 Why should n''t maids be like countesses? |
26732 | Why the extra dollar-- or extra two dollars? |
26732 | Why, how do you mean? |
26732 | Why, lovesoul, d''you suppose I''d be talking up as brash as this to a bid, stwong man like oo if I did n''t have a gun handy? |
26732 | Why, uh----"What I mean---- I mean, how did you happen to want to go there, with a garage at home? 26732 Why----""''Fraid of getting held up?" |
26732 | Will you marry me, tomorrow? |
26732 | Wo n''t you come back and meet my father? 26732 Wo n''t you have a little walk?" |
26732 | Would you like to see grandfather''s daguerreotype? |
26732 | Would you mind shoving on that side, just a little bit? |
26732 | Wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwhy where the heck did you come from? |
26732 | Yes, she''s-- she''s---- What do you hear from your father? |
26732 | Yes? |
26732 | Yes? |
26732 | You come from the East, do n''t you? |
26732 | You mean it? |
26732 | You the young lady that got stuck in that hole by Adolph Zolzac''s? |
26732 | You''re engaged? |
26732 | You''re going out to Seattle? 26732 You''re looking----""You''re so----""Nice trip? |
26732 | _ Ja?_from within. |
26732 | _ Knew_ him? 26732 ''Bout a mile away I''d make it, would n''t you? 26732 ''Cause what''ll I do to you afterwards? |
26732 | ''Member when I suggested we all chip in on a dynamo with a gas engine and have electric lights? |
26732 | ''Phone?" |
26732 | ***** In the clamminess of his room, when the enchantment was gone, he said gravely:"How much longer can I keep this up? |
26732 | A real woman, or one of these flirts, that love to tease a man because he''s foolish enough to be honestly in love?" |
26732 | A shirt- sleeved man, all covered with mustache and calm, sat by the table, and he kept right on sitting as he inquired:"Vell?" |
26732 | A small Zulu in blue tights and brass buttons glared at Milt; and a large, soft, suave, insulting young man demanded,"Yes, sir?" |
26732 | A straggly little girl came up from the candy- shop below his room, demanding,"Say, are you Mr. Daggett? |
26732 | Across the road, on the Barmberry porch, she could hear her father saying"Ah?" |
26732 | Again Milt snapped, and again the tailor suffered and died, and to a doubting heathen world maintained the true gospel of"What do you vannnnt? |
26732 | Ai n''t I met you some place in Montana?" |
26732 | All right?" |
26732 | Always wished I were a mechanical or civil engineer so----""Then why do n''t you become one? |
26732 | An''thing else I can do for you?" |
26732 | And Gene said,"Well, why_ did n''t_ you?" |
26732 | And I say, how would an omelet be with a butter sauce over it?" |
26732 | And I''ll come to Brooklyn with shoulder- straps and bells on and---- Will you be waiting?" |
26732 | And Milt''s cheerful,"How''s the boy?" |
26732 | And did you see the contemptuous look he gave me when I was so eccentric as to order toast? |
26732 | And if drivers ca n''t help each other, who can?" |
26732 | And incidentally, what the deuce am I going to do in Seattle if I do get there?" |
26732 | And who appointed these people to a fixed social position? |
26732 | And would n''t everybody be able to tell from his foolish look that he did n''t belong in one?" |
26732 | And,"But I wonder if I am aphoristic and subtle? |
26732 | And---- Uh---- Might n''t we drive on a little farther, perhaps? |
26732 | And: Which is worse, not to tip when a tip has been expected; or to tip, when the tip is an insult? |
26732 | Anxiously she asked,"Both rooms are with bath?" |
26732 | Are n''t you glad he''s here to help us, instead of somebody like Jeff Saxton?" |
26732 | Are you ashamed of having been a prairie pirate?" |
26732 | Are you going to stay long in Seattle?" |
26732 | Are you?" |
26732 | As Saxton turned from him, and crooned to Claire,"More ham, honey?" |
26732 | As he tramped off with Claire, Milt demanded,"Glad to escape?" |
26732 | As she retreated to her chair she stammered,"Did you---- Was Alaska interesting?" |
26732 | As she undressed, in her tent, Claire reflected,"He wo n''t take advantage of my being friendly, will he? |
26732 | As they all turned away she beckoned Milt and murmured,"Did I raise the dickens? |
26732 | Been eating some pork? |
26732 | Besides, I''ve found out----""You love me?" |
26732 | Besides-- suppose he became just a little more friendly, each time he came up, all the way from here to Seattle?... |
26732 | Bill looked at him and, perceiving the dumbness, gallantly helped out:"So you met the kid on the road, eh? |
26732 | But Bill kissed the fifteen dollars, carelessly rammed it into his pocket, crawled back on the bed, yawned,"What''s the rush? |
26732 | But I could n''t tell then that---- What, uh, which girl did you fall in love with?" |
26732 | But are we? |
26732 | But do fairies have sisters? |
26732 | But have you really?" |
26732 | But how much is so much?" |
26732 | But is n''t it taking your mind away from business?" |
26732 | But suppose the engine overheated, ran out of water? |
26732 | But the bristly man spat at her as the car started,"Going far?" |
26732 | But what could he do about it? |
26732 | But what will become of the cat?" |
26732 | But wo n''t you stay somewhere near us?" |
26732 | But you do keep on punishing ra----""Punishing? |
26732 | But you''ll give me a kiss, wo n''t you, Gwendolyn?" |
26732 | But, uh, you understand we''re very grateful for what you have done and, uh, perhaps we shall see each other in Seattle?" |
26732 | But-- well-- wouldn''t it maybe be better to leave the car at a public garage, so the Boltwoods could get it when they wanted to? |
26732 | But---- Darn it, now I''ll have to live up to my New England aristocracy.... Wonder if my grand- dad''s dad was a hired man or a wood- sawyer?... |
26732 | But---- What can I say to him? |
26732 | But---- What fun that morning was at-- Pellago, was it? |
26732 | But---- Will I get all fussy and ribbon- tied again, when I go back?" |
26732 | By the way,_ can_ we get the car out?" |
26732 | CHAPTER XXIX THE ENEMY LOVE But at second glance-- was it Jeff? |
26732 | CHAPTER XXVII THE VICIOUSNESS OF NICE THINGS"What did you think of my nice Daggett boy?" |
26732 | Ca n''t we be just playmates a while yet? |
26732 | Ca n''t we get across? |
26732 | Ca n''t you see I''m trying to be kind to you? |
26732 | Can I be of any assistance in introducing you to some engineering firm where you could do a little work on the side? |
26732 | Can I become-- the kind of man you like?" |
26732 | Can I introduce him to the Gilsons? |
26732 | Can we get something to eat?" |
26732 | Can you come?" |
26732 | Can you guess how much? |
26732 | Can you stand going down there? |
26732 | Car going to pass? |
26732 | Claire begged of her,"Where in the world am I talking from, anyway?" |
26732 | Claire dear, do you know why I came on this trip? |
26732 | Claire wanted to outline what she thought of him, but she merely demanded,"Will you kindly drive it in?" |
26732 | Claire, will you walk a few blocks with me?" |
26732 | Come and try it, Claire, ca n''t you?" |
26732 | Could she climb out, reach her friend of the Alaska Café? |
26732 | Could yuh loosen up and slip me just a couple bones?" |
26732 | D- did you know I was going to propose?" |
26732 | Daggett?" |
26732 | Did n''t we pass you or something? |
26732 | Did n''t you, a teeny bit? |
26732 | Did the president make Saxton High Cockalorum of Dress- Suits or something? |
26732 | Did you know I''d sold my garage?" |
26732 | Did you part''em or roll''em up, when you sat down? |
26732 | Do n''t you get tired?" |
26732 | Do you begin to get your teeth into the engineering? |
26732 | Do you know Dolly Ransome? |
26732 | Do you know---- What would be the cost of installing a wireless telephone plant with a hundred- mile radius?" |
26732 | Do you mean to say that you leave that hole there in the road right along-- that people keep on trying to avoid it and get stuck as I was? |
26732 | Do you mind, dearie?" |
26732 | Do you own it? |
26732 | Do you read books? |
26732 | Do you realize what a demure tyrant you are? |
26732 | Do you really cook your own meals? |
26732 | Do you suppose you could tell what it is?" |
26732 | Do you think I''m going to lose the one real playmate I''ve ever had? |
26732 | Do you think you ought to be too intimate with him?" |
26732 | Drive your car out for you?" |
26732 | Drive-- that?" |
26732 | Father in business there?" |
26732 | Flattering, but---- You do n''t suppose he could be deliberately following us?" |
26732 | Gee, not the Tavern?" |
26732 | Gene will now say,''Why did n''t you?''" |
26732 | Get me? |
26732 | Get me? |
26732 | Going north? |
26732 | Going to take the run through Yellowstone Park?" |
26732 | Got a big screwdriver? |
26732 | Got a revolver, of course?" |
26732 | Got your transportation back East?" |
26732 | Had she done this to him? |
26732 | Had she turned his cheerful ignorances into a careful stupor? |
26732 | Had the conductor or any of the passengers realized that he was a dub in a dress- suit without the hat? |
26732 | Have I simply got to beat you up before you begin to suspect you are n''t welcome? |
26732 | Have n''t you any idea how terribly close to me the thought of you has been these weeks? |
26732 | Have they been bullying you, Claire? |
26732 | Have you a tow- rope?" |
26732 | Have you ever thought of it?" |
26732 | Have you got it-- or shall I go some place else?" |
26732 | Having a picnic? |
26732 | He begged of a high- nosed colored functionary-- not in khaki overalls but in maroon livery--"Where''ll I put this boat?" |
26732 | He came dustily rattling up with a hail of"Distributor on strike again?" |
26732 | He flapped his arms, and wailed,"What do you vant? |
26732 | He grumbled,"What''s that?" |
26732 | He halted on a level, and curtly asked,"That trap- door in the back of the car-- convertible extra seat?" |
26732 | He kept worrying,"Do you think we better try it?" |
26732 | He panted"Press m''suit while I wait?" |
26732 | He said,"Gee whillikens, that''s a dandy idee, telephone to bawl the shuffer out with,"and"Are them flowers real, the bokay in the vase?" |
26732 | He snapped,"Heh? |
26732 | He was clutching her arms, demanding,"Can you like me? |
26732 | He whined,"Do n''t I get nothing I break de harness?" |
26732 | He would stroll in, look about vacuously, and pipe to the suspicious night attendant,"Seen a traveling man named Smith?" |
26732 | He''s been here at the house, has n''t he? |
26732 | Heh, whasat, Pink? |
26732 | Her father interrupted:"Uh, Mr., uh-- Daggett, was it?--I wonder if you wo n''t stay a little closer to us hereafter? |
26732 | Her father spoke for the first time since the Galahad of the tin bug had come:"How much do you think we ought to give this fellow?" |
26732 | Her low evening dress--"what was it made of-- some white stuff, but was it silk or muslin or what?" |
26732 | Her shoulders were startling in their bare powdery smoothness--"how dare that young pup dance with her?" |
26732 | Hesperyds? |
26732 | How are you, little princess?" |
26732 | How can I get out of this mud?" |
26732 | How can I tell? |
26732 | How could he ever figure out what he ought to do? |
26732 | How could he keep from feeling foolish in a low- cut vest, and what the deuce would he do with the tails? |
26732 | How could she escape him? |
26732 | How did he come to Schoenstrom?" |
26732 | How did he strike you?" |
26732 | How do you live? |
26732 | How far y''going?" |
26732 | How long can I go on being good- natured? |
26732 | Huh? |
26732 | I could blackjack you both before this swell- elegant vehickle lost momentum, savvy? |
26732 | I did n''t mean----""What are you? |
26732 | I do n''t know what put it into my head but---- Do you realize that a miracle has happened? |
26732 | I do n''t suppose Mr. McGollups will care to dress for dinner?" |
26732 | I intended to''phone the plumber---- Ca n''t you''phone him tomorrow, from the office?" |
26732 | I just meant---- Will you forgive me? |
26732 | I killed Dolores''s husband, and took her along, see? |
26732 | I know it-- I do want to stroke his cheek and-- his kiss frightened me, but---- Will I hate him when I see him with nice people? |
26732 | I want to stay here in Seattle a few days, and take you on jolly picnics, but---- Would you rather I did n''t even do that? |
26732 | I was brought up nice, no rough- house or---- Say, did you folks come to see the gold- mine?" |
26732 | I wish you''d explain that-- overture they call it, do n''t they?" |
26732 | I wonder can they be talking French, maybe, or Wop, or something? |
26732 | I wonder if I ca n''t escape?" |
26732 | I wonder if he had intended to make the Yellowstone Park trip? |
26732 | I wonder if he would n''t share it with, uh, with his acquaintance here before-- before they make camp for the night?" |
26732 | I wonder if he''ll let us go any farther in the car? |
26732 | I wonder if when she gets the rice- powder off, Claire is n''t a lot more like Milt than she thought?" |
26732 | I wonder if you know the Dudenants?" |
26732 | I''ll start you down the joy- slope and jump off, savvy? |
26732 | I''m king in Schoenstrom, while you''re just one of a couple hundred thousand bright people in New York----""Really? |
26732 | I, uh, Claire, Claire dear----""Milt, are you proposing to me? |
26732 | I----""Are you trying to scare me, you poor four- flusher?" |
26732 | If we just went through to Montana?--or even just to Bismarck?" |
26732 | If you aren''t---- Want granite or marble for the headstone? |
26732 | If you can drag me from New York to the aboriginal wilds, and I did_ not_ like that oatmeal, what will you do to this innocent? |
26732 | In alarm she thought,"How long does it last? |
26732 | In fact---- Did you know that he has saved up money to attend a university?" |
26732 | In the soft, tree- dimmed dooryard among dry, blazing plains it seemed indecent to go on growling"Gee,"and"Can you beat it?" |
26732 | Is it that late? |
26732 | Is n''t it lucky I got that can for an extra gallon?" |
26732 | Is n''t that a wonderful word? |
26732 | Is that all right, father?" |
26732 | Is that it?" |
26732 | Is there a class in cooking at your university? |
26732 | Is there another?" |
26732 | It was"some kind of a party?--or what would folks like these call a party?" |
26732 | Just as he thought that he had escaped, Saxton begged,"Oh, Daggett, I was arguing with a chap---- What color are Holstein- Friesian cattle? |
26732 | Just look about halfway between bored and tol''able and say,''How do you do?''" |
26732 | Let him go on ahead? |
26732 | Like to beat it to Minneapolis with me?" |
26732 | Like to stay and get the prof''s flivver out, so he can have it in the morning?" |
26732 | Lose any money in it?" |
26732 | May I pay you for that labor? |
26732 | Met any of the high- toned skirts?" |
26732 | Milt could hear him commenting,"Does n''t that just get the feeling of the great open, Miss Boltwood?" |
26732 | Milt saluted her and sympathized:"You have a punk time, do n''t you, countess? |
26732 | Milt smiled at his assistant, Ben Sittka, and suggested,"Well,_ wie geht''s mit_ the work, eh? |
26732 | Milt tried to be hearty:"What''re you going to do, old kid?" |
26732 | Milt was saying to himself,"Am I a fool? |
26732 | Miss Boltwood? |
26732 | Miss Boltwood?" |
26732 | Montana or Idaho?" |
26732 | Mrs. Corey and Mrs. Betz looked at each other in a motionless wink, and Mrs. Corey prodded:"From New York?" |
26732 | Never have dinner-- lunch-- with her by the road----"In the reaction of anger he demanded of Vere de Vere,"What the deuce do I care? |
26732 | Now that man in the hotel:''May I trouble you for the train guide? |
26732 | Of the-- Blessed? |
26732 | Oh Gooooooosh, wo n''t these houses ever stop? |
26732 | Oh, Milt-- yes, and you, Mr. Parrott-- will you whip-- lick-- beat up-- however you want to say it-- somebody for me?" |
26732 | Oh, Reaper, Reaper, you desire a modern town, yet I wonder if you know how many thousands of tourists go from coast to coast, cursing you? |
26732 | Oh, by the way, did you get the water tap in the blue room fixed? |
26732 | Oh, good morning, Mr. Daggett, how do you like Seattle? |
26732 | Oh, how are you?" |
26732 | Oh, why-- why-- why was I insane on that station platform?" |
26732 | Only, in the triumphant moment when the parted ends of the steel rim snapped back together, he piped,"Going far?" |
26732 | Or is that a rude question?" |
26732 | Or your boy? |
26732 | Ought n''t I to be sensible? |
26732 | Our squire still following? |
26732 | P.?" |
26732 | Philgren?" |
26732 | Pinky? |
26732 | Pinky?" |
26732 | Poor Don Dudenant, is n''t it a pity he''s such a fool? |
26732 | Really?" |
26732 | Really?" |
26732 | Red?" |
26732 | Rotten shame, do come have a bun or something, frightfully informal these bruncheons, play auction?" |
26732 | Say, Milt, whadyuh think of me and you starting a lunch- room here together? |
26732 | Say, uh, did you and your father grab any eats----""A----""I mean, did you get dinner there?" |
26732 | Say, you are n''t kidding me along?" |
26732 | Say, you have n''t got a cartwheel instead of this wrapping paper, have you? |
26732 | Shall we have to entertain him in Seattle?" |
26732 | She could not manage her voice, as she got the operator on the farmers''-line wire, and croaked,"Was some one trying to get Miss Boltwood?" |
26732 | She false- heartedly fawned upon Mr. Gilson, and inquired:"Is there anything very exciting going on at the mills, Gene?" |
26732 | She hailed him,"Mrwr? |
26732 | She hesitated, and thought with creased brows, and brought out,"Uh, uh, oh---- Oh Milt: How much is gas selling at now?"... |
26732 | She ran to him, hooked her fingers in his lapel, poured out,"They''ve invited you to the opera? |
26732 | She rose, moved toward Milt, murmuring,"Have you had dinner?" |
26732 | She sauntered back to the picnic, and observed,"What is that purple flower up on the mountain side?" |
26732 | She sprang up, beseeching,"Jeff dear, you''re going to stay for tea? |
26732 | She was not far from the worshiping sub- deb in her sighing,"How_ did_ you get the scar?" |
26732 | Since you wo n''t be our guest, will you be our host-- I mean, as far as welcoming us? |
26732 | So you come from New York, do you? |
26732 | Some day you''ll be back in-- where is it in New York State?" |
26732 | Something up?" |
26732 | Still, by golly, did n''t I pick up Dutch-- German-- like a mice? |
26732 | Straight?" |
26732 | Such views-- the mountains---- Do you like it?" |
26732 | Surely he was an inspiration?" |
26732 | Tell me-- long before that-- were you terribly lonely as a little boy?" |
26732 | That woman-- everything all right?" |
26732 | That? |
26732 | The lunchman was cordial:"At a hotel, ma''am? |
26732 | The man at the desk got in only one cynical question,"Driving far?" |
26732 | The mountains---- Do you like it?" |
26732 | The waiter- cook, whose apron was gravy- patterned, with a border and stomacher of plain gray dirt, grumbled,"Whadyuhwant?" |
26732 | Then I can drive on nice and alone, without having to pound your ears off?" |
26732 | Then came clearly,"Hear me now?" |
26732 | There was something---- What was it he was trying to remember? |
26732 | These the ideas which a few months ago he had taken as natural and extremely amusing? |
26732 | They settled down on bed and chair, Bill''s ears red with joy, while Milt demanded:"How the deuce did you get here?" |
26732 | This Boltwood? |
26732 | Those chickens have made it awful dirty, though, have n''t they? |
26732 | Turn round and drive to the nearest doctor-- at Cashmere, I suppose?" |
26732 | Two men waved at him, and one demanded,"Say, Milt, is whisky good for the toothache? |
26732 | Two stores farther on, a bulky farmer hailed,"Say, Milt, should I get an ensilage cutter yet?" |
26732 | Uh, ah, I, oh, I---- Have you seen Miss Boltwood?" |
26732 | Uh-- did you get the storage check for your car?" |
26732 | Uh---- Do you like Seattle?" |
26732 | Uh? |
26732 | Vot she t''ink of de Sherman people?" |
26732 | W- when----?" |
26732 | Wa''n''t it, Mike?" |
26732 | Was I nice?" |
26732 | Was he going to get what he deserved for eavesdropping? |
26732 | Was it impossible to insult Pinky? |
26732 | Was it ten hours before that she had cooked dinner beside the road? |
26732 | Was n''t he, after all, merely a Bill McGolwey himself? |
26732 | Was this the fellow he had liked so well? |
26732 | Well, I wonder if you can tell me about wireless telegraphy, then?" |
26732 | Well-- I do n''t know----""Who did you play with in Schoenstrom? |
26732 | What are you doing? |
26732 | What are you planning to do there? |
26732 | What are you studying? |
26732 | What are you-- newspaper, politics, law, preacher, or gambler?" |
26732 | What business you say your father''s in?" |
26732 | What car are you going to use this afternoon? |
26732 | What d''you think, girlie?" |
26732 | What did she tell you about him?" |
26732 | What do I care? |
26732 | What do you expect? |
26732 | What do you vannnnt? |
26732 | What had George Worlicht been doing, when you were home?" |
26732 | What is your ambition? |
26732 | What kind of motor?" |
26732 | What machine d''you fly?" |
26732 | What shall I do? |
26732 | What the deuce do we care about the opinions of people we do n''t like? |
26732 | What track you race on?" |
26732 | What was it? |
26732 | What was the funny name he gave her-- the Marchioness Montmorency or something?" |
26732 | What was the use of trying to go ahead? |
26732 | What would you do if the car did stop? |
26732 | What''s he got his neck bandaged for? |
26732 | What''s she charging you for a room?" |
26732 | What''s wrong? |
26732 | When do you go?" |
26732 | When she brought them, she put a spoon in Claire''s saucer of peas, and demanded,"Say, you do n''t wear that silk dress in the auto, do you?" |
26732 | When she needs me so?" |
26732 | When she stopped for gasoline, and the seller inquired,"Quart of oil?" |
26732 | When the Gomez had started, Mr. Boltwood skirmished,"This young man---- Do you think you better let him call you by your Christian name?" |
26732 | Where am I, where am I? |
26732 | Where d''you come from, heh?" |
26732 | Where d''you come from, young woman?" |
26732 | Where''s your car? |
26732 | Which is the better?" |
26732 | Which one? |
26732 | Who is this Daggett boy-- some university student-- whom she seems to like?" |
26732 | Who the hell said I was destitute, heh?" |
26732 | Who''s that man?" |
26732 | Who''s your little friend in the rompers?" |
26732 | Why am I totally lacking in sense? |
26732 | Why did I ever get a car that takes a 36 × 6?" |
26732 | Why do n''t you put them in the insane hospital, where they belong?" |
26732 | Why do n''t you talk? |
26732 | Why do n''t you wear boots when you''re out like this?" |
26732 | Why do n''t you? |
26732 | Why do you do it then?" |
26732 | Why do you let them torture innocent people? |
26732 | Why in heaven''s name did we have Johnny Martin here? |
26732 | Why not have him here so often that Claire will awaken to his crudity, and get sick of him?" |
26732 | Why not stop and see Pinky''s gold- mine? |
26732 | Why, him and I have bummed around together, and worked on farms, summers, and fished for bull- heads---- Ever catch a bull- head? |
26732 | Why?" |
26732 | Will he learn anything besides engineering? |
26732 | Will the whole town be onto me? |
26732 | Will you guide me to the canyon, if I do?" |
26732 | Will you step in?" |
26732 | Will you want to?" |
26732 | With a kniiiiiife? |
26732 | With her paws on the tiny wheel? |
26732 | Wonder what it will be?" |
26732 | Wonder-- wonder what they''re talking about? |
26732 | Would he pile up shekels? |
26732 | Would his creations be favorites in the best lunch rooms? |
26732 | You asked me----""M- must I s- shout?" |
26732 | You do n''t bore Eva with your horrid, headachy business- problems, do you?" |
26732 | You do n''t mind Bill?" |
26732 | You driving all the way? |
26732 | You driving through?" |
26732 | You going to be in town some time, oh yes, Claire said you were in the university, engineering, was n''t it? |
26732 | You have been dictatorial ever since we started up----""Have I? |
26732 | You having a good time? |
26732 | You still control it?" |
26732 | You talking from Barmberry''s?" |
26732 | You wo n''t let them change me back into a pink- face, will you? |
26732 | You''re quite a ways from home, are n''t you?" |
26732 | You''re young---- How old are you?" |
26732 | You''ve got a New York license?" |
26732 | and I said,''Is it?'' |
26732 | and"Indeed?" |
26732 | and"Ohhhhh, that''s a Minnesota license-- wonder who it is?" |
26732 | he ventured,"May I speak to Miss Boltwood?" |
26732 | that I meant to be a grouch----""Then do tell me---- Who is this Milton Daggett that you know so much better than I ever can?" |
7960 | When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman? |
7960 | ( map facing page 184)? |
7960 | ------_ What have the Greeks done for Modern Civilization?_( N. Y., 1909, Putnam,$ 1.50). |
7960 | 13. Who was the"Apostle to the Germans"? |
7960 | 14. Who were the"Apostles to the Slavs"? |
7960 | 17. Who is the present Pope? |
7960 | 2. Who were Baber, Kublai Khan, Othman, Mohammed II, Constantine Palaeologus, and Ivan the Great? |
7960 | 3. Who comprised the"third estate"in the Middle Ages? |
7960 | 4. Who were Belisarius, Chosroes II, and Heraclius? |
7960 | 4. Who were St. Thomas Aquinas, Abelard, Gratian, Irnerius, and Roger Bacon? |
7960 | 5. Who were Quintus Fabius Maximus, Mithradates, Catiline, and Cleopatra? |
7960 | 753(?) |
7960 | After what French king was Louisiana named? |
7960 | Are modern coins"debased"to any considerable extent? |
7960 | Are unity of race, a common language, a common religion, and geographical unity of themselves sufficient to make a nation? |
7960 | At what points is it probable that southern Europe and northern Africa were once united? |
7960 | Augustus, 31 B.C.-l4 A.D., topic The Augustan Age)? |
7960 | CHAUCER, 1340(? |
7960 | COLUMBUS, 1446(? |
7960 | Can you find examples of any of the Greek orders in public buildings familiar to you? |
7960 | Can you give any reason for this characterization? |
7960 | Can you justify this statement? |
7960 | Can you mention any of Shakespeare''s plays which are founded on Italian stories or whose scenes are laid in Italy? |
7960 | Can you name any savages still living in the Stone Age? |
7960 | Can you suggest a reason why some historians do not regard Châlons as one of the world''s decisive battles? |
7960 | Can you suggest any objections to the system of state pay introduced by Pericles? |
7960 | Can you suggest any reason why the Arabs did little in painting and sculpture? |
7960 | Can you suggest any reasons why Islam to- day spreads among the African negroes more rapidly than Christianity? |
7960 | Can you suggest any reasons why the sources of the Nile remained unknown until late in the nineteenth century? |
7960 | Can you suggest why Caesar''s conquest of Gaul had even greater importance than Pompey''s conquests in the East? |
7960 | Could monks enter the secular clergy and thus become parish priests and bishops? |
7960 | DESIDERIUS ERASMUS 1466(? |
7960 | Did it have an official character? |
7960 | Did religion have anything to do with the migrations of the Germans? |
7960 | Did the medieval interest in astrology retard or further astronomical research? |
7960 | Did the popular assembly of Athens have any resemblance to a New England town meeting? |
7960 | Do you know of any modern columns of victory? |
7960 | Do you know why Washington was called the"American Fabius"? |
7960 | Do you see any resemblance in structural features between a Gothic cathedral and a modern"sky- scraper"? |
7960 | Does this seem a fair description? |
7960 | Does this statement appear to be justified? |
7960 | Does this statement seem to be justified? |
7960 | EXPANSION OF ROME OVER ITALY, 509(? |
7960 | Establishment of the republic 449 Laws of the Twelve Tables 390(?) |
7960 | Expansion of Rome over Italy, 509(? |
7960 | For what were the following men notable: Pym; Bossuet; duke of Marlborough; Louvois; Hampden; Mazarin; William III; and Colbert? |
7960 | For what were the following persons famous: Hammurabi; Rameses II; Solomon; Cyrus; Nebuchadnezzar; and Darius? |
7960 | For what were the following persons noted: Chrysoloras; Vittorino da Feltre; Gutenberg; Boccaccio; Machiavelli; Harvey; and Galileo? |
7960 | For what were the following places noted: Jerusalem; Thebes; Tyre; Nineveh; and Babylon? |
7960 | From what Oriental peoples do we get the oldest true arch? |
7960 | Had Pompey triumphed over Caesar, is it probable that the republic would have been restored? |
7960 | Had the Italians triumphed in the Social War, is it likely they would have established a better government than that of Rome? |
7960 | Have we anything to learn from the Greeks about the importance of training in music? |
7960 | How are the pyramids proof of an advanced civilization among the Egyptians? |
7960 | How can you explain the persecution of the Christians by an emperor so great and good as Marcus Aurelius? |
7960 | How can you justify this statement by a study of European geography? |
7960 | How did Vasco da Gama complete the work of Prince Henry the Navigator? |
7960 | How did it get that meaning? |
7960 | How did the Franciscans and Dominicans supplement each other''s work? |
7960 | How did the Greeks manage to build solidly without the use of mortar? |
7960 | How did the Macedonian Empire compare in size with that of Persia? |
7960 | How did the belief in Purgatory strengthen the hold of the Church upon men''s minds? |
7960 | How did the condition of Germany after 1648 A.D. facilitate the efforts of Louis XIV to extend the French frontiers to the Rhine? |
7960 | How did the discoveries of Galileo and Kepler confirm the Copernican theory? |
7960 | How did the expression, a"red- cross knight,"arise? |
7960 | How did the founding of the Hellenistic cities continue the earlier colonial expansion of Greece? |
7960 | How did the four English counties, Sussex, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk, receive their names? |
7960 | How did the geographical situation of Arabia preserve it from being conquered by Persians, Macedonians, or Romans? |
7960 | How did the names"damask"linen,"chinaware,""japanned"ware, and"cashmere"shawls originate? |
7960 | How did the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 A.D. affect the commercial importance of Alexandria? |
7960 | How did the position of women at Athens differ from their position in Homeric Greece? |
7960 | How did the revolution of 1688 A.D. affect the fortunes of Louis XIV? |
7960 | How did the tsars come to regard themselves as the successors of the Eastern emperors? |
7960 | How did the words"machiavellism"and"utopian"get their present meanings? |
7960 | How did the worship of the Caesars connect itself with ancestor worship? |
7960 | How did the"year of anarchy"after Nero''s death exhibit a weakness in the imperial system? |
7960 | How do the crusades illustrate the truth of this statement? |
7960 | How do they compare in number with those at Rome in the reign of Marcus Aurelius? |
7960 | How do you account for the failure of the republican institutions of Rome? |
7960 | How do you explain the almost total loss of original Greek sculptures? |
7960 | How does Islam, by sanctioning polygamy and slavery, hinder the rise of women and of the working classes? |
7960 | How does Mohammed''s career in Mecca illustrate the saying that"a prophet is not without honor save in his own country"? |
7960 | How does it happen that the gulf of Finland is often frozen over in winter, while even the northernmost of the Norse fiords remain open? |
7960 | How does it illustrate the medieval attitude toward Jews? |
7960 | How does the history of Ireland illustrate this statement? |
7960 | How does the opera differ from the oratorio? |
7960 | How does the presence of few tameable animals in the New World help to account for its tardier development as compared with the Old World? |
7960 | How does the preservation of the balance of power help to explain the Great European War? |
7960 | How far can the phrase"government of the people, by the people, for the people"be applied to the Athenian democracy? |
7960 | How far can the phrase,"government of the people, by the people, for the people,"be applied to the Roman Republic at this period? |
7960 | How is it easy to evade laws forbidding usury? |
7960 | How is it true that the expedition of the Ten Thousand forms"an epilogue to the invasion of Xerxes and a prologue to the conquests of Alexander"? |
7960 | How many have you read? |
7960 | How many holidays( including Sundays) are there in your state? |
7960 | How many of Shakespeare''s plays can you name? |
7960 | How many provinces existed under Trajan? |
7960 | How many"books"are there in the Old Testament? |
7960 | How much can you see and describe in the Alexander Mosaic( illustration, page 123)? |
7960 | How was it with the Arabs? |
7960 | How was"the victory of the Crescent secured by the children of the Cross"? |
7960 | How, it will be asked, did these rights and privileges arise? |
7960 | If the Athenian Empire could have rested on a representative basis, why would it have been more likely to endure? |
7960 | In such cases how could truth be reached unless one reasoned it out for oneself? |
7960 | In the classification of mankind, where do the Arabs belong? |
7960 | In the face of his encroachments would Athens, Sparta, and Thebes, so long the leading cities, submit tamely to this Macedonian conqueror? |
7960 | In the reign of what Roman emperor was Jesus born? |
7960 | In what European countries do kings still rule by divine right? |
7960 | In what century was the year 1917 B.C.? |
7960 | In what city does he reside? |
7960 | In what different senses is the word"church"often used? |
7960 | In what lies the difference? |
7960 | In what non- Christian religions is monasticism an established institution? |
7960 | In what parts of the British Isles are Celtic languages still spoken? |
7960 | In what parts of the world is English now the prevailing speech? |
7960 | In what parts of the world is Spanish still the common language? |
7960 | In what respects is the American system of education a realization of the ideals of Comenius? |
7960 | In what sense does the date, 476 A.D., mark the"fall"of the Roman Empire? |
7960 | In what sense is it true that the Holy Roman Empire was"neither holy nor Roman, nor an empire"? |
7960 | In what sense is it true that"half Europe owes its Christianity to women"? |
7960 | In what sense was Chaeronea a decisive battle? |
7960 | In whose reign was he crucified? |
7960 | In your opinion which of the two rival imperial lines after 800 A.D. had the better title to represent ancient Rome? |
7960 | Is the English Common law codified? |
7960 | Is this still the case? |
7960 | JOHN HUSS, 1373(? |
7960 | Legendary Roman kings 509(?) |
7960 | May a nation arise where these bonds are lacking? |
7960 | Might Rome have extended her federal policy to her territories outside of Italy? |
7960 | Northmen under Ruric settle in Russia 870 Treaty of Mersen 871- 901(?) |
7960 | ST. FRANCIS, 1181(? |
7960 | They often debated the most subtle questions, for instance,"Can God ever know more than He knows that He knows?" |
7960 | To what cities of Asia Minor did Paul write his epistles, or letters? |
7960 | To what extent do we employ the same system under our government? |
7960 | To what other cities in the Roman Empire? |
7960 | Under what circumstances does the Constitution of the United States provide for the suspension of the writ of_ habeas corpus_? |
7960 | Under what circumstances is it sometimes declared in the United States? |
7960 | WILLIAM''S PERSONALITY What manner of man was William the Conqueror? |
7960 | Was Caesar justified in leading his army against Rome? |
7960 | Was Marius or was Sulla more to blame for the Civil War? |
7960 | Was Rome wise in adopting her new policy of expansion beyond the limits of Italy? |
7960 | Was a provincial system really necessary? |
7960 | Were all the great cities in Alexander''s empire of commercial importance? |
7960 | Were any of the ancient religions missionary faiths? |
7960 | Were the Jews independent of Rome during the lifetime of Jesus? |
7960 | Were the crusades the only means by which western Europe was brought in contact with Moslem civilization? |
7960 | What American states lie in about the same latitude as Greece? |
7960 | What European countries in physical features closely resemble Greece? |
7960 | What European monarch styles himself as an autocrat? |
7960 | What European state comes nearest to being a pure despotism? |
7960 | What French kings did most to form the French nation? |
7960 | What advantages has trial by jury over the older forms of trial, such as oaths, ordeals, and the judicial duel? |
7960 | What are its special advantages? |
7960 | What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of primogeniture as the rule of inheritance? |
7960 | What are some of the best- known stories in the_ Thousand and One Nights_? |
7960 | What are the advantages of local self- government over a centralized government? |
7960 | What arguments might have been made for and against the removal of the capital to Constantinople? |
7960 | What artistic objections to the use of"engaged columns"can you mention? |
7960 | What books of the Bible contain the laws of Israel? |
7960 | What circumstances gave rise to( a) the Petition of Right;( b) the Institute of Government;( c) the Habeas Corpus Act; and( d) the Bill of Rights? |
7960 | What class corresponds to it at the present time? |
7960 | What conditions made it easy for the Romans to conquer Magna Graecia and difficult for them to subdue the Samnites? |
7960 | What conditions of the time help to explain the contempt of the Greeks for money- making? |
7960 | What contrasts can you draw between Caesar and Alexander? |
7960 | What contrasts exist between the ancient and the modern house? |
7960 | What countries of Greece did not touch the sea? |
7960 | What countries of modern Europe are included within the limits of Charlemagne''s empire? |
7960 | What did civic patriotism mean to the Greek and to the Roman? |
7960 | What difference did it make whether Clovis became an Arian or a Catholic? |
7960 | What differences exist between an ancient and a modern theatre? |
7960 | What differences existed between Phoenician and Greek colonization? |
7960 | What do the illustrations on pages 38, 43 tell about the pomp of Oriental kings? |
7960 | What do you understand by a"decisive"battle? |
7960 | What do you understand by representative government? |
7960 | What do you understand by"martial law"? |
7960 | What does this mean? |
7960 | What does this statement mean? |
7960 | What does this statement mean? |
7960 | What elements of weakness in the imperial system had been disclosed during the century 180- 284 A.D.? |
7960 | What events are associated with the following dates: 988 A.D.; 862 A.D.; 1066 A.D.; 1000 A.D.; and 987 A.D.? |
7960 | What events are connected with the following places: Soissons; Mersen; Whitby; Reims; Verdun; Canterbury; and Strassburg? |
7960 | What events are connected with the following places: Zama; Cannae; Actium; Pharsalus, and Philippi? |
7960 | What events in the lives of Clovis and Pepin the Short contributed to the alliance between the Franks and the popes? |
7960 | What examples of pastoral and agricultural life among the North American Indians are familiar to you? |
7960 | What examples of triumphal arches in the United States and France are known to you? |
7960 | What famous examples of domed churches and public buildings are familiar to you? |
7960 | What features of Athenian education are noted in the illustration, page 254? |
7960 | What features of our"circus"recall the proceedings at the Roman games? |
7960 | What happened in 987 A.D.? |
7960 | What is a bas- relief? |
7960 | What is a"Fabian policy"? |
7960 | What is a"Pyrrhic victory"? |
7960 | What is his residence called? |
7960 | What is meant by a"robber baron"? |
7960 | What is meant by calling the Church an episcopal organization? |
7960 | What is meant by saying that"French is a mere_ patois_ of Latin"? |
7960 | What is meant by the statement that Carthage is a"dumb actor on the stage of history"? |
7960 | What is meant by the"Norman graft upon the sturdy Saxon tree"? |
7960 | What is meant by the"berserker''s rage"? |
7960 | What is meant by the"emancipation of the peasantry"? |
7960 | What is meant by"sea- power"? |
7960 | What is the Apocrypha? |
7960 | What is the chief difference in mode of government between Presbyterian and Congregational churches? |
7960 | What is the date of the accession of the emperor Commodus? |
7960 | What is the date of the first recorded Olympiad? |
7960 | What is the essential distinction between a"limited"or"constitutional"monarchy and an"absolute"or"autocratic"monarchy? |
7960 | What is the exact meaning of the words,_ Hebrew_,_ Israelite_, and_ Jew_? |
7960 | What is the historical importance of Augustine, Henry the Fowler, Pepin the Short, Charles Martel, Egbert, and Ethelbert? |
7960 | What is the meaning of the word"martyr"? |
7960 | What is the origin of each term? |
7960 | What is the origin of our names of the two months, January and March? |
7960 | What is the origin of our words_ pedagogue_,_ symposium_,_ circus_, and_ academy_? |
7960 | What is the origin of the geographical names Andalusia, Burgundy, England, and France? |
7960 | What is the origin of the modern city of Constantinople? |
7960 | What is the origin of the name"Protestant"? |
7960 | What is the origin of the name_ Delta_ applied to such a region as Lower Egypt? |
7960 | What is the origin of the word"emperor"? |
7960 | What is the origin of the words"monk,""hermit,""anchorite,"and"abbot"? |
7960 | What is the present meaning of the word"chivalrous"? |
7960 | What is the present population of England? |
7960 | What is the use of alloys? |
7960 | What is the"Socratic method"of teaching? |
7960 | What is the_ Pax Britannica_? |
7960 | What is your favorite Greek statue? |
7960 | What is"the power of the keys"which the popes claim to possess? |
7960 | What justification was found in the New Testament(_ Matthew_, x 8- 10) for the organization of the orders of friars? |
7960 | What light is thrown on the beginnings of money in ancient Egypt by the illustration on page 47? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the Macedonian Empire under Alexander? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of ancient Iran? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of the Balkan peninsula? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of the Persian Empire under Darius? |
7960 | What modern countries are included within the limits of the Roman Empire in the age of Trajan? |
7960 | What names of our weekdays are derived from the names of Scandinavian deities? |
7960 | What officers in American cities perform some of the duties of the censors, praetors, and aediles? |
7960 | What particular discoveries were made by Cartier, Drake, Balboa, De Soto, Ponce de León, and Coronado? |
7960 | What parts of Asia were not included in the Mongol Empire at its greatest extent? |
7960 | What parts of the world are most correctly outlined on Ptolemy''s map? |
7960 | What people possessed it during the ninth and tenth centuries? |
7960 | What privileges does it confer? |
7960 | What productions of medieval literature reflect aristocratic and democratic ideals, respectively? |
7960 | What provinces of the Roman Empire in the West were not included within the limits of Charlemagne''s empire? |
7960 | What reasons can be given for the Greek victory in the struggle against Persia? |
7960 | What reasons can you give for Hannibal''s early successes and final failure? |
7960 | What reasons can you suggest for the universal worship of the sun? |
7960 | What reasons for the growth of the Papacy have been set forth in this chapter? |
7960 | What reasons have led the Church to insist upon celibacy of the clergy? |
7960 | What reasons suggest themselves as helping to explain the conversion of the civilized world to Christianity? |
7960 | What resemblances do you discover between the Olympian festival and one of our great international expositions? |
7960 | What resemblances existed between the culture of the Germans and that of the early Greeks? |
7960 | What resemblances may be traced between Islam on the one side and Judaism and Christianity on the other side? |
7960 | What settlements of the Northmen most influenced European history? |
7960 | What state of our union? |
7960 | What states of the Greek mainland were neutral in the Peloponnesian War( map facing page 108)? |
7960 | What stone implements have you ever seen? |
7960 | What was the effect of feudalism on the sentiment of patriotism? |
7960 | What was the importance of the Phoenician fleet in the Persian invasions? |
7960 | What was the importance of the Synod of Whitby? |
7960 | What was the origin of the geographical names Russia, Greenland, Finland, and Normandy? |
7960 | What was the origin of the"divine right"of kings? |
7960 | What was the original meaning of the words"presbyter,""bishop,"and"deacon"? |
7960 | What was the significance of the fact that the Northmen were not Christians at the time when they began their expeditions? |
7960 | What was the_ Pax Romana_? |
7960 | What were the Roman names of England, Scotland, and Ireland? |
7960 | What were the reasons for the failure of the Athenian, Spartan, and Theban attempts at empire? |
7960 | What were the schoolbooks of Greek boys? |
7960 | What were their contributions to knowledge? |
7960 | What would be the effect on trade within an American state if tolls were levied on the border of every county? |
7960 | What would you say of Holbein''s success as a portrait painter( illustrations pages 651, 658)? |
7960 | When and by whom was he elected? |
7960 | When and where was Jesus born? |
7960 | Where are they still found? |
7960 | Where is it obtained? |
7960 | Where was each side weak and where strong? |
7960 | Where were they? |
7960 | Who made them? |
7960 | Who was king of Judea at the time? |
7960 | Whom do you consider the greater man, Julius Caesar or Augustus? |
7960 | Why are modern coins always made perfectly round and with"milled"edges? |
7960 | Why are the earliest laws always unwritten? |
7960 | Why are they not so useful now? |
7960 | Why can wars with barbarous and savage peoples be justified as"the most ultimately righteous of all wars"? |
7960 | Why could not such an institution as the Papacy develop in the East? |
7960 | Why did Balboa call the Pacific the"South Sea"? |
7960 | Why did Italy remain for so many centuries after the Lombard invasion merely"a geographical expression"? |
7960 | Why did Xerxes take the longer route through Thrace, instead of the shorter route followed by Datis and Artaphernes? |
7960 | Why did heresies develop in the East rather than in the West? |
7960 | Why did it prove more difficult to establish a despotic monarchy in England than in France during the seventeenth century? |
7960 | Why did no one suggest that the New World be called after Columbus? |
7960 | Why did the French language in the seventeenth century become the language of fashion and diplomacy? |
7960 | Why did the Germans fail to take part in the work of discovery and colonization? |
7960 | Why did the Germans progress more slowly in civilization than the Greeks and the Romans? |
7960 | Why did the Greek traveler, Herodotus, call Egypt"the gift of the Nile"? |
7960 | Why did the Mongol conquest of Russia tend to strengthen the sentiment of nationality in the Russian people? |
7960 | Why did the Renaissance begin as"an Italian event"? |
7960 | Why did the Romans call the Second Punic War the"War of Hannibal"? |
7960 | Why did the cattle breeder in Italy have no reason to fear foreign competition? |
7960 | Why did the classical scholar come to be regarded as the only educated man? |
7960 | Why did the colonies, as a rule, advance more rapidly than the mother country in wealth and population? |
7960 | Why did the existence of numerous slaves in Egypt and Babylonia tend to keep low the wages of free workmen? |
7960 | Why did the reformers in each country take special pains to translate the Bible into the vernacular? |
7960 | Why do great cities rarely develop without the aid of commerce? |
7960 | Why do you like it? |
7960 | Why does an American city have a charter? |
7960 | Why does classical literature contain almost no"love stories,"or novels? |
7960 | Why does the First Triumvirate mark a distinct step toward the establishment of the empire? |
7960 | Why had the Arabs, until the time of Mohammed, played so inconspicuous a part in the history of the world? |
7960 | Why has Alaric been styled"the Moses of the Visigoths"? |
7960 | Why has Carthage been called the"London"of the ancient world? |
7960 | Why has England been called"the mother of parliaments"? |
7960 | Why has Froissart been styled the"French Herodotus"? |
7960 | Why has Justinian been called the"lawgiver of civilization"? |
7960 | Why has Lothair''s kingdom north of the Alps been called the"strip of trouble"? |
7960 | Why has Marathon been considered such a battle? |
7960 | Why has Marco Polo been called the"Columbus of the East Indies"? |
7960 | Why has Siegfried, the hero of the_ Nibelungenlied_, been called the"Achilles of Teutonic legend"? |
7960 | Why has Wycliffe been called the"morning star of the Reformation"? |
7960 | Why has chivalry been called"the blossom of feudalism"? |
7960 | Why has feudalism been called"confusion roughly organized"? |
7960 | Why has it been called the"suicide of Greece"? |
7960 | Why has scholasticism been called"a sort of Aristotelian Christianity"? |
7960 | Why has the Baltic Sea been called a"secondary Mediterranean"? |
7960 | Why has the Bill of Rights been called the"third great charter of English liberty"? |
7960 | Why has the Delphic oracle been called"the common hearth of Hellas"? |
7960 | Why has the Mediterranean been called a"highway of nations"? |
7960 | Why has the Peloponnesian War been called an"irrepressible conflict"? |
7960 | Why has the Roman Church always refused to sanction divorce? |
7960 | Why has the Third Crusade been called"the most interesting international expedition of the Middle Ages"? |
7960 | Why has the battle of Adrianople been called"the Cannae of the fourth century"? |
7960 | Why has the invention of the bow- and- arrow been of greater importance than the invention of gunpowder? |
7960 | Why has the medieval Papacy been called the"ghost"of the Roman Empire? |
7960 | Why has the medieval city been called the"birthplace of modern democracy"? |
7960 | Why have Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica been called the"suburbs of Italy"? |
7960 | Why have queens never ruled in France? |
7960 | Why have the consuls been called"joint kings for one year"? |
7960 | Why is Greece in its physical aspects"the most European of European lands"? |
7960 | Why is Hastings included among"decisive"battles? |
7960 | Why is Roman law followed in all Spanish- American countries? |
7960 | Why is an acquaintance with Scandinavian mythology, literature, and history especially desirable for English- speaking peoples? |
7960 | Why is it likely that the bust of Nerva( illustration, page 200) is a more faithful likeness than that of Pericles( illustration, page 103)? |
7960 | Why is it so much lower in modern countries? |
7960 | Why is it true that civilization may be said to have begun"with the cracking of the slave whip"? |
7960 | Why is it very desirable for the United States to adopt the budget system? |
7960 | Why is modern civilization, unlike that of antiquity, in little danger from barbarians? |
7960 | Why is the Council of Trent generally considered the most important church council since that of Nicaea? |
7960 | Why is the First Triumvirate described as a"ring"? |
7960 | Why is the Second Crusade often called"St. Bernard''s Crusade"? |
7960 | Why is the defeat of the Moslems before Constantinople regarded as more significant than their defeat at the battle of Tours? |
7960 | Why is there some excuse for describing a Gothic building as"a wall of glass with a roof of stone"? |
7960 | Why not so well fitted as Asia to originate civilization? |
7960 | Why should Mithraism have proved"the most formidable foe which Christianity had to overcome"? |
7960 | Why should Rome have made a greater success of her imperial policy than either Athens or Sparta? |
7960 | Why should the Phoenicians have been called the"colossal peddlers"of the ancient world? |
7960 | Why should the discovery of fire be regarded as of more significance than the discovery of steam? |
7960 | Why should the steppes of central and northern Asia have been a nursery of warlike peoples? |
7960 | Why was Attila called the"scourge of God"? |
7960 | Why was Europe better fitted than Asia to develop the highest civilization? |
7960 | Why was Friday regarded as a specially unlucky day? |
7960 | Why was India better known in ancient times than China? |
7960 | Why was Mary naturally a Catholic and Elizabeth naturally a Protestant? |
7960 | Why was Spain inconspicuous in European politics before the opening of the sixteenth century? |
7960 | Why was Venice called the"bride of the sea"? |
7960 | Why was a canal through the isthmus of Suez less needed in ancient times than to- day? |
7960 | Why was it necessary to codify Roman law? |
7960 | Why was the Parliament of 1295 A.D. named the"Model Parliament"? |
7960 | Why was the extinction of the Ostrogothic kingdom a misfortune for Italy? |
7960 | Why was the feudal system not found in the Roman Empire in the East during the Middle Ages? |
7960 | Why was the island of Cyprus a natural meeting place of Egyptian, Syrian, and Greek peoples? |
7960 | Why was the money- changer so necessary a figure in medieval business? |
7960 | Why was the purchasing power of money much greater in the Middle Ages than it is now? |
7960 | Why was the revival of Greek more important in the history of civilization than the revival of Latin? |
7960 | Why was the rule of the Senate, unsatisfactory though it was, to be preferred to that of the Roman populace? |
7960 | Why was the tyranny of Sparta more oppressive than that of Athens? |
7960 | Why was there no antagonism between labor and capital under the guild system? |
7960 | Why was war the usual condition of feudal society? |
7960 | Why were fairs a necessity in the Middle Ages? |
7960 | Why were the Hellenistic cities the real"backbone"of Hellenism? |
7960 | Why were the invasions of the Mongols and Ottoman Turks more destructive to civilization than those of the Germans, the Arabs, and the Northmen? |
7960 | Why were the reformers within the Church of England called"Puritans"? |
7960 | With that of Assyria? |
7960 | With what paintings by the"old masters"are you familiar? |
7960 | Would import duties on foreign grain have revived Italian agriculture? |
7960 | Would the crusaders in 1204 A.D. have attacked Constantinople, if the schism of 1054 A.D. had not occurred? |
7960 | [ Illustration: CERVANTES] FROISSART, 1397(? |
7960 | [ Illustration: Map, PORTUGUESE AND SPANISH COLONIAL EMPIRES IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY] FERDINAND MAGELLAN, 1480(? |
7960 | [ Illustration: PLAN OF KIRKSTALL ABBEY, YORKSHIRE] RULE OF ST. BENEDICT, 529(?) |
7960 | _ Founding of Rome_ 753(?)-509(?) |
7960 | _ Quo Vadis?_( Boston, 1896, Little, Brown, and Co.,$ 2.00). |
7960 | but were not yet provinces? |
7960 | in 1066 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1215 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1295 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1346 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1453 A.D.? |
7960 | in 1485 A.D.? |
7960 | of Marseilles? |
7960 | of Naples? |
7960 | of Syracuse in Sicily? |
7960 | of the Council of Nicaea? |
7960 | of the Edict of Milan? |
7960 | of the accession of Diocletian? |
7960 | of the death of Theodosius? |
7960 | of the expulsion of the last tyrant of Athens? |
7960 | of"Greater London?" |
7960 | the Germans? |
7960 | the Persians? |
7960 | the earliest legal code? |
7960 | the first coined money? |
7960 | the inhabitants of the United States? |
7960 | the most ancient book? |
7960 | the year 1917 A.D.? |
9184 | ''But, Father,''you continue,''how is it that you have become so harsh, and have changed your gentleness, as Job says to Almighty God, into cruelty? 9184 A fine question,"cried the other,"my neighbour, do you think? |
9184 | Again, who would not love this dear enemy for whom Jesus Christ prayed? 9184 Ah,"he said to me one day,"what is a man''s reputation, that so many should sacrifice themselves to this idol? |
9184 | Am I not old enough and strong enough for that? |
9184 | And during those six months,replied Bellarmine,"at whose hands will the blood of the lost sheep of my flock be required?" |
9184 | And for how much then do you,he answered,"account Jesus Christ, whom I honour in your person?" |
9184 | And of what use to God are the merits and good works of men? |
9184 | And pray what could be done with those notes? |
9184 | And supposing equal charity, vow, or no vow,resumed the person,"will not the action done by vow have greater merit than the other?" |
9184 | And what about the thanksgiving? |
9184 | And what part is that? |
9184 | Are we not,he would say,"in some sort visiting the sick when we obtain by our prayers relief or refreshment for the poor Souls in purgatory? |
9184 | Are you aware,he said,"that in the first place we require him to work at least one miracle? |
9184 | At any rate, would you not rather abandon yourself to God than to the evil one? |
9184 | Besides, do you reckon as nothing the good example which they may set wherever God calls them? 9184 But how can we imitate either this compassion or this Passion if we do not suffer from the motive of the love of God? |
9184 | But what are we to do? |
9184 | But what,I asked,"are those who can not read to do?" |
9184 | But, Father,I said,"how ought we to make our preparation? |
9184 | But, my Lord,returned the man,"do you really yourself think that I shall die?" |
9184 | But,I cried,"what did you mean by saying that a man married to such a wife as that was a Martyr? |
9184 | But,I objected,"will it not be a cause of disedification to others to see me so quick over things? |
9184 | But,I said,"when almsgiving is practised for the love of God, can we not then call it charity?" |
9184 | But,cried the other,"can you assure me that it would not be presumption on my part to have recourse to His mercy?" |
9184 | But,objected the other,"does God forbid us to take care of our health?" |
9184 | But,rejoined this person,"is not what is done by vow more meritorious than what is done only from a firm and settled purpose?" |
9184 | But,returned the Priest,"were not your feelings stirred at all by this treatment?" |
9184 | Do you know,he says,"what the cloister is? |
9184 | Do you wish to know,he continued,"how I test the excellence and value of a preacher? |
9184 | For, in fact,he used to say,"what is the use of running a race if we do not reach the goal, or of drawing the bow if we do not hit the target?" |
9184 | For,he went on to say,"who knows but that God may have touched his heart at the last moment and converted him? |
9184 | Has God not said that He is with us in tribulation, and is not His Cross the mark of the chosen? 9184 Have you any children?" |
9184 | Have you read,he once said to me,"the life of Blessed Aloysius Gonzaga of the Society of Jesus? |
9184 | How shall he who has no one in command set over him learn obedience? 9184 How shall we know whether or not we have yielded this consent?" |
9184 | I suspected that was it,replied Blessed Francis;"in that case who do you wish should profit by what you do?" |
9184 | Must we then,I asked,"give up all spiritual guides?" |
9184 | Nay,rejoined the Saint,"do not fathers interfere in the quarrels of their children, judging between right and wrong? |
9184 | Of what then does it avail you,said the other,"to have made that vow about which I have been consulting you?" |
9184 | Since,he says,"God can bring good out of evil, will He not surely do so for those who have given themselves unreservedly to Him? |
9184 | Still, is it wrong to find pleasure in thinking of what is sinful? |
9184 | That is true,he answered,"but have you not noticed that I say he must be chosen out of ten thousand? |
9184 | The question then is in what does the essential perfection of a Christian life consist? 9184 Then that splendid carriage, which is, so to speak, regal, in which I see you every day driving about the city is not your own?" |
9184 | Well, then,replied he,"if you understand it thus, why do you contend against your understanding and your conscience? |
9184 | Well, then,said the Bishop,"have you made a bad use of this wealth?" |
9184 | What could have induced you to play these pranks? 9184 What do you mean by that?" |
9184 | What is to be done with you? |
9184 | What memoranda? |
9184 | What more have you to say, for I know you do not intend to spare me? |
9184 | What then,I asked,"is a truly devout man?" |
9184 | What, then,he was asked,"do you say to the chase, and to the killing of animals for the food of man?" |
9184 | What,cried the criminal,"do you think that God would have anything to do with a victim as repulsive as I am?" |
9184 | Why do you not make this preparation earlier, in your morning exercise, which I know, or at least I think, you never neglect? |
9184 | Why,he answered,"can you really think this dignity would in any way conduce to my serving our Lord and His Church better than I can now do? |
9184 | Would it have been too much trouble to call me? |
9184 | You, a child, indeed; and for how long do you mean to go on clinging to your childhood? 9184 _ He is our light and our salvation, whom shall we fear? |
9184 | ''And do you really imagine,''he exclaimed,''that even her dead body could do anything else but contradict me?'' |
9184 | A few are enough-- two are enough-- nay, one is enough._ Why should not a Christian Philosopher be content with what was enough for this Stoic? |
9184 | A man whose tongue is longer than his arm, is he not a monstrosity?" |
9184 | After all, he would say, are not twelve hundred crowns a handsome income for a Bishop? |
9184 | After all, of what use are complaints? |
9184 | After all, possessing honestly all that is necessary for food and clothing, ought we not to be content? |
9184 | After all, what have I done to you to make you wish to leave me? |
9184 | After having answered my questions, and satisfied my mind, he asked me:"And what will you say about the affections?" |
9184 | After that, what could the Priest possibly refuse him? |
9184 | Again in one of his letters he says:"Why? |
9184 | Again, if I pray with devotion and fervour, am I not adding to prayer another religious action, which is devotion? |
9184 | Again, when his steward was complaining of down- right distress, and of there being no money left, he said:"What are you troubling yourself about? |
9184 | Am I like a nurse to breathe softly on your hurt? |
9184 | Am I not happy to live like a child without care? |
9184 | Am I not well- dressed?" |
9184 | And do we despise marriage because we put celibacy above it? |
9184 | And have you, my good daughter, to distress yourself about what the devil attempts? |
9184 | And how is this increase of Faith to be brought about? |
9184 | And if they please Him, whom can they reasonably offend? |
9184 | And sweetness, how can it attract but sweetly and pleasantly? |
9184 | And that it is only taken by those who do violence to themselves? |
9184 | And what is it that a man knows best of all, or at least ought to know? |
9184 | And whence proceeds confidence In God? |
9184 | And who are we that we should judge our brother? |
9184 | And"supposing you were playing for guineas,"returned Francis,"how would it be then? |
9184 | Are not all the faithful taught of God? |
9184 | Are not your teeth strong enough to masticate bread, the hard bread of suffering? |
9184 | Are there not already enough of such institutions into which these applicants might be drafted? |
9184 | Are we insulting the stars when we admire and praise the sun? |
9184 | Are we not clothing the naked when we procure for souls a garment of light, the light of glory? |
9184 | Are we not meriting for God, when we do a good work in a state of grace and for the love of God? |
9184 | Are we not most fortunate to live on only by help of miracles? |
9184 | Are we to talk of our merits and graces as if He needed them, and were not Himself absolute merit and infinite goodness and perfection?" |
9184 | Are your teeth set on edge by eating sour grapes? |
9184 | As He testified to Saul when He cried out to Him:_ Why persecutest thou Me_? |
9184 | As long as we are here below are we not exiled from God? |
9184 | Ask yourself if there is reasonableness in such a request as you are making?" |
9184 | At the sight of fountains:"When will fountains of living water spring up in our hearts to life eternal? |
9184 | But beholding them in that divine resting place, who can do otherwise than love them, bear with them, and be patient with their imperfections? |
9184 | But do you notice how God hides from her own eyes the perfection which He is giving her? |
9184 | But does he who praises one Saint blame the others? |
9184 | But may- be you were accused falsely? |
9184 | But perhaps you were justly accused? |
9184 | But such devotion, though a virtue, is dead, not living,"I rejoined:"But how can this dead devotion be real?" |
9184 | But what can not courage, zeal, charity, and confidence in God accomplish?" |
9184 | But what is this infused and supernatural humility? |
9184 | But when are they made, and in what place? |
9184 | But whence springs this salutary distrust of self? |
9184 | But, my Daughter, how can it be that out of such a will so many imperfections show themselves as are continually springing up within me? |
9184 | Can He not make living and thirst- quenching water flow forth from the jaw- bone of an ass? |
9184 | Can it be said that I chose a bad model or was wanting in taste? |
9184 | Can you as one of my flock, have the heart to take the bread out of my mouth in place of helping to feed me? |
9184 | Can you do that?" |
9184 | Did not she who said to Solomon:_ Let it be divided_,[2] show herself to be the false mother? |
9184 | Did not the Apostles also come forth rejoicing from the presence of the Council where they had received affronts-- for the name of Jesus? |
9184 | Did not the Apostles come forth rejoicing from those assemblies in which they had suffered contumely for the name of Jesus? |
9184 | Did they not even take up stones to cast at him? |
9184 | Do we, out in this desert, have every day for our guests Prelates of such distinction? |
9184 | Do you imagine that he was banished from it in order to do nothing? |
9184 | Do you know that you spoilt your sermon by them? |
9184 | Do you know why the angels envy us? |
9184 | Do you not believe that He says to you also_ Mary, Mary?_ Ah! |
9184 | Do you not know that God takes pleasure when for a sacrifice to Him we offer hospitality and kindliness? |
9184 | Do you want better examples for regulating your conduct?" |
9184 | Do you want these poor people to be doubly poor, like sick physicians, who, the more they know about their disease the more disconsolate they are? |
9184 | Do you wish me to give you milk and pap instead of solid food? |
9184 | Does it become a member to complain of any hardship under a Head wearing no crown but one of thorns? |
9184 | Does it not seem to you that, this being his own case, his talking about poverty makes him like a cleric expatiating on the art of war? |
9184 | Does not the divine oracle tell us that through much tribulation we must enter the Kingdom of Heaven? |
9184 | Does the man who considers gold more precious than silver say that silver is nothing at all? |
9184 | Does the temptation please or displease you? |
9184 | Father,"replied the lady,"do you not remember all those little written notes on various subjects which you gave me to help my memory?" |
9184 | For whom He died? |
9184 | Has anyone offended you? |
9184 | Have you forgotten how to eat bread? |
9184 | Having sufficient to feed and clothe ourselves suitably, what more do we want? |
9184 | He answered me thus:"What would you have? |
9184 | He does not say"anyone who is without venial sin,"for from that who is exempt? |
9184 | He is the Protector of our life, of whom shall we be afraid?_"UPON A COMPASSIONATE MIND. |
9184 | He told him to follow the example set by St. Paul, and by St. Martin, and to make his own the words of the Psalmist:_ For what have I in heaven? |
9184 | He who has no superior, humility? |
9184 | He who is careful with farthings, how much more so will he be with crowns? |
9184 | He who is never contradicted, patience? |
9184 | His next question was,"My Lord, shall I die?" |
9184 | How can one play on a lute without tuning it?" |
9184 | How can we escape from His spirit?" |
9184 | How long shall we continue to dig for ourselves miserable cisterns, turning our backs upon the pure source of the water of life? |
9184 | How many vessels of contempt have been, by the change of the right hand of God, transformed into vessels of honour? |
9184 | How shall we patiently suffer the faults of our neighbour if we are impatient over our own? |
9184 | How shall we practise humility if not on such occasions as these?" |
9184 | How shall we reprove others in a spirit of gentleness if we correct ourselves with irritation, with disgust, and with unreasonable sharpness? |
9184 | How should we like to be talked about like this, and to have our little weaknesses brought out, just to amuse anybody who may chance to hear? |
9184 | I answer this objection in Blessed Francis''own words:"But may we, then, under no circumstances judge our neighbour? |
9184 | I ask you, Philothea, would it be proper for a Bishop to wish to lead the solitary life of a Carthusian monk? |
9184 | I ventured to ask how that could be a fault, and how he could speak of abundance as if it were famine? |
9184 | If God justifies him, who shall condemn him? |
9184 | If I offer to God this prayer, as incense, or a spiritual sacrifice, or as an oblation, are not sacrifice and oblation two religious actions? |
9184 | If in praying I adore God, is not adoration one also? |
9184 | If we extol the Seraphim, do we on that account despise all the lower orders of Angels? |
9184 | In what condition think you was Saul when God raised him to the throne of Israel? |
9184 | Indeed, how could this philosopher, being destitute of the true Faith, possess charity? |
9184 | Indeed, who can say how many more virtues claim a place in this bright choir? |
9184 | Instead of excusing or defending himself, he would say cheerfully,"Do they say no more than that? |
9184 | Is it fitting that I, who glory in being the servant of Jesus Christ crucified, should desire to be better treated than my Master? |
9184 | Is it for us, I say, to scrutinize their counsels, and ask, Why are you acting thus? |
9184 | Is it likely I should have? |
9184 | Is it not He who imparts it to men? |
9184 | Is it not a case of painting on water and sowing on sand?" |
9184 | Is it not a great thing that these good men submit themselves to the Church, and so defer to her as to ask her permission and blessing? |
9184 | Is it not in the observance of the law that true justice consists? |
9184 | Is it not so with other acts which are perfected by frequent repetition? |
9184 | Is it not the most splendid thing imaginable to counsel the doubtful, to convert the sinner, to forgive injuries, to bear wrongs patiently? |
9184 | Is it right that one who is the father of others, one to whom God has given the rank of a Bishop in His Church, should play the child? |
9184 | Is it unimportant in your opinion to be a sweet odour in Jesus Christ, an odour of life eternal? |
9184 | Is liberality displayed towards the rich, in your opinion, worth as much as alms given to the poor? |
9184 | Is not He the God of knowledge? |
9184 | Is not doing the will of God a work great enough for anyone? |
9184 | Is not our Order the first of the three estates in a christian kingdom? |
9184 | Is not that enough to constitute a kind of fraternity between us? |
9184 | Is the arm of God shortened? |
9184 | Is there any condemnation for one who is in Christ Jesus? |
9184 | Is this the beautiful Noemi of bygone days? |
9184 | Let thy fountains be conveyed abroad, and in the streets divide thy waters._[1] From so excellent a vocation what but good results could be expected? |
9184 | More and more surprised, and unable to understand the man''s distaste for life, the Bishop said:"Then, my brother, why do you so long for death?" |
9184 | Moreover, if by this prayer I desire to praise God, is not divine praise a religious act? |
9184 | Moreover, they are our brethren according to the flesh, for are we not all children of Adam? |
9184 | Must you then, my dear sister, my dearest daughter, because of this temptation, fret and disquiet yourself and change your manner of thought? |
9184 | My dear daughter, tell me what better penance can be given to an erring heart than to bear a continual cross and to be always renouncing self- love?" |
9184 | My friend replying:"Why do you refuse to others the advice which you took for yourself in your youth?" |
9184 | Neither is it for us to dare to say:''Why hast Thou done thus?'' |
9184 | Now what is this that a man knows not at all? |
9184 | Now, in what rule is charity, the queen of the virtues, more recommended that in that of St. Augustine? |
9184 | Now, on what is the kingdom of this world founded? |
9184 | Now, tell me what do you say as to that lengthiness of yours which inconveniences everybody? |
9184 | Of the two requisites for a good pastor, precept and example, which think you is the most estimable? |
9184 | Of what avail then will this high reputation be to me? |
9184 | Of what use are laws if they are not observed? |
9184 | Of what use will they be to the Church of God? |
9184 | Of_ justice_; for who is there that has not sinned and consequently has not deserved punishment? |
9184 | On his friends reminding him that he would be exposing his sacred office to derision,"What of that?" |
9184 | On the other hand, who are we that we should judge our brethren, the servants of another? |
9184 | On what did Jesus Christ ride triumphant on Palm Sunday? |
9184 | Others say:"We are too weak"; but is not this the Bread of the strong? |
9184 | Others;"We are infirm"; but in this Sacrament have you not the Good Physician Himself? |
9184 | Possibly those which separate us from God? |
9184 | Regarding the reception of the infirm, he might have exclaimed with St. Paul:_ Who is weak and I am not weak_? |
9184 | Shall we not bear with those whom God Himself bears with? |
9184 | Should I not drain the chalice held to my lips by the hands of so loving a Father? |
9184 | Since in God there is no pleasure that is not good, what difference can there be between the_ good pleasure_ and the_ will_ of God? |
9184 | So also that other,_ Why seest thou the mote that is in thy brother''s eye, and seest not the beam that is in thy own eye_? |
9184 | Some plead as their excuse that they"are not good enough"; but how are they to become good if they keep aloof from the source of all goodness? |
9184 | That has grieved me very much, for even if those who made them do not give way to sin, why, and for what, do they now omit them? |
9184 | That is to say, all power of judging in Heaven and on earth? |
9184 | The Saint then said gently but gravely:"Do you then wish me to give the charge of my sheep blindfolded and to the first comer? |
9184 | Then, noticing how indignant we all were with the slanderers,"What,"he would exclaim,"have I given you leave to fly into a passion on my account? |
9184 | True, but who is so foolish as to think that he can commit more sins than God can pardon? |
9184 | Truly, we may say here with the wise man:_ Who is he and we will praise him? |
9184 | Was it not by the hand of a woman? |
9184 | Was it not upon an ass?" |
9184 | Was it possible to carry patience further than this? |
9184 | Was there ever any reputation more torn to pieces than that of Jesus Christ? |
9184 | We arm ourselves against wolves and bears; but who would condescend to do so against the swarms of flies which torment us in hot weather? |
9184 | What better way of learning to receive Him well can there be than receiving Him often? |
9184 | What can come out of a bag but what is in it? |
9184 | What can sensible presence add to a love which God has made, which He supports, and which He maintains? |
9184 | What can we do of ourselves, but fail? |
9184 | What did He not do with a rod in the hand of Moses? |
9184 | What do they mean by distracting occupations? |
9184 | What do you think of this doctrine, you who go by rule and measure in valuing an act of virtue? |
9184 | What does a man know until he is tempted? |
9184 | What good can we do to Him to Whom all our goods belong, and Who has all good in Himself; or, rather, Who is Himself all good? |
9184 | What harm do others do us by having a bad opinion of us? |
9184 | What injury has he borne? |
9184 | What is there that should be able to sadden the servant of Him who will be our joy through all eternity? |
9184 | What marks can be lacking of perseverance in a unity which God has created? |
9184 | What matters it how or by what means we are united to God? |
9184 | What shepherd feeds his flock and does not drink its milk and clothe himself with its wool? |
9184 | What would this good and all- merciful God do with His mercy; this God, whom we ought so worthily to honour for His goodness? |
9184 | What would you have, I repeat? |
9184 | What, I say, would He do with it if He did not share it with us, miserable as we are? |
9184 | What, however, do you think he did with the small amount of money which he found in the bag? |
9184 | What, then, becomes of acts of holy fear, and of the virtue of hope? |
9184 | When He willed to create the world, out of what did He form it, save nothingness? |
9184 | When a child is troubled to whom should it turn if not to its kind father?" |
9184 | When faults were public and so manifest that they could not be excused, he would say:"Who knows but that the unhappy soul will be converted? |
9184 | When shall we yield fruits both plentiful and well flavoured to the heavenly Husbandman, who cultivates us with so much care and toil?" |
9184 | When there was any talk of budding and grafting, he would say:"When shall we be rightly grafted? |
9184 | When we help on their deliverance by the means which Faith suggests, are we not most truly ransoming prisoners? |
9184 | Where is your unfailing compassion?'' |
9184 | Where was the sacred fire found when the Jews returned from their captivity among the Medes? |
9184 | Where will you find one more troubled, and more interrupted by sin, than that of King David? |
9184 | Who can wonder at the prolonged sufferings of the sick man who resolutely refuses every salutary remedy which he is entreated to take? |
9184 | Who dare call them irritating or troublesome? |
9184 | Who gives us the right to amuse ourselves thus at the expense of another? |
9184 | Who has told us that we are blameless? |
9184 | Who is he? |
9184 | Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
9184 | Why are not our souls as richly adorned with virtues?" |
9184 | Why are you so cowardly? |
9184 | Why be angry with those who come to our aid against so powerful an enemy?" |
9184 | Why do you not avail yourself of it? |
9184 | Why is that? |
9184 | Why should I dwell more on his reproof? |
9184 | Why, then, am I so slothful and lax in the quest after my wandering sheep? |
9184 | Why, then, are you stumbling now? |
9184 | Why, then, may He not have offered the same favour to this unhappy heresiarch? |
9184 | Will not that, my good M.R.,[5] be living on our goods?" |
9184 | Will they, do you think, be more perfect because they have more convents?" |
9184 | With the jaw- bone of an ass in that of Samson? |
9184 | With what calumnies was He not loaded? |
9184 | With what did He vanquish Holofernes? |
9184 | With what insults was He not overwhelmed? |
9184 | Without purity how should we recognise impurity? |
9184 | Would Rome, which would be the place of my residence, afford me more opportunities for so doing, than this post in which God has placed me? |
9184 | Would it be the right thing if an artisan, a magistrate, or a doctor only worked at his profession one or two days in the week? |
9184 | Would you desire a more unmistakable vocation than that of King Saul, or one more glorious than that of Judas? |
9184 | Yet who would not rather be with Jesus, Mary, and Joseph in that shadowy gloom than with the shepherds even in their ecstasy of heavenly joy? |
9184 | You are beneath His wings, like a little chicken under those of its mother; what do you fear? |
9184 | You ask me how we are to deal with these inclinations and manage these talents or virtues? |
9184 | You ask me if we are permitted to wish for death rather than offend God any more? |
9184 | You were going on so well, who is it who is holding you back? |
9184 | [ 1] Can any man be just unless he accommodate his actions to the rule of the law? |
9184 | [ 1] Evil, for,_ Shall there be evil in the city which the Lord hath not done_? |
9184 | [ 1] For if the great Apostle St. Paul said that with the weak he was weak,[2] how much more the divine Exemplar, whom he but copied? |
9184 | [ 1] Who has given thee the hardihood to take upon thyself the office of Him Who has received from the Eternal Father all judgment? |
9184 | [ 2]"Do you see,"he would say,"by what scale humility must be measured? |
9184 | [ 6]"Shall I tell you what my own feeling is? |
9184 | _ He who is not tempted what knows he?_ says Holy Scripture. |
9184 | _ Is mildness come upon us_? |
9184 | _ Who art thou_, says Sacred Scripture,_ who judgest thy brother?_ Knowest thou that_ wherein thou judgest another thou condemnest thyself_? |
9184 | _ Who art thou_, says Sacred Scripture,_ who judgest thy brother?_ Knowest thou that_ wherein thou judgest another thou condemnest thyself_? |
9184 | and of the great St. Francis, who cried out:"Who art Thou, my God and my Lord? |
9184 | and who am I, poor dust and a worm of the earth?" |
9184 | gentlemen,"he cried,"is it for us to question and reason when two sovereigns concur in issuing the same command? |
9184 | he cried,"are not dry sweetmeats quite as good as sweet drinks? |
9184 | he said,"what new act of self- renunciation has he made? |
9184 | how many times a day, then, must not I, who am_ not_ just, fall?" |
9184 | if manners could be changed, what would I not give for such as yours? |
9184 | man of little faith, wherefore dost thou doubt? |
9184 | replied the Bishop,"did not our Saviour suffer shame for us-- were not insults heaped upon Him?" |
9184 | said Blessed Francis,"what would you say, or do, if you had such a burden as mine on your shoulders? |
9184 | say some:--Must we cease to fear God and to hope in Him? |
9184 | the city of perfect loveliness, the joy of the whole earth?" |
9184 | think you that the martyrs when they were suffering their cruel tortures, were praised by the spectators for their patience? |
9184 | what is to be done in all this?" |
9184 | when will our flowers give fruits, and, indeed, be themselves fruits of honour and integrity?" |
9184 | who will give me the wings of a dove, that I may fly to this holy resting place, and draw breath for a little while beneath the shadow of the Cross? |
9184 | who would not love this royal Heart, which to us is as the heart both of a father and of a mother?" |
27997 | 20A, ST. JAMES''S SQUARE, W.MY DEAR BEAUCLERK,--Will you lunch with us to- morrow at two o''clock? |
27997 | Ai n''t you happy? |
27997 | Am I going to die, Sir Thomas? |
27997 | And Robert? |
27997 | And how much do you love me? |
27997 | And suppose,said the Princess,"that she is able to prove that she spent the whole of Wednesday with Lady Fitz Rewes? |
27997 | And the trousseau? |
27997 | And to what effect? |
27997 | And what do you think of Robert Orange? |
27997 | And what is that, dearest? |
27997 | And what will you do? |
27997 | And where is your self now? |
27997 | And who was Mrs. Orange before she married Orange? |
27997 | And who will play the Marquis? |
27997 | And why are you so interested in Anglican Orders? |
27997 | And why does n''t he think of his health? |
27997 | And why? |
27997 | And why? |
27997 | And you? |
27997 | And you? |
27997 | Are n''t most of''em place- hunters and self- seekers? |
27997 | Are the Duke and Duchess of Fortinbras respectable? |
27997 | Are you anxious? 27997 Are you cold?" |
27997 | Are you happy? |
27997 | Are you in pain, my lord? 27997 Are you so sure?" |
27997 | At two in the morning? 27997 But if they are fantastic, capricious, insincere?" |
27997 | But need you lose her-- as a friend? |
27997 | But why not? |
27997 | But would this woman, if she really loved him, wish him to turn back? 27997 But you can predict the final shape?" |
27997 | But you do n''t intend to leave, surely? |
27997 | But you owe it to yourself and to Orange to hold the Meeting to- morrow? |
27997 | But, by the by, how is the portrait going? 27997 But,"said Agnes, a little frightened at this outburst,"do you never think of God and His Will?" |
27997 | But-- but what feeling have you for Marshire? |
27997 | Can I forget her interests? 27997 Can I go to him?" |
27997 | Can one man judge another in these questions? |
27997 | Can you pretend that his opinion has no weight with you? |
27997 | Dead souls? |
27997 | Did he die in pain? |
27997 | Did you give him many sittings? |
27997 | Did you say,she asked,"that he left any letters or papers?" |
27997 | Divorce? |
27997 | Do I know this other one... the one, now? |
27997 | Do n''t you agree? |
27997 | Do n''t you like him? |
27997 | Do n''t you see how much more power you would have over men if you were more emotional, more spontaneous, more human? 27997 Do n''t you see,"she said,"that his heart is broken?" |
27997 | Do you believe,I rejoined,"that you would get the nation''s sanction to the general upset which you propose? |
27997 | Do you care about them? |
27997 | Do you know that you are all I love in the world, and I am yours for ever and ever? |
27997 | Do you love her? |
27997 | Do you mean that they can believe the evil, but, as a rule, they wo n''t? |
27997 | Do you quite understand? 27997 Do you remember our journey from Catesby?" |
27997 | Do you think I would ever take the commonplace course? |
27997 | Do you think so? |
27997 | Do you think,she asked,"that the wife will be an obstacle in his way?" |
27997 | Does Beauclerk adore Agnes? |
27997 | Does God think of me? |
27997 | Does Marshire know him? |
27997 | Does Orange know that she was seen that day? |
27997 | Does he always bring your letters upstairs? |
27997 | Does it require much looking to see that I am really unhappy? |
27997 | Does she forgive it now? |
27997 | Does she resemble, in any way, I wonder, her good mother, Madame Duboc? |
27997 | Drop him? |
27997 | For a long, long time,he continued,"my constant question has been,''Can this last? |
27997 | Has he said anything to you about the Marquis of Castrillon? |
27997 | Has n''t my love done harm enough already? 27997 Have I made myself clearer?" |
27997 | Have n''t I always said so? |
27997 | Have you accepted Marshire? |
27997 | Have you asked Pensée the name of that extremely pretty song she sang for us when we all dined together at Lord Wight''s? 27997 Have you been to Prince d''Alchingen''s, or has he approached you in any way?" |
27997 | Have you ever thought,said Reckage, with pretended carelessness,"that Orange''s serenity just now is somewhat unnatural? |
27997 | Have you had any conversation with Reckage? |
27997 | Have you hinted at resignation? |
27997 | He has called for you several times,said Sir Thomas;"and,"he added, dropping his voice,"is there any lady who could meet... the family? |
27997 | He is coming here? 27997 He is distinguished; would one call him handsome?" |
27997 | He is interesting, he has force, and, as for origin, do people ever repeat pleasant facts about a neighbour''s pedigree? 27997 He wishes him to become a Jesuit priest? |
27997 | How am I to give him up? |
27997 | How can I help you? |
27997 | How can I live where I should be afraid to die? |
27997 | How can it be my business to ask what lady went to-- to his lodgings? |
27997 | How can you assume such horrors? |
27997 | How can you call anything unlikely? |
27997 | How could I have accepted you-- as my friend-- without it? |
27997 | How could it be otherwise than right to marry a man of Marshire''s position, means, stamp, and general fitness? 27997 How do you know all this?" |
27997 | How does he look? |
27997 | How else could I know all the news twenty- four hours before the rest of the world? 27997 How is it that you know your subject so well? |
27997 | How is this? |
27997 | How many hours do they think----? |
27997 | How shall I bear it? 27997 How,"exclaimed Augusta,"can they forget so soon? |
27997 | How? 27997 I suppose you enjoy this room?" |
27997 | I wonder whether he will ever be an Academician? |
27997 | I wonder who that lady was? |
27997 | I wonder,he said,"I wonder why that was there?" |
27997 | I wonder,she said,"what our life is to be? |
27997 | In time? |
27997 | In what way? |
27997 | Is Mrs. Parflete in her bedroom? |
27997 | Is it possible? |
27997 | Is n''t he? 27997 Is that all?" |
27997 | Is that all? |
27997 | Is that for me? |
27997 | Is there much use in denying the fact that he married the Archduke''s daughter? |
27997 | Is this warm enough? |
27997 | It is n''t going, is it? |
27997 | It may be desirable enough, but is it right? |
27997 | It must be Reckage,said the Earl;"I never knew a man so fond of riding who rode so ill.""What, I wonder, does he want now?" |
27997 | May I call upon her? 27997 Mudara? |
27997 | Must we be very earnest this evening? |
27997 | My dear, why should I pretend anything? 27997 My dearest,"she said,"do n''t you see how trivial everything is to me in comparison with you? |
27997 | Nations go mad,said he, smiling;"why not to my advantage, then, as well as yours?" |
27997 | Never hate me, will you? |
27997 | No,said Robert, so well accustomed to such violent jars that they could no longer disturb him;"I was only thinking....""About what?" |
27997 | Not a word,replied Robert, in surprise:"why should he?" |
27997 | O, why have I said such things? |
27997 | On me? |
27997 | Ought you to give way to these moods? 27997 Our strong men?" |
27997 | Sara,he said, obeying an impulse which surprised himself,"do you believe in me?" |
27997 | Say what you were going to say, dearest? |
27997 | Shall we go? |
27997 | Shall we need umbrellas? |
27997 | Shall you tell Orange that you intend to throw him over? |
27997 | She seemed all right,said Robert;"and was n''t Reckage splendid?" |
27997 | She wo n''t stand in his way? |
27997 | Stand still, will you? |
27997 | Surely we need not suffer so much just for the discipline of our own souls? 27997 Tell me, Father, with all your experience, do you understand life?" |
27997 | That man again? 27997 That means the happiest, too?" |
27997 | The speech for the Meeting? |
27997 | The trousseau? |
27997 | Then how can you expect us to like you when you are so-- so wise? |
27997 | Then what are you driving at? |
27997 | Then what do you want Beauclerk to do? |
27997 | Then why all this fuss? |
27997 | Then why have you been with me, cat- fish, ever since I was born? |
27997 | Then why not-- me? |
27997 | Then you liked them? |
27997 | Then you never actually proposed to her? 27997 This being the case, why upset him at the eleventh hour?" |
27997 | Three-- against the world and all the planets and heaven? |
27997 | To whom else-- if not Pensée? |
27997 | To whom else? |
27997 | Two? 27997 Was his mind at peace?" |
27997 | Was that necessary? |
27997 | Were they fears? 27997 Were they so happy? |
27997 | What about Robert? |
27997 | What are the moods and tastes? |
27997 | What are you thinking of? |
27997 | What danger is this? |
27997 | What did Reckage say? |
27997 | What did he do? |
27997 | What do you mean? 27997 What do you mean?" |
27997 | What do you suppose we have been talking about? |
27997 | What do you think,she said, turning to the Princess,"of Mrs. Parflete? |
27997 | What does he think of the portrait? |
27997 | What does it mean? |
27997 | What is it, Robert? |
27997 | What is one to do? |
27997 | What is the matter now? |
27997 | What is the matter? |
27997 | What is the matter? |
27997 | What is the use of that now? 27997 What is this languor, this inability to rouse myself, to feel the least interest in things or people?" |
27997 | What is to be done? |
27997 | What is to be done? |
27997 | What is troubling you, sir? |
27997 | What makes you think so? |
27997 | What opportunity? |
27997 | What ought Orange to do? |
27997 | What things? |
27997 | What will Parflete do? |
27997 | What will people say? 27997 What will you do?" |
27997 | What will you do? |
27997 | When can you dine? 27997 When did these ideas come to you?" |
27997 | When does Beauclerk return from the North of France? |
27997 | Where are you going? |
27997 | Where are you staying? |
27997 | Where is Castrillon now? |
27997 | Where is it? 27997 Who are your strong men now?" |
27997 | Who can tell? 27997 Who gave you that letter?" |
27997 | Who is he? |
27997 | Who is he? |
27997 | Who was he? |
27997 | Who? |
27997 | Whose love- affair? |
27997 | Why are you in town? |
27997 | Why did he like that little adventuress, that white china Rahab? |
27997 | Why did n''t you speak to him? |
27997 | Why do n''t you keep up your music?--your wonderful playing? 27997 Why do you hesitate?" |
27997 | Why do you quote Robert? |
27997 | Why not leave it alone? 27997 Why not?" |
27997 | Why should there be? |
27997 | Why should we two matter in so large a world? |
27997 | Why should you die? |
27997 | Why the devil do you tell me such lies? |
27997 | Why, indeed? |
27997 | Why,she said, kissing her soft, pale cheek,"why did n''t you let me know that you had returned? |
27997 | Why? 27997 Why?" |
27997 | Why? |
27997 | Why? |
27997 | Why? |
27997 | Will she go to Hadley? |
27997 | Will you do me the favour to leave that lady''s name out of the discussion? |
27997 | With Wrexham? 27997 Would you call me heartless?" |
27997 | Would you feel more sure of his gifts-- in that case? |
27997 | Would you like to see her? |
27997 | You can urge that much in my favour, then? |
27997 | You do n''t mean it? |
27997 | You followed them? |
27997 | You have a right to direct my opinion,he exclaimed;"where else do I hear such sound good sense? |
27997 | You have known Beauclerk ever since he was a boy, have n''t you? |
27997 | You mean-- in your own marriage? |
27997 | You never used to say these things,she exclaimed at last;"why do you say them now?" |
27997 | You think so? |
27997 | You think you would feel more sure of Orange''s patriotic instinct if he had chosen an Englishwoman? |
27997 | You were at the wedding this morning? |
27997 | You will come in the morning? |
27997 | You? 27997 Your own conscience is easy, I take it?" |
27997 | ''And was n''t he right?'' |
27997 | ''Is not the life of men upon earth all trial, without any interval?'' |
27997 | A woman who loves, or who has loved-- Robert Orange? |
27997 | Agnes, were they happy?" |
27997 | Am I at last to fly through an intrigue on the wings of a conspiracy?" |
27997 | And I wonder what that mastery will mean? |
27997 | And did she bear the extraordinary resemblance,_ of which so much had been made_, to Marie Antoinette? |
27997 | And do you think,"he asked, aloud,"that she cares at all for Orange?" |
27997 | And has one the right to hope for miracles where the question of happiness or unhappiness in human love is the egoistic point at stake? |
27997 | And indeed, what was there to be said? |
27997 | And may I call you Agnes? |
27997 | And pretty? |
27997 | And the odd thing is----""Well, what is the odd thing?" |
27997 | And then that noble Tintoret? |
27997 | And this de Hausée-- what of him? |
27997 | And was Mrs. Parflete at all like her mother? |
27997 | And what had been the impoverishment of her soul under this grim discipline? |
27997 | And what will you play?" |
27997 | And what, after all, are the gratified expectations of any career in comparison with its hidden despairs? |
27997 | And who is here?" |
27997 | And who was La Guimard? |
27997 | And why? |
27997 | And why? |
27997 | And your languages-- why not work an hour a day each at Italian, Spanish, German, and French? |
27997 | And, if there is anything in him, could he ever be happy in any stopping short of the fullest renunciation-- once resolved on that renunciation?" |
27997 | Are no deep, sacred feelings left?" |
27997 | Are some victories better lost? |
27997 | Are there many, or any of us nowadays, who feel that there are certain things which we must do, not do, or perish eternally? |
27997 | Are they thick enough?" |
27997 | Are you trying to find the civilest thing you can say of the performance?" |
27997 | As for being straightforward, do n''t they misconstrue our words continually? |
27997 | As for gossip, how is anybody''s tongue to be stopped?" |
27997 | As for me-- am I a woman who could, by any chance, be both happy and wise at the same moment?" |
27997 | At his age, was he to look on-- with a dead heart and unseeing eyes, murmuring words of tame submission to a contemptuous Fate? |
27997 | Be careful, wo n''t you? |
27997 | Be kind to her always? |
27997 | Because life is evil? |
27997 | Besides, whom else could it have been-- if not Mrs. Parflete? |
27997 | But as he has already compromised Mrs. Parflete, surely his present scruples are entirely new and unlooked for? |
27997 | But did he know the world he was renouncing? |
27997 | But do you_ like_ him?" |
27997 | But does he himself believe in the Church as a Divine institution-- mark you, a_ Divine_ institution? |
27997 | But how?" |
27997 | But if that is n''t Madame Parflete''s writing, whose writing is it?" |
27997 | But marriage between two idealists so highly strung, and so passionately attached as these two beings were-- what would happen? |
27997 | But one thought is perpetually coming up in my mind: Shall I be able to make him happy? |
27997 | But ought he, at his age, so handsome, so brilliant, so much a man, to renounce all other women for the sake of a little adventuress? |
27997 | But she baffled her companion a little by saying--"I suppose you want Orange to marry your inopportune Archduchess?" |
27997 | But was the indefinable, indispensable feeling absent? |
27997 | But what if she had been seen or recognised? |
27997 | But what is troubling you? |
27997 | But what should she do? |
27997 | But why do you sit in the firelight? |
27997 | But why is it that, no matter where we start, we always come back to Orange? |
27997 | But would he and Pensée come unless they felt we should need them?" |
27997 | But,"she added,"what can any of us do, after all, toward raising either dead bodies or dead souls?" |
27997 | By the by, have you heard that Castrillon is now in the marriage- market? |
27997 | Ca n''t you see, plainly enough, that he is on the road to disaster?" |
27997 | Ca n''t you understand? |
27997 | Can any settling down be in contemplation? |
27997 | Can nothing be done? |
27997 | Can this be permitted?" |
27997 | Can you follow this? |
27997 | Can you refuse?" |
27997 | Could it only wish for something greater than this earth can give by being artificially saddened? |
27997 | Could things look more auspicious? |
27997 | Did I ever tell you why my father, with all his prospects, became a drawing- master? |
27997 | Did every delicate, secret sentiment have to endure, soon or late, the awful test of degradation and mockery? |
27997 | Did he guess that when one most eagerly desires happiness, one is most near to it? |
27997 | Did he like sugar? |
27997 | Did it not seem a triumph over life and its threatened deceptions? |
27997 | Did not sorrow pass also? |
27997 | Did she too possess-- as her mother had possessed-- the sweet but calamitous gift of loving? |
27997 | Did they exalt and purify the mind? |
27997 | Did you come to tell me that, also?" |
27997 | Did you ever see such an infernal ass? |
27997 | Did you mind?" |
27997 | Did you notice her dress? |
27997 | Distinguished persons, staying at Kemmerstone for the first time, would ask a fellow- guest,"Who is the melancholy youth who looks so ill?" |
27997 | Do men ever believe evil reports about the women they love?" |
27997 | Do n''t you admire his handwriting?" |
27997 | Do you approve?" |
27997 | Do you expect me to believe that Mrs. Parflete''s servant gave you twenty guineas?" |
27997 | Do you find her unpaintable?" |
27997 | Do you know it? |
27997 | Do you know the man? |
27997 | Do you know, poor little angel, what it means? |
27997 | Do you realise the poor child''s position? |
27997 | Do you remember the white violets at Woodbridge, and sitting on that gate looking across that deep valley at the bonfires? |
27997 | Do you think he seems altogether settled in his mind?" |
27997 | Do you think, darling, that I could look at you, love you, be loved by you, and call life a bad joke?" |
27997 | Do you, or do n''t you, wish to marry Miss Carillon?" |
27997 | Do you?" |
27997 | Does an idle week in summer ever beget more lassitude or such disgust of life as a month-- alone with books-- in a library? |
27997 | Does any one present know Parflete''s handwriting?" |
27997 | Does it strike you that they may have, nevertheless, a danger also?" |
27997 | Does n''t Disraeli''s action say, as delicately as possible, that I am wasting my time over small men? |
27997 | Does n''t this explain the many cases of unrequited love? |
27997 | Does one ever, in the hidden depths of the mind, mistake the cinders of a consumed anguish for the stars of peace? |
27997 | For instance, how can the bishops,_ without previous explanation_, consecrate one lying under the censure of their House? |
27997 | Had Sir Piers seen the odd announcement, about his name and antecedents, in the_ Times_? |
27997 | Had he not often suspected, until then, that, for some reason, he had been called to renounce the hope of marriage? |
27997 | Had she been born to ruin men? |
27997 | Had she been given a glamour and certain gifts merely to perplex, deceive, and destroy all those who came within the magic of her glance? |
27997 | Had the many emotional strains of the last year tried her delicate youth beyond endurance? |
27997 | Had the whole course of fate a like to show? |
27997 | Have I helped you, or have I been a hindrance? |
27997 | Have you noticed that, Isidore?" |
27997 | He had been obliged to pause and ask himself at every thought, at every step--"What would Sara say to this?" |
27997 | He had now met, poor fellow, with an appalling chastisement, but could any one pretend that he had not brought it, to a great extent, upon himself? |
27997 | He might, eventually, begin to hope----""What?" |
27997 | He, following his custom, grew faint at the sight of Madame----""Then he, too, recognised her? |
27997 | How are you? |
27997 | How can any end be attained in his present state of irresolution?" |
27997 | How can you be sure that I have not suffered it already? |
27997 | How can you care for me?" |
27997 | How could she tell the many thoughts which had travelled unquestioned over the highway of her heart during that process of disillusion? |
27997 | How could that be? |
27997 | How else can I say what I must say?" |
27997 | How else did he keep up his spirits in the face of a grotesque, if unfortunate, adventure? |
27997 | How far, and to what purpose, should he exert it? |
27997 | How much were you paid for giving me this twaddle? |
27997 | How the dickens did he pass us?" |
27997 | How will he justify his rash conduct?" |
27997 | How would Robert bear it? |
27997 | How, then, could she pause in a meditation of such vital interest to make capricious remarks about a mere acquaintance? |
27997 | How---- you?" |
27997 | I dined with him at the Tuileries-- did I mention it?" |
27997 | I have my reward"? |
27997 | I know that we are not born to be happy, and so, I wonder, have we stolen our happiness? |
27997 | I pulled out my revolver( although I had no intention of firing), aimed it, and said,"Who is there?" |
27997 | I suppose he told you that I was in town again?" |
27997 | I suppose you know she will act in this comedy with Castrillon at the d''Alchingens?" |
27997 | If you could read her heart and whole thought at this moment, what would you see there?" |
27997 | In fact, sir, is not that the very essence of the Church''s teaching?" |
27997 | In which column?" |
27997 | Indeed, any idea of immortality is awful How could it ever be a consolation-- except to a smug, very self- satisfied egoism? |
27997 | Is Reckage timorous?" |
27997 | Is a man better off with a dangerous woman whom he adores than with a good woman who adores_ him_?" |
27997 | Is he not sometimes at the Carlton with Lord Wight? |
27997 | Is it not mistaking the imagination for the soul? |
27997 | Is it so easy even to acquiesce in the great bereavements caused naturally, against our will, by death? |
27997 | Is it worth while to undeceive the world? |
27997 | Is it_ all_ religion?" |
27997 | Is n''t that a foreign stamp?" |
27997 | Is n''t that a good story?" |
27997 | Is n''t that the case?" |
27997 | Is n''t that true?" |
27997 | Is n''t there a crease under my left arm? |
27997 | Is n''t this the trouble?" |
27997 | Is the other man quite, quite out of the question?" |
27997 | Is there no hope?" |
27997 | Is this true, David?" |
27997 | It is all very well for Pusey to write,''Do you prefer your party to Almighty God and to the souls of men?'' |
27997 | It is magnificent, but is it love? |
27997 | It was you? |
27997 | Look through these trees now-- see the flames and smoke? |
27997 | Loss of reputation, the finger of scorn, and for what? |
27997 | May I ask you to meet me to- morrow with your second at three o''clock at Calais? |
27997 | May I beg you, as one more favour, never to talk to me about the events of the last fortnight? |
27997 | May I call on my return? |
27997 | May I have some chicken and one of those very droll, very stupid, English rice puddings? |
27997 | May I know her? |
27997 | Must I go now?" |
27997 | Not your business?" |
27997 | O why, why does he fight so hard against me?" |
27997 | Oh, when shall every thought be brought into captivity?" |
27997 | Orange?" |
27997 | Parflete?" |
27997 | Parflete?" |
27997 | Parflete?" |
27997 | Parflete_?" |
27997 | Please let me have one.... And may I kiss the dog? |
27997 | Reckage joined her and said, under his voice,"You think I ought to go, do n''t you?" |
27997 | Sara and Orange, meanwhile, left alone in the drawing- room, were exchanging interrogatory glances,"What do you think now?" |
27997 | Serious accident to Lord Reckage!_""My God, what are they saying? |
27997 | Shall I resume my work on the 28th? |
27997 | Shall I write?" |
27997 | She cared for him-- how could he doubt it? |
27997 | She could inspire his life, but could she enter into it, be it, live it with him daily? |
27997 | She was not cold, but was she unearthly? |
27997 | Should he remain unresisting and without influence on the decision of his own destiny? |
27997 | Sir Piers Harding? |
27997 | So you think the meeting will be useful?" |
27997 | Sometimes I feel as though it would be wiser to meet the dark hours and make acquaintance with them.... And what is to become of her? |
27997 | Still, what could he ask better than this triumph over a cruel, an obstructive memory? |
27997 | Suppose it has something to do with Parflete?" |
27997 | Surely you understand?" |
27997 | That reminds me-- how does the portrait grow? |
27997 | The landlord, the men on the staircase-- had they followed her home, or been able to pierce through her thick veil? |
27997 | The question is, then: Ought I to go against this strong tide and get myself disliked?" |
27997 | The question now is-- How will Parflete endure such conduct? |
27997 | The questions,"What have I missed? |
27997 | Their respective contents ran as follows:-- MY DEAR SARA( I love the sweeter name of Valérie: may I not use it sometimes? |
27997 | There was never any tacit understanding?" |
27997 | They belong to the innocent rhetoric of youth which will cry out to June,"Are you fair?" |
27997 | Was Brigit one of these? |
27997 | Was M. de Hausée, by any chance, in the audience? |
27997 | Was Rennes behaving well in speaking out-- too late? |
27997 | Was an enfeebling and afflicting of the natural man so necessary to the exaltation of the soul? |
27997 | Was day less day because it darkened into evening? |
27997 | Was he a fool for his pains? |
27997 | Was his daughter not weighing-- with prayer, he hoped, and certainly with all her senses-- the prospect of an alliance with the Duke of Marshire? |
27997 | Was it getting late? |
27997 | Was it love to press his letter to her heart, to read it again and again, to keep it under her pillow at night? |
27997 | Was it love to think of him every moment of the day, to compare all others to him and find them wanting, to see his face always before her eyes? |
27997 | Was it not irrevocable? |
27997 | Was it too late? |
27997 | Was it, then, such an easy matter to bury love in perpetual silence, to let nature yield to fate, to stifle every human craving? |
27997 | Was joy a false thing because it passed? |
27997 | Was man, whom God had made in His own Image, but a shadow on the unstable wind? |
27997 | Was n''t I dull? |
27997 | Was n''t it perfect? |
27997 | Was n''t it the critical moment of his life? |
27997 | Was night less night because it paled gloriously before the sun? |
27997 | Was she herself? |
27997 | Was she in love? |
27997 | Was she really so young? |
27997 | Was she sane? |
27997 | Was she, perhaps, some straying angel-- some fervid, bright spirit, flame- coloured and intangible, a being of the elfin race? |
27997 | Was the soul in itself so weak that it could only rest decently in a sick body? |
27997 | Was the water boiling? |
27997 | Was there not a possible joy also? |
27997 | Was this love? |
27997 | Was this the child- like, immature being of their strange visit to Miraflores? |
27997 | Was this the end of all sublime ideals? |
27997 | Was this their home? |
27997 | We may have great trials-- how can we expect to be exempt from them? |
27997 | Were his artistic talents such that he might reasonably hope to become a Royal Academician and maintain an establishment? |
27997 | Were they lofty in tone? |
27997 | What are they saying? |
27997 | What are they saying?" |
27997 | What birthright have I renounced?" |
27997 | What did it mean? |
27997 | What do you think of that?" |
27997 | What have I lost? |
27997 | What if, after all, there was an incalculable element in man? |
27997 | What is duty? |
27997 | What is more weary than a tired mind? |
27997 | What is your opinion of French art?" |
27997 | What joys and labours are more exhausting than those of the intellect, and the intellect only? |
27997 | What made Henry Fox? |
27997 | What man can teach men to understand the will of God?" |
27997 | What might his life have been without that early association with a noble if somewhat restricted nature? |
27997 | What must it be, therefore, to themselves? |
27997 | What must the conflict be then for those who, with slight purses and few allies, find themselves pitted against the powerful of the earth? |
27997 | What should she do? |
27997 | What stroke of fate, she wondered, had overtaken the poor girl? |
27997 | What then had remained? |
27997 | What then? |
27997 | What then?" |
27997 | What were his habits? |
27997 | What were his prospects? |
27997 | What were the woes and cryings of the outer world to them, lost in the impenetrable silence of that retreat? |
27997 | What would she do next? |
27997 | What would they say about his honour? |
27997 | What, he thought, if it should be Brigit? |
27997 | What_ class_ of pictures did he paint? |
27997 | When I hear a sermon I feel an inclination always to say,''My dear fellow, ca n''t you put your case better?'' |
27997 | Where did you get it?" |
27997 | Where have you been hiding yourself? |
27997 | Where then was the harm in harking back, merely in reverie, to the frivolous, amusing phantom of a renounced sentiment? |
27997 | Where''s the letter? |
27997 | Whilst buttoning one she said--"Have you seen him?" |
27997 | Who could have hoped for such a miracle as this? |
27997 | Who could have imagined him going in for a high- spirited, brilliant girl like Sara?" |
27997 | Who could stand it?'' |
27997 | Who gives you credit for self- control? |
27997 | Who, better than I, should take the place of her adviser, her Prime Minister? |
27997 | Who, for instance, could jilt Pensée? |
27997 | Why could they not be carried thus for ever, tranquil with happiness, wanting nothing, seeking nothing, bound no- whither? |
27997 | Why did n''t you say so?" |
27997 | Why do n''t they tell one something about the optimism of God, even before the spectacle of men''s weakness? |
27997 | Why do n''t you suggest something? |
27997 | Why do you dwell upon him?" |
27997 | Why do you try to disturb my life-- now-- after so many really happy months of friendship?" |
27997 | Why else had he borne the severance from Mrs. Parflete with such astonishing fortitude? |
27997 | Why have n''t they lit the gas? |
27997 | Why is he coming here?" |
27997 | Why is she in Edinburgh? |
27997 | Why make her discontented with the average male creature? |
27997 | Why not act upon it? |
27997 | Why not ask her what it means?" |
27997 | Why not get up a kind of Historical Commission and examine the validity of the Anglican Orders? |
27997 | Why should they care for England? |
27997 | Why should you, of all people, think it a joke? |
27997 | Why spoil her chances? |
27997 | Why then do you scold me?" |
27997 | Why was it that one could never, by any sense, enter into another''s spirit? |
27997 | Why was the road so short? |
27997 | Will Orange do nothing? |
27997 | Will the rank and file ever trust a person so far above their comprehension? |
27997 | Will you bear with me, and, if I am indiscreet, forgive me? |
27997 | Will you do me a favour? |
27997 | Will you look?" |
27997 | Will you stand on the balcony and watch me till I am out of sight? |
27997 | Wo n''t you?" |
27997 | Would Mrs. Parflete see him? |
27997 | Would he be able to sustain his character? |
27997 | Would he now immaturely fall a victim to an enticing face and the cares of a household? |
27997 | Would n''t such an adventure as this take him out of himself?" |
27997 | Would she be frightened? |
27997 | Would she be pale? |
27997 | Would she meet him in Kensington Gardens? |
27997 | Would she see me?" |
27997 | Would the world misjudge him? |
27997 | Would there be any dancing? |
27997 | Would there not have to be great reservations, half statements, and, worst of all, a subtle kind of hypocrisy? |
27997 | Would they make good engravings-- such engravings as one might hang on one''s walls? |
27997 | Yet had she not given her word to Reckage? |
27997 | Yet what can we do? |
27997 | Yet, all the same, do these things really count for much? |
27997 | You follow me?" |
27997 | You have a great career before you-- who can say what may happen in the future? |
27997 | You have heard her play, have n''t you, Robert?" |
27997 | You have spiritual peers, why not spiritual Commons?" |
27997 | You know Robert Orange, do n''t you? |
27997 | You mean Robert''s wedding?" |
27997 | You remember the evening?" |
27997 | You see, do n''t you? |
27997 | You understand, do n''t you?" |
27997 | You wo n''t think me strange for introducing the subject at once? |
27997 | You? |
27997 | _ Dans le combat, il faut marchez sans s''attendrir!_""Who would live?" |
27997 | _ Shall not the day of the Lord be darkness and not light? |
27997 | and to the autumnal moon in mist,"Must there be rain?" |
27997 | asked Brigit;"where is he?" |
27997 | asked Lady Sara;"and where is her bedroom?" |
27997 | at seventeen, was she to sit pale, silent, tearful, and alone? |
27997 | even very dark, and no brightness in it?_ He did not believe that. |
27997 | exclaimed his lordship;"what next?" |
27997 | he exclaimed,"are you hungry?" |
27997 | in what way?" |
27997 | is it a delusion?'' |
27997 | is that a compliment? |
27997 | is your lordship in pain?" |
27997 | pleased?" |
27997 | said Robert,"in the presence of fate and facts? |
27997 | said Sara, trying to speak calmly;"and will Orange become a liver- devotee?" |
27997 | said he;"where did you get this? |
27997 | she asked;"do you pretend to believe that Agnes and Beauclerk can make each other even moderately contented?" |
27997 | she said carelessly;"is n''t your opinion enough for me?" |
27997 | she said,"is n''t it terrible? |
27997 | was she going on the public stage, or would she remain an accomplished, semi- royal amateur? |
27997 | was she really so pretty? |
27997 | what can you mean? |
27997 | what is that? |
27997 | would she sing? |
27997 | you would have him turn back?" |
16114 | A circumstance in itself suspicious,said Endicott,"wherefore needs an honest intent to hide its head?" |
16114 | A pleasing episode in your romantic life,said the stranger; but know you perfectly how you came to leave America so suddenly?" |
16114 | Am I at a confessional,demanded the lady,"that I am bound to expose the secrets of my soul?" |
16114 | An''you are for Scripture,answered mine host,"have at thee with a text in return? |
16114 | And I hope thou art not angry with her for being the cause of my present happiness? |
16114 | And being a friend, doubtless it would please thee to see me at liberty? |
16114 | And can anything be more graceful than its lovely curves? 16114 And can the chief say why the Great Spirit gave Owanux the wisdom which he denied to us?" |
16114 | And canst tell why he wanted to speak to me alone? |
16114 | And did Sister Celestina know your sentiments? |
16114 | And how know you I gave it not? 16114 And is it in my sleeping apartment, audacious wretch, that you expect to find him?" |
16114 | And is this the way you take leave, when perhaps you may not see me again for a month? 16114 And it was not of thine own head?" |
16114 | And now what shall be done? 16114 And now, Master Arundel,"he inquired, taking the young man''s arm,"hast found Sassacus?" |
16114 | And pray, what may thy wisdom have discovered now? |
16114 | And suppose it done, what then? |
16114 | And thou believest this fable, as wild as ever sprung from the unbridled license of an Oriental story- teller? |
16114 | And was it Ephraim who advised thee to associate thyself with me? |
16114 | And what knows he of the woman? |
16114 | And what may they be? |
16114 | And what said the tradition,asked Winthrop,"should be the fate of the two races?" |
16114 | And what will be done with them when they come back? |
16114 | And when is it you purpose to depart? |
16114 | Art mad? |
16114 | Art sure you heard aright? 16114 Art thou a Christian man, and so ignorant of the things that pertain to salvation? |
16114 | Art thou degraded by any service which promotes the interests of the Commonwealth? |
16114 | Art thou prepared for thy trial? 16114 At least, you can tell the purpose wherefor you came?" |
16114 | Aye, but Protestant or Catholic? |
16114 | Bethink thee, that though thy loving words are a feast to the spirit, the body requires more substantial fare? |
16114 | Blare of trumpets shivering Above the reeling fight, Proves the inhuman challenge-- The warrior''s right? 16114 But how account for his being launched upon the deep? |
16114 | But how am I to escape? |
16114 | But how are these strangers to find the way? |
16114 | But how can you attain to the knowledge of the white men, without becoming like them? |
16114 | But how long mean you to submit to this unjust violence? |
16114 | But how,inquired Eveline,"is it to be done?" |
16114 | But is it so light a thing to be done, sweet Prudence? |
16114 | But is there no danger of attracting wandering savages, and so being taken prisoners, or shot with their arrows? |
16114 | But should I be missed? |
16114 | But surely you could never have penetrated so far in the direction of this fierce tribe? |
16114 | But what is the difficulty across the room? |
16114 | But what made thee so late? |
16114 | But what,he added aloud,"are the red skins looking at so sharp out to sea?" |
16114 | But when-- but when, lovely Prudence? 16114 But, has not Sir Christopher attended?" |
16114 | Call you that a thing indifferent,demanded Endicott,"which is plainly reprobated in Scripture?" |
16114 | Call you the preservation of our liberty and lives a betrayal of trust? 16114 Call you this justice?" |
16114 | Callest thou me one of the baser sort? 16114 Can Neebin,"said Winthrop, resuming his interrogatories,"tell me where is Sir Christopher Gardiner?" |
16114 | Can your Hobbamocki be in two places at once? |
16114 | Canst not let the Indians alone, Captain? |
16114 | Canst thou not understand the liberty of the saints? 16114 Comports it with your sense of propriety to reveal more?" |
16114 | Dame,said Eveline, kissing her comely cheek,"how shall I ever be able to repay thy motherly kindness? |
16114 | Darling Neebin,said Winthrop, whose countenance really expressed an interest in the little Indian,"hast ever been taught thy prayers?" |
16114 | Dear husband,said Dame Spikeman, sobbing, and taking his hand,"know you me?" |
16114 | Dearest Eveline, why thus cast down? |
16114 | Detains he not my affianced bride? 16114 Did I say I had a whole pottle? |
16114 | Did not the right worshipful Governor remark the profane exclamation of the prisoner even in this presence? |
16114 | Didst meet on thy way that most puritanical of Puritans, the praying, cheating, canting, hypocritical, long- faced Master Spikeman? |
16114 | Do I look, forsooth, like one in need of a husband, or likely to assist my young mistress therewith? 16114 Do I not know that the villains, thine accusers, lied? |
16114 | Do I not? |
16114 | Do the people at Shawmut, under Sagamore Winthrop, believe in all things, as my brother? |
16114 | Do you dare to call me a thief? |
16114 | Do you distrust me, Eveline? |
16114 | Do you know what it looks like to me? |
16114 | Does he know the occasions of Soog- u- gest''s frequent absences from home? |
16114 | Does he powah with Owanux, or is he true to the faith of his fathers? |
16114 | Does it pain thee so much,inquired Eveline, half reproachfully,"to remain in the wilderness?" |
16114 | Dost distrust the good faith of the Knight in his embassy? |
16114 | Dost think it advisable to retract anything? |
16114 | Dost wish to ruin me, and have thine ears nailed to the whipping- post, and perhaps cut off? 16114 Edmund Dunning,"he added, as his mind temporarily wandered,"why do you fasten your accusing eyes on me? |
16114 | Eveline, dearest Eveline,cried her lover, catching her to his bosom,"how canst thou speak thus? |
16114 | Expect you,inquired Sir Christopher,"to convert these English colonies into dependencies of France or Spain?" |
16114 | Fie, Dame,said the Assistant, laughing, and pinching, and kissing her still tempting cheek;"what crazy fancies be these? |
16114 | For what purpose came ye into these parts? |
16114 | Has Prudence--? |
16114 | Has any thing been heard or seen of him whom we seek? |
16114 | Has anything happened? 16114 Has anything worthy of note occurred, during my absence of three weeks?" |
16114 | Has he not evil entreated thee, and loaded thee with unnecessary and cruel bands of iron, till compelled by me to remove them? |
16114 | Has the heart of Samoset turned white? |
16114 | Has the whole interior been thoroughly searched? |
16114 | Has what I have said sunk into the ears of Mesandowit? |
16114 | Hast lost thy wits with fright? 16114 Hast never another?" |
16114 | Hast said anything about it to Joy, as I requested thee not? |
16114 | Hast thou discovered nothing on thy watch on the outside? |
16114 | Hast thou fully considered,he asked,"the perils whereunto thou dost expose thy young life? |
16114 | Hast thou visited it thyself? |
16114 | Hath he not been your protector since leaving England? |
16114 | Hath not our examination proceeded far enough? |
16114 | Hath the order for the soldier''s release arrived from the Governor? |
16114 | Have my people given my friend anything to eat? |
16114 | Have the disciples of Loyola penetrated to this fierce tribe? |
16114 | Have they anything against Master Miles, too? |
16114 | Have you so far forgotten the modesty of your sex as to make this declaration in public? 16114 He is your only prisoner, I believe?" |
16114 | Hear me, my young friend,urged the Knight;"hast thou well weighed the terrors thou wouldst seek? |
16114 | Hobbamocki is thy name for the Evil Spirit? |
16114 | Hold you these Puritans to be, in any true sense, a Church at all? |
16114 | How are ye, once more, my hearty? |
16114 | How can I make answer thereto? |
16114 | How can it be a fire? |
16114 | How can it be an old maid, when, on every tack, half a dozen children, like so many porpoises, come across your bows? |
16114 | How can you speak of your soul,said Prudence, smiling as she spoke,"when you know you are talking and acting like a wicked man?" |
16114 | How canst thou doubt? 16114 How could he imagine the contrary? |
16114 | How felt you in reference to the plan of converting an English into a French colony? |
16114 | How hast thou prevailed? |
16114 | How hath it happened,continued Endicott,"that you have never appeared with the congregation, in the Lord''s house?" |
16114 | How have my people treated Mesandowit in my absence? |
16114 | How is this? |
16114 | How know you of the relationship? |
16114 | How knowest thou this to be true? |
16114 | How now, sirrah,cried Winthrop,"what means this intrusion?" |
16114 | How shall it be done? |
16114 | How shall that be determined? 16114 How then became he wicked?" |
16114 | How were it possible otherwise? |
16114 | I am curious to hear of Philip''s treatment in his confinement, if he will favor us with an account thereof? |
16114 | I am to understand, then, that you have accepted the office of mediator? |
16114 | I counselled no more violence than was necessary to effect thy purpose; but who moved the Governor in thy case? 16114 I have no fancy for either; but can not your wit devise some mode to save me from yon lock- up? |
16114 | I mean, plainly-- is not thy name Mary Grove? |
16114 | I wish,she said, presently raising her head, and looking Spikeman bewitchingly in the face,"I knew whether you really mean what you say?" |
16114 | I wonder what new mischief he hath now on foot, for it is his meat? |
16114 | I wonder what they have found? |
16114 | If I deny them I am not to be believed, and the denial would only bring down upon my head additional insult; then why tempt so hard a fate? 16114 In thy present habiliments of a savage?" |
16114 | Is he content with the explanation? |
16114 | Is he ill? |
16114 | Is he ready to return to his own country? |
16114 | Is he what he appears? 16114 Is it in humanity,"returned the Knight,"not to be annoyed at the outrage? |
16114 | Is it not,he said,"most extraordinary, this refusal to allow me to say to a man who saved my life, that I have not forgotten him? |
16114 | Is it possible,inquired the Knight,"that thou believest not in the sincerity of the professions of peace made by these poor savages?" |
16114 | Is my brother satisfied? |
16114 | Is my brother''s lodge distant? |
16114 | Is not the laborer worthy of his hire? |
16114 | Is she not his wife? |
16114 | Is that all? |
16114 | Is that the voice of the Governor? |
16114 | Is the Indian whom I left in thy charge safe? |
16114 | Is the right worshipful Governor at home so that he may be seen? |
16114 | Is there aught else that would pleasure thee more? 16114 Is there aught else ye expect to elicit?" |
16114 | Is there not enough in the circumstances wherein I am placed, to agitate the timid heart of a woman, and account for her unreasonable caprices? 16114 Is this intentional discourtesy, or are ye ignorant of the customs of the English?" |
16114 | Is this one of the plenipo- po- pothecaries? 16114 Is thy servant a dog?" |
16114 | Is, then, thy resolution fixed beyond change? 16114 It is all sport with thee, Philip, but dost not remark it begins to be earnest with the chief?" |
16114 | Know you by what right he doth assume the title? |
16114 | Know you not Philip''s voice? |
16114 | Know you not that the ambassadors have left in anger? |
16114 | Know you what is expected to be learned from the child? |
16114 | Know you when he was knighted? |
16114 | Know you,inquired Arundel,"the name of their tribe, and their intentions towards us?" |
16114 | Late is it? 16114 Madam,"answered Spikeman,"where is Sir Christopher Gardiner? |
16114 | May I inquire what excites your indignation, master Endicott? |
16114 | May I inquire what is your reply? |
16114 | May I know them? |
16114 | May a friend inquire after the cause of your sudden departure? |
16114 | May it please thee, Albert, to be more explicit? |
16114 | May it please you, madam, to answer the question? |
16114 | May it please you, who are so happily here, to explain his meaning? |
16114 | My judgment tells me thou art right, Eveline, however much my heart rebels; but is there no emergency which can make thee cast off this slavery? |
16114 | Now tell again, what is that other reason why thou didst say nothing of the paper to me before? |
16114 | O, sir,exclaimed the girl,"can you tell me anything about Philip? |
16114 | Of what use do ye think would it be to make the red skins Christians? 16114 Oh, fie,"said she, once more;"what would folk say if they saw thee?" |
16114 | Our dear brother,said Mr. Eliot,"of what specially wouldst thou repent? |
16114 | Pieskaret asks,resumed the Taranteen,"what have the Aberginians to do with our treaties? |
16114 | Prudence,he said,"how long shall I languish? |
16114 | Quecheco,said the Knight, reproachfully, as he stood upon the bank,"is it thou, and thou, too, Negabamat, who treat me as an enemy? |
16114 | Recollect you your offer to join the congregation? |
16114 | Sam Bars,inquired Joy,"wherefore did you at first load me with irons, and afterwards take them off?" |
16114 | Shall they who work in the Lord''s vineyard receive no wage? |
16114 | Shall we not, beloved brother, unite our supplications to the throne of grace, for the last time on earth? |
16114 | Son of thoughtful Science, Unthinking of renown, Is thine the name to thunder The ages down? |
16114 | Speaks my brother of Soog- u- gest, of the white chief who lives away from his people in the forest? |
16114 | Spoke Paul in this wise,inquired Dudley,"as Paul the inspired messenger, or as Paul the fallible man?" |
16114 | The danger of being treated as enemies is less, for what Indian would suspect such of going singing through the woods? |
16114 | The two friends of Sassacus,he said,"have Indian hearts; why should they not keep their Indian skins? |
16114 | Then is not Samoset my brother, and lies he not close to the heart of Sassacus, as a pappoose nestles up to its mother? |
16114 | Then why hesitate to avow it? |
16114 | Then you will not deny me? 16114 Then, why did you admit them?" |
16114 | There is no hope? |
16114 | This Sir Christopher Gardiner, the man who is sometimes called''The Knight of the Golden Melice,''is a great friend of thine, is he not? |
16114 | Thou art right, Prudence, and I am hot and hasty; but does not the villain deserve the warmest place in Beelzebub''s dominions who would harm thee? 16114 Thou hearest,"he resumed,"those sounds and seest these faces, and dost thou believe that all these men are also disloyal? |
16114 | Thy guess hits the mark, mine host,he said? |
16114 | To what end? 16114 To what purpose? |
16114 | Was he not very happy there, and had all that he wanted? |
16114 | Was it not our covenant that the life of the white man should be spared? |
16114 | Were it not well to proceed to the examination of the woman? |
16114 | What ails thee? |
16114 | What ails thee? |
16114 | What am I to think of this man? |
16114 | What art in amaze about? |
16114 | What be these tidings? |
16114 | What can anybody have against so sweet- tempered and liberal a gentleman? |
16114 | What coil is this? 16114 What confessions?" |
16114 | What fanciful follies be these? |
16114 | What favor owe you him? |
16114 | What have I done to deserve such affection? |
16114 | What have we to do with England or her cramping ordinances, which we have turned our backs upon forever? 16114 What is a soul?" |
16114 | What is it I see gliding in yonder thicket? 16114 What is that, Miles?" |
16114 | What is the girl chattering about? |
16114 | What is the relation,inquired Winthrop, with some hesitation,"wherein you stand to him?" |
16114 | What is thy name, little one? |
16114 | What is thy profession of faith? |
16114 | What know you of any wife or wives he may have had? |
16114 | What made you, Sam Bars, take all the ornaments off Philip but the bracelets, without saying anything to me? |
16114 | What may that be? |
16114 | What means that? |
16114 | What means this outrage, Master Spikeman,demanded Arundel,"on one in the king''s peace, and quietly about his own business?" |
16114 | What means this, Colonel McMahon? |
16114 | What means this, Sassacus? |
16114 | What other name? |
16114 | What possesses the imps now? |
16114 | What said he? |
16114 | What says he? |
16114 | What says he? |
16114 | What secret? 16114 What seek ye?" |
16114 | What should I want of tramping after Indians in the dark, and perhaps catch an arrow in my paunch for my pains? |
16114 | What strange language do I hear? 16114 What think you,"he whispered to his companion in captivity,"of making a rush, and showing our heels to the Philistines?" |
16114 | What thinks Waqua of the painted man? |
16114 | What white man ever entered the wigwam of Waqua and was not invited to a seat on his mat? 16114 What will the chief do?" |
16114 | What will ye have to drink, my hearties? |
16114 | What woman speaks? |
16114 | What wouldest have me do, Sir Christopher? |
16114 | What? |
16114 | When I offered to join the congregation, who would have thought that so trifling a difference could close your bosoms against me? |
16114 | When and where became you first acquainted with the Knight? |
16114 | When did Sassacus ever make a secret of his lodge? 16114 Where is Waqua?" |
16114 | Where is the other Indian? |
16114 | Wherefore arrested, since I have an order of release? |
16114 | Wherefore do you delay? 16114 Whether we should have detained or allowed them to depart in their present frame of mind, is the question which I would submit to thy decision?" |
16114 | Who are ye,inquired a woman''s voice,"who, in the dead of night, assail the rest of innocent folk?" |
16114 | Who could that be, and with what motive? |
16114 | Who ever dared to call Philip Joy a coward? |
16114 | Who has dared to remove it? |
16114 | Who is in the room? |
16114 | Who is there? |
16114 | Who is there? |
16114 | Who shall lay anything to the charge of God''s elect? 16114 Who speaks of works? |
16114 | Who wants Sassacus? |
16114 | Who, on Glory''s pinion, Shall mount the upper air, And write his name with sunbeams Sublimely there? 16114 Whom have we here?" |
16114 | Whom mean you? |
16114 | Whom of the holy fathers saw you? |
16114 | Whom should I mean, but the man ye call the Knight of the Golden Melice? |
16114 | Why did Sassacus attack my people, and kill two of my men? |
16114 | Why did Sassacus give away his own sister? |
16114 | Why do I distrust him? |
16114 | Why do you talk as though you were giving me riddles to guess? 16114 Why does the bear attack the hunter who has robbed her of her cubs? |
16114 | Why dost hesitate? |
16114 | Why should I speak to him, when I should hear only curses? |
16114 | Why should the chief doubt my word? 16114 Why sit here to be scorned by this unbreeched heathen?" |
16114 | Why told you me not this before? |
16114 | Why, dame,answered the Assistant,"is it a new thing for me to be absent one night? |
16114 | Why, what has got into the girl? |
16114 | Why, who is to wait on my mistress, and take care of her but me? 16114 Will he remember the place?" |
16114 | Will she say them for me? |
16114 | Will the chief tell me what he pleases about him? |
16114 | Wilt thou say nothing more touching this subject? |
16114 | Works? |
16114 | Would you see Miles? |
16114 | Yet dost thou not deny the name? |
16114 | Yet, being asked, tell me, with thy usual candor, Master Spikeman, what you yourself would have done in like circumstances? |
16114 | Yet, wherefore should they, being Papists, come hither? |
16114 | You tell me not all your thoughts about Master Miles, and why should I acquaint you with mine about Joe? |
16114 | You would not have us fight for our liberty? |
16114 | A silence followed, which was interrupted only by the sobs of Dame Spikeman, until the wounded man inquired:"How long shall I live?" |
16114 | Accompany you me, or go I melancholy, alone?" |
16114 | Am I a deer to be frightened at the whizzing of an arrow, or the sight of a tomahawk?" |
16114 | Am I not bone of thy bone?" |
16114 | Am I to understand that thou hast no further proof?" |
16114 | And I will let you know, Sam Bars? |
16114 | And now it is my turn to ask questions, so tell me how gattest thou rid of the irons?" |
16114 | And now, Philip, will you ruin yourself and me, or will you remain?" |
16114 | And what has become of the missing Taranteens? |
16114 | And who would have guessed that Indians knew anything about countersigns? |
16114 | Answer-- where is Sir Christopher Gardiner?" |
16114 | Are our friends, engaged in the execution of our orders, to be slaughtered with impunity, and thus others to be encouraged to like atrocities?" |
16114 | Are they like that hell which thy powaws say is prepared for such as thou?" |
16114 | Are they too killed, or in the forest on their way home? |
16114 | Are we not brothers?" |
16114 | Are we to be boarded in this piratical way, and see all our stores and, provisions captured without a blow? |
16114 | Art as dumb as the bench your heavy carcass almost breaks down? |
16114 | Art not tired? |
16114 | Bear they in their hands weal or woe to humanity? |
16114 | Besides, what is it he would burn up but a heap of old logs, whose whole value could scarcely exceed ten pounds?" |
16114 | Bethink thee how often my occasions call me to the plantation?" |
16114 | But art not afraid of the old villain?" |
16114 | But art thou ill?" |
16114 | But do not the white men believe in Hobbamocki?" |
16114 | But for all the sacrifices I make, what shall be thy return to me?" |
16114 | But for yourself, Sir Christopher, tire you not of the monotony of your forest life?" |
16114 | But forget you not that you are only a secular coadjutor, and therefore bound simply to obey?" |
16114 | But how fares it otherwise with thee? |
16114 | But how shall I find thee again?" |
16114 | But say, why is thy mind so careworn about this soldier?" |
16114 | But shall it be soon?" |
16114 | But then what cause of such enmity could there be? |
16114 | But thy mistress, where is she?" |
16114 | But what are the accusations devised against me?" |
16114 | But what did he?" |
16114 | But what does he intend to do? |
16114 | But what further testimony than that of the young lady hast thou, her representations being contradicted by Master Spikeman?" |
16114 | But what is that?" |
16114 | But what reported Celestina to him?" |
16114 | But where away was I when I begun chase after old Jacob Le Maire? |
16114 | But where is Mistress Eveline? |
16114 | But where is Sir Christopher?" |
16114 | But wherefore should I not love the king? |
16114 | But wherefore,"inquired Joy, as if some sudden suspicion sprung up in his mind,"do you take this trouble and risk on my account?" |
16114 | But whither hath my wandering talk strayed?" |
16114 | But whither should they fly? |
16114 | But why pursue a discourse which can have but little interest except for the speakers? |
16114 | But will he follow me now into another part of my dwelling?" |
16114 | But, how got you this hurt?" |
16114 | But, who is to be thy bridesmaid?" |
16114 | Call you yourselves loyal subjects who tolerate such an outrage?" |
16114 | Can he not instruct Sassacus how to make guns, and the little black seeds which cause the lightning?" |
16114 | Canst not be more precise?" |
16114 | Canst thou say that the Taranteens have departed without seeming justification?" |
16114 | Come, Master Arundel, hast never a song wherewith to waken the echoes of the virgin forest and shorten the toils of our way?" |
16114 | Did Master Spikeman know of that paper?" |
16114 | Do I understand that it is thy desire to be tried by the Assistants?" |
16114 | Do you call this a town?" |
16114 | Dost suppose it becomes a young woman to let her gallant know all she thinks about him? |
16114 | Dost think that a man of any spirit is going to be satisfied with an errand that runs like a stream of cold water down one''s back? |
16114 | Dost thou comprehend me?" |
16114 | Dost thou understand me?" |
16114 | Dost understand what it says?" |
16114 | Doth not Scripture in some manner commend the sagacious reptile, holding him up to us as an example, and bidding us be wise even as serpents? |
16114 | Doth the garniture of his spirit conform to the polished and attractive surface? |
16114 | Dread ye not a like judgment on yourselves?" |
16114 | First, however, Dudley inquired,"Is there nothing more thou wouldst communicate?" |
16114 | For, was it not designed that all should be brought within one fold, that there might be one shepherd? |
16114 | Has Sassacus any hand in this matter? |
16114 | Has not my brother told me that the white men fight and kill one another about their religion?" |
16114 | Has she learned all about the pretty pictures?" |
16114 | Has your worship obtained knowledge of any such?" |
16114 | Hast seen or heard anything on thy watch?" |
16114 | Hast thou not done more than most daughters, in giving me all the property that remains to thee here?" |
16114 | Have I not given every possible proof of affection? |
16114 | Have I not labored with untiring diligence to promote the end we both have in view? |
16114 | Have I not treated thee as the elect lady of my soul?" |
16114 | Have ye not heard of the godly man who, long time, had been prisoner at Norwich for the cause, and was by Judge Cook set at liberty? |
16114 | Have you entreated the Governor, as you promised, to let him out of that dreadful dungeon?" |
16114 | Have you got one here?" |
16114 | How can I thank my brother?" |
16114 | How continues Master Arundel to like the new world?" |
16114 | How does it look?" |
16114 | How fares it with your kinswoman, the lady Geraldine? |
16114 | How now, my masters, is there to be no discipline when my foot is off the quarter- deck? |
16114 | How shall he answer his mother, when she asks after Neebin?" |
16114 | How, I want to know, is a secret of State better than any other? |
16114 | Husband, what is the matter?" |
16114 | I am foolish,"she added, forcing some moisture into her eyes;"but-- but--""But what, O garden of delights?" |
16114 | I deny not honor and dignity, where they rightfully belong, but what is to become of the realities, if the shams receive an equal consideration?" |
16114 | I have risked my life to rescue thee, and now dost thou reject my service?" |
16114 | I suppose you came to see me?" |
16114 | If Indians killed him, why took they not his scalp, and why set they him floating on the water? |
16114 | If the cement to hold together the stones of the temple be untempered mortar, must not the fabric fall, and bury the worshippers in its ruins? |
16114 | If the watchmen sleep, what shall become of the city? |
16114 | Is it a fashion taught thee by the savages?" |
16114 | Is it because their treatment of the unfortunate Sagamore is so bad that they are unwilling it should be known? |
16114 | Is it not written, that to him only who thinketh a thing to be evil, it is evil? |
16114 | Is it not written-- touch not mine anointed, and do my prophets no harm? |
16114 | Is it your pleasure to accompany me, or remain you later?" |
16114 | Is the enemy taken?" |
16114 | Is this an Indian mode of disposing of friends?" |
16114 | Is this the way you have abused my relative?" |
16114 | Larkham, or the valor of either? |
16114 | Larkham,"demanded the other,"which authorizes Endicott, or any other man, to cut out the cross from the King''s colors? |
16114 | Might they not justly consider this a strange way of courting an alliance? |
16114 | Not one salute?" |
16114 | Not so, however, thought the Assistant,( for what man can not the cunning of a coquette deceive?) |
16114 | Now, have ye never noticed that the best time to trade with a man is when half a dozen glasses have warmed his heart?" |
16114 | Now, how may this be done, if respect be not had to the prepossessions and prejudices of mankind? |
16114 | O, Sam, why do you aggravate me so? |
16114 | Of what art afraid?" |
16114 | Of what use can it be to you to put him to a horrid death?" |
16114 | Pray, are they credited by any one, save by them of the baser sort?" |
16114 | Presently she was heard calling,"Eveline; why, Eveline, art not ready yet?" |
16114 | Refuses he not even to allow me to see her, and must not our meetings be stolen? |
16114 | Said not holy St. Augustine,_ credo quia impossibile et_? |
16114 | Saith not the Scripture, also, He giveth wine to gladden man''s heart? |
16114 | Seest thou not that it is only thyself who dost stand in the way of thy happiness? |
16114 | Shall I fire?" |
16114 | Shall I rehearse it to you?" |
16114 | Shall Sassacus love Neebin less than a bear its cub? |
16114 | Shall we try our fortune together?" |
16114 | She is well?" |
16114 | She manifested no fear at sight of the Indians,( for what had she to dread from those who had always shown her kindness?) |
16114 | She started at the first sound, but quickly recovering herself, replied, in a tone as low:"Of what avail? |
16114 | Should I not feel an interest in a brave man unjustly condemned by the artful Winthrop? |
16114 | Should I request thee to visit the Taranteens in their own country, what would be thy reply?" |
16114 | Sir Christopher,"cried the lady, falling at his feet,"Wherefore, when I besought thee before to explain thy conduct, did you treat me so slightingly? |
16114 | Sparhawk, how Boston looks to you?" |
16114 | Sparhawk,( do ye hear?) |
16114 | Suppose you he would take my word in opposition to that of a fellow saint and magistrate?" |
16114 | Surely, I have explained all this, even unto weariness?" |
16114 | Teaches not God by his example how to govern his world?" |
16114 | The reason thereof will satisfy most, for is it not written,''Be ye not unequally yoked with unbelievers?'' |
16114 | They were friends, but why should the Knight conceal the fact? |
16114 | Thinkest thou that I could bear to part From thee and learn to halve my heart? |
16114 | Thou wouldst not have me speak of secrets of State?" |
16114 | Thus speaks he:''Doth not nature itself teach you that if a man have long hair it is a shame unto him?''" |
16114 | To whom but to yourself; my H., should I dedicate this Romance, which may be said to be the fruit of our mutual studies? |
16114 | To whom thinkest thou is owing thy release from thy heaviest chains?" |
16114 | True, the English knew not that Waqua was Sassacus, but would the Indians believe it? |
16114 | Vouch you for the truth of your correspondent?" |
16114 | Was it for the glory of God that these men died, or because they coveted the praise of the world, and gratified a ferocious instinct of their nature?" |
16114 | Was it not because of the yoke she sought to put upon our necks that we abandoned her, here to enjoy a wider liberty? |
16114 | Was it not inspired by honor, that the Roman Regulus returned to certain torture and death? |
16114 | Well, what do you want? |
16114 | Were he to do so, what would become of the respect of his people?" |
16114 | Were it better now to follow or to remain?" |
16114 | Westward, indeed, the star of Empire had taken its way, and the wise men of the East were following its heavenly guidance; but who knew it then? |
16114 | What art thou about now?" |
16114 | What chance would a poor unprotected girl have in a contest with the rich and powerful Assistant? |
16114 | What do you stand gaping there for, like a chicken with the pip? |
16114 | What does the Scriptures say, goodman Nettles, about an Ethiopian changing his spots?" |
16114 | What foolish thing have I said to this girl?" |
16114 | What has he to do with guns?" |
16114 | What hast thou asked that I have withheld? |
16114 | What hast to tell?" |
16114 | What have I done by my imprudent words?" |
16114 | What have the Pequots to oppose, but naked bodies and uncertain arrows?" |
16114 | What is to be done now, seeing that Sir Christopher is not to be found?" |
16114 | What madness is this? |
16114 | What makes thee unhappy? |
16114 | What mean you? |
16114 | What more?" |
16114 | What motive can he have, other than to perform his duty to the living and to the dead? |
16114 | What passages passed between them?" |
16114 | What refreshment may it please you to take?" |
16114 | What right had they to molest him with their dissenting presence? |
16114 | What right has such a consideration to interfere, when you are called upon to act by them who are set over you, and whom you are bound to obey? |
16114 | What says he now?" |
16114 | What shall be done with him on his return?" |
16114 | What success has he?" |
16114 | What white man ever before was hurt by Sassacus? |
16114 | What will become of thee, Philip, and of me?" |
16114 | What would be the condition of Eveline Dunning shouldst thou never return?" |
16114 | What would such professors, if they were now living, say to the excess of our times?" |
16114 | When is it your purpose that I should depart? |
16114 | Where hast thou been, and what means the change in thy appearance?" |
16114 | Where is my gun?" |
16114 | Where lost the man his life, and by whose hand, and for what cause? |
16114 | Where shall we hunt?" |
16114 | Where was I? |
16114 | Where was I? |
16114 | Wherefore ever refuse to satisfy my questions?" |
16114 | Wherefore should I have hesitated to bestow on one so devoted my absolute confidence?" |
16114 | Wherefore should not those days return? |
16114 | Wherein have I failed? |
16114 | Wherein, pray, has been a change in my conduct?" |
16114 | Who can impeach our faith?" |
16114 | Who can look upon his noble countenance and listen to the tones of his sincere voice, and not be satisfied of his truth? |
16114 | Who can say that Waqua fastened his eyes on him like a snake?" |
16114 | Who dared make those sounds?" |
16114 | Who ever came to his lodge, and he set not a meal before him? |
16114 | Who ever was tired, and Sassacus gave him not a skin whereon to lay his limbs? |
16114 | Who invited one of them, or did he slink without being whistled for between the legs of men into our midst?" |
16114 | Who is Vitalleschi, our chief, but another accredited instrument to accomplish the salvation of the nations? |
16114 | Who is it speaks from the chair of St. Peter, but the Vicegerent of God? |
16114 | Who was it, at thy trial, when the fierce Dudley would have silenced thee, demanded that thou shouldst be heard? |
16114 | Who will doubt it right? |
16114 | Who would have thought it? |
16114 | Who would take her word in opposition to his? |
16114 | Whoever heard before that the Pope had ever anything to do with wine? |
16114 | Whoever heard of an Indian before who refused drink when he could get it?" |
16114 | Why again, he thought, is the chief of a distant tribe lurking in these woods? |
16114 | Why dost not speak? |
16114 | Why flames the far summit? |
16114 | Why not endeavor to interest Governor Winthrop in thy behalf?" |
16114 | Why persist in connecting them with thyself as the cause?" |
16114 | Why shoot to the blast Those embers, like stars from the firmament cast?" |
16114 | Why should he carry about with him a note of this kind respecting another? |
16114 | Why should my brother expose his life?" |
16114 | Why the immobility? |
16114 | Why this solemn adjuration?" |
16114 | Why this violence?" |
16114 | Will he not now return to his big lodge, where he will hear no war- whoop, but only the pleasant song of the gues- ques- kes in the morning?" |
16114 | Will he return with me to Boston?" |
16114 | Will my brother grant me a favor?" |
16114 | Will no prayers, no entreaties change thee?" |
16114 | Will not the chief remain to witness it?" |
16114 | Will you not tell me the cause?" |
16114 | Wilt thou not believe what I say?" |
16114 | Wilt thou revile them who are set in authority over thee? |
16114 | With what great events teems the bosom of futurity? |
16114 | Would he like to know how he was created?" |
16114 | Would it be asking too much for the honor of an introduction?" |
16114 | Would my brother speak to my prisoner, whom, at this moment, he loves more than the justice of an Indian?" |
16114 | Yet, why call I her so? |
16114 | and I see not Prudence?" |
16114 | are we to sit here to listen to malapert railings against men of godly life and conversation?" |
16114 | cried Dame Spikeman, as the haggard face of her husband presented itself in the morning,"where hast thou been all the night? |
16114 | cried the girl, hardly able to speak for merriment;"what are you going to do? |
16114 | do ye think it would be so very pleasant to have the sharks swim into heaven and go jumping and yelling round like so many red devils as they are?" |
16114 | exclaimed Dudley;"not when the answer is blasphemous, or idolatrous, or otherwise impious?" |
16114 | exclaimed Prudence, rising, and preparing to leave the room,"that your love was but a pretext? |
16114 | exclaimed sister Celestina--"what is it but a delusive phantom, whereby ye men are frighted from the noblest undertakings? |
16114 | exclaimed the jailer, did he counsel injury to me?" |
16114 | exclaimed the knight,"is there any forbidding thereof in Holy Scripture?" |
16114 | he asked,"art thou dead, or only scalped?" |
16114 | he exclaimed, after reading through several leaves:"was ever man worse deceived? |
16114 | is it reasonable to ask us to march to battle with the sign of Rome flaunting over our heads? |
16114 | or do they think that in open day I would attempt to rescue him?" |
16114 | said Mr. Eliot, aside, to Governor Winthrop,"who would have thought this of one so zealous for our Israel?" |
16114 | she exclaimed, forgetting herself in the excitement of feeling,"must I bear this? |
16114 | she exclaimed,"be they gone, and have not they scalped you?" |
16114 | she said;"for what know I of the private motions of the mind of Sir Christopher?" |
16114 | that the chivalrous King of Israel, when fainting with thirst, poured out to the Lord the water for which his soul longed? |
16114 | what is the world coming to?" |
16114 | what meanest thou? |
16114 | what would you have me do? |
9442 | ... Why was England lost to the Church? 9442 Alan!--have you noticed-- how well I have been getting on with the Sisters?--what friends Father Leadham and I made? |
9442 | Alan, have you noticed Laura, yesterday and to- day? 9442 All the same, I shall never be a Catholic,"she repeated resolutely;"and how can you marry an unbeliever?" |
9442 | An where''s she been? 9442 And Alan-- will Father Leadham come to- morrow?" |
9442 | And Laura,said the sighing thread of a voice,"how_ can_ you be wiser than all the Church?--all these generations? |
9442 | And all the people, who work with their heads, Daffady, like-- like my papa? |
9442 | And do you happen to know whether Mr. Bayley is coming to supper? |
9442 | And our dear Squire does nothing to try and change Miss Fountain''s mind towards the Church? |
9442 | And so all the world is idle but you farm people? |
9442 | And so-- to avoid him----? |
9442 | And the road? |
9442 | And they ca n''t meet? |
9442 | And they have made him give up his art? |
9442 | And was there-- much suffering? |
9442 | And wha''s the message from? |
9442 | And what you said to me afterwards, about the child-- and doubt? 9442 And what, pray, could Mr. Fountain do, John, but make matters ten times worse?" |
9442 | And you are so eager to listen to them? |
9442 | And you felt no sympathy for him? |
9442 | And you have been, to Whinthorpe already!--Why do you go to Mass every morning? |
9442 | And you were afraid-- that you might love me? 9442 And you wo n''t bend a single prejudice to-- to save such a family possession-- though I care for it so much?" |
9442 | And-- and no prayers for me? |
9442 | And-- that means-- you will sell the Romney? |
9442 | Are there any Catholics near it? |
9442 | Are there not many motives? |
9442 | Are you ready? |
9442 | Blast yer!--why ai n''t it spirits? |
9442 | But howiver are you goin to live wi Mr. Helbeck then? |
9442 | But the factory- hands, Daffady? |
9442 | But you were saying something of yourself? |
9442 | But you will come and look in upon me?--you will help me through? |
9442 | But you''ll be very, very patient with me-- won''t you? 9442 But_ why?_""Inquisitive person!" |
9442 | Ca n''t you realise how it would divide us? 9442 Daddy!--where''s Daddy?" |
9442 | Daddy-- where''s Daddy? |
9442 | Dear, will you let me go now? 9442 Did I ever tell you the story of my great- grandfather drowning in that pool?" |
9442 | Did Polly tell you? |
9442 | Did he actually tell you that was his intention? |
9442 | Did he scold you just now about the relic? 9442 Did he see it?" |
9442 | Did she tell you her plans? |
9442 | Did you? 9442 Did-- did Father Leadham tell you that?" |
9442 | Do n''t cry-- can''t you get some brandy? |
9442 | Do you forget my stepmother''s state, Cousin Elizabeth? |
9442 | Do you know what the child was doing this afternoon? |
9442 | Do you like me to read your books? |
9442 | Do you mean that you want me to marry you, Hubert? 9442 Do you think I made a ridiculous fuss?" |
9442 | Do you think he cares-- one rap? 9442 Do you think so?" |
9442 | Do you want to hear? |
9442 | Do you? |
9442 | Do!--who wants him to do anything? 9442 Does his father wish to see him?" |
9442 | Dostha want the cart to- morrow? 9442 Experimenting with a Whinthorpe dressmaker,"she said;"do you approve?" |
9442 | Father Bowles gave her Communion this morning? |
9442 | For me? |
9442 | Has he seen his father? |
9442 | Have they stopped the mills? |
9442 | Have you got a shawl? 9442 Have you judged him already? |
9442 | Have you told Laura? |
9442 | Have you? |
9442 | He did n''t suffer? |
9442 | He is selling some land there? |
9442 | Hoo can he knaw? |
9442 | How can there be any possible doubt what I should have said to her? |
9442 | How far is it across the sands to Marsland station? |
9442 | How long will my stepdaughter let it go on? |
9442 | How long will that be? |
9442 | I suppose young Mason saw her off? |
9442 | I want to know what_ you_ would do if Mr. Williams-- if any priest you know were to break his vows and leave the Church, what would you do? |
9442 | If he were to leave the Jesuits,she said,"would you break with him?" |
9442 | If she loved, would n''t that change her? 9442 Is Miss Fountain there?" |
9442 | Is he in Cambridge? |
9442 | Is he never to be free to say what he thinks and feels in his own house? |
9442 | Is it possible that you could show it me-- or any part of it? 9442 Is that true? |
9442 | Is there a wife? |
9442 | Is there immediate danger? |
9442 | It was our engagement, of course, that he meant-- by your fall-- the black cloud that covered you? |
9442 | It was very ghostly, was n''t it? 9442 Laura, do you know what those kind dear nuns have done? |
9442 | Laura, does it seem very hard-- very awful-- to you? |
9442 | Laura, whatever did you do it for? 9442 Little one-- if you keep such pale cheeks-- what am I to do?" |
9442 | Might n''t there? |
9442 | Miss Fountain is not at home? |
9442 | Miss Fountain-- may I ask you a kindness? |
9442 | Misther Helbeck!--yo''ll tell me on your conscience-- as it''s reet and just-- afther aw that''s passt--''at this yoong woman should go wi yo? |
9442 | Mrs. Fountain''s nobbut sadly, I unnerstan? |
9442 | Mut yo goa, missie? 9442 My dear sister, if it were so-- what difference can it make?" |
9442 | My dear,said the doctor anxiously, laying hold on his wife''s arm,"should we have asked him to lunch?" |
9442 | Not yet-- can''t anyone find some brandy? 9442 Now-- you''ll let me take you home, Miss Laura? |
9442 | Oh,_ Alan_!--where is she? |
9442 | Or am I to sit by and see him sink to the level of these bigots? |
9442 | Ought she to be here? |
9442 | Polly-- Laura-- what art tha aboot? 9442 Polly-- are you all very cross with me still?" |
9442 | Right for Marsland? |
9442 | Shall I? |
9442 | Shall we go into the drawing- room? 9442 Sir John Pringle?" |
9442 | So that is why you would not take us to Whinthorpe the other day to see that London company? |
9442 | So you are going to be very unkind to him? |
9442 | So you do approve? 9442 So you would cast him off?" |
9442 | So? 9442 Suppose I am jealous of your Church and hate her?" |
9442 | There is Wilson in the garden-- shall we go and talk to him? |
9442 | To the Jesuits? |
9442 | To the Third Order? 9442 Under the same roof-- and the old conditions? |
9442 | Was it long ago? |
9442 | Was n''t it kind of the dear nuns, Laura? |
9442 | Well, I was here on some business-- and I thought I''d look you up, do n''t you know? |
9442 | Well, and why should I? |
9442 | Well, they said that Mr. Helbeck could do no different, that he did it to save his sister from knowing----"Knowing what? |
9442 | Well, we''re cousins, you see-- though of course I do n''t mean to say that we''re her sort-- you understand? |
9442 | Well-- and Mrs. Fountain? 9442 Well-- and if I did?" |
9442 | Well-- you had n''t exactly commended yourself as an escort, had you? |
9442 | What are you here for? |
9442 | What became of her? |
9442 | What chance have I? |
9442 | What do they say? |
9442 | What do you mean by''soul''? 9442 What do you mean? |
9442 | What do you mean? |
9442 | What does that mean? |
9442 | What has poor Williams done that you should imagine such things? |
9442 | What have I to offer you? |
9442 | What have you been doing to yourself? |
9442 | What is it? |
9442 | What is it?--in two words? |
9442 | What penalty do I exact for that? |
9442 | What power have I beside theirs? |
9442 | What was that? |
9442 | What were they all about, to make such a blunder? |
9442 | What would you have said to her? |
9442 | What, the drinking and gambling gentleman? |
9442 | When am I to teach you Latin? |
9442 | When did the change come? |
9442 | Where have you come from? |
9442 | Where''s the Marsland train? |
9442 | Who can understand that? |
9442 | Who talks of Jesuit tyranny now? |
9442 | Why did n''t she tell me? |
9442 | Why do you give so much to the Sisters? 9442 Why do you suppose I went away the day after the ghost?" |
9442 | Why does n''t he give it all up,she said with energy,"and be an artist? |
9442 | Why is it so horrible that an Anglican church should be built on your land? |
9442 | Why should n''t he be keeping straight? |
9442 | Why should n''t you take me? 9442 Why will you start such uncomfortable topics, dear?" |
9442 | Why, Pater-- who is it? |
9442 | Why-- what frightened you? |
9442 | Why? 9442 Why?" |
9442 | Why? |
9442 | Will you fight me? |
9442 | Will you pardon me,he said quietly,"if I ask for more information? |
9442 | Will you please come and look at the sights?--or shall I go home? |
9442 | Will you take me into the drawing- room, and get me some wine-- before I see Augustina? |
9442 | Wo n''t you trust those things to me? |
9442 | You ca n''t love me,she repeated;"when did you begin? |
9442 | You can''t-- you ca n''t belong to that-- when we are married? |
9442 | You did n''t expect to see me in this dress, Miss Fountain? 9442 You do n''t seem to miss Mr. Hubert very much?" |
9442 | You knew Father Leadham in the north, Miss Laura? |
9442 | You know that I was brought up apart from religion, altogether? |
9442 | You mean----? |
9442 | You were glad to be coming back-- to be coming here? |
9442 | You would have left Bannisdale, would n''t you? |
9442 | You, I suppose, became acquainted with her in Westmoreland? |
9442 | You-- you would like to correspond with Father Leadham? |
9442 | Your father did wish it, did n''t he? |
9442 | ''And as to those other trifles, what have you to do with them? |
9442 | ''Fadther''--he ses--''dear fadther-- is there nowt I could do fer tha?'' |
9442 | ''How could I be tired? |
9442 | ''Will you give me one more day?'' |
9442 | *****"Wo n''t she come?" |
9442 | --his voice leapt--"do I do enough to make you happy?" |
9442 | A finger, was it? |
9442 | A wife resist-- defy? |
9442 | Alan!--will you put your ear down to me?" |
9442 | And Mr. Helbeck? |
9442 | And beyond? |
9442 | And he is keeping straight?" |
9442 | And how long is it to go on?" |
9442 | And if He died, are we not His from the first moment of our birth-- His first of all? |
9442 | And now who would not be free to talk, to spatter her girlish name? |
9442 | And now-- what was there left to give? |
9442 | And the difficulty is, what is she to do? |
9442 | And then? |
9442 | And where, now, was any sign of it? |
9442 | And who knows--- who can know? |
9442 | And you? |
9442 | Anyway, will you please tell Cousin Elizabeth that I''m not going to be a Catholic? |
9442 | Are you really anxious?" |
9442 | Are you unhappy about me? |
9442 | At last she said, looking away from him:"Do you think, if I proposed it, your mother could bear to have me on a visit to the farm?" |
9442 | BOOK V CHAPTER I"My dear, where are the girls?" |
9442 | Bannisdale, home? |
9442 | Barlow?" |
9442 | Beauty? |
9442 | Because Henry was a villain?--because the Tudor bishops were slaves and poltroons? |
9442 | Bit t''Bible says''How can he get wisdom that holdeth the plough-- whose taak is o''bullocks?'' |
9442 | But I expect-- you know what she''d be afraid of?" |
9442 | But a dozen passengers with luggage laid hands upon him at once, and he was left with no time for more than the muttered remark:"Marsland? |
9442 | But approach her!--whether it was poor Hubert, or even----? |
9442 | But at last she said:"Where is Laura?" |
9442 | But had it deserved a stroke so cruel-- so unjust? |
9442 | But he looks very ill-- don''t you think so?" |
9442 | But he never came near the faith, Laura-- how could he judge? |
9442 | But his glance had an intensity, it expressed a determination, which made her cry out--"Alan-- if she gave way?" |
9442 | But how could I help listening? |
9442 | But how? |
9442 | But if I say whatever you want me to say-- if I do what is required of me-- you wo n''t ask me too many questions-- you wo n''t press me too hard? |
9442 | But if calamity came-- if it meant calamity-- and he had not delivered his message-- would there not have been a burden on his soul? |
9442 | But now, I suppose, you will stay? |
9442 | But then, how is she at fault? |
9442 | But what had Mason to do with it-- on that occasion? |
9442 | But where is she to look for self- respect, for peace of mind? |
9442 | But why should there be"stories,"and what did it all mean? |
9442 | But, Laura, are they_ true_?" |
9442 | But, Laura, what have I seen in you? |
9442 | But, since she suffered-- since she felt the need of that more intimate, more exquisite link--? |
9442 | CHAPTER II"Missie-- are yo ben?" |
9442 | CHAPTER III As the dog- cart reached the turning of the lane, Mr. Helbeck said to his companion:"Would you kindly take the cart through? |
9442 | Can I sit here in the station till the morning?" |
9442 | Could he undo the blood- relationship between her and the Masons? |
9442 | Could it torment you if-- if it had not gained some footing in your heart? |
9442 | Could she not easily have found a woman on whom to throw herself, who would have befriended her? |
9442 | Daffady, Cousin Elizabeth wo n''t forget to bring up the letters?" |
9442 | Daffady, you''re very kind and nice to me-- I wonder why?" |
9442 | Dearest, wo n''t you recognise my difficulties, and-- and help me through them?" |
9442 | Did I do it well-- that night-- about the ghost?" |
9442 | Did Laura''s eyebrows go up the very slightest trifle? |
9442 | Did he read with her-- share his mind with her? |
9442 | Did n''t they warn you at Froswick? |
9442 | Did n''t you know?" |
9442 | Did you only determine on this last night?" |
9442 | Do n''t all women live by their affections? |
9442 | Do you approve of all that?" |
9442 | Do you explain my recent absences in the same way?" |
9442 | Do you know that I have sat here all night-- in misery?" |
9442 | Do you remember once rebuking me in anger because I had made some mistake in the chapel work? |
9442 | Do you remember what a good nurse he was?--so much better than I?" |
9442 | Do you remember when his wife was very ill, and he was praying for her, he heard a voice-- do you remember?" |
9442 | Do you see that little beach?" |
9442 | Do you-- do you think St. Francis Borgia was a very admirable person?" |
9442 | Does Leadham, or any other rational man really think so?" |
9442 | Else-- how shall I be his wife at all?" |
9442 | Father Leadham is bound to teach, is he not, as a priest? |
9442 | For Heaven''s sake, why do we leave our children''s minds empty like this? |
9442 | For what? |
9442 | From want of sleep?--or merely from the daily fatigue of that long walk, foodless, to Whinthorpe for early Mass? |
9442 | Had Mason simply arranged the whole"mistake,"jumped into the same train with her, and confronted her at the junction? |
9442 | Had he forgotten who was once the ghost? |
9442 | Had she fallen asleep in her fatigue? |
9442 | Had she made all arrangements for Augustina? |
9442 | Had there been any touch of spiritual arrogance in his tone? |
9442 | Have I a soul?--and what do you suppose is going to happen to it?" |
9442 | He bent over his sister, and said in a low decided voice,"Will you give me the relic, dear? |
9442 | He might have made sure? |
9442 | He was trying hard to read her face, but-- what the deuce made girls so close? |
9442 | He would not only excuse the audacity-- was she quite sure that in his inmost heart he would not shrink before the warning? |
9442 | Helbeck?" |
9442 | Helbeck?" |
9442 | Helbeck?" |
9442 | Her reason refuses them-- but why? |
9442 | Home? |
9442 | How can I save myself, wretched tempter and coward that I am, and leave her in remorse and grief?'' |
9442 | How can one be sure--?" |
9442 | How can you be happy? |
9442 | How did he dare to present himself to you?" |
9442 | How had she lived through it? |
9442 | How is it that contempt and war can change like this? |
9442 | How strange, after these ghastly hours, to feel yourself floating in beauty and peace-- a tremulous peace-- like this? |
9442 | How was it possible to go on suffering like this? |
9442 | How''s Daffady? |
9442 | How_ could_ she? |
9442 | Hush!--what time was it? |
9442 | I dare say it was ridiculous-- but I was so startled-- and he had no business----""He had given you no hint-- that he wished to accompany you?" |
9442 | I have prayed for your father''s soul at every Mass since-- you remember that Rosary service in April?" |
9442 | I shall never come first-- quite first-- shall I?" |
9442 | I wonder what they would have said to St. Francis Borgia?" |
9442 | If Laura_ did_ become a Catholic-- is there anything in the way-- anything you ca n''t undo?" |
9442 | If a girl''s name were indeed at the mercy of such chances, why should one care-- take any trouble? |
9442 | If living here does n''t teach one, what could? |
9442 | If your mother does n''t hate me now, as she did last summer-- perhaps-- she and Polly would take me in for a while?" |
9442 | In Helbeck''s heart? |
9442 | In Williams''s case, so long as he had a fascinating and absorbing pursuit, how could he give himself up to his superiors? |
9442 | Is any chastisement too heavy, any restraint too harsh, if it keep us from the sin for which our Lord must die? |
9442 | Is it too far?" |
9442 | Is the world under sin-- and has a God died for it? |
9442 | Is there a light?" |
9442 | Is there not already some tenderness"--his voice dropped--"behind the scorn? |
9442 | Laura, can you be happy-- with poverty-- and me?" |
9442 | Laura, my little Laura, am I hurting you so?" |
9442 | Laura, my love, my sweet, why does our Faith hurt you so much if it means nothing to you? |
9442 | Martin?" |
9442 | May I be frank? |
9442 | May I?" |
9442 | Mind, Polly,--did you hear?" |
9442 | Missed train? |
9442 | Mr. Helbeck-- I am not mistaken, Miss Fountain, in thinking that I may now speak of Mr. Helbeck with more freedom?" |
9442 | Mrs. Mason tucked in the small figure-- lingered a little-- said,"Laura, th''art not coald-- nor sick?" |
9442 | Mrs. Mason''s window was thrown open next, and her voice came out imperiously--"What is it?" |
9442 | Music?--books?--the books that"make incomparable old maids"--friends? |
9442 | My schemes have been growing-- what motive had I for holding my hand? |
9442 | Nature? |
9442 | Nothing but a cold tolerance-- bare civility and protection for Augustina''s sake? |
9442 | Nothing for you to discover and explore as time goes on?" |
9442 | Of what revolt, what ruin is not the body capable? |
9442 | Only, will you forgive me if you feel a change in me? |
9442 | Or to- night, if she were awake, and strong enough? |
9442 | Or was it merely the change of dress? |
9442 | Or was it the stimulating effect of her brother''s engagement? |
9442 | Or was she in the plot? |
9442 | Or why not have tried to get a carriage? |
9442 | Please tell me-- would-- would you regard him as a lost soul?" |
9442 | Presently he asked:"You think Mrs. Fountain is really worse?" |
9442 | Religion? |
9442 | She paused, then added with great vivacity--"I thought it applied to someone else-- don''t you?" |
9442 | Since she could not let it alone, but must needs wound herself and him----? |
9442 | So I sent him to the inn to ask-- and I----""You----?" |
9442 | Strange passion of it!--it rushes through the girl''s nature in one blending storm of longing and despair....... What sound was that? |
9442 | Suddenly Mason said:"Would you take a walk with me, Miss Laura?" |
9442 | Suddenly she caught the words:"So you still keep her? |
9442 | Suppose he_ did_ give it all up? |
9442 | Surely someone had opened the further gate-- the gate from the lane? |
9442 | That he may enjoy a little more martyrdom?" |
9442 | That past physical ecstasy-- in spring-- in flowing water-- in flowers-- in light and colour-- where was it gone? |
9442 | That unlucky Froswick business-- and young Mason? |
9442 | The eager feverish voice went on:"Do you know that''s the kind of thing you read always-- always-- day after day? |
9442 | The guard, who had already whistled, waved his flag as he replied:"Marsland? |
9442 | Then again, why not go to the inn? |
9442 | Then, with a sudden change of tone--"Can I have the cart to- morrow, Daffady?" |
9442 | There was a quick association of ideas-- and she said abruptly:"Why did Mr. Williams say all that to you last night, do you suppose?" |
9442 | There-- take me!--will you guide me?" |
9442 | To open the old wounds-- to make him glad for an hour-- then to strike and leave him-- could anything be more pitiless? |
9442 | To search a sleeping town for Miss Fountain-- would that mend matters? |
9442 | To- morrow-- will you tell Augustina? |
9442 | Two months before, would the same adventure have affected her at all? |
9442 | Unless Hubert--? |
9442 | Was Alan up all that night? |
9442 | Was Augustina in a great way?" |
9442 | Was he really making up his mind to propose-- because people might talk? |
9442 | Was he sober now? |
9442 | Was he to make a house- to- house visitation at that hour? |
9442 | Was it another punishment from Heaven for her own wilful and sacrilegious marriage? |
9442 | Was it not three weeks and more, now, that Laura had been at the farm? |
9442 | Was it old Wilson, or Mr. Helbeck? |
9442 | Was it the last touch? |
9442 | Was it the mere spell of Catholic order and discipline, working upon her own restless and ill- ordered nature? |
9442 | Was it-- such a hard fate?" |
9442 | Was she hurt, and did he deserve it? |
9442 | Was she responsible for her father? |
9442 | Was she to be wept over by Sister Angela-- to confess her sins to Father Bowles-- still worse, to Father Leadham? |
9442 | Was she-- by submission-- to give these people, so to speak, a right to meddle and dabble in her heart? |
9442 | We can be friends, ca n''t we? |
9442 | Well, but now-- you''re free-- and I''m a better sort-- won''t you give a fellow a chance?" |
9442 | Well, but-- comfort!--where was it to be had? |
9442 | Well, what wonder?--if they thought her just a fast ill- conducted girl, who had worked upon Mr. Helbeck''s pity and softness of heart? |
9442 | Were you quite kind-- quite right in doing what you did last night? |
9442 | What can it do with its poor freedom?" |
9442 | What can it mean? |
9442 | What do earth- worms like mothers and sisters matter to him?" |
9442 | What do you really think-- what do you fear-- what_ must_ you fear? |
9442 | What do you say now-- to yourself-- when-- when you pray for me? |
9442 | What else do you expect of me?" |
9442 | What happens? |
9442 | What harm could happen to her? |
9442 | What matter? |
9442 | What need of any other sacrament or sign than these-- this beauty and bounty of the continuing world? |
9442 | What on earth did she want to be in those parts again for? |
9442 | What on earth did the Bishop mean? |
9442 | What on earth was she doing here, in that untidy state, with a young man, at an hour going on for midnight? |
9442 | What right had the Bishop or anyone else to speak of"stories"about Laura? |
9442 | What stood in the way? |
9442 | What was happening in this strange, strange world? |
9442 | What was he to do?--what could he do? |
9442 | What was in her mind all the time-- behind those clear indomitable eyes? |
9442 | What was she to do? |
9442 | What was she to do?--how was she to protect herself? |
9442 | What was that phrase he had dropped once as to being"under a rule"? |
9442 | What was the matter?" |
9442 | What was this freedom, this atrocious freedom-- that a creature so fragile, so unfit to wield it, had yet claimed so fatally? |
9442 | What was"The Third Order of St. Francis"? |
9442 | What were they talking of?--the picture? |
9442 | What will you say? |
9442 | What wonder? |
9442 | What would she say-- when the train stopped? |
9442 | What would the Squire think? |
9442 | What''s the good of a man like Father Leadham-- so learned, and such manners!--if he ca n''t talk to a girl like Laura? |
9442 | What''s your housekeeping after? |
9442 | When do you think the mistress will be back?" |
9442 | When he found her so, what could he do but pity her?--be moved, perhaps beyond bounds, by the goodness of a generous nature? |
9442 | When she called to Bruno he checked his flow of anecdote, and said to her in a lower voice:"You think us uncharitable?" |
9442 | When they were married, would he still sell all that he had, and give to the poor-- in the shape of orphanages and reformatories? |
9442 | When was Laura to be married, and what was she to wear? |
9442 | Whence was it-- this stilling, pacifying power? |
9442 | Where could she feel secure? |
9442 | Who can ever take his place? |
9442 | Who knows? |
9442 | Who was I that I should teach anybody? |
9442 | Whose fault was it? |
9442 | Why did you give me the slip that night?" |
9442 | Why do you say these things?--why does it hurt you so much?" |
9442 | Why must he always play the disobliging and tyrannical host? |
9442 | Why should my coat be so blessed?" |
9442 | Why should there be these mysterious suspicions and penalties in the world? |
9442 | Why then this weariness-- this overwhelming melancholy that seized her in all her solitary moments? |
9442 | Why will ye now hold them back from Me-- wherefore will ye die?"'' |
9442 | Why!--would the inn take her in? |
9442 | Why, was n''t Seaton''s word good enough? |
9442 | Why? |
9442 | Will he never even scold or argue with her again? |
9442 | Will you feel it too long?" |
9442 | Will you forgive me?" |
9442 | Will you go and see, while I wait? |
9442 | Will you help me up? |
9442 | Will you kindly tell him when he comes back that I have made up my mind after all to walk to Marsland? |
9442 | Will you leave my love no mysteries, Laura-- no reserve? |
9442 | Will you never, never let me get the upper hand?" |
9442 | Will you raise my pillow a little?" |
9442 | Will you take the consequences?" |
9442 | Wo n''t you come here, and sit down"--she pointed to a chair near her--"as if we were friends still? |
9442 | Wo n''t you come out?" |
9442 | Wo n''t you take my word for the sweetness, the reward, and the mercifulness of God''s dealings with our souls?" |
9442 | Would he be at Bannisdale before she was? |
9442 | Would not all difficulties find their solvent-- melt in a golden air-- when once they had passed into the freedom and confidence of marriage? |
9442 | Would such a ravening world be worth respecting, worth the fearing? |
9442 | Would you be like him if you could? |
9442 | Would-- would Father Leadham, do you think, take the trouble to correspond with me-- to point me out the books, for instance, that I might read?" |
9442 | Yes-- surely she saw a figure on that wide expanse of sand, moving quickly, moving away? |
9442 | You did not love me then: how could I dream you ever would? |
9442 | You know, however, that we must begin our new buildings at the orphanage in six weeks-- and that I must have the money?" |
9442 | You remember, Laura, when you sat here on Easter Sunday? |
9442 | You would not have me give up what has been my help and salvation for ten years?" |
9442 | You''ll trust to my being yours-- to my growing into your heart? |
9442 | dear Augustina?" |
9442 | had you realised that young man?" |
9442 | he said in bewilderment,"where am I to begin?" |
9442 | how''re the calves? |
9442 | how''s Hubert?" |
9442 | how''s the cow that was ill? |
9442 | is it to- night you expect Father Leadham?" |
9442 | she said, rather hoarsely--"many ways? |
9442 | they be gone for her an t''passon boath,"said another voice;"what''s passon to do whan he cooms?" |
9442 | where are you?" |
9442 | yo''re to be a Romanist too-- for sure?" |
12908 | Well, that''s a bit of all right, ai n''t it? |
12908 | ''"Reported wounded and missing-- now reported killed"? |
12908 | ''"They"? |
12908 | ''About beauty?'' |
12908 | ''Again?'' |
12908 | ''Ah, well, never mind,''said Nelly--''I''m sure that man wo n''t forget?'' |
12908 | ''Ah?'' |
12908 | ''All very well!--but suppose--_suppose_--before she felt herself free-- and against her conscience--_she_ were to fall in love with_ you_?'' |
12908 | ''And Mrs. Weston wants to know what time supper''s to be?'' |
12908 | ''And Sir William lent us one of his farms-- near his cottage-- do you remember?'' |
12908 | ''And drop me a line to- night?'' |
12908 | ''And he has never written?'' |
12908 | ''And now-- you never give it?'' |
12908 | ''And please, what have you done with Herbert? |
12908 | ''And that it would be better not to risk the effect on his wife? |
12908 | ''And then what shall I do with her?'' |
12908 | ''And there is really no hope for him?'' |
12908 | ''And there was no sign of recognition?'' |
12908 | ''And we give you neither?'' |
12908 | ''And what about those-- to whom it will do harm?'' |
12908 | ''And what do you find to do with yourself at Rydal?'' |
12908 | ''And where have you been all the time? |
12908 | ''And you do n''t mean to write to me? |
12908 | ''And you think I shall find her by the lake?'' |
12908 | ''And you-- how often?'' |
12908 | ''And you?'' |
12908 | ''And_ you_ want to take it in hand?'' |
12908 | ''Are n''t they-- aren''t they worth immense sums?'' |
12908 | ''Are n''t you Mr. and Mrs. Sarratt? |
12908 | ''Are n''t you very tired, Bridget? |
12908 | ''Are they at home?'' |
12908 | ''Are they bad cases?'' |
12908 | ''Are they?'' |
12908 | ''Are you alone?'' |
12908 | ''Are you drawing a Haggan, Tommy?'' |
12908 | ''Are you going so soon?'' |
12908 | ''Are you quite sure Sarratt has been in it?'' |
12908 | ''Are you quite sure you can stand it?'' |
12908 | ''Asked her? |
12908 | ''Beginning of what?'' |
12908 | ''Bridget--_why_ did you do it?'' |
12908 | ''But why are you staying here? |
12908 | ''But you must n''t tell?'' |
12908 | ''Ca n''t we have a walk, you and I, together?'' |
12908 | ''Can one help it? |
12908 | ''Can you keep her away?'' |
12908 | ''Captain Marsworth did n''t seem to be taking much trouble?'' |
12908 | ''Cicely dear-- what is the matter with you?'' |
12908 | ''Cicely?'' |
12908 | ''Could I?'' |
12908 | ''Could n''t you get some cousin-- some friend to stay with you?'' |
12908 | ''D''ye see that, Mum?'' |
12908 | ''Daisy Stewart? |
12908 | ''Darling!--when I made you marry me--_did_ I do you an injury?'' |
12908 | ''Did he?'' |
12908 | ''Did n''t I tell you so?'' |
12908 | ''Did that interest you, Nelly?'' |
12908 | ''Did you ask for it, Bridget?'' |
12908 | ''Did you expect him?'' |
12908 | ''Did you see the eyes again? |
12908 | ''Do I ever say so?'' |
12908 | ''Do I know you well enough to ask whether you get on with her?'' |
12908 | ''Do I like being kissed?'' |
12908 | ''Do n''t I always?'' |
12908 | ''Do n''t you believe me when I say I want to do some work?'' |
12908 | ''Do n''t you think people look at us sometimes, as though we were doing something wrong?'' |
12908 | ''Do n''t you think so? |
12908 | ''Do tell me what you''re doing, Bridget?'' |
12908 | ''Do you hear the sea?'' |
12908 | ''Do you imagine that her husband has n''t told her?'' |
12908 | ''Do you know Loughrigg Tarn?'' |
12908 | ''Do you know him? |
12908 | ''Do you only"say that to annoy"?'' |
12908 | ''Do you think He''s our friend, George-- that He really cares?'' |
12908 | ''Do you think she gives up hope?'' |
12908 | ''Do you think you could persuade your sister to do something that would please me very much?'' |
12908 | ''Does Miss Farrell ever do any real nursing?'' |
12908 | ''Does Willy know?'' |
12908 | ''Does n''t that show she''s stupid? |
12908 | ''Does she expect me to give her my room?'' |
12908 | ''Doing? |
12908 | ''Eyes?'' |
12908 | ''Fast, you think? |
12908 | ''For whom?'' |
12908 | ''George, darling!--you know what you said when you went away-- what you hoped might come-- to make us both happy-- and take my thoughts off the war? |
12908 | ''Going back in a week, is he?'' |
12908 | ''Happened to her? |
12908 | ''Has he a wife?'' |
12908 | ''Has she? |
12908 | ''Have you any visitors?'' |
12908 | ''Have you been quarrelling already? |
12908 | ''Have you ever really asked yourself, Willy, how it will look to the outside world-- what people will think? |
12908 | ''Have you heard anything?'' |
12908 | ''Have you missed me-- dreadfully? |
12908 | ''Have you no other enquiries?'' |
12908 | ''Have you really asked her?'' |
12908 | ''He''s coming here?'' |
12908 | ''He''s out of it for a bit?'' |
12908 | ''He? |
12908 | ''Hester!--do you believe there''ll ever be any hope for me?'' |
12908 | ''Hester!--isn''t it strange what we imagine about ourselves-- and what is really true? |
12908 | ''How are the proofs getting on?'' |
12908 | ''How can I, if she shews me at once that I''m unwelcome? |
12908 | ''How could he? |
12908 | ''How did she get over it yesterday?'' |
12908 | ''How do you know?'' |
12908 | ''How is he really getting on?'' |
12908 | ''How is she? |
12908 | ''How is she?'' |
12908 | ''How long have you known?'' |
12908 | ''How long will it take you, George, getting to the front?'' |
12908 | ''How long?'' |
12908 | ''How much weight has she lost?'' |
12908 | ''Howson?'' |
12908 | ''Howson?'' |
12908 | ''I beg your pardon!--but have you by chance seen another lady carrying a bag like mine? |
12908 | ''I do n''t want to desert you, but-- what right have I to such comfort-- such luxury-- when other people are suffering and toiling?'' |
12908 | ''I forget''--said Nelly gravely--''which are the good ones?'' |
12908 | ''I say, what''s happened to your sister?'' |
12908 | ''I suppose,''said Nelly timidly--''they will come in to tea?'' |
12908 | ''I wonder what this motor cost?'' |
12908 | ''I wonder what we had better do?'' |
12908 | ''I wondered how you got on at dinner?'' |
12908 | ''If I_ worked_--you really think? |
12908 | ''Is he killed?'' |
12908 | ''Is it good?'' |
12908 | ''Is it here?'' |
12908 | ''Is it very full now?'' |
12908 | ''Is n''t it beautiful? |
12908 | ''Is n''t it jolly? |
12908 | ''Is n''t it my duty to make George happy?'' |
12908 | ''Is n''t it worth while to be just the joy and inspiration of those who can work hard-- so that they go away from you, renewed like eagles? |
12908 | ''Is n''t that Cicely''s voice?'' |
12908 | ''Is she going to make a quarrel of it all our lives?'' |
12908 | ''Is that her line now? |
12908 | ''Is that really you?'' |
12908 | ''Is this Sir William Farrell''s flat?'' |
12908 | ''It is surely most unlikely that my brother- in- law could have survived all this time? |
12908 | ''It''s awfully good of you-- but-- shouldn''t we have to get a servant? |
12908 | ''It_ ca n''t_ take more than forty- eight hours to come-- can it?'' |
12908 | ''Lanchesters?'' |
12908 | ''Loss of memory?--shell- shock?'' |
12908 | ''Luxury? |
12908 | ''Mademoiselle Cook-- Cookson?'' |
12908 | ''May I come in?'' |
12908 | ''May I look?'' |
12908 | ''May one ask what the book is?'' |
12908 | ''Miss Cookson?'' |
12908 | ''Miss Stewart? |
12908 | ''More agreeable than Captain Marsworth?'' |
12908 | ''Must you?'' |
12908 | ''My dear-- does Bridget feed you properly?'' |
12908 | ''Nelly dear-- what do you mean?'' |
12908 | ''Nelly, poor darling, have you been very lonely?--Were the Farrells kind to you?'' |
12908 | ''No, why should you? |
12908 | ''Not much likeness between me and St. Ignatius, is there?'' |
12908 | ''Now may I see him?'' |
12908 | ''Oh!--how can I?'' |
12908 | ''Oh, Cicely, what have you been doing?'' |
12908 | ''Oh, Sir William--''she said, in bewilderment--''Did you come in just now?'' |
12908 | ''Oh, what can I do-- what can I do?'' |
12908 | ''Oh, you_ draw_?'' |
12908 | ''Only because I have n''t got it to spend, you mean?'' |
12908 | ''Outside-- or inside?'' |
12908 | ''People at home think they''re_ so_ busy, and---''''You think they''re doing nothing?'' |
12908 | ''Perhaps you''re not a close observer of such things?'' |
12908 | ''Sarratt? |
12908 | ''Sha n''t I-- and a pink jersey, the new shade? |
12908 | ''Sha n''t we go down to the Lake, Mrs. Sarratt? |
12908 | ''Sha n''t we go out? |
12908 | ''Shall I tell Simpson not to let him in again?'' |
12908 | ''She does n''t really want it, does she?'' |
12908 | ''She regards me as a first- class prig in fact?'' |
12908 | ''She treats you nicely?--at last?'' |
12908 | ''Should you know him again, if you saw him?'' |
12908 | ''Sir William thinks he is somewhere near Festubert? |
12908 | ''Sir William-- can you take me to Windermere, for the night- train? |
12908 | ''So it''s my crimes that are driving you away? |
12908 | ''So peace is what you want?'' |
12908 | ''So she''s actually going to take up this new nursing? |
12908 | ''So you can take a rest from worrying?'' |
12908 | ''So you_ are_ going to the cottage?'' |
12908 | ''Somehow all the"ologies"seem very far away-- don''t they?'' |
12908 | ''Something dreadfully difficult?'' |
12908 | ''Staying through the summer, I suppose?'' |
12908 | ''That I do n''t know what a splendid creature she is, really?'' |
12908 | ''That is what you like-- to advise people?'' |
12908 | ''That man who spoke to us? |
12908 | ''The farm under the hill there''--she pointed--''you know about them?'' |
12908 | ''The psychology book?'' |
12908 | ''Then he has been complaining?'' |
12908 | ''Then they think he''s a prisoner?'' |
12908 | ''Then why not get a Sunday free from him?'' |
12908 | ''Then you''re not going to Rome?'' |
12908 | ''Then you_ are_ going to the cottage?'' |
12908 | ''They have warned you that this poor fellow is deaf and dumb?'' |
12908 | ''To- morrow?'' |
12908 | ''Was he-- was he very changed?'' |
12908 | ''Was it their_ religion_ made them behave like that?'' |
12908 | ''We can stay, I think, for a couple of days, ca n''t we, till we find something else? |
12908 | ''Well, I can write to him to- night then, and say we''ll go to- morrow? |
12908 | ''Well, am I to encourage Marsworth-- supposing he comes to me for advice-- to go and propose to the Rector''s granddaughter?'' |
12908 | ''Well, are you ready?'' |
12908 | ''Well, but when she''s away?'' |
12908 | ''Well, have they come?'' |
12908 | ''Well, if he does get us leave to boat, you need n''t mind, need you? |
12908 | ''Well, then they''re happy!--and why hold anyone back?'' |
12908 | ''Well, we know-- about-- don''t we?'' |
12908 | ''Well, what did Seaton say?'' |
12908 | ''Well, why should n''t we?'' |
12908 | ''Well, you would n''t wish him to be miserable?'' |
12908 | ''Well? |
12908 | ''Well?'' |
12908 | ''Well?'' |
12908 | ''Well?--mayn''t anyone give things to a sick child? |
12908 | ''Were you trying to shock Captain Marsworth?'' |
12908 | ''What are you doing now, Bridget?'' |
12908 | ''What are you going to do this afternoon?'' |
12908 | ''What at? |
12908 | ''What can be done about that incredible sister? |
12908 | ''What can it be about?'' |
12908 | ''What can they have to talk about?'' |
12908 | ''What did he come for?'' |
12908 | ''What do we want with all these things now?'' |
12908 | ''What do you deny, Cicely?'' |
12908 | ''What do you mean? |
12908 | ''What do you mean?'' |
12908 | ''What do you mean?'' |
12908 | ''What do you think of her?'' |
12908 | ''What does Dr. Howson mean, Miss Cookson, and why does he refer Mrs. Sarratt to you?'' |
12908 | ''What does it mean?'' |
12908 | ''What does she matter?'' |
12908 | ''What does that mean? |
12908 | ''What had brought it about?'' |
12908 | ''What has made you take a dislike to the poor little soul, Cicely? |
12908 | ''What has she been doing?'' |
12908 | ''What have you been doing now?'' |
12908 | ''What is it?'' |
12908 | ''What is she going to do?'' |
12908 | ''What news? |
12908 | ''What shall I do?'' |
12908 | ''What shall we do with them to- morrow?'' |
12908 | ''What sort of a room was he in, Bridget? |
12908 | ''What the deuce will she have made of it, by the end? |
12908 | ''What was I like before it?--what shall I be, when he is gone?'' |
12908 | ''What was their crime?'' |
12908 | ''What wrought the miracle?'' |
12908 | ''What"George"? |
12908 | ''What''ll the next message be?'' |
12908 | ''What''s the good of saying that, about a man like William, who knows what he wants? |
12908 | ''What, that little woman? |
12908 | ''What-- with a wife to leave?'' |
12908 | ''What? |
12908 | ''What_ do_ you mean?'' |
12908 | ''Whatever did you expect?'' |
12908 | ''When shall I hear?'' |
12908 | ''Where do the Haggans live, Tommy?'' |
12908 | ''Where is he?--and what is he doing?'' |
12908 | ''Where is it?'' |
12908 | ''Where is it?'' |
12908 | ''Where is she?'' |
12908 | ''Where is your husband?'' |
12908 | ''Who cares about dress nowadays?'' |
12908 | ''Who is that with your sister?'' |
12908 | ''Whom are you discussing?'' |
12908 | ''Why Hester?'' |
12908 | ''Why am I so tired? |
12908 | ''Why did he come?'' |
12908 | ''Why did n''t you put off coming till next week?'' |
12908 | ''Why do n''t you come too, Nelly? |
12908 | ''Why do n''t you go on with your sketching?'' |
12908 | ''Why do n''t you_ teach_ her?'' |
12908 | ''Why do you let her settle it?'' |
12908 | ''Why do you make such a fuss? |
12908 | ''Why do you put up with it?'' |
12908 | ''Why does n''t Bridget stop here and look after you?'' |
12908 | ''Why does n''t she keep away?'' |
12908 | ''Why does she blacken her eyebrows, and paint her lips, and powder her cheeks? |
12908 | ''Why does she come at all?'' |
12908 | ''Why not the"wibbons?"'' |
12908 | ''Why not-- if she makes you miserable?'' |
12908 | ''Why should I allow my plans to be interfered with by Captain Marsworth?'' |
12908 | ''Why should n''t you?'' |
12908 | ''Why should she take it seriously?'' |
12908 | ''Why should she? |
12908 | ''Why this"thusness?"'' |
12908 | ''Why will you be so hard on yourself?'' |
12908 | ''Why wo n''t you come and sit with me a bit, Bridget? |
12908 | ''Why, old boy, do such things happen? |
12908 | ''Why?'' |
12908 | ''Why?'' |
12908 | ''Will it take us long?'' |
12908 | ''Will you be in action at once?'' |
12908 | ''Will you ever have time-- to think of me-- George?'' |
12908 | ''Will you-- will you come in to tea?'' |
12908 | ''With these hands?'' |
12908 | ''Wo n''t it be awfully expensive?'' |
12908 | ''Wo n''t you come in, Sir William?'' |
12908 | ''Wo n''t you sit down there? |
12908 | ''Work?'' |
12908 | ''Would you be an angel, Miss Farrell, and help me to find a particular Turner drawing I want to see? |
12908 | ''Would you like that to copy?'' |
12908 | ''Yo mun ha''passed them in t''lane?'' |
12908 | ''You brought her up from Torquay?'' |
12908 | ''You did really make up your mind--_then_?'' |
12908 | ''You do n''t even see the general likeness Dr. Howson thought he saw?'' |
12908 | ''You had n''t even the time of the heart for it? |
12908 | ''You know Cicely and I have become great friends?'' |
12908 | ''You know I''ve had good news-- splendid news?'' |
12908 | ''You know he writes to me nearly every day?'' |
12908 | ''You mean I have taken advantage of her?'' |
12908 | ''You mean Jupiter?'' |
12908 | ''You mean soldiers behave like that?'' |
12908 | ''You mean the letter you left for me-- in case?'' |
12908 | ''You mean, you ca n''t trust me?'' |
12908 | ''You mean-- does she care enough to give up her ways and take to yours?'' |
12908 | ''You mean-- you think I bully her?--she thinks so?'' |
12908 | ''You must n''t be angry, but-- why ca n''t you accept her-- as she is-- without always wanting her different?'' |
12908 | ''You see what keeps me?'' |
12908 | ''You think Sir William Farrell looks like doing without things?'' |
12908 | ''You think it natural-- and right-- to take the war like that?'' |
12908 | ''You think she still hopes?'' |
12908 | ''You think she''ll hunt sphagnum-- and make bandages? |
12908 | ''You will be staying on here after your husband goes?'' |
12908 | ''You''ll take that Wordsworth I gave you, wo n''t you, George? |
12908 | ''You''re going to X---? |
12908 | ''You''re not going to tell me?'' |
12908 | ''You''re tired of us?'' |
12908 | ''You''ve been out some time?'' |
12908 | ''_ How_ stupid are you, darling? |
12908 | ''_ Missing?_ That means-- a prisoner. |
12908 | *****''Is this it?'' |
12908 | --''Of the 21st Lanchesters? |
12908 | --and the perplexed effort to answer Howson''s--''Can you tell us your name and regiment?'' |
12908 | --thought Farrell--''Are they all-- all the women-- suffering like this?'' |
12908 | A gentleman? |
12908 | After a moment''s silence she said--''Has she ever repented-- ever asked your forgiveness? |
12908 | After a pause, she added--''Does he write with his own hand?'' |
12908 | After all, might it not still go on? |
12908 | Allowing him to suppose that after a little while she would be quite ready to forget George and be his wife? |
12908 | And after little more than a year she was to forget him, and be rich and happy with a new lover-- a new husband? |
12908 | And by George!--isn''t that Marsworth?'' |
12908 | And if she were convinced, and it were legally possible for her to marry again and all that-- what chance would there be for Willy? |
12908 | And the sister too?'' |
12908 | And then, at last, the dazed question--''Where am I?'' |
12908 | And then, what happened after? |
12908 | And what could she have to say to Captain Marsworth? |
12908 | And what was the good of disturbing your mind?'' |
12908 | And who do you think they are?'' |
12908 | And who was it-- what contriving brain-- had designed and built it up, out of the rough and primitive dwelling it had once been? |
12908 | And why should n''t she herself marry?'' |
12908 | And--''''And what? |
12908 | Anyway, Nelly, you may think yourselves highly honoured--''''Darling, is n''t that basket ready?'' |
12908 | Are you sure he did n''t know you? |
12908 | Are you_ quite_ sure? |
12908 | As to William-- would it really be necessary to leave him behind? |
12908 | At Rydal?'' |
12908 | At last he said--''How could you help it? |
12908 | At last he said--''I thought you promised Cicely and me that you would n''t attempt anything of the kind?'' |
12908 | At least if you''re up to a walk?'' |
12908 | Bridget lifted her eyes and looked intently at the speaker--''You think he''s very ill?'' |
12908 | Bridget was surprised into amiability,--and Sarratt found a chance of saying--''And you''ll let Nelly talk about the war-- though it does bore you? |
12908 | Bridget? |
12908 | But Howson has heard something, through some people near Cassel-- has he told you?'' |
12908 | But I believe now you can go to the Courts--''''If a woman wants to re- marry? |
12908 | But I suppose I may be mistaken like anybody else-- mayn''t I? |
12908 | But I suppose-- that very particular gentleman-- has been complaining?'' |
12908 | But I_ was_ getting on-- wasn''t I?'' |
12908 | But as Sarratt was clearly dead, what did that matter? |
12908 | But as it is-- why must you feel bound to break up this-- this friendship, which means so much to us all? |
12908 | But ca n''t you take a holiday?--just this week?'' |
12908 | But had she cared for him enough in return?--had she really tried to understand him? |
12908 | But have you had any food?'' |
12908 | But if she does n''t go?'' |
12908 | But just try and persuade her-- won''t you-- quietly? |
12908 | But otherwise-- why had she so little pleasure now in the prospect of a visit from Sir William Farrell? |
12908 | But she is certainly more forthcoming to him than to anybody else, is n''t she?'' |
12908 | But that, I suppose, is the kind of man whom Bridget would have liked you to marry, darling?'' |
12908 | But then, why behave like an idiot when Providence had done the thing for you?'' |
12908 | But then, why did he still pursue her?--why did he still lay claim to the privileges of their old intimacy, and why did Cicely allow him to do so? |
12908 | But was n''t it strange? |
12908 | But what did it really mean to him?--what would it mean to_ her_--if she were left alone? |
12908 | But what was the good?'' |
12908 | But what was two hundred and fifty a year? |
12908 | But where are your sketching things?'' |
12908 | But why ca n''t I be her friend? |
12908 | But why is she bored with the war?'' |
12908 | But why was it so much fainter, so much less distinct than it had been an hour ago? |
12908 | But why----?'' |
12908 | But you''ll come early-- won''t you?'' |
12908 | But, even so, why did she do it?'' |
12908 | But_ why_ did he write to her, so constantly, so intimately?--what was the real motive of it all? |
12908 | By the way, when may one-- legally-- presume that one''s husband is dead?'' |
12908 | CHAPTER III May I come in?'' |
12908 | CHAPTER V''Is Mrs. Sarratt in?'' |
12908 | CHAPTER XIV''So you are not at church?'' |
12908 | CHAPTER XVII''Well-- what news?'' |
12908 | Ca n''t I go to him?'' |
12908 | Can you get away, without alarming your sister, or letting her, really, know anything about it? |
12908 | Can you recollect anything peculiar about Lieutenant Sarratt''s hands?'' |
12908 | Cicely!--aren''t you a great friend of Sir John Raine?'' |
12908 | Could I see her?'' |
12908 | Could one never escape it? |
12908 | Could she get it at once, or would she be kept waiting in town? |
12908 | Could you order something for me?'' |
12908 | Did Dr. Howson tell you about them?'' |
12908 | Did Sir William tell you? |
12908 | Did he look at you?'' |
12908 | Did he really believe in existence after death-- in a meeting again, in some dim other scene, if they were violently parted now? |
12908 | Did n''t he lose nearly all his friends at Neuve Chapelle?'' |
12908 | Did n''t you wish for something normal to do? |
12908 | Did she mean physically or morally? |
12908 | Did you call him by his name? |
12908 | Did you make him understand?'' |
12908 | Did you speak to him-- did you see his eyes open? |
12908 | Did you tell her you haunted these parts?'' |
12908 | Did you think I had forgotten George?'' |
12908 | Do go home and lie down, or will you come to the cottage for tea first? |
12908 | Do n''t I always behave nicely to them?'' |
12908 | Do n''t you remember that poor Mrs. Henessy whose son died here? |
12908 | Do you know her?'' |
12908 | Do you know?'' |
12908 | Do you mind that I''m so stupid-- do you mind?'' |
12908 | Do you remember admiring it at the cottage? |
12908 | Do you remember how you used to mock at them?'' |
12908 | Does n''t she find it a little difficult to think about psychology just now?'' |
12908 | Even if I had been certain-- and how could I be certain?--wasn''t it_ reasonable_ to weigh one thing against another? |
12908 | Farrell was silent a moment, then broke out--''Did you ever see anything so small and transparent as her hands are? |
12908 | First of all-- how old was your brother- in- law?'' |
12908 | Funny, was n''t it? |
12908 | Goodness!--did you hear that? |
12908 | Grayson?'' |
12908 | Had he even forgotten the little creature beside him? |
12908 | Had she been filling her own path with imaginary perils and phantoms? |
12908 | Had she heard? |
12908 | Has Sir William been here to- day?'' |
12908 | Have you been alone all the week?'' |
12908 | Have you done all you wanted to do?'' |
12908 | Have you had tea?'' |
12908 | Have you walked all the way? |
12908 | He and she were still to meet as usual, while meeting was possible-- wasn''t that how it stood? |
12908 | He asked her once--''Dear, did you ever send for my letter?'' |
12908 | He turned over on his front and plunged into drawing-- Silence-- till Nelly asked--''What are you drawing, Tommy?'' |
12908 | Heavens!--What are they at now? |
12908 | Hester-- you here? |
12908 | His wife''s beauty? |
12908 | How account for the interval between September 1915 and June 1916--for his dress, his companion-- for their getting through the German lines? |
12908 | How could she, till the new fact was before her? |
12908 | How could she? |
12908 | How dared she? |
12908 | How do you like my boots?'' |
12908 | How else did you know anything about me?'' |
12908 | How had it happened? |
12908 | How had she come to spring from Manchester? |
12908 | How had two such opposites ever come to make friends? |
12908 | How is he?'' |
12908 | However, if you do meet her-- a lady with a sailor hat, and a blue jersey-- will you tell her that I''ve gone on to Ambleside?'' |
12908 | Howson?'' |
12908 | Howson?'' |
12908 | I did n''t take to the sister-- but who knows? |
12908 | I return to my first question-- does she care a hapo''rth?'' |
12908 | I thought you''d wish to be together?'' |
12908 | I wish you would bring your wife there to tea with me one day before you go? |
12908 | I wonder if you ever noticed Sarratt''s hands? |
12908 | If Mr. Sarratt wanted you to paint and powder----''''He would n''t be the"George"I married? |
12908 | If he never came back to her, what was she going to do with her life? |
12908 | Is Miss Cookson here?'' |
12908 | Is he all right?'' |
12908 | Is it only looks, or is there something besides?'' |
12908 | Is it the war?'' |
12908 | Is n''t it funny? |
12908 | Is n''t it kind and dear of them?'' |
12908 | Is n''t it pretty at night?'' |
12908 | Is she bearing up-- eating?--sleeping?'' |
12908 | Is she really such a learned party?'' |
12908 | Is she still angry with me for not being rich?'' |
12908 | Is she still learning Spanish?'' |
12908 | Is that what you mean?'' |
12908 | Is there any news?'' |
12908 | Is your sister here?'' |
12908 | Is-- is Miss Farrell--''she looked round--''in love with anybody?'' |
12908 | It might simply kill her-- why not? |
12908 | It would be too-- too dreadful, would n''t it?--to miss everything-- by being proud, or offended, for nothing----''''What do you mean by everything?'' |
12908 | It''s all to be laid on my shoulders?'' |
12908 | Lame? |
12908 | Lieutenant Sarratt was, I think, married?'' |
12908 | May I see the hospital?'' |
12908 | May I walk in?'' |
12908 | Meanwhile--''Do you want any more books or magazines?'' |
12908 | My hat, the Lanchesters have been having a hot time there!--funny, is n''t it? |
12908 | Nelly? |
12908 | No-- the world was full of lamentation, mourning and woe; and who could tell how Armageddon would turn? |
12908 | Oh, is n''t it wonderful!--isn''t it_ ripping_?'' |
12908 | Only, in her weakness, with you on one side-- and Bridget on the other-- what could she do?'' |
12908 | Or are you going also to maintain,''laughed the general,''that no one can be beautiful who looks it?'' |
12908 | PART II CHAPTER IX''Is she out?'' |
12908 | Sarratt!--have you_ any_ idea, whether Cicely cares one brass farthing for me, or not?'' |
12908 | Sarratt?'' |
12908 | Sarratt?'' |
12908 | Sarratt?'' |
12908 | Shall I get you leave?'' |
12908 | Shall I go and see him?'' |
12908 | Shall we go back quickly?'' |
12908 | She had had the very best of life-- could it ever come again? |
12908 | She had promised nothing; but he had promised-- would she be able to hold him to it? |
12908 | She supposed before long William would be proposing to draw her-- hm!--with the husband away? |
12908 | She was saying to herself--''Shall I ever be able to go?--to break with them all?'' |
12908 | Should she make up the fire? |
12908 | So I have offended you?'' |
12908 | So if your husband liked you to paint and powder, you would do it?'' |
12908 | So you_ do n''t_ think it was a mistake? |
12908 | Sometimes a second time-- Oh, and what of the hands?--did you notice them?'' |
12908 | Somewhere in the past was there some strain of southern blood which might account for her? |
12908 | Supposing he fell, and she lived on-- years and years-- to be an old woman? |
12908 | Tall and slight?--not handsome exactly, but a good- looking gentlemanly chap? |
12908 | The D.S.O., and a respectable leave before the summer''s over? |
12908 | The officer sitting in front beside the driver turned to ask--''Where shall I put you down?'' |
12908 | Then after a pause--''Ah, is n''t that the motor?'' |
12908 | Then she lifted her hand to shade her eyes against the westering sun--''Isn''t that Sir William coming?'' |
12908 | There was some silly shindy at a parish tea last week-- by the way, she''s coming to you to- day?'' |
12908 | These things are awful chancey-- funny, is n''t it? |
12908 | They''re always in luck-- the Lanchesters-- funny, I call it?--what? |
12908 | This little room? |
12908 | To- morrow then, at eleven?'' |
12908 | Unless''--his voice sank almost to a whisper--''Nelly!--couldn''t you-- marry me? |
12908 | Was Lieutenant Sarratt fair or dark?'' |
12908 | Was Nelly now convinced of her husband''s death?--was that what her black meant? |
12908 | Was he adequate? |
12908 | Was he aware of his own good fortune? |
12908 | Was it coming from the North Sea, from the neighbourhood of that invincible Fleet, on which all hung, by which all was sustained? |
12908 | Was that Mrs. Sarratt descending the side- lane? |
12908 | Was there some secret voice telling her that if he were dead, she would have heard? |
12908 | Was this her George-- this ghost, grey- haired, worn out, on the brink of the unknown? |
12908 | We shall discover that it was something--''''Desperately interesting and important? |
12908 | Well now, will you suggest that to Mrs. Sarratt? |
12908 | Well of course this man looks much older than that-- but the question is what''s he been through? |
12908 | Well, to- morrow?'' |
12908 | Were there men dying there to- night-- like her George? |
12908 | What about Sarratt? |
12908 | What am I to do? |
12908 | What are you going to do?'' |
12908 | What could be the matter with Bridget? |
12908 | What could she do?--what must she do? |
12908 | What could she still do for him? |
12908 | What did Cicely mean? |
12908 | What did it matter? |
12908 | What did that mean? |
12908 | What do you mean?'' |
12908 | What do you take me for, Hester? |
12908 | What do you think, Captain Marsworth?'' |
12908 | What does he mean? |
12908 | What does he say?'' |
12908 | What does it matter?'' |
12908 | What else, I wonder, could he do for us?'' |
12908 | What had she been doing all this time? |
12908 | What had she been doing with this kindest and best of men? |
12908 | What harm is there in it? |
12908 | What have I done with them?'' |
12908 | What is she?--twenty- one? |
12908 | What kindred had she with the smoke and grime of a great business city? |
12908 | What makes them do it? |
12908 | What news is it? |
12908 | What shall I wish you? |
12908 | What touch of fate would let them loose at last? |
12908 | What was Miss Cookson about? |
12908 | What was it Sir William was supposed to have, by way of income?--thirty thousand a year? |
12908 | What was she going to see? |
12908 | What was she to do in this case-- or in that? |
12908 | What was the_ soul_?--had it really an independent life? |
12908 | What was there to say? |
12908 | What were they after? |
12908 | What were we saying? |
12908 | What would be the good of pretending out there? |
12908 | What would come of it? |
12908 | What''ll the girls do they used to play and dance with? |
12908 | What_ was_ wrong with Bridget? |
12908 | When am I to ask her? |
12908 | When did you go?'' |
12908 | When did you hear last?'' |
12908 | Where are they?'' |
12908 | Where are your brushes?'' |
12908 | Where could he have been?'' |
12908 | Who cares whether a man''s rich, or who''s son he is? |
12908 | Who could possibly dispute a sister''s advice in such a case? |
12908 | Who could they be? |
12908 | Who else will do it if you desert us?'' |
12908 | Who was he?'' |
12908 | Who was nursing him? |
12908 | Who was responsible-- God?--or man? |
12908 | Who were they? |
12908 | Who would advise her, and tell her how to get to France under war conditions? |
12908 | Whose fault is it?'' |
12908 | Why ca n''t I share with her the things that give me pleasure-- books-- art-- and all the rest? |
12908 | Why ca n''t you? |
12908 | Why did Hester seem so anxious always about Farrell''s influence with Nelly-- so ready to ward him off, if she could? |
12908 | Why had they come to this place? |
12908 | Why must women be always bustling and hurrying, and all of them doing the same things? |
12908 | Why not Sir William himself? |
12908 | Why not let poor Nelly have her last weeks with him in peace, and then-- in time-- marry her safely and lawfully to Willy? |
12908 | Why not to her!--oh, why not to her? |
12908 | Why not? |
12908 | Why on earth does he come here to fish? |
12908 | Why should Nelly want to go so soon? |
12908 | Why should n''t I?'' |
12908 | Why should some people have so much and others so little? |
12908 | Why should such beings grow old?'' |
12908 | Why should we be bothered with anyone else?'' |
12908 | Why should you slave so? |
12908 | Why was she so frequently away on the days when Sir William was expected? |
12908 | Why would Bridget always sit alone in that chilly outside room, which even with a large fire seemed to Nelly uninhabitable? |
12908 | Why, indeed? |
12908 | Why, she was George''s wife, still!--his_ wife_--for who could_ know_, for certain, that he was dead? |
12908 | Why? |
12908 | Why_ make_ trouble for oneself? |
12908 | Will that give her time to settle down?'' |
12908 | Will you come over to lunch to- morrow? |
12908 | Will you follow me, please?'' |
12908 | Will you tell him?'' |
12908 | Without telling him? |
12908 | Without warning? |
12908 | Wo n''t you?'' |
12908 | Would grieving-- would the loss of George-- take Nelly''s prettiness away? |
12908 | Would he get leave before Christmas? |
12908 | Would n''t you like to come back this afternoon, and watch him again? |
12908 | Would she be allowed to go by the short sea passage? |
12908 | Would she never know? |
12908 | Would she stick to her purpose? |
12908 | Would she? |
12908 | Would the train never go? |
12908 | Would you rather get some food here, in the town, or push on at once?'' |
12908 | You I think have had a brother- in- law"missing"for some time?'' |
12908 | You do believe it''s quite different-- don''t you?'' |
12908 | You do see that, do n''t you?'' |
12908 | You go on Saturday?'' |
12908 | You said you''d sent for the papers?'' |
12908 | You saw he had a stiff knee?'' |
12908 | You wo n''t come again?'' |
12908 | You wo n''t mind if I go to sleep? |
12908 | You''ll have seen about this fighting in the newspapers? |
12908 | You''ll write to him? |
12908 | You''re stopping here?'' |
12908 | _ Why_ are we so short? |
12908 | and what was she going to do? |
12908 | is n''t it?'' |
12908 | said Hester Martin, who had been unobtrusively mothering her, since Farrell left her--''When may I come and see you?'' |
12908 | said Marsworth suddenly,''what was that?'' |
12908 | said her husband, who had been watching her--''You''re not very tired?'' |
12908 | she said in a low voice--''do I? |
12908 | she said, incoherently--''how could I?--how_ could_ I?'' |
12908 | she was saying to herself,''Oh, what ought I to do?'' |
12908 | when the rush came? |
12908 | you mean Willy and Captain Marsworth? |
10116 | And what will ye do in the end thereof? |
10116 | From whence,he says,"come wars and quarrels among you? |
10116 | Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die? 10116 Lord,"they answer,"when saw we Thee?" |
10116 | So runs my dream; but what am I? 10116 Suppose ye that these Galilaeans were sinners above all the Galilaeans? |
10116 | To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me? 10116 What?" |
10116 | Why seek ye the living among the dead? 10116 Why should God go out of His way, as it were, to care for such a paltry folly as the pride of an ignorant, weak, short- sighted creature like man? |
10116 | Will he be praised, rewarded, mentioned in the newspapers, if he fights well? |
10116 | Will he get food enough, water enough, care enough, if he is wounded? |
10116 | Will the officers lead us right? |
10116 | ? à ¦ ata à ¦ a? |
10116 | ? à ¦ ata à ¦ a? |
10116 | ? Ã ¦ ata-- sorrows are lessons; and that the most truly pitiable people often are those who have no sorrows, and ask for no man''s pity. |
10116 | A Gospel? |
10116 | A child''s first impressions of this life, what are they but pleasure? |
10116 | Above all, I may say-- Who will lead us into all truth? |
10116 | All true love of husband and wife, mother and child, sister and brother, friend and friend, man to his country,--what does it mean but this? |
10116 | Am I discontented with myself, or with things about me, and outside of me? |
10116 | Am I speaking almost to deaf ears? |
10116 | And are not you, too, soldiers-- soldiers of Jesus Christ? |
10116 | And deeper still, why does a little child know when it has done wrong? |
10116 | And do we not know that so it is? |
10116 | And do you not know that it is among such people as these that pestilence is always bred? |
10116 | And even if He had not, would not common sense tell us that He intended us to do so? |
10116 | And how can you best do that? |
10116 | And how does he try to bring them round to him? |
10116 | And how far shall we have to go to find ourselves face to face with God? |
10116 | And how shall we become like God? |
10116 | And how? |
10116 | And how? |
10116 | And how? |
10116 | And if God has made it bear even the poorest fruit in me, why should He not make it bear fruit in other men and in all the world? |
10116 | And if not, is not the pestilence of the soul more subtle and more contagious than any pestilence of the body? |
10116 | And if they shall make answer,"And who is He that I did not know Him? |
10116 | And if you ask me, How is it a sacrifice to God to confess to Him that we are sinners? |
10116 | And in the kingdom of nature how does God begin with mankind? |
10116 | And is it not as true for us now, ay, for all nations and all mankind now, as it was when it was uttered? |
10116 | And is not the answer the most essential of all answers? |
10116 | And know you not Who that Light is, and what He said of little children? |
10116 | And no doubt it is perfectly and literally true: but answer me this, when does the wicked man do that which is lawful and right? |
10116 | And no man ever gained it but what he found the truth of St Peter''s own words,"Who will harm you if ye be followers of that which is good?" |
10116 | And now, my dear friends, what has this to do with us? |
10116 | And shall I forget Thee, disobey Thee, neglect to praise, and honour, and worship Thee, and thank Thee day and night, for Thy great glory? |
10116 | And shall there be no noble indignation in God when He beholds all the wrong which is done on earth? |
10116 | And that we are chastised for pride, who does not know? |
10116 | And the people asked him saying, What shall we do then? |
10116 | And the soldiers likewise demanded of him, saying, And what shall we do? |
10116 | And therefore I must ask, in sober sadness, how long would His influence last? |
10116 | And they say, How doth God know? |
10116 | And to that the other party will answer, Has not God said,"Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself?" |
10116 | And what answer is that? |
10116 | And what are they like, those blessed beings of whom the text speaks? |
10116 | And what are they? |
10116 | And what are those heavenly places? |
10116 | And what did they do? |
10116 | And what do they do, those blessed beings? |
10116 | And what followed? |
10116 | And what has He made? |
10116 | And what if, as needs must happen at whiles, the sovereign were not a man, but a woman or a child? |
10116 | And what is our duty in them? |
10116 | And what is that mob? |
10116 | And what is that? |
10116 | And what is the grace of Christ? |
10116 | And what is the grace of life? |
10116 | And what is the gracious law which will save you from the terrible law which will make you go on from worse to worse? |
10116 | And what is this but self- conceit-- ruinous, I had almost said, blasphemous? |
10116 | And what is this witness of which the apostle speaks? |
10116 | And what right thing? |
10116 | And what was our Lord''s answer-- seemingly more stern than ever? |
10116 | And when one asks in astonishment-- You call yourselves Christians? |
10116 | And whence comes the population of parents whom these children represent? |
10116 | And who are easy- going folk like you and me, that we should arrogate to ourselves a place in that grand company? |
10116 | And who are they? |
10116 | And who is He? |
10116 | And who is the Judge but God Himself, who is set on His throne judging right, while you are doing wrong? |
10116 | And who is the officer, to whom that judge will deliver you? |
10116 | And who save God has put them into the world''s heart? |
10116 | And who was that adversary? |
10116 | And whose voice can that be but the voice of Christ, and the Spirit of God? |
10116 | And why does that please God? |
10116 | And why? |
10116 | And why? |
10116 | And why? |
10116 | And why? |
10116 | And why? |
10116 | Are any of you, again, in the habit of cheating your neighbours, or dealing unfairly by them? |
10116 | Are not such thoughts unjust and uncharitable to your neighbours, to your country, to all mankind? |
10116 | Are not they enough to possess? |
10116 | Are not they enough wherewith to lie down at night in peace, and rise to- morrow to take what comes to- morrow, even as he took what came to- day? |
10116 | Are they the anxious people? |
10116 | Are those who do most work, either the plotting or intriguing people? |
10116 | Are we not apt to say to them"Raca"--to speak cruelly, contemptuously, fiercely of them, if they thwart us? |
10116 | Are we not( I am, I know, may God forgive me for it) apt to be angry with our brethren without a cause, out of mere peevishness? |
10116 | Are we selfish? |
10116 | As for any real improvement in human nature-- where is it? |
10116 | Ask yourselves each, Am I at peace? |
10116 | Ay, more, which can not only make these tiny living things, but, more wonderful still, make them make themselves? |
10116 | But Lord, how could I do less? |
10116 | But does our Lord bid us copy a cheat? |
10116 | But for the honour of our Lord, we may say, Does not this story shew that the Lord is humane enough, tender enough, to satisfy all mankind? |
10116 | But from whom do they come? |
10116 | But from whom does that good come, save from Christ and from the Spirit of Christ, from whom alone come all good gifts? |
10116 | But how are such souls recompensed in the earth? |
10116 | But how could that be? |
10116 | But how is it that they are ever needed? |
10116 | But how many? |
10116 | But how shall we know Christ''s sheep when we see them? |
10116 | But how shall we know these temptations? |
10116 | But how to worship Him? |
10116 | But how? |
10116 | But if so; why does our Lord mention it? |
10116 | But if that be all, why can they not say their prayers at home? |
10116 | But if we can find a Father of our spirits, of our souls, shall we not rather be in subjection to Him and live? |
10116 | But if you will do the thing you know to be right, and say the thing you know to be true, then what can harm you? |
10116 | But in what sense is He not content? |
10116 | But is that all? |
10116 | But may not Christ have His elect among them? |
10116 | But should we know Him merely by His bearing and character? |
10116 | But some one will say, how can that be, when so many of the old Hebrews seem to have known nothing about the next life? |
10116 | But the Holy Spirit is spoken of in Scripture under the likeness of a dove? |
10116 | But then comes the question, Of all the flowers in a single field, is one in ten thousand ever looked at by child or by men? |
10116 | But then what does he say is their sin? |
10116 | But those who were trying earnestly to do their work, though amid many mistakes and failures, why should they dread the coming of the kingdom of God? |
10116 | But what does that mean? |
10116 | But what does that mean? |
10116 | But what has that to do with us, free self- governed Englishmen, in this peaceful and prosperous land? |
10116 | But what has that, again, to do with us? |
10116 | But what is good? |
10116 | But what is it that troubles you? |
10116 | But what is our Lord''s solemn answer? |
10116 | But what kind of comfort do we not merely like but need? |
10116 | But what manner of man was St John the Baptist in the meantime? |
10116 | But what name? |
10116 | But what picture of St John the Baptist shall we choose whereby to represent him to ourselves, as the forerunner of the incarnate God? |
10116 | But what says Easter day? |
10116 | But what shall we say to that lost sheep? |
10116 | But where, oh where? |
10116 | But where? |
10116 | But which is to come first,--love to God, or love to man? |
10116 | But who are they? |
10116 | But who has seen those countless tribes, which have been living down, in utter darkness, since the making of the world? |
10116 | But who is the adversary of that man, and who is the judge, and who is the officer? |
10116 | But who may abide the day of His coming? |
10116 | But who will help us to drink the bitter cup? |
10116 | But why should God resist the proud? |
10116 | But why should it be true? |
10116 | But why? |
10116 | But why? |
10116 | But with what are they not content? |
10116 | But yet, as in Judea of old, would He not be only too successful? |
10116 | But you may say, What is all this to us? |
10116 | But, after all, why should you try to improve? |
10116 | But, some of you may say, Is it not so after all? |
10116 | Can any man put off these bad habits in a moment, as he puts off his coat? |
10116 | Can he feel for frail me? |
10116 | Can we suppose that God would take one view of these Corinthians, and then inspire St Paul to take another view? |
10116 | Canst thou lift up thy voice to the clouds, that abundance of waters may cover thee? |
10116 | Canst thou send lightnings, that they may go, and say unto thee, Here we are? |
10116 | Come they not hence, even of the lusts which war in your members? |
10116 | Commended him for cheating him a second time, and teaching his debtors to cheat him? |
10116 | Did He mean us not to love them, after He has made us love them, we know not how or why? |
10116 | Did He say in vain,"All power is given unto me in heaven and earth?" |
10116 | Did He say in vain,"Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world?" |
10116 | Did He speak with a frown, or with something like a smile? |
10116 | Did not Christ bring heaven with Him whithersoever He went? |
10116 | Did the apostles, then, believe in these three goddesses? |
10116 | Did they think that He had gone away and left them? |
10116 | Did they, therefore, as would have been natural, weep and lament? |
10116 | Do I mean that we are to submit slavishly to circumstances, like dumb animals? |
10116 | Do I mean, then, that the text has nothing to do with us? |
10116 | Do I say this to frighten you away from being religious? |
10116 | Do not good men often lead lives of poverty and affliction? |
10116 | Do not men make large fortunes, or rise to fame and power, by base and wicked means? |
10116 | Do such people get most work done? |
10116 | Do these men know of Whom they talk? |
10116 | Do they find that in Scripture? |
10116 | Do we indulge our passions? |
10116 | Do we neglect our duty? |
10116 | Do we not live and move and have our being in God? |
10116 | Do we pride ourselves on being something? |
10116 | Do we squander our money? |
10116 | Do we?--but what use to go on reminding men of truths which no one believes, because they are too painful and searching to be believed in comfort? |
10116 | Do you ask what will Christ give me? |
10116 | Do you believe the Bible? |
10116 | Do you believe the Christian religion? |
10116 | Do you believe the Creeds? |
10116 | Do you doubt that? |
10116 | Do you fancy that I understand them, though my reason, as well as Holy Scripture, tells me that they are true? |
10116 | Do you hear that there are savages and heathens, generations of them, within a rifle- shot of the house? |
10116 | Do you know what it is? |
10116 | Do you know who that Caesar is, my friends? |
10116 | Do you not hear from the psalmists, and prophets, and apostles, of a God who judges and punishes such generations as this? |
10116 | Do you not see the difference, the infinite difference, and the good news in that? |
10116 | Do you not think that God will punish YOU for all this? |
10116 | Do you not understand me? |
10116 | Do you think that God is a tempter and a deceiver? |
10116 | Does He hear me? |
10116 | Does He see me? |
10116 | Does any one say-- These things are too high for me; I can not understand them? |
10116 | Does he hear voices from heaven telling little children that they are lost sinners? |
10116 | Does he know what I go through?" |
10116 | Does he see lightning come from heaven to strike sinners dead, or earthquakes rise and swallow them up? |
10116 | Does it matter very much what I say and do now, provided I make my peace with Him before I die? |
10116 | Does it not sober us to see even a picture of Christ crucified? |
10116 | Does not God punish men every day for their father''s sins? |
10116 | Does not this earth look brighter to him then? |
10116 | Does that seem strange? |
10116 | Does that sound much like a general increase of armaments? |
10116 | Does that state of things look much like progress of the human race? |
10116 | Does this seem strange to you? |
10116 | Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom? |
10116 | Doubtless it means that; but if it meant nothing more at first, why was not the plain word Gift enough for the Apostles? |
10116 | For do we not find, do we not find, my friends, in practice, that our Lord''s words are true? |
10116 | For is not the Old Testament spiritual as well as the New? |
10116 | For says David again,"Lord, who shall dwell in Thy tabernacle, or who shall rest upon Thy holy hill? |
10116 | For then comes in the question-- not merely is God good? |
10116 | For to understand the original question-- Is it lawful to pay tribute to Caesar or no? |
10116 | For was not St Paul an inspired apostle? |
10116 | For what does he say-- and say not( remember always) of Christian magistrates in a Christian country, but actually of heathen Roman magistrates? |
10116 | For what has a man of all his labour, and of the vexation of his heart, wherein he has laboured under the sun? |
10116 | For what has a slave to do with pride? |
10116 | For what is growth, but a thing making itself? |
10116 | For what is it that thou lovest in thy neighbour? |
10116 | For what is life that we should make such ado about it, and hug it so closely, and look to it to fill our hearts? |
10116 | For what keener, what nobler enjoyment for rational and moral beings, than satisfaction with, and admiration of, a Being better than themselves? |
10116 | For what says the 26th verse of this chapter? |
10116 | For when He ascended to heaven out of their sight, did they consider that was seeing Him no more? |
10116 | For when I ask you the solemn question, Would you know Christ if He came among you? |
10116 | For who is our Lord? |
10116 | Gavest thou the goodly wings unto the peacocks? |
10116 | Has He not commanded us to love our wives, our children? |
10116 | Has He not meant us to use them? |
10116 | Hast thou entered into the springs of the sea? |
10116 | Hast thou given the horse strength? |
10116 | Have His words passed away? |
10116 | Have his father''s sins kept him ignorant, or in anywise hindered his rise in life? |
10116 | Have his father''s sins made him unhealthy? |
10116 | Have the father''s sins made the son poor? |
10116 | Have they no time-- I am sure they have the heart-- to tend the wounded and the fever- stricken, that they may rise and fight once more? |
10116 | He will make you like Himself, partaker of His grace; and what is that? |
10116 | High pay? |
10116 | How are we to look at it? |
10116 | How can He be? |
10116 | How can I tell whether I should recognise, after all, my Saviour and my Lord? |
10116 | How can she help being distracted by the thought of to- morrow? |
10116 | How can they be to any finite and created being? |
10116 | How can they be too strong, in face of what is now passing in a neighbouring land? |
10116 | How could he be? |
10116 | How dare any man say-- Bad I am, and bad I must remain-- while the God who made heaven and earth offers to make you good? |
10116 | How dare he be covetous, ambitious, revengeful, false? |
10116 | How do I know that if He said, as in Judea of old,"Will ye too go away?" |
10116 | How else dare Abraham ask of God,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
10116 | How else has God''s command to the old Jews any meaning,"Be ye holy, for I am holy?" |
10116 | How is it your duty to deal, then, with these poor children? |
10116 | How is that, my friends? |
10116 | How shall I make myself safe against the chances and changes of life? |
10116 | How should I be able to pull through such a trouble? |
10116 | How then dare I ask it of you? |
10116 | How were they recompensed in the earth? |
10116 | How, but by the very test which Christ has laid down, it seems to me, in this very parable? |
10116 | How, then, shall we picture John the Baptist to ourselves? |
10116 | How? |
10116 | I have been a philanthropist: but have I really loved my fellow- men? |
10116 | I have given large sums in charity: but have I ever sacrificed anything for my fellow- men? |
10116 | I should answer with St Peter,"Lord, to whom shall we go? |
10116 | If God can give you common sense about one thing, why not about another? |
10116 | If God were really angry with, really hated, the proud man, or any other man, would He need only to resist him? |
10116 | If St John himself was struck down with awe, what shall we feel, even the best and purest among us? |
10116 | If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him?" |
10116 | If inspiration does not mean that, what does it mean? |
10116 | If our Lord could make stones into bread to satisfy His hunger, why should He not do so? |
10116 | If this chapter was a lesson to our forefathers, how is it to be a lesson to us likewise? |
10116 | If we could feed ourselves by making bread of stones, would not that make us proud enough? |
10116 | If we had such a Comforter as that, could we not take evil from his hands, as well as good? |
10116 | If we have to rebuke our children for doing wrong, do we begin by trying to break their hearts? |
10116 | If you and I could make the whole city worship and obey us, by casting ourselves off this cathedral unhurt, would not that make us proud enough? |
10116 | If you had a tribe of Red Indians on the frontier of your settlement, would you take the less guard against them, because you did not put them there? |
10116 | In the sense in which a hard task- master is not content with his slave, when he flogs him cruelly for the slightest fault? |
10116 | Is God pure? |
10116 | Is God sinless? |
10116 | Is God wise? |
10116 | Is He not as ready to hear in the field, and in the workshop and in the bed- chamber, as in the church? |
10116 | Is it not obvious now, and has it not been notorious in every country, and in all times, that so it is? |
10116 | Is it not the most blessed news, that He who takes away, is the very same as He who gives? |
10116 | Is it not true? |
10116 | Is it something outside you?-- something which is NOT you yourself? |
10116 | Is it your will, my friends; or is it not? |
10116 | Is not God harder on some than on others? |
10116 | Is not Jesus Christ the same yesterday, to- day, and for ever? |
10116 | Is not that blessed news? |
10116 | Is not that man recompensed in the earth? |
10116 | Is not that the question of all questions? |
10116 | Is not the Old Testament inspired, and that by the Spirit of God? |
10116 | Is not the adulteration of food just now as scandalous as it is unchecked? |
10116 | Is not the condition of the masses in many great cities as degraded and as sad as ever was that of the serfs in the middle ages? |
10116 | Is that a hard word? |
10116 | Is that not a sin to bow our hearts as the heart of one man? |
10116 | Is that not noble? |
10116 | Is there a luxury in which a respectable man could safely indulge, which I have denied myself? |
10116 | Is there in one of them the high instincts-- even the desire to do a merciful act? |
10116 | Is there knowledge in the Most High?" |
10116 | Is there no hint in this blessing of God of something more than our mortal life-- something beyond our mortal life? |
10116 | Is there not in every one of them, as in you, the Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world? |
10116 | Is this theory altogether novel and unheard of? |
10116 | Is yours the duty which the good Samaritan felt?--the duty of mere humanity? |
10116 | It was God who sowed the seed in me; surely it is God who has sowed it in other men? |
10116 | Know you not what I mean? |
10116 | Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven? |
10116 | Let St Paul answer once more; who should know better than he, save Christ alone? |
10116 | May He not have His sheep among them, who hear His voice though they know not that it is His voice? |
10116 | May not His Spirit be working in some of them? |
10116 | Merely to be comfortable?--To be free from pain, anxiety, sorrow?--To have only pleasant faces round us, and pleasant things said to us? |
10116 | Might He not have been with the Father during those forty days, whenever they had not seen Him? |
10116 | Must it not be so? |
10116 | My dear friends, are they not too high for me likewise? |
10116 | Nay, I would go further still, and say, Is not the righteous man recompensed on the earth every time he hears a strain of noble music? |
10116 | Nay; was He not always in heaven? |
10116 | Not in our parish, and what of that? |
10116 | Not that which is bad in him? |
10116 | Now how could that be a temptation to pride? |
10116 | Now if we can thus have hope for some among the heathen abroad, shall we not have hope, too, for some among the heathen at home? |
10116 | Now what are these spiritual sacrifices? |
10116 | Now what is this, but worshipping the evil spirit, in order to get power over this world, that they may( as they fancy) amend it? |
10116 | Now what was the secret of this inspired herdsman''s strength? |
10116 | Now, is not this self- conceit? |
10116 | Now, my dear friends,--surely beautiful things were made to be seen by some one, else why were they made beautiful? |
10116 | Now, what does this word grace mean? |
10116 | Now, why do I say all this? |
10116 | Now, why was that flower put there? |
10116 | Of the way in which the Spirit of God works in man? |
10116 | Oh, is there a Holy One, whom I may contemplate with utter delight? |
10116 | On what have you set your heart and affections? |
10116 | Our Father has given us the cup-- shall we not drink it? |
10116 | Proud, self- willed thoughts are surely out of place to- day( and what day are they in place?) |
10116 | Refined? |
10116 | Say to your fathers, husbands, brothers, sons, and say too, and that boldly, to the tradesmen with whom you deal-- Do you hear this? |
10116 | Shall not He, who suffered without hope of reward, have His reward nevertheless? |
10116 | Shall the just and holy God look on carelessly and satisfied at injustice and unholiness which vexes even poor sinful man? |
10116 | Shall we even allure it by promises of heaven? |
10116 | Shall we pass over the waste, the hereditary waste of human souls, brought about by similar defects in every great city in the world? |
10116 | Shall we pride ourselves on health and strength? |
10116 | Shall we terrify it by threats of hell? |
10116 | Should we not fear lest that might hurt us? |
10116 | Should we recognise, or should we reject, our Saviour and our Lord? |
10116 | Should we see in Him an utterly ideal personage-- The Son of Man, and therefore, ere we lost sight of Him once more, the Son of God? |
10116 | Sickened by the follies, the failures, the ferocities, the foulnesses of mankind, for ages upon ages past? |
10116 | So we should learn something of how all things were made; and then would come a second question, why all things were made? |
10116 | Somebody must always be rich, why should not I? |
10116 | Somebody must enjoy the money, why should not I? |
10116 | That He who afflicts is the very same as He who comforts? |
10116 | That He who brings us into"the valley of the shadow of death,"is the same as He of whom it is said,"Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me?" |
10116 | That sort of jealousy is a base and wicked passion in man, and dare we attribute it to God? |
10116 | That when we walk across the field, or look out into the garden, we could have the wisdom to remember, Whither, O God, can I go from Thy presence? |
10116 | The amusement and excitement of fires? |
10116 | The difference between our minds and the Mind of God is-- to what shall I liken it? |
10116 | The difficulty in all ages about a standard of morality has been-- How can we fix it? |
10116 | The minute after he has repented? |
10116 | The people-- the farming class-- came to him with"What shall we do?" |
10116 | The question for us is, how ought we to keep it? |
10116 | The vanity of being praised for their courage? |
10116 | Then I too will eat and drink, for to- morrow_ I_ die?" |
10116 | Then came also publicans to be baptized unto them, and said unto him, Master, what shall we do? |
10116 | Then is not God merciful to the world in punishing them, even in destroying them out of the world, where they only do harm? |
10116 | Then said he to the multitude that came forth to be baptized of him, O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? |
10116 | Then said the Jews unto Him, Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast Thou seen Abraham?" |
10116 | Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we Thee an hungred, and fed Thee? |
10116 | Then why does St. Peter give it as a reason for expecting blessing and happiness in the life to come? |
10116 | These are awful words, but, my dear friends, I can only ask you if you think them too awful to be true? |
10116 | These are serious words; for which of us dare to say that we are greater than John the Baptist? |
10116 | Think ye that they whose blood Pilate mingled with their sacrifices were sinners above all the Galilaeans, because they suffered such things? |
10116 | This is God''s method with us in His Church, and what is it but St Paul''s method with these Corinthians? |
10116 | Those who imagine to themselves possible misfortunes, and ask continually-- What if this happened-- or that? |
10116 | Thou did''st die for me-- for whom have I ever died? |
10116 | Thou did''st hunger for me-- for whom have I ever hungered? |
10116 | Thou did''st suffer for me-- for whom have I ever suffered? |
10116 | Thou hast the words of eternal life, and we believe and are sure that thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God?" |
10116 | Thou lovest God? |
10116 | Thou lovest God? |
10116 | To make you fear and dread the Spirit of God? |
10116 | To take away comfort from you? |
10116 | True, our hands are more or less clean: but what of that? |
10116 | Was He not always with the Father, the Father who fills all things, in whom all created things live, and move, and have their being? |
10116 | Was it not so? |
10116 | Was not heaven very near them? |
10116 | We let the guilty criminal eat and drink well the morn ere he is led forth to die-- shall we not do as much by those who are innocent? |
10116 | We may, therefore, believe that He would condescend to the level of our modern knowledge; and what would that involve? |
10116 | We say with Abraham,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
10116 | Were you never not merely puzzled-- all thinking men are that-- but crushed and sickened at moments by the mystery of evil? |
10116 | What are a child''s first impressions of this life? |
10116 | What are we to do? |
10116 | What but this? |
10116 | What but your own faculties, your own emotions, your own passions-- in one word, your own selves? |
10116 | What comfort, what example to us here struggling, often sinning, in this piecemeal world? |
10116 | What did he believe? |
10116 | What did he preach? |
10116 | What do I mean? |
10116 | What do you fancy keeps them up to their work? |
10116 | What do you want with it? |
10116 | What does God''s Spirit give us? |
10116 | What does the preacher know of a woman''s troubles? |
10116 | What else could it do? |
10116 | What had our Lord to do, what have we to do, with the opinion of so foolish a man? |
10116 | What have I been after all, with all my philanthropy and charity, but a selfish, luxurious, pompous personage? |
10116 | What helped him to face priests, nobles, and kings? |
10116 | What humility which will not seem self- conceit? |
10116 | What if He gave them their wish? |
10116 | What if He took them at their word? |
10116 | What if they departed and entered the presence of Christ, only to meet with a worse fate than that of Gerontius? |
10116 | What is it you want altered? |
10116 | What is our cleverness-- our strength of mind? |
10116 | What is our knowledge of the world? |
10116 | What is our wisdom-- What does a wise man say of his? |
10116 | What is the grace of Jesus Christ like, and how is it the same as the grace of God''s Spirit? |
10116 | What is the spreading power of fever to the spreading power of vice, which springs from tongue to tongue, from eye to eye, from heart to heart? |
10116 | What is the use of the service, as we call it, if the sermon is the only or even the principal object for which we come? |
10116 | What is there in the character of God which makes it reasonable, probable, likely to be true? |
10116 | What it is? |
10116 | What justice which will not seem unjust? |
10116 | What manner of personage would He be did He condescend to appear among us? |
10116 | What matter to a mother to be called a dog, if she could thereby save her child from a devil? |
10116 | What matter whether they be one mile off or five? |
10116 | What mean the words that we partake of a divine nature? |
10116 | What means the command to be perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect? |
10116 | What more wholesome than to be made holy and humble men of heart? |
10116 | What picture of him and his character can we form to ourselves in our own imaginations? |
10116 | What proverb more common, what proverb more true, than that after pride comes a fall? |
10116 | What purity can we bring into His presence which will not seem impure to Him? |
10116 | What reason is there for it? |
10116 | What says St. James to that? |
10116 | What says a wiser and a better man than I shall ever be, and that not of noble music, but of such as we may hear any day in any street? |
10116 | What was that glory which, as far as we can judge of divine things, He resumed as on this day? |
10116 | What wisdom which will not seem folly? |
10116 | What would become of me then? |
10116 | What, some one will ask, when a man loves a fair face, does he love Christ then? |
10116 | What, then, does this word mean? |
10116 | What, then, was John the Baptist like? |
10116 | What? |
10116 | When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy? |
10116 | When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts? |
10116 | Whence comes this large population of children who are needy, if not destitute; and who are, or are in a fair way to become, dangerous? |
10116 | Where is that Comforter? |
10116 | Where shall I find friends? |
10116 | Whither can I flee from Thy Spirit? |
10116 | Whither can we go from His spirit, or whither can we flee from His presence? |
10116 | Who am I, that God can not govern the world without my help? |
10116 | Who dare say,--I can not amend-- when God Himself offers to amend you? |
10116 | Who is Lord of joy and sorrow? |
10116 | Who is Lord of life and death? |
10116 | Who is he that God should care more for him than for others? |
10116 | Who is he that God should help him when he prays, more than He will help His whole church if it will but pray? |
10116 | Who is his adversary? |
10116 | Who is our Governor? |
10116 | Who is our Guide? |
10116 | Who is our King? |
10116 | Who is our Lawgiver? |
10116 | Who is she? |
10116 | Who knoweth the spirit of man that it goeth upward, and the spirit of the beast that it goeth downward to the earth?" |
10116 | Who loved Him better, and whom did He love better, than St John? |
10116 | Who save the Cause and Maker, and Ruler of all things, past, present, and to come? |
10116 | Who will be the comforter, and give us not mere kind words, but strength? |
10116 | Who will give us the faith to say with Job,"Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him?" |
10116 | Who will give us the firm reason to look steadily at our grief, and learn the lesson it was meant to teach? |
10116 | Who will give us the temperate will, to keep sober and calm amid the shocks and changes of mortal life? |
10116 | Who will harm you, asks St Peter himself,"if you be followers of that which is good? |
10116 | Who, then, was He whose ascent we celebrate? |
10116 | Why can you not open your eyes and of yourselves judge what is right? |
10116 | Why care for any born of woman, if the happiness which depends on them is exposed to a thousand chances-- a thousand changes? |
10116 | Why did God make the worlds? |
10116 | Why did He make it lovely? |
10116 | Why did He put us into it, if He did not mean us to enjoy it? |
10116 | Why did they use Grace? |
10116 | Why do we come to church at all? |
10116 | Why does a little child dance when it hears a strain of music? |
10116 | Why does a little child pick flowers? |
10116 | Why does it love to hear of things beautiful and noble, and shrink from things foul and mean, if what I say is not true? |
10116 | Why has God so ordered the world and human nature, that pride punishes itself? |
10116 | Why has our anxiety come? |
10116 | Why is it so? |
10116 | Why relieve distress which fresh accidents may bring back again to- morrow, with all its miseries? |
10116 | Why seek Him among the dead? |
10116 | Why should it seem strange, my friends, to us, if we are in the habit of training our children, and rebuking our children, as we ought? |
10116 | Why should they shrink from remembering that, though God''s kingdom is not come in perfection and fulness, it is here already, and they are in it? |
10116 | Why should they shrink from that thought? |
10116 | Why should we care for it, even if it be true? |
10116 | Why should we try and say anything more for him? |
10116 | Why should you hurry, if you remember that you are in the kingdom of Christ and of God? |
10116 | Why take so much trouble? |
10116 | Why then love man? |
10116 | Why, where else is every man, you and I, heathen and Christian, bad and good, save in the presence of his Maker already? |
10116 | Will He find me out? |
10116 | Will not they corrupt our servants; and those servants again our children? |
10116 | Will you let the shades of that prison- house of mortality be peopled with little save obscene phantoms? |
10116 | Will you send your help across the Atlantic; and deny it to the sufferers at your own doors? |
10116 | Wilt thou hunt the prey for the lion? |
10116 | With such a King over us, how can the world but go right? |
10116 | Would He not be at once too liberal for some, and too exacting for others? |
10116 | Would it not be our concern if there was small- pox, scarlet fever, cholera among them? |
10116 | Would you not bestir yourselves then? |
10116 | Would you not question whether the prayers offered up in that chapel would have any answer from Him, save that awful answer He once gave? |
10116 | Would you not turn away from that palace with the contemptuous thought-- Civilized? |
10116 | Wrath and terror and destruction? |
10116 | Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky and of the earth; but how is it that ye do not discern this time?" |
10116 | Yes, my friends, why seek the living among the dead? |
10116 | You ask, with astonishment and disgust, how comes that there? |
10116 | You believe in God, and the Bible, and Christianity? |
10116 | an actor doing my alms to be seen of men? |
10116 | and are not these words of his inspired by the Holy Spirit of God? |
10116 | and at the same time, what is the reason why he has not the same right over the lives of his fellow- men? |
10116 | and if it be inspired by the Spirit, what can it be but spiritual? |
10116 | and if so, where is He? |
10116 | and in thy name cast out devils? |
10116 | and in thy name done many wonderful works? |
10116 | and is there knowledge in the most High?" |
10116 | and may not He accept us likewise? |
10116 | and who shall stand when He appeareth? |
10116 | and why so many do not obtain it, and are, therefore, not at peace? |
10116 | be justified by having it proved to all the world that God had not forsaken Him? |
10116 | but am not I impure? |
10116 | but, am not I a sinner? |
10116 | but, am not I bad? |
10116 | by the imperfections even of the holiest few? |
10116 | do I not ask myself a question which I dare not answer? |
10116 | doth the eagle mount up at thy command?" |
10116 | for some among that mass of human corruption which welters around the walls of so many of our cities? |
10116 | hast thou clothed his neck with thunder? |
10116 | how shall they converse with them? |
10116 | how shall they know them? |
10116 | how we can obtain it? |
10116 | or fill the appetite of the young lions? |
10116 | or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of death? |
10116 | or rather like Christ who is both God and man? |
10116 | or the day after? |
10116 | or thirsty, and gave Thee drink?" |
10116 | or wings and feathers unto the ostrich? |
10116 | saith the Lord God: and not that he should return from his ways, and live?" |
10116 | say rather weltering in their own life- blood-- and all because they have forgotten the living God? |
10116 | simply to let it all, as it were, run to waste, till after thousands of years one traveller comes, and has a hasty glimpse of it? |
10116 | that is, what sort of thoughts ought to be in our minds upon this day? |
10116 | then am not I a fool? |
10116 | what proportion do those who do good bear to those who do nothing? |
10116 | who is He that I should know Him now?" |
10116 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
10116 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
10116 | why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
10116 | why he may not use them for food? |
10116 | why he may use them for his food? |
10116 | why not be content to be just what you are? |
10116 | would He have to wait till the next life to punish him? |
12560 | ''Fraid of a run, eh? |
12560 | A fine American, ai n''t he? |
12560 | A labor party, eh? |
12560 | A moral earthquake, eh? |
12560 | About the ballot- box stuffing... or your Sing Sing record, Casey? |
12560 | About the election? |
12560 | Adrian, what do you mean? |
12560 | Adrian, who is this? |
12560 | After Tuesday night? |
12560 | Aleta,he said, sternly,"do you love this man?" |
12560 | Aleta-- will you marry me? |
12560 | Am I going to die? |
12560 | An American... fighting against his country? |
12560 | And are you an officer, dad? |
12560 | And did he succeed? |
12560 | And how does the big fellow take it? |
12560 | And how goes it this morning? |
12560 | And how will they go about it, with no prison- house, no courts or judges? |
12560 | And nothing else happened? |
12560 | And our rancho? |
12560 | And suppose we refuse? |
12560 | And what are squatter''s rights, may I ask? |
12560 | And what are they doing outside? |
12560 | And what are those two brigs doing stranded in the mud? |
12560 | And what do you want of me? |
12560 | And what is the other side doing? |
12560 | And what is the strange contrivance upon which he has his hand? |
12560 | And what of yourself; are you not in danger? |
12560 | And what would you suggest, my boy? |
12560 | And what''s the Workingmen''s Trade and Labor Union doing? |
12560 | And where is Don Rafael? |
12560 | And where, may I ask, would human liberty be today if there''d never been a revolution? |
12560 | And who might ye be, stranger? |
12560 | And why''ll it fail, my young jackanapes? |
12560 | And you say Gwin has repudiated his pact? |
12560 | And your father''s? |
12560 | And your plot? |
12560 | And, are these notes negotiable security? 12560 And, are you certain you can manage this chap?" |
12560 | And, suppose I refuse? |
12560 | And-- you will do this, Commandante? |
12560 | Any chance of recovery? |
12560 | Anyone hurt? |
12560 | Are n''t you? |
12560 | Are you glad? |
12560 | Are you guilty or not guilty? |
12560 | Are you hit? |
12560 | Are you hurt very bad, young feller? |
12560 | Are you ready, gentlemen? |
12560 | Are you with me, boys? 12560 Are you--"he hesitated, fearing to impart offense,"are you the girl who came with McTurpin?" |
12560 | Arrest? |
12560 | Ask him what part of the Empire State he hails from? |
12560 | Ask your Uncle Robert, dear? |
12560 | Because of his--"His alleged prison record? |
12560 | Become an actor-- or a politician? |
12560 | Benito,she said one night, when Broderick had gone,"Benito, my dearest, will you let me stir you-- even if it wounds?" |
12560 | Bertha, what is wrong with you tonight? |
12560 | Buckley... he''s the one who promised me a job, Is Pond the Mayor now? |
12560 | Busted? |
12560 | But how is this? |
12560 | But how''s it to be done? 12560 But she''d make more money at real writing, would n''t she?" |
12560 | But what about yourself? |
12560 | But what if they do n''t? |
12560 | But where are the police? |
12560 | But who was he? |
12560 | But, why not? |
12560 | But,objected Brannan,"is that wise?" |
12560 | But-- can I be of any-- ah-- service? |
12560 | But-- how did you manage it? |
12560 | But-- the boat and its crew could n''t vanish completely? |
12560 | But-- what? |
12560 | But--he hesitated,"Anita carissima, what will you do with a rectangle of mire in this rough, unsettled place?" |
12560 | But... do you mean one gets these glorious animals-- for love? |
12560 | Ca n''t you come in later? 12560 Ca n''t you-- marry_ him?_ Is he too poor?" |
12560 | Ca n''t you-- marry_ him?_ Is he too poor? |
12560 | Can not they state their business in writing? |
12560 | Can nothing be done? |
12560 | Can we not come to the point at once? 12560 Can you bear a shock, old chap?" |
12560 | Can you bring anyone else to corroborate your testimony? |
12560 | Can you prove these things? |
12560 | Can you stop a duel? 12560 Carrying much Virginia City nowadays?" |
12560 | Child? |
12560 | Cleaned out? |
12560 | Confound it, Broderick, have n''t you any influence at all? 12560 D''ye know that Irish drayman, Dennis Kearney?" |
12560 | D''ye mean it, James? |
12560 | Dave,said Alice, as he dined with them that evening,"your''re not going to fight this man?" |
12560 | Dave,said Windham, seriously,"do you suppose you''ll be blamed for this?" |
12560 | Did I hear him call you Windham? |
12560 | Did Ward write anything about a parley? |
12560 | Did n''t he know Norah France rather well? |
12560 | Did n''t he say anything about his destination? |
12560 | Did n''t set the bag down, did you? 12560 Did she tell you his name?" |
12560 | Did you live here, formerly? |
12560 | Did you make it gamblin'', Alec? |
12560 | Do n''t any of you? |
12560 | Do n''t you know me? 12560 Do n''t you, Frank?" |
12560 | Do we search again for that elusive Monterey? 12560 Do you believe in the conventional Heaven?" |
12560 | Do you hear that? 12560 Do you hear that?" |
12560 | Do you know how many talesmen have been called in the Calhoun trial? |
12560 | Do you know that Aleta Boice loves you? |
12560 | Do you know that Governor McDougall has issued a proclamation condemning the Vigilance Committee?... 12560 Do you know that Ruef has skipped?" |
12560 | Do you know that this morning 200 more Americans arrived on the ship Brooklyn? 12560 Do you know who did this?" |
12560 | Do you know,he burst out finally,"that your partner, Sharon, has become the most incurable and dissolute gambler in Nevada?" |
12560 | Do you mean it? |
12560 | Do you mean she''s not as-- pretty, Frank? |
12560 | Do you mean that you''ll be all alone? |
12560 | Do you mean you have ze monnaie? 12560 Do you reckon I''ll let you go to give the alarm?" |
12560 | Do you remember when I went to the mines I met a man named Burthen? 12560 Do you suppose they''ll catch him-- Ruef, I mean?" |
12560 | Do you think I ought to, Jeanne? |
12560 | Do you think he''ll give them to you? |
12560 | Do you think,she asked, so low that he could scarcely catch the words,"do you think, Dave, that you''re safe?" |
12560 | Do you wish to know just what I thought? |
12560 | Does Sharon win or lose? |
12560 | Does anyone bid higher than Miss Windham? |
12560 | Does n''t look much like disbanding, does it? 12560 Eh, what''s that? |
12560 | Getting tired of your task? |
12560 | Gladly,answered Frank,"but what about the coupe?" |
12560 | Goin''to rebuild? |
12560 | Got a kiss for Uncle Dave? |
12560 | Has he seen my brother? |
12560 | Has he taken the girl to his-- the ranch? |
12560 | Has she got a husband? |
12560 | Has this fellow some hold on you? 12560 Has your-- ah-- society approached General Johnson?" |
12560 | Have a drink? |
12560 | Have ye voted, Aleck? |
12560 | Have you heard any talk about a man named Schmitz? 12560 Have you seen McTurpin or his friend, Ned Gasket?" |
12560 | Have you seen anything of Dave Broderick? |
12560 | Have you seen this Burthen? 12560 He is wounded? |
12560 | He threatened to, some time ago,said Broderick...."How goes it with your law, Benito?" |
12560 | He''ll never learn that, partner, have no fear; who''ll tell him? |
12560 | He''s looking for a preacher--"Preacher? |
12560 | He? 12560 Heard the news, Benito? |
12560 | Heavens, man,he said,"I''m sorry to intrude on you in this condition... but my errand wo n''t wait....""What do you want, Bill Sherman?" |
12560 | Hello, Coleman, how are the Vigilants? 12560 Hello, Dave,"he said,"why so pensive?" |
12560 | Hello, lad,he greeted;"want a tip on the stock market?" |
12560 | Him your Chinese friends call''The Blind White Devil?'' 12560 His which, pard?" |
12560 | Hounds? |
12560 | How about cavalry and artillery? |
12560 | How about the Southerners, the Chivalry party? 12560 How about the ladies, Leidesdorff?" |
12560 | How about the lots that lie south? |
12560 | How can it be otherwise?'' 12560 How did you know?" |
12560 | How do you know? |
12560 | How do you propose to accomplish this? |
12560 | How goes it with our''army,''Sam? |
12560 | How goes it, Sam? |
12560 | How is Alice? |
12560 | How is she? 12560 How is the war going?" |
12560 | How is your friend, Dennis Kearney? |
12560 | How is your settlement work progressing? |
12560 | How long have I been ill? |
12560 | How many men d''you get? |
12560 | How many men have you? 12560 How much will we require to withstand a day''s run?" |
12560 | How soon? |
12560 | How will they straighten it out? |
12560 | How''s Lucas- Turner? |
12560 | How''s my little girl tonight? |
12560 | How''s that? |
12560 | How''s the money lasting? |
12560 | How''s your bank? |
12560 | How-- how is she? 12560 How?" |
12560 | How? |
12560 | I hate to think of what may happen if he dies? |
12560 | I was wondering about tomorrow...."Why tomorrow? |
12560 | I wonder what McTurpin''s doing at the ship? |
12560 | I wonder what made me say that? |
12560 | I wonder,she remarked a little later,"why it makes so very much-- ah-- difference... who one''s parents were?" |
12560 | I wonder-- who could have informed him? |
12560 | I-- I fainted? |
12560 | I-- I--"What? |
12560 | I? 12560 If the prosecution forced the Supervisors to resign, which would be easy enough, do you know what would happen?" |
12560 | Impossible? |
12560 | In the name of what law? |
12560 | Indeed? |
12560 | Is McTurpin here? |
12560 | Is he-- Benito--? |
12560 | Is he--? |
12560 | Is it that you fear for our Benito when he rides among the Gringos of the puebla? |
12560 | Is it true that they have come to drive us from our homes? |
12560 | Is n''t he a wonder? 12560 Is n''t he, though?" |
12560 | Is n''t it fine? 12560 Is n''t it true?" |
12560 | Is n''t this Francisco Sanchez, whom we go to visit, a soldier, a former commandante of your town, alcalde? |
12560 | Is not that his high- stepping mare and his beanpole of a figure riding beside Benito in yon cloud of dust? |
12560 | Is she-- dead? |
12560 | Is that God''s work? 12560 Is that all you can do? |
12560 | Is that all? |
12560 | Is there any-- news? |
12560 | Is there anything you want-- that I can give you? |
12560 | Is there not a garrison at the Presidio? |
12560 | Is your posse ready? |
12560 | It is really necessary to associate with people such as-- well, you know... James Casey, Billy Mulligan, McGowan? |
12560 | It must have seemed like old times, did n''t it, dad? |
12560 | It''s difficult to fancy, is n''t it? 12560 Jean?" |
12560 | Lookin''for somebody, stranger? |
12560 | May I suggest that such a course is wise-- and just? |
12560 | McTurpin dying? 12560 Meaning-- what?" |
12560 | Mine? 12560 Missee, please, you let me stay?" |
12560 | My dear young lady--he regarded her with patent consternation--"my dear young lady... w- what is wrong?" |
12560 | My wife? |
12560 | Nevertheless it''s true... and children? |
12560 | Not-- dead? |
12560 | Now, tell me, Miss, what''s wrong? |
12560 | Now,she asked him, in a half- shamed whisper,"will you help me?" |
12560 | Oh-- ah--said the other,"heard from your folks lately, Francisco?" |
12560 | Oh-- ah--spoke the stranger,"this is the Bohemian Club, is n''t it?" |
12560 | One of the Sydney coves? |
12560 | Perhaps she is here.... Who knows? |
12560 | Poor? |
12560 | Pretty, yes, but what''s it worth? |
12560 | Quien sabe? |
12560 | Quien sabe? |
12560 | Quien sabe? |
12560 | Scolding Dave again? |
12560 | See that, gentlemen? 12560 See, is it not pretty?" |
12560 | Senor, if Benito should be captured-- you will have mercy? |
12560 | Shall we join them in the pueblo later on? |
12560 | Sherman,said Van Ness excitedly,"is it true that you''ve been appointed major- general in charge of the second division of the California Militia?" |
12560 | So you sought consolation? |
12560 | So--Frank was a little nonplussed--"he wants you to marry him?" |
12560 | Suppose he declines to withdraw the proclamation? |
12560 | Suppose we deny your manufactured requisitions? 12560 Tell me, is all well-- with Inez? |
12560 | Tell me, quickly, have you news of him? |
12560 | That reminds me, Ralston.... How are stocks? |
12560 | That was Chang Foo, who runs the Hall of Everlasting Fortune, was n''t it? |
12560 | That? 12560 The cove you don hout o''his rawnch?" |
12560 | The-- The Raratonga? |
12560 | The-- procuress? |
12560 | Then the fight will go on? |
12560 | Then why--the other''s smile was whimsical--"then why not both of my notes?" |
12560 | Then you can do nothing? |
12560 | Then-- Bertha did n''t know? |
12560 | Then--her eyes were stars,"you''ve felt it, too?" |
12560 | There is a price, is n''t there? |
12560 | There''s going to be trouble, is n''t there? |
12560 | They-- what, my love? |
12560 | This committee means to lynch a man-- to murder him? |
12560 | To save you-- and your brother? |
12560 | Ward asks for instant reinforcements.... Can you recruit-- say fifty-- from your colony? |
12560 | Was it military need that filched two hundred of our blooded horses from the ranches? 12560 We love it in spite of its faults and upheavals, do n''t we, Aleta?" |
12560 | Well, Sherman,he asked, not ungraciously,"what can I do for you?" |
12560 | Well, did you make him insult you? |
12560 | Well, gentlemen,the mayor raised his voice,"what is the verdict?" |
12560 | Well, how is the auction business, Bob? |
12560 | Well, my boy,Francisco spoke,"what''s troubling you?" |
12560 | Well, my friend, that sounds quite serious.... What''s poor Bill''s particular kind of-- vice? |
12560 | Well,Francisco seemed to hesitate,"let me think it over.... Can I let you know,"he smiled,"tomorrow?" |
12560 | Wh-- where is she-- Bertha? |
12560 | What about rifles and ammunition? |
12560 | What are they? |
12560 | What are you doing here? |
12560 | What are you dreaming of, my friend? |
12560 | What are you going to do with that stuff? |
12560 | What are you going to do? |
12560 | What are your orders, master? |
12560 | What can I do, Senora? |
12560 | What can a fellow do? |
12560 | What can he do with a square of bog that is covered half of the time by water? |
12560 | What d''ye mean? |
12560 | What d''ye mean? |
12560 | What d''ye mean? |
12560 | What d''ye say, boys, shall we let her have''em? |
12560 | What d''ye think of this youngster of mine? |
12560 | What d''ye want... a story? |
12560 | What d''ye want? |
12560 | What did he say? |
12560 | What did you tell the-- hound, Aleta? |
12560 | What do they wish? |
12560 | What do you fellows want? |
12560 | What do you mean, Aleta? |
12560 | What do you mean,cried the politician, trying to speak calmly,"by publishing that article about me in the Bulletin?" |
12560 | What do you mean? 12560 What do you mean?" |
12560 | What do you mean? |
12560 | What do you people want? |
12560 | What do you propose? |
12560 | What do you think of Mr. Schmitz-- as a candidate for Mayor? |
12560 | What do you think of the prospect? |
12560 | What do you want me to do? |
12560 | What do you want? |
12560 | What do you want? |
12560 | What do you wish me to do? |
12560 | What does that mean? |
12560 | What duel? |
12560 | What for? |
12560 | What for? |
12560 | What good will it do me to learn Latin and Greek.... Higher mathematics and social snobbery? 12560 What had we better do next?" |
12560 | What happened? |
12560 | What if we''re caught? |
12560 | What is he going to do to the Central Pacific nabobs if they do n''t discharge their Chinese laborers? |
12560 | What is his name? |
12560 | What is it, Adrian? |
12560 | What is it, dear? |
12560 | What is it, dear? |
12560 | What is it, little girl? |
12560 | What is that to me? |
12560 | What is that? |
12560 | What is to become of us? |
12560 | What matter? |
12560 | What part of New York? |
12560 | What place is that? |
12560 | What say you, my pathfinder? |
12560 | What security, young fellow? |
12560 | What shall I say to the people at home for you, Mr. President? 12560 What shall we do? |
12560 | What shall we do? |
12560 | What shall we say to them, boys? |
12560 | What ship is that? |
12560 | What then? |
12560 | What was that? |
12560 | What will they do with Judge Terry? |
12560 | What will you do? 12560 What would I do if I were Ruef?" |
12560 | What would he have you do? |
12560 | What would our old land barons have thought of a rancho four by six feet, which the first of our trade winds will blow into the bay? |
12560 | What would you have me do? 12560 What''ll Langdon say to that?" |
12560 | What''s a vara? |
12560 | What''s it all abaout, this''ere news? 12560 What''s that Vigilante Committee doing here with you?" |
12560 | What''s the Lecompton Resolution? |
12560 | What''s the latest news from King? |
12560 | What''s the matter here? |
12560 | What''s the matter now? |
12560 | What''s the matter with them? |
12560 | What''s the matter, Francisco? 12560 What''s the meaning of this?" |
12560 | What''s this I hear about your Vigilante recrudescence? |
12560 | What''s up? |
12560 | What''s up? |
12560 | What''s wrong ahead? 12560 What''s wrong?" |
12560 | What? 12560 What? |
12560 | What? 12560 What?" |
12560 | What? |
12560 | When do you leave? |
12560 | When is your next meeting? |
12560 | Where are you bound so-- impetuously? |
12560 | Where are you going? |
12560 | Where in the world are you two going? |
12560 | Where is she? |
12560 | Where is she? |
12560 | Where the devil is it, then? |
12560 | Where the devil were you, then? |
12560 | Where the devil''s Law? |
12560 | Where the devil''s Sherman? |
12560 | Where was your father born? |
12560 | Where were you born? |
12560 | Where were you going? |
12560 | Where were you going? |
12560 | Where''d you hear that? |
12560 | Where''s Aleta? |
12560 | Where''s Alice? |
12560 | Where''s McTurpin, where''s Gasket? |
12560 | Where''s Po Lun? |
12560 | Where''s the map... the paper this man showed you... of his mine? |
12560 | Where''ve you been? |
12560 | Where,she questioned fearfully,"is--""McTurpin?" |
12560 | Whither now, my sergeant? |
12560 | Who am I to say my boy is no Americano? 12560 Who are those chaps with him? |
12560 | Who do you wish to see, sir? |
12560 | Who is Benito, little one? |
12560 | Who is Jean? |
12560 | Who is that? |
12560 | Who is the lanky fellow with him? |
12560 | Who sent you here? |
12560 | Who the devil let him in to spy on us? |
12560 | Who the devil''s this? |
12560 | Who was that? |
12560 | Who''s that he''s playing with? |
12560 | Who''s that on the bed? |
12560 | Who''s that? |
12560 | Who''s there? |
12560 | Who''s this? |
12560 | Who''s to lead us? |
12560 | Who''s to make the first bid? 12560 Who''s to stop us?" |
12560 | Who, the Mormons? 12560 Who-- who was her mother, Uncle Bob?" |
12560 | Why did she do it? |
12560 | Why did you come to tell me this? 12560 Why do n''t they oust these grafters from office?" |
12560 | Why not-- marry Jeanne? |
12560 | Why should n''t I? |
12560 | Why so troubled, madre mia? |
12560 | Why-- er-- how should I know?... 12560 Why-- in God''s name!--did he tell you this?" |
12560 | Why-- it''s finished, is n''t it? |
12560 | Why? |
12560 | Why? |
12560 | Will he get well, doctor? |
12560 | Will the Americano Capitan restore it to us, think you, Don Guillermo? |
12560 | Will the ladies accept? |
12560 | Will there never be law in San Francisco? |
12560 | Will you and Hang Far stay with me? |
12560 | Will you come quietly? |
12560 | Will you forgive me? 12560 William,"Macondray, acting as the spokesman,"what message shall we take the Governor?" |
12560 | With you-- with Inez? |
12560 | Wo n''t she have you? |
12560 | Wo n''t you all come in and see the baby? |
12560 | Wonder where he is? |
12560 | Would I? |
12560 | Would you care, Frank? 12560 Would you-- trust him?" |
12560 | Y- e- s... the one who used to be a sailor? |
12560 | You admit, then, that the envelope was given you? |
12560 | You and your husband got any blankets? |
12560 | You are-- Mr. Windham''s sister? |
12560 | You do n''t look very fit.... Been ill? |
12560 | You do n''t mean... you''re a traitor? |
12560 | You have come for horses, doubtless, amigo alcalde? |
12560 | You have not, perchance, a touch of fever? |
12560 | You mean I''ve been delirious, Po Lun? |
12560 | You mean their crew deserted during the gold rush? |
12560 | You mean,she queried in alarm,"McTurpin?" |
12560 | You mean-- McTurpin? 12560 You place no credence in it, then?" |
12560 | You want to lay me this ranch against-- what? |
12560 | You will lend me your husband, Hein? |
12560 | You''ll attend to it, Ned? |
12560 | You''ll fight? |
12560 | You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you? 12560 You''ll take me to him?" |
12560 | You''re sure-- there''s no one at the place? |
12560 | You''re sure? 12560 You''re very happy over it, are n''t you, Dave?" |
12560 | You''ve been to Broderick? 12560 You''ve remembered what we told you-- Alice and I?" |
12560 | You-- you''ll not let them take me, Dave? |
12560 | ***** That evening Frank said to his father, with a wink at Jeanne,"Want to go slumming with me tonight, father? |
12560 | ... when you pointed out the way, for instance?" |
12560 | A call to--""What?" |
12560 | A labor candidate?" |
12560 | A passive conniver at theft? |
12560 | A trap? |
12560 | Adrian shook him, whispering,"Where''s Doctor Jones?" |
12560 | After a moment''s hesitation he spoke, softly:"Is someone in trouble?" |
12560 | Against the Solid South?" |
12560 | Alice Burthen... that''s her name, is n''t it?" |
12560 | Alice, are n''t you proud?" |
12560 | All ze monnaie zat we wish?" |
12560 | An ambush? |
12560 | An inheritance?" |
12560 | And how is Alice?" |
12560 | And how is all at Monterey?" |
12560 | And if she did, he asked himself, what should he say-- or do? |
12560 | And then, ere Adrian could answer, he inquired,"Have you much on deposit there?" |
12560 | And what do they care who dies of the hunger or scurvy-- drinking their flagons in Mexico or Madrid? |
12560 | And what is an American who takes up arms against his country?" |
12560 | And you?" |
12560 | Appropriate, is n''t it? |
12560 | Are we too late?" |
12560 | Are you an atheist?" |
12560 | Arrest them?" |
12560 | Ask him,"Dennis whispered, nudging the writer''s ribs with his elbow,"ask him how his gambling place in Platt''s Hall is coming on?" |
12560 | Benito lighted a cigar and puffed a moment; then he added,"Do you know what that boy of mine proposes to do?" |
12560 | Besides, whom would we put in Langdon''s place?" |
12560 | Better, ai n''t you?" |
12560 | Broderick?" |
12560 | But had He? |
12560 | But the other one?" |
12560 | But what of that? |
12560 | But what''s it matter? |
12560 | But what''s the diff?" |
12560 | But who''s to tell? |
12560 | By what absurd imprudence had he laid himself thus open to the scoundrel''s swift attack? |
12560 | Ca n''t this trouble be adjusted here and now?" |
12560 | Ca n''t we always be that-- just that?" |
12560 | Ca n''t you find a younger chap to head your Citizens''Committee?" |
12560 | Ca n''t you keep such stuff out of type?" |
12560 | Can I help?" |
12560 | Can not you dine with us there tonight?" |
12560 | Can ye find me a preacher, old fellow?" |
12560 | Can you come now-- quickly?" |
12560 | Can you suggest anyone else-- absolutely to be trusted, who will ask no questions?" |
12560 | Carrying any mining stock, Benito?" |
12560 | Cawn''t ye tell a fellow? |
12560 | Coleman held up a quill pen invitingly,"Who''ll be first to sign?" |
12560 | Could it be the gambler so soon? |
12560 | Curse him, wo n''t he turn his hand to help a friend?" |
12560 | Dave Broderick, the son of a stone mason, a former fireman, bartender, ward- boss-- fighting for an ideal? |
12560 | Did God raise him up from obscurity just to torture him? |
12560 | Did they leave any word?" |
12560 | Do n''t you see what would happen? |
12560 | Do n''t you wish to marry him, young lady?" |
12560 | Do you know my father, sir?" |
12560 | Do you know that the gang wrecked several Chinese laundries after the attack on Windham? |
12560 | Do you know that there are seven murderers in our jail? |
12560 | Do you know what I mean? |
12560 | Do you know what it means?" |
12560 | Do you know what that means? |
12560 | Do you know what they''ve done? |
12560 | Do you know where it lies?" |
12560 | Do you need bail?" |
12560 | Do you remember young Waters who came here last December to congratulate me? |
12560 | Do you see her often?" |
12560 | Do you see that well- fed looking fellow carrying the ragged baby? |
12560 | Do you think,"he sneered,"that a handful of greasers can defy the United States?" |
12560 | Do you understand?" |
12560 | Do you want the whole place to burn?" |
12560 | Dying?" |
12560 | Else do you think I''d use my political machine? |
12560 | Fight for you?" |
12560 | Finally he burst out,"If it''s any of my business, what''s she doing-- there?" |
12560 | For a moment Parker said nothing; then, almost in Benito''s ear, he spoke a warning:"Do you know that McTurpin is back?" |
12560 | Frank shouted after him,"Wait, where have my parents gone? |
12560 | From where? |
12560 | Had Norah printed a poem or something? |
12560 | Had he a picture of her? |
12560 | Have I got your place?" |
12560 | Have n''t squatters dispossessed the Spaniards all over California? |
12560 | Have n''t you heard? |
12560 | Have you brought the paper?" |
12560 | Have you heard that Dennis Kearney''s been arrested?" |
12560 | Have you no more faith in San Francisco?" |
12560 | He questioned merrily,"What has our Lieutenant- Governor been doing now?" |
12560 | He spoke with brusque official authority, as if no previous interview had taken place:"Mr. Coleman, what are you and your committee plotting? |
12560 | He spun about suddenly, threateningly,"You''ve a wife, have n''t you?" |
12560 | He''s almost as big as you.... How is''Montgomery Straight''progressing?" |
12560 | How about your--?" |
12560 | How can I sit still when-- when--?" |
12560 | How does your work go, Adrian?" |
12560 | How is Inez?" |
12560 | How much would it take?" |
12560 | How''d you get those guns aboard without suspicion?" |
12560 | How''s he going to run a journal? |
12560 | I am a decent man... but what is the use? |
12560 | I did n''t know then--""That you had a daughter?" |
12560 | I should like to play a big stake-- once, before I leave--""How big?" |
12560 | I was talking with Henry George today....""He''s the new city gas and water inspector, is n''t he?" |
12560 | I wonder--"he turned to her slowly,"Aleta, will it be like that with us?" |
12560 | I wonder.... Could it be the same one?" |
12560 | I''ve tried to live it down these twenty years....""Damn it, do you think I''d tell Aunt Maizie?" |
12560 | If I could make it clear to others--""Why do n''t you try?" |
12560 | If he''d been some poor devil charged with stealing a bottle of milk from the doorstep, how long would it take to convict him?" |
12560 | If men like that could stoop to the bribing of Supervisors, what was American civilization coming to? |
12560 | If possible see that Sheriff Hayes''pistols do n''t go off.... You understand? |
12560 | If that worthy heard, he made no answer; but a slight, agile man with sly eyes looked up from a nearby table,"What d''ye want of him, stranger?" |
12560 | If we squat on the Rincon, who''ll dispossess us? |
12560 | In his room, behind closed doors, the Governor spoke a trifle irritably:"What the devil''s all this row about, Van Ness? |
12560 | Inez called out in a whisper,"Who is there?" |
12560 | Instead he asked her, very quietly:"To Europe, Aleta? |
12560 | Is he forcing you into this marriage?" |
12560 | Is he here?" |
12560 | Is it a go?" |
12560 | Is n''t it, my girl?" |
12560 | Is that business? |
12560 | Is the fire out?" |
12560 | Is there any--""Danger? |
12560 | It was he who spoke first in a guarded undertone:"Is everything ready-- safe?" |
12560 | It''s not the way to treat the question....""What is the way, then?" |
12560 | Joaquin Miller-- rather catchy, is n''t it? |
12560 | King?" |
12560 | Know him? |
12560 | Make money-- like Adrian?" |
12560 | McKibben repeated,"Are you ready, Dave?" |
12560 | Meawhile her brother, father, lover were speeding homeward, into what? |
12560 | Men on whom you can depend in a crisis?" |
12560 | Mills?" |
12560 | Mother, you will forgive? |
12560 | No, he''s not my sort....""Does he know?" |
12560 | Not enough.... Is there any powder hereabouts?" |
12560 | Oh, Frank, I love it, do n''t you? |
12560 | Once more he spoke:"I say, what''s the trouble in there? |
12560 | Or of Don Nathan?" |
12560 | Or was it? |
12560 | Or, shall we let the sailor act as auctioneer?" |
12560 | Out of it the host''s voice spoke:"Who are you? |
12560 | Pickering?" |
12560 | Ralston?" |
12560 | Ralston?" |
12560 | Shall I call the house manager, sir?" |
12560 | Shall we let the enemy dictate terms?" |
12560 | Shall we stand that passively? |
12560 | Sherman?" |
12560 | Should I make no further claim upon your ranch than that which I possess, why may we not be neighbors-- friends?" |
12560 | Should she ask O''Farrell to accompany her? |
12560 | Should they send it up? |
12560 | So you''ve had no news from Benito?" |
12560 | Someone cried:"Where''s Casey?" |
12560 | Tell me, will you have to go about now, kissing babies and all that sort of thing?" |
12560 | That they threaten to burn the Pacific Mail docks?" |
12560 | That''s fair enough, is n''t it boys? |
12560 | The Red Cross?" |
12560 | The man who wanted me to--""Do you mean the Supervisor?" |
12560 | The man? |
12560 | The pair that has been exposing Senators and land frauds up in Oregon?" |
12560 | The white face of the bearded stranger sprang into her memory,"Is he dead?" |
12560 | The women?" |
12560 | Then a hearty voice said from the door:"What''s the matter, gentlemen?" |
12560 | Then he questioned, anxiously,"Bertha? |
12560 | Then he said, quite calmly:"I? |
12560 | Then the judge''s question, clearly heard,"What is your plea?" |
12560 | Then the judge''s question, clearly heard,"What is your plea?" |
12560 | Then the judge''s question, clearly heard,"What is your plea?" |
12560 | Then where--? |
12560 | Then, rather unexpectedly, he asked:"And what do you give them in exchange, alcalde?" |
12560 | Then,"Aleta''s father was a circus rider?" |
12560 | Then,"Was any- body-- drowned?" |
12560 | There a hand fell on his shoulder and Spear''s hearty voice saluted him:"How fares it at the ranch, Camerado?" |
12560 | There was excited murmuring; then Terry''s heavy tones once more:"Do you mean that you will attack the person of a Supreme Court Justice?" |
12560 | There''s no-- no danger?" |
12560 | They asked me to join....""They? |
12560 | Those who could not see asked eagerly of others,"What''s the matter now? |
12560 | To see a little of the world?" |
12560 | To torture me?" |
12560 | Understand?" |
12560 | WHO WILL NOT MOURN?" |
12560 | Wants to see me?" |
12560 | Was God a murderer? |
12560 | Was it military need that robbed my ailing mother of her pet, the mare Diablo? |
12560 | Was it raining? |
12560 | Was something amiss? |
12560 | Was that a woman sobbing? |
12560 | Was there ever such idiocy?" |
12560 | We''ll wake up the town, or my name is n''t James King of William.... Wo n''t we, James?" |
12560 | What are your courts but strongholds of political iniquity?" |
12560 | What brought him here?" |
12560 | What brought you here? |
12560 | What can I do for YOU?" |
12560 | What can we do?" |
12560 | What do you expect to accomplish?" |
12560 | What do you wish?" |
12560 | What farther whimsy of an unkind Fate had prompted his long walk? |
12560 | What has become of them?" |
12560 | What if I should take it all? |
12560 | What is that cloud of dust on the horizon? |
12560 | What is wrong?" |
12560 | What next?" |
12560 | What the devil is that?" |
12560 | What then?" |
12560 | What tragedies men hid beneath the smooth exteriors of successful careers? |
12560 | What was McTurpin doing in San Francisco? |
12560 | What was there about McTurpin and a child? |
12560 | What will Coleman do? |
12560 | What you say, Missee Alice?" |
12560 | What''ll you bid for a lot in the southern part of town? |
12560 | What''s bid for a south lot, my hearties?" |
12560 | What''s happened now?" |
12560 | What''s new up there, if I may ask you?" |
12560 | What''s new?" |
12560 | What''s the matter?" |
12560 | What''s to prevent rascals taking advantage of such a movement-- running it to suit themselves? |
12560 | What''s wrong?" |
12560 | When do your folks start on their''second honeymoon,''as they call it?" |
12560 | Whence came the horse you sit like a very clown? |
12560 | Where are your police when our citizens are slain? |
12560 | Where would you go? |
12560 | Where''s your boss and whither are ye bound?" |
12560 | Who bids?" |
12560 | Who else?" |
12560 | Who fired at you?" |
12560 | Who is he?" |
12560 | Who''s talking?" |
12560 | Who?" |
12560 | Who?" |
12560 | Whose child? |
12560 | Why do n''t you get married yourself?" |
12560 | Why do you stoop to--""To petty politics?" |
12560 | Why had he and his companions ridden toward the Windham rancho? |
12560 | Why not go to her now; lay the question before her? |
12560 | Why not?" |
12560 | Why should he trouble his mind about McTurpin and a paramour? |
12560 | Will you give me a message?" |
12560 | Will you help me get out? |
12560 | Will you help me to start a journal that will run our crooked officials and their hired plug- uglies out of town?... |
12560 | Will you help me? |
12560 | Will you, in your honorable kindness, protect my nephew, Po Lun? |
12560 | Will you?" |
12560 | Will your shop- keepers accept them in lieu of coin?" |
12560 | Windham?" |
12560 | Would n''t you take her for a princess? |
12560 | Would you care-- at all?" |
12560 | Write editorials or poetry?" |
12560 | Yes, I remember... you resented it a little, did n''t you?" |
12560 | Yet, if He_ permitted_ such things--? |
12560 | You can see what''ll happen....""You mean they''ll seize the forts... deliver us to the enemy?" |
12560 | You know Nesbitt, do n''t you? |
12560 | You''ll like it, would n''t you? |
12560 | You, the proud Senora and the shiftless young Benito?" |
12560 | cried the other,"are they hanging the prisoners?" |
12560 | he asked, stirring restlessly,"go into business? |
12560 | he asked,"how soon?" |
12560 | he inquired,"Inez Windham?" |
12560 | mocked Brannan,"the law you''ve been giving us for six months past?" |
12560 | said the lawyer, broodingly,"what d''ye think they''ll be up to next?" |
12560 | scoffed Robert;"he''s a poseur-- ought to be an actor, with his long hair and boots and sash.... How is the fair Jeanne?" |
12560 | she cried, reproachfully,"you say that of the Senor Brannan? |
12560 | understand?" |
12560 | what''s that?" |
12560 | what''s up?" |
12958 | ''And art thou not a married wretch? 12958 ''But what can I do with the little baggage?'' |
12958 | ''Is there no reason, think you,''said I,''to imagine that your acquaintance with me gives her uneasiness? 12958 ''Well, but after all, Sir Simon,''would I say, if I had been in presence at his peevish hour,''you are a fine gentleman, are you not? |
12958 | All in good time, Pamela!--But is this the best appearance you choose to make, to receive such guests? |
12958 | And are you in earnest, Pamela? |
12958 | And do you think, Sir, whether it be so or not, that it is equitable it should be so? |
12958 | And is her ladyship there, or in town? |
12958 | And must I, Sir, speak my mind on such a point, before so many better judges? |
12958 | And what is the result? |
12958 | And who can better instruct us to guard_ our hearts_, than a lady who has so well defended_ her own_? |
12958 | And will you, dearest lady, take under your own immediate protection, the poor unguilty infant? 12958 Are you angry, Widow?" |
12958 | As how, Sir? |
12958 | As how, my dear? |
12958 | Ay, Pamela,said Mr. B.,"what can you say to this? |
12958 | But do you yield it up cheerfully, my dear? |
12958 | But how came Mr. Adams, Polly, to know of this letter? |
12958 | But how can I help it?--Must I not connive at your proceedings, if I do not? 12958 But how does my Pamela? |
12958 | But how, brother baronet,said Sir Charles to Sir Jacob,"came_ you_ to be reconciled to her? |
12958 | But pray, dear Sir, what had you in view in all this? 12958 But then, Madam,"said Miss,"would Profusiana venture to play at public places? |
12958 | But what became of the naughty boys, and the naughty girl, mamma? |
12958 | But what can I do? |
12958 | But why ca n''t you bear with it a little longer, sister? 12958 But will not that be presumptuous, Sir?" |
12958 | But, after all, does happiness to a gentleman, a scholar, a philosopher, rest in a greater or lesser income? 12958 But, say, my Pamela, can you forgive my harshness?" |
12958 | But,said Lady Towers, very satirically,"whither, ladies, are we got? |
12958 | Butt cann you forgive me? 12958 Dear Sir, if I should tell you it is_ not_ Mr. Turner, you''ll guess at somebody else: and what avails all this to the matter in hand? |
12958 | Dear Sir,said I, almost as quick as he was,"why should I be moved? |
12958 | Do I want you, Confidence? 12958 Do n''t the Misses love you now, Miss Goodwin?" |
12958 | Does what I said concern Mr. Martin more than any other gentleman,returned Lady Towers,"that he is disposed to take offence at it?" |
12958 | For myself, what can I say? 12958 Has he given you money?" |
12958 | How came Mr. B.,thought I,"to tell_ you_ that, Madam? |
12958 | How can I enough,returned I, and kissed her hand,"acknowledge your ladyship''s polite goodness in this compliment? |
12958 | How do you do, niece? |
12958 | How dost thou know what wits_ should_ or should_ not_ do? 12958 How often must I chide you for calling me any thing but your Pamela, when we are alone together?" |
12958 | I asked if it were not owing to some alteration in his own temper? 12958 I hope, friend, thou art prepared with a father for the light within thee?" |
12958 | I know it, Polly; and are you not of opinion he loves you a little? |
12958 | I need not dress otherwise than I am? |
12958 | I see( might he not have said? |
12958 | I''ll tell you, truly, Pamela: I said to her,''Well, now your ladyship has seen my Pamela-- Is she not the charmingest girl in the world?'' 12958 I_ am_, and what then?--Must the consequence be crime enough to warrant your jealousy?" |
12958 | Is it not descending too much, my ladies, as to the company? |
12958 | Is that it? 12958 Is this wit?" |
12958 | It is so then? |
12958 | Madam,said he to the countess,"Lord Davers, Lady Davers, do we want any titles, think you, to make us happy but what we can confer upon ourselves?" |
12958 | Mr. Williams, how do you do? |
12958 | Nay, now you talk of treating,said Sir Charles,"when, ladies, will you treat our sex with the politeness which you shew to one another?" |
12958 | O my good lady,said he,"who can forbear following such an example as you set? |
12958 | O, Madam, what can you mean? 12958 Right or wrong, Sir Jacob?" |
12958 | She has; and what then? |
12958 | Sir-- Sir,hesitated I,"as you please-- I can''t-- I ca n''t be displeased--""_ Displeased?_"interrupted he:"why that word? |
12958 | Sir-- Sir,hesitated I,"as you please-- I can''t-- I ca n''t be displeased--""_ Displeased?_"interrupted he:"why that word? |
12958 | So, Pamela!--How do you do now? |
12958 | So, my dear love,says he,"how do you?" |
12958 | That''s very true,replied he:"But would you expect I should give you a_ reason_ for an attempt that appears to you so very shocking?" |
12958 | The very mention of the word, dear Sir, is a security to me; I want no other; I can not doubt: but if you speak short to me, how shall I bear that? |
12958 | Then what occasion have I for it, if that be the case, Madam? |
12958 | Then you do n''t approve of them, Pamela? |
12958 | Then, dear Sir,said I,"must I not be a strange creature? |
12958 | They are certainly in the right-- But were you not a dear perverse creature, to give me all this trouble about your saucy scruples? |
12958 | Upon this, my mother said,''Do n''t you think Pamela writes a pretty hand, son?'' 12958 Was not my girl a little inquisitive upon me just now?" |
12958 | Was the gentleman a man of wit, Madam? 12958 Well, Pamela,"said he, a little seriously,"what say the worthy pair?" |
12958 | Well, but then, Sir, as to the expression to her uncle, that she had rather have been a certain gentleman''s second wife? |
12958 | Well, but then, dear Sir, there is nothing at all amiss, at this rate, in the correspondence between my lady and you? |
12958 | Well, but, mamma, we will all be good:-Won''t we, Master Davers? |
12958 | Well, for my part,said Lady Davers,"thou art a strange girl: where, as my brother once said, gottest thou all this?" |
12958 | Well, my dear,said Mr. B.,"but what would you advise in this case? |
12958 | Well, my strange dear!--But sure your head is a little turned!--What is your question? |
12958 | Well, so, this is your bar, is it? 12958 Well, then, my dearest,"said he,"we will forgive one another? |
12958 | Well; but may I not ask, whether, if the mountain can not come to Mahomet, Mahomet will not come to the mountain? 12958 What a happy thing is it,"thought I,"that good nature generally accompanies this character; else, how would some people be supportable?" |
12958 | What ails the little fool? |
12958 | What answer did my Lord S. make to it? |
12958 | What foolishness is this on both sides!--But are you willing to be released from this bargain? |
12958 | What have I done? 12958 What is your boast, dearest Sir? |
12958 | What is your proposal, my dear? 12958 What mean you, Sir?--Who are you, Sir?--What mean you?" |
12958 | What means all this parade, my dear? 12958 What means my dearest?" |
12958 | What now,with some little impatience,"would the pretty fool be at?" |
12958 | What say_ you_, Sir? |
12958 | What should you be vexed at, my dear? |
12958 | What then, does he pass his time_ with you_, Polly? |
12958 | What''s the matter, my love? |
12958 | What, all this while, is poor Profusiana doing? 12958 What, dost think I shall look through_ his_ foolish eyes? |
12958 | What_ means_ the dear creature? 12958 When, Sir, am I to come upon my trial? |
12958 | Whence this insolence? 12958 Where''s Pamela?" |
12958 | Whether, Sir, the Nun-- I speak boldly; the cause requires it-- who followed you at the Masquerade every where, is not the Countess of--? |
12958 | Who is to be judge of that? |
12958 | Who would not be good? |
12958 | Who''s that? |
12958 | Why have I wept the distresses of the injured Hermione? |
12958 | Why so? |
12958 | Why this,continued the countess,"must be_ born_ dignity--_born_ discretion-- Education can not give it:--if it could, why should not_ we_ have it?" |
12958 | Will not a penitent Nun make a good third with a mournful Widow, and a prim Quaker? |
12958 | Will not my friends be welcome, Pamela? |
12958 | Will you be pleased, Madam, to have a chair? 12958 Will you favour us with your company home, my old acquaintance?" |
12958 | Will you give Master to my arms, one moment, Madam? |
12958 | Will you give me leave, my dear,said he,"to break the seal?" |
12958 | Will you suffer me, Sir, to attend you? 12958 Will your ladyship see him now?" |
12958 | Would you have me dress better? |
12958 | Yet I fancy, Madam, the wind is a little too high for you.--Won''t you catch cold? |
12958 | You answer me not,continued I;"and may I not fairly presume you can not as I wish to be answered? |
12958 | You are ruined if you do!--And I wish-- But tell me, Polly, are you not ruined as it is? |
12958 | You talk to me, my dearest life, as if all you had heard against me was true; and you would have me answer you,( would you?) 12958 You talked, Madam,"said she,"when I saw you before, that I should come and live with you-- Will you let me, Madam? |
12958 | _ There_--and what then? |
12958 | ''And will you,''said I,''ingenuously acquaint me with the issue of your inquiries? |
12958 | ''This is her writing, is it?'' |
12958 | ''Tis not unusual with our vain sex,"observed he,"to construe even reproaches to our advantage,")''is the lady here, whose shackles thou wearest?'' |
12958 | ''s hands, since you have such testimonies,_ both_ of you, of the rectitude of her thinking and acting?" |
12958 | ''s in this particular? |
12958 | ''s place in her absence?" |
12958 | ( for I honour the slut with too much of my notice),"Where''s Polly?" |
12958 | ( who is since dead), I could not but notice her fondness for her, and said,''What do you design, Madam, to do_ with_ or_ for_, this Pamela of yours? |
12958 | ( who knows?) |
12958 | ),"let me offer but one thing: do n''t you think Sir Simon himself would be loth to be thought a reformed gentleman? |
12958 | --"And what could he say?" |
12958 | --"Are they so?" |
12958 | --"As how?--As what?--In what way?--How faulty?" |
12958 | --"But where,"said Lady Davers,"collectedst thou all this good sense, and fine spirit in thy devotion?" |
12958 | --"Do I, Sir?" |
12958 | --"Dost thou,"said she,"hate shackles? |
12958 | --"For what, Lady Davers?" |
12958 | --"For what, Madam? |
12958 | --"I had consented--"--"To what?" |
12958 | --"I hope not too, Polly!--But you know he was free enough with you, to make you say''_ Fie!_''And what might have been the case, who knows? |
12958 | --"No, Madam, but--"--"But what?--Say, but what?" |
12958 | --"Or in me?" |
12958 | --"Rather,"whispered she,"what is become of the Spaniard?" |
12958 | --"Well pray, Sir, go on.--What was next?" |
12958 | --"Well then, shall I go up, and oblige Pamela to sup by herself, and persuade Lady Jenny to come down to us?" |
12958 | --"What is it I hear? |
12958 | --"What proposals?" |
12958 | --"Why, dost believe, Goodman Andrews,"said he,"that I would do such a thing? |
12958 | --"With all my heart, Madam,"replied Mr. Williams;"and I shall be proud of such a direction,"--"What say_ you_, brother? |
12958 | --"With all my heart,"replied he.--"But, uncle,"said Mr. B.,"have you really no desire, no curiosity to see the girl I have married?" |
12958 | --"With me, Sir Jacob?" |
12958 | --"Yet, what is that virtue,"said the dean,"which can not stand the test?" |
12958 | --"You speak to your knowledge, I doubt not, Sir Jacob?" |
12958 | --''Is it not?'' |
12958 | --(Did she say?) |
12958 | --For just then, the chariot brought me into the court- yard--"Who''s this? |
12958 | --Lady Davers then turning herself to Mrs. Jervis--"How do you, good woman?" |
12958 | --She was silent.--"Tell me, Polly( for I am really greatly concerned for you), what you think_ yourself_; do you_ hope_ he will marry you?" |
12958 | --She was silent.--"Tell me, Polly, if he does?" |
12958 | --Was not this, my ladies, a triumph of triumphs to the late miserable, now exalted, Pamela!--could I do less than pardon her? |
12958 | --could resolve as she resolved, and act as she acted? |
12958 | Again and again, I say( for what can I say else or more-- since I ca n''t find words to speak all I think? |
12958 | All her courtship was sometimes a hasty snatch of the hand, a black and blue gripe of the arm, and--"Whither now?" |
12958 | All my resolution fails me; what shall I do? |
12958 | And I rung and rung, and"Where''s Polly?" |
12958 | And I was getting away as fast as I could: but he arose and took my hand,"Why is my charmer so soon frightened?" |
12958 | And being told, came up to me:--"What ails the good woman below, my dear?" |
12958 | And can we propose ourselves, for the government of our children, a better example than that of the Creator? |
12958 | And did her ladyship so answer?" |
12958 | And do n''t you remember, when we were at Bath, in what a hurry I once passed by some knots of genteel people, and you asked what those were doing? |
12958 | And having declared that I did so, was I not to shew the sincerity of my declaration? |
12958 | And how could I forbear repeating these kind things to you, that you may see how well every thing is taken that you do? |
12958 | And how did she bring it about?" |
12958 | And if the dear gentleman had two or three thousand less, might he be less happy on that account? |
12958 | And if you had intended to have gone without taking leave of me?" |
12958 | And is it so great a praise, that you think fit to own for a sister so deserving a girl as this, whom I take pride in calling my wife?" |
12958 | And let us know your opinion, whether my brother himself does right, to comply with such an unreasonable distaste?" |
12958 | And now, my dear parents, do you not rejoice with me in this charming, charming appearance? |
12958 | And rising up--"Will you excuse me, Sir, that I can not attend at all to such a subject as this? |
12958 | And should you care to try? |
12958 | And so we shew how little we deserve what we have been so long coveting; and yet covet on: for what? |
12958 | And then looking up at his face, and down at his feet, three or four times successively,"Are you my brother''s son? |
12958 | And what did you design should come of it?" |
12958 | And what do you think the free gentleman said upon it? |
12958 | And what have_ you_ to do but to rejoice? |
12958 | And what is the instruction that can be gathered from such pieces, for the conduct of common life? |
12958 | And what is the_ honour_ you swear by? |
12958 | And what punishment does not such a seducer deserve?" |
12958 | And what was the consequence? |
12958 | And when once I asked myself, to what this conversation might tend at last? |
12958 | And where''s your lord? |
12958 | And who can then be so blest as your Pamela? |
12958 | And why should it not be so? |
12958 | And why this wry face? |
12958 | And will it be right then to say, you are uneasy under such( at least as to your wills) returned and discharged obligations? |
12958 | And will ladies so disgrace their characters, and their sex, as to pursue this pernicious diversion in public?" |
12958 | And will not the man of_ mind_ bestow his principal care in improving that mind? |
12958 | And wo n''t that be an ugly foible overcome? |
12958 | Are you not?" |
12958 | At last, up he got, and swore a sad oath:"And am I thus tricked and bamboozled,"that was his word;"am I? |
12958 | B. come up again? |
12958 | B. said,"Why are you not full- dressed, my dear?" |
12958 | B.--"O why,"as Deborah makes the mother of Sisera say,"is his chariot so long in coming? |
12958 | B.?" |
12958 | B.?" |
12958 | B.?" |
12958 | B.?" |
12958 | B.?" |
12958 | B.?" |
12958 | B.?" |
12958 | Believing the Countess was desirous of being alone with me, I said,"My dear Miss Goodwin, wo n''t you go to your little nursery, my love?" |
12958 | But Achilles could be touched only in his heel; and if he was to die by an enemy''s hands, must not the arrow find out that only vulnerable place? |
12958 | But I have no notion of_ mere_ formalities of this kind"--(How unpolite this, my dear, in your friend?) |
12958 | But after a pause, she said,"Well, then, brother, will you let Pamela decide upon this point?" |
12958 | But are we not all apt to argue for a practice we make our own, because we_ do_ make it our own, rather than from the reason of the thing?" |
12958 | But ca n''t we talk of any other subject? |
12958 | But did she not ask you who you were?" |
12958 | But do n''t you observe what a dear good lady I had? |
12958 | But do you think I will call all these things my own?--Do you think I would live rent- free? |
12958 | But does Mr. B. think it must be so in_ every_ matrimony? |
12958 | But hark- ye- me, my sweet girl, what have I done, that you wo n''t write yourself_ sister_ to me? |
12958 | But have you no other objection, if one could find a genteely- descended young Master? |
12958 | But if she has been accustomed to grant him little favours, can she easily recal them? |
12958 | But is such a Narcissus!--But this between ourselves, for his uncle is wrapt up in the fellow-- And why? |
12958 | But pray, Sir, may I ask, what have you determined to do?" |
12958 | But pray, Sir, what is the earl''s living valued at?" |
12958 | But tell me what you would say? |
12958 | But tell me, truly, Pamela, are you not a little sullen? |
12958 | But tell me, what you think of''em?" |
12958 | But this I see plainly, that he will have his own way; and if I can not get over my scruples, what shall I do? |
12958 | But what a preamble is here? |
12958 | But what are the princes of the earth, look at them in every nation, and what they have been for ages past, compared to this lady? |
12958 | But what can I do? |
12958 | But what foolishness is this!--What consideration has he made you?" |
12958 | But what shall we say? |
12958 | But what will become of the naughty boys? |
12958 | But what, pray, Mr. Williams, do you propose to allow to your curate? |
12958 | But where is such a gentleman as Mr. B. to be met with? |
12958 | But who knows, when the time comes, whether it may not be proper to dispense with this duty, as you deem it, on other accounts? |
12958 | But who was your_ first_ informant?--Was that by letter or personally? |
12958 | But will you pardon me, if I ask, whither you go so soon? |
12958 | But wo n''t you oblige me with the sequel of your letter to your father? |
12958 | But you next require of me an instance, where, in complaisance to_ my_ will, he has receded from_ his own?_ I do n''t know what to say to this. |
12958 | But, dear Sir, will you be pleased, to satisfy me about that affecting information, of your intention and my lady''s to live at Tunbridge together?" |
12958 | But, indeed, how should she? |
12958 | But, my dear friend, are you not in danger of falling into a too thoughtful and gloomy way? |
12958 | But, would you believe it, Sir Simon? |
12958 | But-- but--"staring at me,"Are you married, Madam?" |
12958 | Can I have a will that is not his? |
12958 | Can not you defend me from this charge? |
12958 | Can people merit by doing their duty? |
12958 | Can the affections be so highly raised as mine are on these occasions, and the thoughts creep grovelling like one''s ordinary self? |
12958 | Can the gluttonous father expect a self- denying son? |
12958 | Can the profuse father, who is squandering away the fortunes of his children, expect to be regarded in a lesson of frugality? |
12958 | Colbrand?" |
12958 | Could you ever have thought, my dear, that husbands have a dispensing power over their wives, which kings are not allowed over the laws? |
12958 | Did he not look displeased? |
12958 | Did she go my way? |
12958 | Did you intend to carry this matter, at first, as far as ever you could?" |
12958 | Did you not disdain me at that moment?" |
12958 | Did you think that could be? |
12958 | Do n''t you know how much I interest myself in every thing that makes for my brother''s happiness and your''s? |
12958 | Do n''t you remember it, dear Sir? |
12958 | Do n''t you see his delight, when speaking of his former pranks, as if sorry he could not play them over again? |
12958 | Do n''t you think me, my dear, insufferably vain? |
12958 | Do these instances come up to your questions, my dear? |
12958 | Do they come up to your first question? |
12958 | Do you ever hear Miss Goodwin say a naughty word? |
12958 | Do you think I can bear to hear my friend so freely treated?" |
12958 | Do you think I did not look very silly? |
12958 | Do you think they do?--And if you hope to emulate my good fortune, do you think_ this_ is the way?" |
12958 | Do, dear Miss, be so free as to forbid me to send you any more long journals, but common letters only, of how you do? |
12958 | Does any thing provoke you_ now_"( with a sly leer and affected drawl)"that did not_ formerly?_""Provoke me!--What should provoke me? |
12958 | Does any thing provoke you_ now_"( with a sly leer and affected drawl)"that did not_ formerly?_""Provoke me!--What should provoke me? |
12958 | Does he pretend that he will marry you?" |
12958 | Does not God himself, by rewards and punishments, make it our interest, as well as our duty, to obey him? |
12958 | Does not this shew, that her virtue has made her more conspicuous than my fortune has made me? |
12958 | Else how would it have been forgiveness? |
12958 | For he will have me then reveal my intelligencer: and what may be the case between them? |
12958 | For how, when you, and my good ladies, are continually giving me such charming examples, can I do a wrong thing?" |
12958 | For is it not a sad thing, that the church should be profaned by such actions, and such thoughts, as ought not to be brought into it? |
12958 | For must they not have implements to work with? |
12958 | For since such is your will, and seem to be your engagements, what avails it to me to oppose them? |
12958 | For what may not be feared from so early inculcating the use of dice and gaming, upon the minds of children? |
12958 | For when the mind is elevated, ought not the sense we have of our happiness to make our expressions soar equally? |
12958 | For, dear Sir, is there no doubt, that the tutor should lay himself open to the aversion of the child, whose manners he is to form? |
12958 | From two such extremes, how was it possible I could presently hit the medium? |
12958 | Go to, honest heart, I love thee dearly; but can Mr. B. do too much for his lady, think''st thou? |
12958 | H.?" |
12958 | Has not the Countess taken a house or lodgings at Tunbridge?" |
12958 | Hast thou nothing at all to say for thyself?" |
12958 | Have you any notion, that your lady will have so much power over us?" |
12958 | Have you forgot that?" |
12958 | Have you got her mother with you? |
12958 | He gave me a gentle tap on the neck:"Let me beat my beloved sauce- box,"said he:"is it thus you rally my watchful care over you for your own good? |
12958 | He looked at me with sternness,"Do you doubt my honour, Madam?" |
12958 | He says, that he_ must_, and therefore he_ will_ be virtuous: and is a man for ever to hear the faults of his youth, when so willing to forget them?" |
12958 | He smiled, and said,"Would you, my good Miss Darnford, look so silly, after such a length of time, with a husband you need not be ashamed of?" |
12958 | He was pleased to ask me, when they were gone, how I liked his two lawyers? |
12958 | Hold him fast, and play over all thy monkey tricks with him, with all my heart; who knows but it may engage him more? |
12958 | How happy shall we be!--But how long will you be permitted to stay, though? |
12958 | How know you, but he has found a way to your wife''s ear, as he has done to my uncle''s, and to all my friends''? |
12958 | How shall I acknowledge your inexpressible goodness to me? |
12958 | How should_ she_ be able to reflect, who knows not what reflection is, except of the spiteful sort? |
12958 | How will a parent, whose hands are seldom without cards, or dice in them, be observed in lessons against the pernicious vice of gaming? |
12958 | How, in a word, shall_ they_ come by their knowledge? |
12958 | I asked, if I might not be excused writing, only making my observations, here and there, to himself, as I found occasion? |
12958 | I began as follows:"Will you be pleased, Sir, to favour me with the continuation of our last subject?" |
12958 | I believe you did feel the weight of my hand: but what was that? |
12958 | I bowed my head to the Countess; but my tears being ready to start, I kissed my Billy:"Dearest baby,"said I,"you are not going to cry, are you?" |
12958 | I doubt not, you are soon to return to Tunbridge?" |
12958 | I fear you have sprained your foot.--Shall I help you to a chair?" |
12958 | I had them in my pocket, and read them to my lady; who asked me, if her brother had seen them? |
12958 | I hope you have a better opinion of me than--""Than what, Pamela?--What would you say? |
12958 | I hope, niece, he locks up his baby, while you''re here? |
12958 | I looked, it seems, a little grave; and Mr. B. said,"What have you to offer, Pamela?--What have I said amiss?" |
12958 | I might have been_ drawne__ in_ to do strange foolish things, and been ruin''d at the long run; for who knows where this thing mought have ended? |
12958 | I never saw one before though, in Mr. H.--What''s the matter, Sir?" |
12958 | I repeat my demand: shall it be as Mrs. B. lays it out, or not?" |
12958 | I said softly,"Dear Miss Darnford"( for Mr. B. and the Nun were out of sight in a moment),"what is become of that Nun?" |
12958 | I shall never forget your looks, nor your words neither!--they were severe speeches, were they not, Sir?" |
12958 | I took the charmer in my arms, and kissed her three or four times, as she deserved; for was not this very pretty in the child? |
12958 | I''ll-- But who comes here?" |
12958 | If I were as good as I_ ought_ to be, and as some_ think_ me, must they wish to make me bad for that reason?" |
12958 | If my Pamela is safe, the boy is welcome, welcome, indeed!--But when may I go up to thank my jewel?" |
12958 | If the fountain- head be polluted, how shall the under- currents run clear? |
12958 | If this goodness makes him know no mean in giving, shall I be so greedy as to know none in receiving? |
12958 | If this, Sir, be the case, does not this excellent author recommend a scheme that is rendered in a manner impracticable from this difficulty? |
12958 | If you might not be uneasy at our acquaintance, and at his frequent absence from you, and the like? |
12958 | Is it for this? |
12958 | Is it not a proof of weakness? |
12958 | Is it not a random shot? |
12958 | Is it''cause thou''rt affected_ most_ with thy own case? |
12958 | Is it?" |
12958 | Is not such a poor creature to be pitied? |
12958 | Is_ she_ like to do well?" |
12958 | Is_ she_ safe? |
12958 | It has been an expence to you rather, which you will not presently get up: do you propose an early marriage, Sir? |
12958 | Jervis asked me on Saturday evening, if I would be concerned to see a larger congregation in the lesser hall next morning than usual? |
12958 | Jervis?" |
12958 | Jervis?" |
12958 | Jervis?'' |
12958 | LETTER LXIX Why do n''t I subscribe Sister? |
12958 | LETTER LXVIII Why does not my sweet girl subscribe_ Sister_, as usual? |
12958 | LETTER V MY DEAREST DAUGHTER, How shall I do to answer, as they deserve, your two last letters? |
12958 | LETTER X_ From the same._ And so, Pamela, you are solicitous to know, if the gentlemen have seen every part of your papers? |
12958 | Lady Davers keeps me in countenance in this my notion; and who doubts her politeness? |
12958 | Longman?" |
12958 | Lord Davers-- what merit_ would_ you assume? |
12958 | Madam, I could speak any one distinct sentence? |
12958 | Madam--_ought_ I-- if this be the case? |
12958 | Madam.--But where''s my nephew, Lady Davers? |
12958 | May I not know your subject?" |
12958 | May we hope to be favoured now and then with a letter from you, my dear child, like some of your former, to let us know how you go on? |
12958 | Miss Darnford was addressed by the name of the Sprightly Widow: another asked, how long she intended to wear those weeds? |
12958 | Mr. B. asks me how I relish Mr. Locke''s_ Treatise on Education_? |
12958 | Mr. B. coming up just as I had concluded my letter, asked me what was my subject? |
12958 | Mr. B. looked as if he still expected I should say something.--"Won''t you, Sir, dispense with me?" |
12958 | Mr. B. said,"Observe you not, Lady Davers, that you used a word( to avoid that) which had twice the hissing in it that_ sister_ has? |
12958 | Mr. B. said,"Wo n''t it be better to sit over- against her, uncle?" |
12958 | Mr. H. putting his handkerchief to his eyes, his aunt said,"What''s the matter, Jackey?" |
12958 | Mrs. B. reflects upon me for making her blush formerly, and saying things before my daughters, that, truly, I ought to be ashamed of? |
12958 | Must not such a lady as this, dear Madam, have as much merit as many even of those, who, having not had her temptations, have not fallen? |
12958 | My Lady Davers followed us:"Where is my angelic sister?" |
12958 | My Lord Davers sat next me, and Sir Jacob said,"Shall I beg a favour of you, my lord, to let me sit next to Lady Jenny?" |
12958 | My brother was not disturbed at them, was he?" |
12958 | No, to what purpose should I speak? |
12958 | O Mores!_ What will this world come to?" |
12958 | O my dear parents, how can you, as in your_ postscript_, say,"May we not be_ favoured_ now- and- then with a letter?" |
12958 | O when shall I see you? |
12958 | O, my dear, these gentlemen are strange creatures!--What can they think of themselves? |
12958 | Of such a prerogative in a husband? |
12958 | On the contrary, is it not oftener to be found in a happy competency or mediocrity? |
12958 | Or did you intend to induce him to go to town with us?" |
12958 | Or is it, that thy hour is not yet come?" |
12958 | Or is not what I have said, a full answer, were I to say no more, to_ all_ your enquiries? |
12958 | Or were it not better to suspend your intentions of that sort for a year or two more?" |
12958 | Or what words shall be found to embody air? |
12958 | Or would it be excusable if I_ had?_ All little matters I cheerfully give up: great ones have not yet occurred between us, and I hope never will. |
12958 | Or,''Why should Sally have this or that, any more than I?'' |
12958 | Pray, Madam"( to me),"have you ever been at all conversant in such writers?" |
12958 | Pray-- have you shewn Jewkes''s letter to your good friend?--Lady Betty wants to know( if you_ have_) what he could say to it? |
12958 | Put on an angrier brow, or how shall I retain my purpose? |
12958 | See you not,"and I pressed his hand with my lips,"they are all gone already?" |
12958 | Shall I call her in?'' |
12958 | Shall I engage her to visit you? |
12958 | Shall I present you with a curiosity? |
12958 | Shall such a girl as this awe me by her rigid virtue? |
12958 | She asked me, pretty dear, just now, If I think there is such a happy girl in the world as she is? |
12958 | She returned, with an affected laugh,"Smartly said!--But art thou come hither, friend, to make thy light shine before men or women?" |
12958 | She says you can play on the harpsichord, and sing too; will you let a body have a tune or so? |
12958 | Sir, dispense with me on this occasion? |
12958 | Sir, what then was there on_ your_ side, in that matter, that made you give me so patient and so kind a hearing?" |
12958 | Sir, you had rather it were a girl than a boy?" |
12958 | Sir; it is you that part with me: and tell me, Sir, tell me but what you had intended should become of me?" |
12958 | Sir? |
12958 | Sir? |
12958 | Sir?" |
12958 | Sir?" |
12958 | Suppose my dear Mr. B. had five thousand pounds a year added to his present large income, would that increase his happiness? |
12958 | Tell me, how it is possible for me, in my situation, to avoid it?" |
12958 | That is to say, how a young lady ought to guard against and overcome the first favourable impressions?" |
12958 | That it would add to his cares, is no question; but could it give him one single comfort which he has not already? |
12958 | The business is, if Miss Darnford could love him well enough for a husband? |
12958 | The gentlemen laughed:"Is it shooting flying, Sir Jacob,"returned Sir Charles,"to praise that lady?" |
12958 | Then she must make a brighter appearance by far, and a more pleasing one too: for why? |
12958 | Then why this complaining? |
12958 | They are all living, I hope?" |
12958 | They have taken their house, I suppose: but what need they, when they''ll have one in Bedfordshire, and one in Lincolnshire? |
12958 | This frighted them both: Mr. H. swore, and said,"Who can that be?--Your lady''s gone with them, is n''t she?" |
12958 | This is it: I put it in my bosom, when he came up: he saw me do so:"Are you writing, my dear, what I must not see?" |
12958 | Thou married to a lord, and thy brother to a-- Can''st tell me what, Barbara? |
12958 | Thus( could your ladyship have thought it?) |
12958 | To whom were you directing your favours now? |
12958 | Towers,"may one ask, what particular subject was at this time your employment?" |
12958 | Towers,"whenever you censure any indiscretion, you seldom fail to give cautions how to avoid it; and pray let us know what is to be done in this case? |
12958 | Upon which my lady said, a little tartly,"Yes, and for a very good reason, I doubt not; for who cares to condemn himself?" |
12958 | Was the lady a woman of taste?" |
12958 | We being alone, after supper, I took the liberty to ask him, who was of his party to Oxford? |
12958 | Well, but what shall I say more? |
12958 | What a plague has this little witch done to you all? |
12958 | What ails you, Pamela?" |
12958 | What are they, my lord?" |
12958 | What can one do?--Did you ever hear of such a notion, before? |
12958 | What can one say to all things? |
12958 | What can two such ladies write, that I may not see?" |
12958 | What do you see of freedom in me?" |
12958 | What have I said now?" |
12958 | What made me such a fool, I wonder? |
12958 | What means that heaving sob? |
12958 | What new thing shall I have?" |
12958 | What occasion is there for it? |
12958 | What say you to these things, my dear? |
12958 | What think you, Mr. B.? |
12958 | What vexes me is, that when the noble uncle of this vile lady--(why do n''t you call her so as well as I?) |
12958 | What would I not do, in short, to procure to myself the inexpressible pleasure that I should have in your company and conversation? |
12958 | What would_ you_ advise, my dear?" |
12958 | What, I say, had I to do, to take upon me lady- airs, and to resent? |
12958 | What, I warrant, you would not be too much beholden to his honour, would you?" |
12958 | What, and make you cry''_ Fie!_''-or do you intend to trust your honour to his mercy, rather than to your own discretion?" |
12958 | What, indeed, does not such a deceiver deserve?" |
12958 | What, may I ask, came next? |
12958 | What_ can_ I say for Polly Barlow? |
12958 | What_ means my_ Pamela? |
12958 | When Mr. B. is all tenderness and indulgence, and requires of me nothing, that I can have a material objection to, ought I_ not_ to oblige him? |
12958 | Where have you been these two hours, that you never came near me, when you knew''twas my time to have my foot rubbed, which gives me mortal pain?" |
12958 | Which side are you of?" |
12958 | Who knows but we may find out some cousin or friend of Mr. Murray''s between us, that we may persuade to address you? |
12958 | Who''s housekeeper now? |
12958 | Who, that knows these things of him, would wish him to be hers, with all his advantages of person, mind, and fortune?" |
12958 | Why should I thus sadden all your gaudy prospects? |
12958 | Why starts this precious pearl?" |
12958 | Why tarry the wheels of his chariot?" |
12958 | Why the plague,"whispered he,"could you not have pitched your tent here? |
12958 | Why the word_ foolish_, aunt? |
12958 | Why then all this emotion?" |
12958 | Why, she is not to sit at table, is she? |
12958 | Will ladies game, Madam? |
12958 | Will my dear papa grant it, do you think, if you were to lay the highest obligation upon your dutiful daughter, and petition for me? |
12958 | Will that please you, Sir?" |
12958 | Will this instance, my dear, come up to your demand for one, where he recedes from his own will, in complaisance to mine? |
12958 | Will you excuse me, my dear, all this seeming vanity, for the sake of repeating exactly what passed? |
12958 | Will you excuse me, my dear? |
12958 | With how ill a grace must a man who will often be disguised in liquor, preach sobriety? |
12958 | Wo n''t it look like intolerable vanity in me, to find fault with such a genius as Mr. Locke? |
12958 | Wo n''t there be a fine twinkling and sparkling, think you, when the greater and lesser bear- stars are joined together? |
12958 | Would Miss Goodwin, think you, have done so or so?" |
12958 | Would he not have thought the humble cottager as capable of insolence, and vengeance too, in her turn, as the better born? |
12958 | Would it not be inevitable ruin to her to leave me? |
12958 | Would not his honour think if I hid one thing from him, I might hide another? |
12958 | Would you care to subscribe to it? |
12958 | Writing, I dare say? |
12958 | Yet what could he have done? |
12958 | Yet, how much better is it to suffer one''s self, than to be the cause of another''s sufferings? |
12958 | You are to suppose the living in your own hands again; will you leave the whole matter to my_ sister_ here?" |
12958 | You desire to know, my honoured papa, how Mr. B. passes his time, and whether it be in his lady''s chamber? |
12958 | You do n''t keep her company, do you?" |
12958 | You have had instances of the vile arts of men against poor maidens: have you any notion that Mr. H. intends to do honourably by you?" |
12958 | You''re the Countess of C.''s youngest daughter Jenny-- That''s your cue."--"Ah? |
12958 | _ Am_ I mistaken?" |
12958 | _ Common decency_, did you say? |
12958 | a passionate man, patience? |
12958 | added he:"Have you not a son worthy of such an alliance?" |
12958 | an irreligious man, piety? |
12958 | and that she wanted but the power, to shew the like unrelenting temper, by which she had so grievously suffered? |
12958 | and where the pleasure each seemed to take in the other''s, might possibly end? |
12958 | and whether you expected an answer from me to your last? |
12958 | and why that hesitation in your answer? |
12958 | as you do, what ails Mrs. Jervis? |
12958 | but tell me, who will part with their child, think you? |
12958 | coming to me, and folding me in his arms over the chair''s back, the seat of which supported my trembling knees,"Can you so easily part with me?" |
12958 | did I betray any impatience of speech or action, or any discomposure? |
12958 | fear you not an instant punishment for this appeal? |
12958 | goes?" |
12958 | hadst thou been born a fool, or a raw greenhead, or a doating greyhead--"--"What then, Sir Jacob?" |
12958 | how can you speak such a word? |
12958 | let it take its course!--How barbarously, methinks, I speak!--He ought to_ feel_ the lash, first, because he_ deserves_ it, poor little soul? |
12958 | might I not well be grave, knowing what I knew?) |
12958 | my dear lady, what could I do? |
12958 | my dear,"said I;"what is beauty, if she be not a good girl? |
12958 | my dear,"said he,"no papa and mamma!--Did they not send you a pretty black boy to wait upon you, a while ago? |
12958 | or do they not? |
12958 | rob me of heaven too? |
12958 | said I;"and is it thus, by_ repeating_ your fault, that you_ atone_ for it? |
12958 | said he, and stamped--"Who can choose but bless you? |
12958 | said he:"I hope you and she have had no words?" |
12958 | said she,''whither can she go, to be so happy as with me? |
12958 | said she:"how could you help it? |
12958 | said the silly girl--"yet that was like her voice!--Me''m, are you in your closet, Me''m?" |
12958 | that I should have been what I am?" |
12958 | we condemn every man who dresses well, and is not a sloven, as a fop or a coxcomb?" |
12958 | what wilt thou do? |
12958 | whistled he, with a wild stare:"and how is it with you, youngster?" |
12958 | who is she?" |
48294 | ''Mistress_ Elinor_ Calvert?'' 48294 ''They?'' |
48294 | ''Tis a pretty device, is it not, Thir Chrithtopher? 48294 ''Well,''quoth the friar,''have you a whetstone?'' |
48294 | Accused of what? |
48294 | Ah, do those bright eyes feel the weight of sleep so early? |
48294 | Ah, thou didst never think I had known what it was to love? |
48294 | Ah? |
48294 | Alas,thought the mother,"when did ever my boy find it hard to speak with me before?" |
48294 | Am I in thy way? |
48294 | Am I like to forget it? |
48294 | An innocent man? |
48294 | An''what''s that, pray? |
48294 | And Reuben Early-- was he in liquor too? |
48294 | And after what fashion was that? |
48294 | And canst thou forgive one who can not lay claim to that mantle of love that covers all sins? |
48294 | And cleared in safety? |
48294 | And did you go about it the right way? |
48294 | And didst show it to Neale or Cornwaleys? |
48294 | And didst thou? |
48294 | And hard? |
48294 | And his name? |
48294 | And how do you know, little Peggy, that that is not just the reason why I have asked for your company? 48294 And my stockings with the clocks of gold? |
48294 | And my thilver- broidered doublet? |
48294 | And never told me? |
48294 | And she is very wise too? |
48294 | And she is virtuous and tender and true? |
48294 | And spent much time on the wharf? |
48294 | And stopped at St. Gabriel''s Manor? |
48294 | And then did you see him? |
48294 | And thou wilt help thy mother to go on liking me? |
48294 | And thou? |
48294 | And what changed your purpose? |
48294 | And what did you then? |
48294 | And what dost thou think of when thou art thinking of nothing? |
48294 | And what harm if it do? |
48294 | And what will you do about it? |
48294 | And who is the doer of the deed? |
48294 | And who is to be the leader? |
48294 | And why not, pray? 48294 And why?" |
48294 | And with such pretty points, knowst thou any other that wears points as fine? |
48294 | And you? |
48294 | Are you Captain or I? |
48294 | Are you come as Governor Brent''s messenger? |
48294 | Are you from the charnel- house or from Hell itself? |
48294 | Are you ready for a fight, my men? |
48294 | Are you satisfied with the prisoner''s promise? |
48294 | Art sure it will not try thine endurance too far to dwell so on the past? |
48294 | Art sure thou hast strength to hear it? |
48294 | Art thou really? |
48294 | At what hour does he sup? |
48294 | Ay or no? |
48294 | Ay, but how comes it he is so friendly with that rascal brother of his? |
48294 | Ay, but there is dinner to come, and''tis best to make allowance for this future; besides, who is this at the wharf in the in- bound boat? |
48294 | Ay, but what''s the use of telling a droll story if it be not droll? 48294 Ay, so I would have sworn two hours since; but tell me one thing-- did he and the priest quarrel here at St. Gabriel''s last night?" |
48294 | Ay, the twentieth; and what night was that? |
48294 | Ay,said Elinor, smiling,"but the question is, art thou up to my meaning? |
48294 | Ay,said his wife, laying down the purse she was netting,"and what is that?" |
48294 | Brother,she had answered,"my house is open to all who seek its shelter, and shall I shut its doors to the priests of our Holy Church?" |
48294 | But did he? |
48294 | But how can one tell when one is-- is in love? |
48294 | But how couldst thou have joined in a death struggle and brought home no trace of conflict? |
48294 | But how to follow it? |
48294 | But how to mount the bluff? |
48294 | But how were you on the road to a bishop''s see? 48294 But how, when, where?" |
48294 | But if we find them, what then? 48294 But thou didtht promise, and how oft have I heard thee say,''A promise is a promise''?" |
48294 | But thou wilt stand my friend even if Father Mohl like me not? |
48294 | But who will lock the door? |
48294 | But why was it necessary that thou shouldst be caught in the toils? 48294 But, Humphrey, what can be keeping him?" |
48294 | By what token? |
48294 | Can I be of service to you? |
48294 | Captain Ingle, will you come ashore and try the quality of Romney cheer? |
48294 | Christopher Neville, do you know this knife? |
48294 | Come, then,called Neville more cheerfully, feeling his point half won;"why not come in and smoke with me? |
48294 | Could I not be of use if I went too to the Governor? |
48294 | Couldst not make thy decidence now? |
48294 | Dick,said Ralph Ingle as the two brothers were left alone together,"what treatment might a prisoner look for if brought aboard this ship?" |
48294 | Did that settle it? |
48294 | Did ye hear no noise? 48294 Did ye know Philpotts, then?" |
48294 | Did you ever hear of the miracle of the buttered whetstone? |
48294 | Did you ever tell your love? |
48294 | Did you not ask my help? |
48294 | Did you not say I was worth any twenty Virginians in this expedition? |
48294 | Didst fancy I was like to mithtake thy hands? |
48294 | Do I know him? |
48294 | Do I stand on the platform at the end of the hall where Couthin Mary stands when her tenants come in? |
48294 | Do they? |
48294 | Do ye know what those are? |
48294 | Do ye think, Master Cecil, the black would come off if ye touched one? |
48294 | Do you admire her as much as the other men do? |
48294 | Do you believe this calumny? |
48294 | Do you think I could so escape Hell? |
48294 | Do? 48294 Does Ralph Ingle come here often?" |
48294 | Does Richard Ingle take his meals on board ship or ashore? |
48294 | Does he come alone? |
48294 | Does it bring happiness? |
48294 | Does-- does any one else suspect thee? |
48294 | Done? 48294 Dost know what manner of thing love is?" |
48294 | Dost thou like him? |
48294 | Dost thou mind, Elinor,she said, quickly,"how we were wo nt to make merry on Candlemas Eve at home in England?" |
48294 | Dost thou remember, Betty, the day I set sail from James City in_ The Red Fox_? |
48294 | Dost thou truly? 48294 Elinor, is that thou?" |
48294 | Elinor, what is it to thee what befalls a man whom thou didst meet but yesterday? |
48294 | Father Fisher? 48294 Father, is it a sin to love?" |
48294 | Father, must thou be gone so soon? |
48294 | Fool he is,answered Neale;"who ever knew Dick Ingle other than a fool? |
48294 | For the love of God, talk no more in riddles, but tell me plainly, what is it has changed thee so? 48294 For what purpose?" |
48294 | Gentlemen, are you ready for the test? |
48294 | Girls, have any of you seen this Maryland maid who is staying with Mistress Huntoon? |
48294 | Governor Brent,Ingle spoke in slow, reluctant tones,"did you chance to read the name of the larger packet as we passed?" |
48294 | H''m? |
48294 | Has Sir Christopher Neville left us also? |
48294 | Hast thou ever looked on death? |
48294 | Hast thou seen him? |
48294 | Hast thou spent the morning in the open? |
48294 | Hast thou-- is there any clue? |
48294 | Hath some woman promised thee aught and failed thee? |
48294 | Have I not heard thee say any one might have the training of a child after seven if thou couldst have the teaching of him till then? |
48294 | Have you no feeling? 48294 He doubted_ thee_?" |
48294 | Heard ye that? 48294 Here, in Maryland?" |
48294 | How can I say''ay''or''no''to that? |
48294 | How could she know thee so long, and credit any such base slander? 48294 How dare they?" |
48294 | How dare you? |
48294 | How did the village lie, and what is its name? |
48294 | How did you leave affairs there? |
48294 | How do I know but you want to set the tobacco- house afire? 48294 How do I know? |
48294 | How do you know it is a lie? |
48294 | How far away is she? |
48294 | How goes it? |
48294 | How say you, Huntoon, has your walk given you a zest for an hour''s rest and a bite of good victual? |
48294 | How say you, Mistress Brent, are the terms accepted, and are we ready for the ceremony of investiture? |
48294 | How''s that? 48294 How''s this?" |
48294 | How? |
48294 | Humphrey, thou dost love to argue, but answer me one question, Dost thou put trust in them? |
48294 | Huntoon--? 48294 Hush, Cecil,"said his mother;"where are thy manners? |
48294 | I did not when I was your age,--that''s sure; but I have seen so many worse things since then--"What? |
48294 | I must doff my finery, for who knows when I may need it to receive another tenant? |
48294 | I put thee down? 48294 I?" |
48294 | If I go, wilt thou come up after supper to see me? |
48294 | If my temper did me no credit, who drove me to it? |
48294 | Indeed,sneered his brother,"have a few months in the Brent household turned thee into such a white- livered fellow, half prude, half priest? |
48294 | Is Neville''s knife falling from his garments my own imagining? |
48294 | Is it a falsehood or a truehood? |
48294 | Is it all your fancy painted-- this ride through the forest? |
48294 | Is it indeed illness, or grief? |
48294 | Is it not a pity, my good host, to be shut indoors when the sunshine lies on the river bank and the air is like mellow wine? |
48294 | Is it not enough that there be a dozen here who are convinced of thy guilt? |
48294 | Is it not silly to fear the dark? |
48294 | Is it really so long? |
48294 | Is it too late now to repent? 48294 Is not the ammunition of my providing?" |
48294 | Is not this enough like Hell? |
48294 | Is the name you seek_ Elinor_--_Elinor Calvert_? |
48294 | Is this all? |
48294 | Is this the flower of that confidence through love which you so much admire, Sir Christopher? |
48294 | Is your aunt at home? |
48294 | It is like the days at old Romney Hall, is it not, sweetheart? |
48294 | It is not the same thing as being my tenant? |
48294 | Let us hear, then; who is he that has such poor taste in likings? |
48294 | Master Huntoon,cried Peggy, turning to Romney with a merry eye but a trembling lip,"thinkst, then, thou couldst get up a massacre? |
48294 | Master Ingle? |
48294 | May I come in for nutth? |
48294 | May I tell you? |
48294 | Mistress Brent? |
48294 | Mother, dost take thy son for a baby or a popinjay? |
48294 | Mother, wilt thou sing me a song as thou dost every Candlemas? |
48294 | Mother,broke in Cecil,"wilt thou we d Thir Chrithtopher?" |
48294 | Must it be that, Cecil? 48294 My daughter,"he continued,"is your heart wholly at peace-- firmly stayed upon the living rock?" |
48294 | Nay, I''d stake my life that if we find the tag we find the murderer--"What gives you such assurance? |
48294 | Nay, Margaret, are there not men enough? |
48294 | Nay, no_ ifs_--ay or no? |
48294 | Nay, who shall say what is a clue? 48294 Nay,"answered Romney,"else how account for this?" |
48294 | Neville, so that is her name? |
48294 | No, he is well-- he sent me hither; but-- there has been an accident--"Are you hurt, that you look so white? |
48294 | No,answered the child, gravely,"elthe how could I keep my food in when I eat? |
48294 | Nor any carnal affection threatening to draw thy soul away from the path of salvation? |
48294 | Nor any unworthy wish? |
48294 | Not Master William Claiborne? |
48294 | Not a prick; only a mighty satisfaction that the devil looks so well after his own-- or-- hold-- art thou going to tell all this to God? 48294 Now, Giles,"said his sister,"art thou satisfied at last who is the guilty man?" |
48294 | Now, do you ask for it? |
48294 | Of what art thou thinking? |
48294 | Oh, Margaret, do you think there is any ray of light? |
48294 | Oh, Romney, is it gone so far, in one little fortnight? 48294 Oh, may I really? |
48294 | Oh, only little boys? |
48294 | Oh, what is it? |
48294 | Oh, you mean Mother''s picture; why, of course you may have it, and mine too, which has larger pearls round it,--may he not, Mother? |
48294 | One_ l_ and two_ t''s_? |
48294 | Peggy dear, wilt thou not go below and keep warm? |
48294 | Peggy, Peggy, what have you done? |
48294 | Philpotts, can you see how we are heading? |
48294 | Rather, I should say, of a mind filled with some one person--"Do I look like a love- sick maid? |
48294 | Ready to make a bonfire of yonder town? |
48294 | Ready to open the bung- holes in the tavern barrels? |
48294 | Richard Ingle,said he,"are you drunk or sober?" |
48294 | Richard Ingle? |
48294 | Robin Hood''s Barn? 48294 Said he so indeed? |
48294 | Say? 48294 Say? |
48294 | Shall I not be afraid of her? |
48294 | Shall there be no liberty of conscience? |
48294 | She is living, then? |
48294 | Should I not feel honored by the confidence? |
48294 | So I do not look well enough as I am? |
48294 | So the Maryland picture of poor Claiborne supplies him with all the attributes of the devil, except the horns and hoof? 48294 So you are come to take me to Hell, are you?" |
48294 | So you could not go on living with Mary? 48294 So-- thou-- art-- the son of Master John Neville of Frome House?" |
48294 | Somerset? |
48294 | Still harping on escape? 48294 Swim? |
48294 | Tell me, did the old crone predict aught about-- about your marriage? |
48294 | Tell me, thou dear, wise Mistress Huntoon, can a woman truly love and yet be fain to laugh at herself and her love and her lover? |
48294 | That can not be; and why shouldst thou need pity? |
48294 | That could not be--"No, I feared that was asking too much,Neville said humbly,"but at least thou wilt let me have the boy?" |
48294 | That? |
48294 | The knife came down, and ere I could pull it out I heard steps near by and did run for my life--"Whither didst run? |
48294 | The question is, rather, are you willing to allow my claim upon your far- famed hospitality? |
48294 | Then I may come to see you? |
48294 | Then the winter will be long? |
48294 | Then where comes in the point of thy words? |
48294 | Then why ask his pardon? |
48294 | Then why not give it to him? |
48294 | Then,said Peggy with the characteristic stamp of her foot,"then why say such hard things? |
48294 | Think you all souls are as sensitive as thine? |
48294 | Thinkst thou I would defeat justice, and make myself sharer in such a guilty secret as that? |
48294 | This Indian-- who was he-- did ever you see him before? |
48294 | This night? |
48294 | This very night? |
48294 | Thou dost defend them? |
48294 | Thou knowest? 48294 Thou wilt come with me?" |
48294 | To love purely, with a high and unselfish devotion? |
48294 | To_ pack_? |
48294 | Truly? |
48294 | Understood what? |
48294 | Verily? 48294 Was I smiling? |
48294 | Was he not drowned in a cowardly attempt to escape from a trial he dared not face? |
48294 | Was it all worth while? |
48294 | Was it good news? |
48294 | Was it not under authority of Virginia that I made a settlement at Kent Island? |
48294 | Was the girl English? |
48294 | Wath Couthin Giles ever little-- really little-- like me? |
48294 | Well? |
48294 | Were you bred to the sea? |
48294 | Were you two alone? |
48294 | Wert thou_ sure_? |
48294 | What always changes a man''s purpose? 48294 What am I?" |
48294 | What are these for? |
48294 | What are they doing? 48294 What can I do?" |
48294 | What fools utter such imbecile slander? |
48294 | What for? |
48294 | What for? |
48294 | What if Ellyson prove the better man of the two? |
48294 | What if the maid lose hers with looking at him? 48294 What is the jest?" |
48294 | What is wrong with my nose? 48294 What justice were there in punishing the innocent with the guilty? |
48294 | What matter what befalls me? 48294 What mought his first name ha''been?" |
48294 | What of that? 48294 What part did he play?" |
48294 | What said she? |
48294 | What say ye now, Neale? |
48294 | What stands between us? |
48294 | What thing? |
48294 | What wall? |
48294 | What was it to my father when thou wert in trouble yonder in James City? |
48294 | What would you want if you''d been shut up in this cold hole for a night and a day? |
48294 | What''s that? |
48294 | What''s this talk of witches and witch knives? |
48294 | What''s wanted within there? |
48294 | What? 48294 What?" |
48294 | What? |
48294 | When I came back I was torn with brambles and stained with blood-- of a beast, I told them-- but who could know if I spoke truth? |
48294 | When Mistress Neville grants her gracious permission; and, Cecil, do you think ever you could gain her consent to another thing? |
48294 | Where am I? 48294 Where did she learn it,"wondered Romney,"and she never at Court?" |
48294 | Where did you leave the two? |
48294 | Where''s your voice, man? 48294 Wherefore abroad so early?" |
48294 | Whither art thou bound? |
48294 | Who are concerned in your present plan? |
48294 | Who are mine accusers? |
48294 | Who could have believed it of_ him_ of all men? |
48294 | Who could have thought it? |
48294 | Who cried for help? |
48294 | Who goes there? |
48294 | Who is it? |
48294 | Who is that? |
48294 | Who is the doer of the deed? |
48294 | Who is the man? |
48294 | Who told thee? |
48294 | Why art thou come hither? |
48294 | Why didst thou not stay to speak with him? |
48294 | Why do you not take a chair once more? |
48294 | Why do you think that? |
48294 | Why does he not ask her for the galliard? |
48294 | Why dost thou seek to become my tenant? |
48294 | Why dost thou seek to hurry me so? 48294 Why must you go?" |
48294 | Why not Neville as well as Ingle? 48294 Why not go straight to Governor Brent and give them the lie?" |
48294 | Why not keep it yoursel'', Master? |
48294 | Why not stay now, since''tis already day? |
48294 | Why not? |
48294 | Why take the risk again? 48294 Why, Peggy? |
48294 | Why, how''s this? |
48294 | Why, where is Captain Ingle''s ship? |
48294 | Why? |
48294 | Will he never come? |
48294 | Will it help ye? |
48294 | Will you do something for me? |
48294 | Will you pass by the road where Father Mohl was murdered? |
48294 | Without fail? |
48294 | Would Couthin Mary tell a lie? |
48294 | Wouldst have the bear eat thy mother? |
48294 | Ye remember the murder of Father Mohl? |
48294 | Yes, Poppet, what is it? |
48294 | Yes, but how is it that he is gone? 48294 Yes, but--""Did not Kent belong to Virginia by right of a charter antedating the patent of that upstart, Calvert?" |
48294 | Yes,said Romney, eagerly;"and what like was he?" |
48294 | Yet you would not have the guilty escape? |
48294 | You cared a little for me, then, in the old days? |
48294 | You found it? |
48294 | You have been at St. Mary''s for some days? |
48294 | You knew the blasphemer, then? |
48294 | You know him? |
48294 | You think so? |
48294 | You were in love once? |
48294 | You will give me an answer to take to him? |
48294 | You would not care to dance with a girl from Maryland, would you, Captain Snow? |
48294 | You? |
48294 | _ Forgive?_ Dearest,_ I love thee_! |
48294 | _ Good!_--I to thee? 48294 _ Her?_"asked Romney, with a fine show of indifference. |
48294 | _ The Reformation?_exclaimed Huntoon. |
48294 | ''So you''re come to take me to Hell, are you?'' |
48294 | ''Tis no baby thou hadst thought me, Mother, hadst thou seen me wrestling with Ralph Ingle? |
48294 | ''Twas spoken like a man, and Peggy-- what said she?" |
48294 | A soft voice from Richard Ingle''s right answered,"Think you not''twere as well to leave the name of God out of the business? |
48294 | After a pause given to meditation he resumed,--"What makes folks die?" |
48294 | Ah, Cecil, how fares it with thee?" |
48294 | Ah, what''s that beyond the headland? |
48294 | Ah, what? |
48294 | All she said was,--"Then why did she ask thy help?" |
48294 | Aloud he said,"And did the disappointment drive you out of England, the country named after your forefathers?" |
48294 | Am I to wear my morocco shoes with the red satin roses?" |
48294 | And Thir Chrithtopher Neville must kneel before me; and how if I tickle him on the neck when he bends, and make him laugh out before them all?" |
48294 | And everlasting damnation to the enemies of-- shall we say the King, or the Parliament?" |
48294 | And how do you know that Mistress Brent desires your company?" |
48294 | And pray what of it?" |
48294 | And those purple eyes, why were they so sad? |
48294 | And thou wilt come with Cecil to see how the land fares from time to time?" |
48294 | And what do you say to the silver flagons fine? |
48294 | And what say you, then, to this? |
48294 | And who are they who have faced all these things for their religion? |
48294 | And who was that beside him-- Ralph Ingle? |
48294 | Answer me, Peggy,"and holding her face between his hands he gazed deep into her eyes,"Dost thou love Romney Huntoon?" |
48294 | Are you glad?" |
48294 | At length looking up timidly she asked,--"Think you I could ever be like her?" |
48294 | At length the child gave up the search and called aloud,--"Where art thou?" |
48294 | At length, making the sign of the cross, he spoke aside to Father White,--"Have I leave to depart?" |
48294 | Begin then!--What first?" |
48294 | Besides, men never forget the obedience to women they learn at their mother''s knee-- or over it--"Is it not so, Father?" |
48294 | But of the quarrel-- did you see Richard Ingle after?" |
48294 | But thou-- what wilt thou do?" |
48294 | But what hath put this fancy in thy head?" |
48294 | But what?" |
48294 | But why do I dwell at such length upon a trifle? |
48294 | But why under heaven did he conceal the whole business from me?" |
48294 | CHAPTER VII IN GOOD GREEN WOOD"Now what say you, Mistress Peggy?" |
48294 | CHAPTER XIX THE ROLLING YEAR"Is he better to- day?" |
48294 | CHAPTER XXII CANDLEMAS EVE"Couthin Marget, dost think the ground- hog can see his shadow when he comes out of his hole to- morrow?" |
48294 | Call you that hospitality, to keep the best for himself?" |
48294 | Can I help in lifting the body?" |
48294 | Can I lie with him at night and eat and drink by day with my arm locked in his? |
48294 | Canst thou wonder that he accuses me?" |
48294 | Cease thy jesting and tell me is that_ The Lady Betty_, or is it not?" |
48294 | Claiborne, how many have you in your command?" |
48294 | Considering the nature of the matter in hand, is it not just possible that He might take offence?" |
48294 | Couldst not choose some gentler name?" |
48294 | Cousin!--art thou hurt?" |
48294 | Did he or did he not start out into the night after the quarrel with Father Mohl?" |
48294 | Did not the old masters paint Our Lady from the women around them, and none so fair as you?" |
48294 | Did the devil tell you? |
48294 | Did you think you were the only person honored with an invitation? |
48294 | Did you?" |
48294 | Didst thou quarrel with Father Mohl?" |
48294 | Do ghosts walk nowadays dost thou think, Cecil?" |
48294 | Do yonder fellows know anything of the prospect of the arrest?" |
48294 | Do you bring any news of that good- for- nothing brother of mine?" |
48294 | Do you hear? |
48294 | Do you or do you not recognize my authority?" |
48294 | Do you think I ought?" |
48294 | Do you think they are all like that?" |
48294 | Dost think Cousin Giles would ever speak with me again if I deserted thee? |
48294 | Dost thou know what a tenant is?" |
48294 | Dost thou love me, dear, still? |
48294 | Dost thou think he did it?" |
48294 | Doth it not smack of deceit and treachery?" |
48294 | Durst thou expose him to the influence of such an example?" |
48294 | Elinor would not? |
48294 | Elinor, are there fire- arms in the house?" |
48294 | Finally she broke the pause, saying,"Do you remember what night the last was?" |
48294 | Gabriel''s?" |
48294 | Gabriel''s?" |
48294 | Giles,''tis but a little while since thou didst urge my taking Christopher Neville for my tenant yonder at Cecil Manor; and why? |
48294 | Governor Brent-- is he killed?" |
48294 | Had he so nearly reached the goal to fail at last? |
48294 | Had her nature sharp peaks, crevasses, and unsunned slopes? |
48294 | Hast thou brandy?" |
48294 | Hast thou lived to nigh forty years, to be hurt like a boy by a woman''s inconstancy? |
48294 | Have I a black smooch on my nose, or did I talk too much or laugh too loud that you look so-- so-- so righteously disapproving?" |
48294 | Have I deserved this?" |
48294 | Have I room in my heart for pity of any save myself?" |
48294 | Have you not deserved death at my hands?" |
48294 | He smiled, but he repeated the question;"How dost thou know it is a lie?" |
48294 | How can I when I know every word will be twisted to one fell purpose?" |
48294 | How can he?" |
48294 | How can it be that thou who hadst the wit to deal with Ingle shouldst so have lost thy head here?" |
48294 | How canst thou talk so bold?" |
48294 | How could Brent have heard of the quarrel when he was absent? |
48294 | How could you manage your home- coming? |
48294 | How say you, Cecil,--wilt thou lend me those cheeks of thine for cushions?" |
48294 | How say you, Master Boniface, would it not be well to compel the traitor to drink himself to death at the expense of the Lord Proprietary?" |
48294 | How wouldst thou have prospered in a Puritan colony?" |
48294 | How_ can_ you smile?" |
48294 | Huntoon started up; but Peggy checked him:"Master Huntoon, will you take me to my brother? |
48294 | I ask once more, have you any confession to make?" |
48294 | I do not like the dark, do you?" |
48294 | I thank you all heartily; and now will you please put your helm about, and head the ketch for St. Mary''s with what speed you may?" |
48294 | If I do, I''ll send you word-- and by the way, so that I may not forget, what is your name?" |
48294 | If that condemns me, protests are vain; if that acquits me, who in the end shall be able to stand against me?'' |
48294 | If the adorable is to be adored and the lovable to be loved, why was not the kissable to be kissed? |
48294 | In God''s name, how didst thou know?" |
48294 | Ingle must look a deal like Lucifer; and Michael-- Mother, dost not think Michael must look rather like Master Neville?" |
48294 | Inigo''s?" |
48294 | Is a man to sit still and listen in silence to a pack of lies told about his friend?" |
48294 | Is he within?" |
48294 | Is not that a sign of a vacant mind?" |
48294 | Is not that reason enough?" |
48294 | Is not this all true so far, Cousin?" |
48294 | Is she with you?" |
48294 | Is that his knock at the door?" |
48294 | Is that true?" |
48294 | Is the murder of yonder priest of my own imagining?" |
48294 | Is there any reason why I should not kill you? |
48294 | Is''t not a silly verse?" |
48294 | It must be the left garter too, so I took it, and knit three knots in it, and then with my eyes shut I said the rhyme--""What rhyme?" |
48294 | Just now Cecil was pressing close to her side and whispering in her ear,--"Mamma, did Thir Chrithtopher Neville kill the priest? |
48294 | Kiss me and say, dost not feel it so?" |
48294 | Know you anything of his family?" |
48294 | Landlord, bring out your ale, and all good fellows shall drink with me a health to-- let me see; shall it be Charles, or Oliver? |
48294 | Let me ask but one question, Do you hold with your brother in his treason?" |
48294 | Margaret Brent had entered unperceived, and now her questioning eyes said,"Who wore it?" |
48294 | Mary''s?" |
48294 | Mary''s?" |
48294 | Mary''s?" |
48294 | May I hope that Flora will tread the pavan with me later?" |
48294 | May I talk of it now?" |
48294 | May not I too be a bidden guest?" |
48294 | May not our course take me past her window, that I may at least wave a good- bye?" |
48294 | May we count on you and your son to be on the wharf with your firearms to- morrow, an hour or so past noon?" |
48294 | Mistress Brent, is the ceremony ended?" |
48294 | Mother, if Thir Chrithtopher Neville married thee would he bear the Calvert crest?" |
48294 | My regards to Sir William Berkeley when you return-- and when is that to be?" |
48294 | Neale, you have your eye to the chink in the shutter?" |
48294 | None feel responsibility for those who are neither kith nor kin save where they--""Where they what?" |
48294 | Now what befell the ketch?" |
48294 | Now what say you to''God and the Parliament''?" |
48294 | Now, Mary, have I not told thee and Giles that I would hear of no such plan? |
48294 | Now, one more question: when you came in that night did you, or did you not, crave blessing and absolution from Father White?" |
48294 | Now, was it all worth while?" |
48294 | Now, what is a poor maid to do under such distracting confusions?" |
48294 | Now, what say you? |
48294 | Now, where is dear old Philpotts?" |
48294 | Of law and leases? |
48294 | Of what was Neville thinking as he knelt there on the step of the dais? |
48294 | Of what, then? |
48294 | Oh, Christopher, canst thou forgive me?" |
48294 | Oh, my daughter, hast thou not before found comfort at the confessional, at the foot of the altar? |
48294 | Oh, what?" |
48294 | Peggy rushed on, all in confusion--"not in beauty, of course, nor in mind, but could I make my character like hers? |
48294 | Perhaps''tis too much to ask, but could you find it in your heart to bear me company in one more troublous time, one more life- risk?" |
48294 | Philpotts, will you kindly put about that helm?" |
48294 | Related to Robert Philpot of Kent?" |
48294 | Saidst thou not so in bed this morning, Mother?" |
48294 | Say now, was I not scratching and biting valiantly?" |
48294 | Say you not so?" |
48294 | Say, Elinor, wilt thou take this man for thy tenant? |
48294 | See you not why I can not bear to have you think ill of me?" |
48294 | Shall I go in her, Captain Ingle?" |
48294 | Shall I name thee one?" |
48294 | Shall I swear by these and doubt the laws that rule a soul?" |
48294 | Shall I tell thee whose picture dwells in my soul by day and night, Elinor?" |
48294 | Shall we wipe the slate and begin again?" |
48294 | Show me Fate and I will show you the will of a man; but what have you there in your hand?" |
48294 | Sir Christopher, will you hear the evidence against you?" |
48294 | Tell me first what do they say? |
48294 | The gentleman that came last night? |
48294 | The wretch did make confession to Father White, and of what, thinkst thou?" |
48294 | Then aloud,"Cecil, wilt thou close thine eyes and come down to me when thou hast counted a hundred?" |
48294 | Then as soon as they were out of hearing,"Romney, what is the matter? |
48294 | Then as though the question were the most natural and casual one she asked,--"When are you to marry?" |
48294 | Then, breaking off and looking toward the staircase, he exclaimed,"In the name of Venus and Cupid, who is_ that_?" |
48294 | Then, with great impressiveness,"_ It was the Eve of St. Agnes._""And what of that?" |
48294 | There, go back and tell that to the devil, will you?" |
48294 | Think you I shall ever find it?" |
48294 | Think you could we draw the lips more together and close the eyelids above that horrible stare?" |
48294 | Thinkst thou a man''s soul is changed in a day or two days or a week? |
48294 | Thir Chrithtopher, why doth God care more for the heart than for the head and legs?" |
48294 | Was Richard Ingle drunk or sober?" |
48294 | Was any with thee when thou didst find the knife?" |
48294 | Was ever any one in your family hung?" |
48294 | Was he glad or sorry? |
48294 | Was it likely that the heart of the young man who walked with the rein over his arm was less jubilant than the scene around him? |
48294 | Was it luck or fate that guided him? |
48294 | Was it of Cecil and his manor? |
48294 | Was she really Elinor Calvert, or a corpse like the one which lay scarcely more white in the middle of the room? |
48294 | Was this the pattern of perfection she had wasted so many thoughts upon,--this woman whose faith broke at the first trial? |
48294 | What are the Calverts themselves? |
48294 | What does it mean?" |
48294 | What gypsy would ever get her palm crossed with silver twice by a maiden, if she failed to promise her a husband?" |
48294 | What have they found, seen, imagined?" |
48294 | What hour o''the clock is it?" |
48294 | What in God''s name can I do or say more?" |
48294 | What is a poor man to do, when asking is presumption, and not asking is dulness?" |
48294 | What is all this tale of thine when sifted? |
48294 | What is he to us? |
48294 | What is it, then, but jail- breaking?" |
48294 | What is your love to mine? |
48294 | What plea are you fain to enter,''guilty''or''not guilty''?" |
48294 | What reason have they? |
48294 | What said she of his looks?" |
48294 | What was it all to thee?" |
48294 | What was the fun of having men struggle for the privilege of talking with her? |
48294 | What was this the men were bearing to her door? |
48294 | What wilt thou have me sing?" |
48294 | What''s that craft yonder by the wooded point?" |
48294 | What''s the use of weeping when thou hast me here safe and sound? |
48294 | What?" |
48294 | When Brent had finished Huntoon said,--"Did he-- was death natural?" |
48294 | When he fell, two men picked him up and one asked,''Whither shall we carry him?'' |
48294 | Where are the gentlemen? |
48294 | Where are you?" |
48294 | Where is he? |
48294 | Where is she?" |
48294 | Who could say what was passing? |
48294 | Who else had that bearing, with its strange blending of a dignity too unconscious to be majestic, with a simplicity too dignified to be wholly simple? |
48294 | Who ever heard of the Brents till they sprang up like mushrooms in this new world? |
48294 | Who is he? |
48294 | Who is that outside the door? |
48294 | Who knows but my love may draw him into the right path?" |
48294 | Who shall say? |
48294 | Who, then, hath taken him by force?" |
48294 | Who?" |
48294 | Why did all present suddenly shrink back as if a leper stood among them? |
48294 | Why do these impulses so often come too late to all of us? |
48294 | Why dost thou look so white and strange?" |
48294 | Why not make it''Wives for us all''?" |
48294 | Why will he never give the other fellow a chance?" |
48294 | Why, all of a sudden, was his brow cleared of its furrows, and his mind of its worries for the moment? |
48294 | Will he have horns and a tail like the devil?" |
48294 | Will that bring Christopher Neville to life? |
48294 | Will that save his poor heart one of the pangs my distrust dealt, or his faithful soul one hour of the weary years my cold disdain cost him? |
48294 | Will you not tell me why?" |
48294 | Wilt thou have me for thy tenant on shares-- three quarters of the harvest to go to thee and one quarter to me?" |
48294 | Wilt thou in good earnest condemn me to despair?" |
48294 | Would she chide him if she did? |
48294 | Would she feel it, he wondered? |
48294 | Years ago he loved me and I loved him, and we would have wedded but for--""But for what, Elinor?" |
48294 | You do mean to ask her again?" |
48294 | You killed Father Mohl?" |
48294 | [ Illustration] With a mocking smile he thrummed and sang:"''Pray, what are women like unto? |
48294 | and pray what dost think of me? |
48294 | and why?" |
48294 | cried Cecil, anxious to be a hero, but conscious of a painful sinking at the pit of his stomach,"what manner of man is this Ingle? |
48294 | exclaimed Cecil,"wert thou once as beautiful as that?" |
48294 | exclaimed Father White,"was thy conscience so dead thou didst feel no pricks at accepting hospitality,--thou, a murderer?" |
48294 | he murmured,"were not things in this unhappy colony tangled enough without this new trouble? |
48294 | he said, pointing Huntoon to the eastward;"is that yonder Watkins Point or a bank of fog?" |
48294 | he thought to himself,"so the wind blows from that quarter, does it? |
48294 | is this not she coming down the path?" |
48294 | is''t not writ as I have said?" |
48294 | queried Peggy,"and just seen Mistress Calvert? |
48294 | said Neville aloud, as if the writer of the note were near; and may not souls draw near as well as bodies? |
48294 | sighed Romney, in the folly of his youth,"what care I what the_ King_ might say, if the_ Queen_ will not listen to me?" |
48294 | then jealously,"Perhaps you think she''s too good for me?" |
48294 | would those dark- fringed eyes never open? |
48294 | you say; and how, pray, am I to hold him when I have no jail save my two hands? |
58812 | Can that be the true preaching of''the Word''where the language of that Word so seldom enters in? |
58812 | Can two walk together,says Holy Scripture,"and not be agreed?" |
58812 | Could that be the true preaching of''Christ, and Him crucified,''where any mention of the simple gospel story was almost systematically shut out? |
58812 | Dost Thou not hear,the demon once more cries out impatiently--"Dost thou not hear what the angel says? |
58812 | Is there really a way through this world to heaven? 58812 Jesus saith to her: Woman why weepest thou? |
58812 | O my Divine Spouse,she said,"where wast thou when I was enduring these conflicts?" |
58812 | What is that to thee? 58812 What is that to thee?" |
58812 | What shall I offer to the Lord that is worthy? 58812 What was it they were required to do? |
58812 | What, with all these filthy abominations? |
58812 | Why stand ye all the day idle? |
58812 | Why stand ye all the day idle? |
58812 | Why stand ye here all the day idle? |
58812 | Why stand ye here all the day idle? |
58812 | _ How can this man give us his flesh to eat?_they said. |
58812 | _ What shall I offer to the Lord that is worthy? 58812 _ What shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" |
58812 | _ What shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul?_Will you sin against your own soul? |
58812 | _ What shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul?_Will you sin against your own soul? |
58812 | _ What shall we say then to these things? 58812 _ Who shall stand to see Him? |
58812 | _ Why weepest thou? 58812 _ Woman why weepest thou? |
58812 | ( a cousin of mine, who is an Episcopalian clergyman) do the same thing?" |
58812 | 3:] Why does the winter come upon us with desolation and storm? |
58812 | A man approaches, and addresses Magdelene in the same words that the angels had used:"Woman, why weepest thou? |
58812 | After all, what has she done? |
58812 | Alone, or only with a feeble woman like herself, she goes out late at night, and whither? |
58812 | And are there not some who do this? |
58812 | And are we now really doing any thing for heaven? |
58812 | And by what law is he to be tried? |
58812 | And for what have you done all this? |
58812 | And has not God promised to protect the orphan? |
58812 | And how does our Lord answer her? |
58812 | And if merely to think about God in this life can make us so happy, what must it be to see Him in the life to come? |
58812 | And if not, why are Roman Catholic bishops schismatical intruders in London and New- York? |
58812 | And if the soul is so beautiful in the little rays that escape from the body, what must it be in itself? |
58812 | And is He not present to you as truly as if you saw Him, hearing each imprecation and blasphemy which you utter? |
58812 | And is it so? |
58812 | And is it, then, not credible? |
58812 | And is it, then, only God for whom we are unwilling to do any thing hard? |
58812 | And is not this our crime, that we are idlers and triflers in religion? |
58812 | And is there any thing in this joy and confidence which reason or Christianity would condemn? |
58812 | And oh, are the judgments of God so strict? |
58812 | And that precious soul of yours, before which all the wealth of the world is but worthless dross with what care have you kept that? |
58812 | And the disciples seeing it, wondered, saying: How is it presently withered away?_"[ Footnote 86][ Footnote 86: St. Matt. |
58812 | And the soldiers asked him, saying:"And what shall_ we_ do?" |
58812 | And they spoke to her:"Woman, why weepest thou? |
58812 | And what does that mass think of the Catholic Church? |
58812 | And what is that? |
58812 | And what is to secure you from dying in such a state? |
58812 | And what we do willingly for the world, for our families, for our health, our pleasure, our sins, shall we refuse to do for the great and good God? |
58812 | And when He comes to judgment will not the stars fall from the sky and the heavens be parted as a scroll? |
58812 | And why was all this? |
58812 | And why? |
58812 | And why? |
58812 | And would you attribute conduct so disgraceful among men to our Father in heaven? |
58812 | Are all our real sorrows removed or alleviated by the resurrection of Christ? |
58812 | Are not all times alike to God? |
58812 | Are our faces, my brethren, turned toward the heavenly city? |
58812 | Are the Anglican bishops in these places schismatical intruders or not? |
58812 | Are the stars inhabited? |
58812 | Are there any here to- night in mortal sin? |
58812 | Are there few or many that will be saved? |
58812 | Are there none of you, my brethren, who recognise this as the secret language of your hearts? |
58812 | Are these children faithful Catholics? |
58812 | Are these orgies meant to insult the dead? |
58812 | Are these wishes executed? |
58812 | Are we as faithful to pray for our departed friends, and to get prayers said for them? |
58812 | Are we hastening thither, acknowledging ourselves strangers and pilgrims on the earth? |
58812 | Are we left to our own fancyings and feelings to decide whether we are pardoned or not? |
58812 | Are we living the lives God intended us to live? |
58812 | Are we not afraid of wounding your pride, of alienating your affections? |
58812 | Are we not too apt to speak so of the work of an opponent? |
58812 | Are we really redeeming the past by a true penance? |
58812 | Are we to have no interest, no feeling for each other? |
58812 | Are you distressed and suffering? |
58812 | Are you in doubt about religious truth? |
58812 | Are you in sin? |
58812 | Are you in sin? |
58812 | Are you leading a tepid, imperfect life? |
58812 | Are you not afraid of His vengeance Whom you have offended? |
58812 | Are you not ready to condemn him yourselves to hell? |
58812 | Are you old? |
58812 | Are you sorely tempted to sin? |
58812 | Are you spending your time as you would wish to spend the last year of your life? |
58812 | Are you willing to practise what you do believe? |
58812 | Are you young? |
58812 | Art thou guilty? |
58812 | Art thou in sin after baptism? |
58812 | Art thou sad and lonely? |
58812 | Art thou weak? |
58812 | As he was on his way, St. Laurence followed him weeping and saying:"Father where are you going without your son? |
58812 | As heaven fills up with saints flaming with love, He says,"Whence are these? |
58812 | As reasonable men, I have appealed to you: what is your decision? |
58812 | Ask the Gospel, Who is that servant whom his Lord at His coming will approve? |
58812 | Ask the Psalmist who of us shall see heaven, and he will answer you,"_ Lord, who shall dwell in Thy tabernacle, or who shall rest on Thy holy hill? |
58812 | But do you think we have none of the charity of the Angels? |
58812 | But does this law reach also to the supernatural world? |
58812 | But how can they turn away from Catholicity as it is expressed by the great saints of the Church? |
58812 | But how did you come by that belief? |
58812 | But how does he believe you? |
58812 | But how will you bear the taunts and jeers of the devil and his angels? |
58812 | But is it not necessary to go to communion? |
58812 | But some of you may say, why tell us this? |
58812 | But suppose these evil temptations are importunate, and remain in the soul even when we resist them, and try to turn from them? |
58812 | But the question with many will be, is it possible to attain it? |
58812 | But when? |
58812 | But who are those young people, that young man and young woman? |
58812 | But why is this necessary? |
58812 | But, it may be asked, does man need a revelation on this point? |
58812 | By what means can I be united to Christ? |
58812 | By what way is light spread, and heat divided on the earth? |
58812 | Can God remain united to the soul which has cast Him off by an act of complete and formal rebellion? |
58812 | Can He be very much displeased at my follies? |
58812 | Can He care what my religious belief is? |
58812 | Can He speak, and you go on as if He had not spoken? |
58812 | Can Jesus Christ resist such an appeal? |
58812 | Can there be any thing more dreadful still? |
58812 | Can there be hope for one like that? |
58812 | Can we doubt to what effect our Saviour would have answered? |
58812 | Can we not believe Jesus Christ? |
58812 | Can we say,"I am fulfilling the requirements of my conscience, in the standard which I propose to myself?" |
58812 | Can you blame her for weeping, as she looks, for the last time, on that dear form? |
58812 | Can you carry away a heavy corpse? |
58812 | Can you doubt His power? |
58812 | Can you doubt His truth? |
58812 | Can you pick and choose among His doctrines, and take up one and reject another? |
58812 | Can you, then, innocently refuse to listen? |
58812 | Could any thing He had made escape His knowledge, or any sorrow fail to awaken His compassion? |
58812 | Cut it down therefore; why doth it take up the ground? |
58812 | Did God require to be reminded of the woes and wants of any child of man, by the sympathizing cries of his fellow- creatures? |
58812 | Did He not manifest Himself to the patriarchs? |
58812 | Did His words ever so abide in any heart as in hers? |
58812 | Did any remain in Christ as she did? |
58812 | Did he not speak face to face with Moses? |
58812 | Did it not carry them through fire and sword? |
58812 | Did it not enable them to meet death with joy? |
58812 | Did not our Lord love his Mother? |
58812 | Did not the sun hide its face at the crucifixon of our Lord, and the earth tremble under His Cross? |
58812 | Did the sad news of the daughter''s death go out to the poor mother in the old country, softened with the evidence of that daughter''s piety and love? |
58812 | Did they ever look at a crucifix, or read the story of the Passion? |
58812 | Did you hear that howl? |
58812 | Do these revellers wish to make us believe that their departed friend was, body and soul, the child of Hell as much as they? |
58812 | Do they know in whose name they are baptized? |
58812 | Do we not, like the Pharisees, give an undue value to outward observances? |
58812 | Do you ask me to what I allude? |
58812 | Do you ask me what has been done for your souls? |
58812 | Do you ask me what has been done for your souls? |
58812 | Do you ask what has been done for your souls? |
58812 | Do you hear this, O sinner? |
58812 | Do you hear this, my brethren? |
58812 | Do you judge of a man as you do of a horse or a dog? |
58812 | Do you think that poor widow of whom the Gospel speaks to- day could help weeping? |
58812 | Do you want a better worship than that which His Eternal Son offers? |
58812 | Do you want to have faith? |
58812 | Do you want to know what a mortal sin is? |
58812 | Do you wish to advance in a good life? |
58812 | Do you wish to die with that veil not taken away? |
58812 | Do you wish to go before God as careless and as sensual as you are now? |
58812 | Do you wish to know how to advance in God''s love? |
58812 | Docs she not run a thousand risks? |
58812 | Does God this night see in this church some heart that is in mortal sin? |
58812 | Does it not look like me? |
58812 | Does not Nature sympathize with man? |
58812 | Does not Scripture itself fashion out for her the glorious throne on which the Catholic Church places her? |
58812 | Does not every creature groan and travail for our redemption? |
58812 | Does not the very word, God, mean something different to us from what it does to a saint? |
58812 | Does sin wage a war against you? |
58812 | Does the Bible teach us this? |
58812 | Does the Catholic Church, as you understand it, come up to these descriptions? |
58812 | Does the world allure thee? |
58812 | Dost thou ask the way back to God? |
58812 | Dost thou know the order of heaven, and canst thou set down the reason thereof on the earth? |
58812 | Dost thou wish to know the life thou must practise? |
58812 | Dost thou wish to know where thou wilt gain strength to keep these laws? |
58812 | Even supposing she reaches the place in safety, will she be permitted to approach the grave? |
58812 | For a momentary gratification of appetite? |
58812 | For what are they but the evidences of the greatness of our religion? |
58812 | God is immutable, and yet He is perfectly free: who shall reconcile these together? |
58812 | Grant that yon are not bound to do precisely what they did, are you at liberty to do nothing? |
58812 | Had not St. Paul and St. Peter influence enough with Heaven to carry their wants directly to the throne of grace? |
58812 | Has Christianity, then, accomplished the results that might have been looked for? |
58812 | Has Jesus Christ always been so near me? |
58812 | Has an angel spoken to him, as of old to the prophet Zacharias? |
58812 | Has he seen a vision? |
58812 | Has it awakened you to new life, new hopes, new aspirations? |
58812 | Has it been a task to you to listen to the sermon? |
58812 | Has not God given His revelation complete credibility? |
58812 | Has not St. Magdalene preached an Easter sermon? |
58812 | Has not the solitary place been made glad by the hymns of its anchorites, and the desert blossomed like a rose under their toil? |
58812 | Has that debt been paid? |
58812 | Has the grace of God also its seasons and its times? |
58812 | Have my guardian angel and the demon that has tempted me been always in this very room? |
58812 | Have not empires owned its sway, and kings come bending to seek its blessings? |
58812 | Have not millions of martyrs loved it better than their lives? |
58812 | Have you a secret sorrow? |
58812 | Have you been critical and captious? |
58812 | Have you found me wanting to my duty? |
58812 | Have you kept it as your most sacred treasure? |
58812 | Have you sought only to be amused? |
58812 | Have you valued that soul of yours? |
58812 | Have you, my brethren, so regarded yourselves? |
58812 | He asks:"Is this binding under mortal sin? |
58812 | He had his little trials, but what was it all-- what was poverty or sickness or disappointment? |
58812 | He listens, and asks,"May I believe this?" |
58812 | He says:"Offer it now to thy prince, will_ he_ be pleased with it, or will_ he_ regard thy face?" |
58812 | He whom they loved and trusted is no more; and they, whither shall they go? |
58812 | Hear the Holy Ghost, Himself interpret it:"_ The voice said, cry; and I said, what shall I cry? |
58812 | How can I describe to you the change that takes place in that moment? |
58812 | How can a person"abjure the Catholic Communion"at Rome, by joining that which is confessedly the principal branch of the Catholic Church? |
58812 | How can it be otherwise? |
58812 | How can there be the guilt of apostasy involved in such an act? |
58812 | How could she go fast? |
58812 | How did he prepare men for the coming of Christ? |
58812 | How did the Blessed Virgin arrive at such glory? |
58812 | How did this happen? |
58812 | How do men act about religion? |
58812 | How does it come to pass that there are those two principles within us? |
58812 | How has it been with each of you? |
58812 | How much of good, then, has been and is in the world? |
58812 | How must, then, a man forget himself whose occupation is more secular? |
58812 | How old is the earth which we inhabit? |
58812 | How shall we abide His coming, my brethren I how shall we prepare to meet Him? |
58812 | How shall we express the thoughts of Him that fill our souls? |
58812 | How shall we worship Him? |
58812 | How were they to preserve the continuity of organization and the apostolic succession? |
58812 | How will men attain that which they do not care for, to which they give no thought? |
58812 | I err by excess or defect in my conduct; I bring evil on myself it is true; but what difference can that make to the Supreme Being? |
58812 | I know there are times when every man has felt the words of the Psalmist:"_ What have I in heaven? |
58812 | If God be for us, who shall be against us? |
58812 | If He did, who of us could be saved? |
58812 | If no rule obliges you to spend the night in prayer, are you not obliged to pray often? |
58812 | If not, why not? |
58812 | If she had not believed, if she had not assented, what would have come of it? |
58812 | If we look back at our own lives, do we not see that we have had our special times when Christ visited us? |
58812 | If you are not called to forego all innocent pleasures, are you exempt from every sort of self- denial? |
58812 | If you are not required to flee from your homes, are you not required to forsake the occasions of sin? |
58812 | If you can be chaste in the presence of a virtuous female, why can you not be chaste everywhere? |
58812 | If you can be honest when the eye of man is on you, why can you not be honest when no eye sees you but that of God? |
58812 | In a family, who is so much loved as the one whose thoughts are all for others? |
58812 | In the first place, then, what is the source and nature of the conflict thus indicated by our Lord? |
58812 | In the sense in which the teaching of an uninspired man can be so designated, have you thus listened to the preacher''s words? |
58812 | In what consists the beauty of a man? |
58812 | In what house, indeed, is the family unbroken? |
58812 | In what, then, does our Lord''s Priesthood since His Crucifixion consist? |
58812 | Is Catholic truth, as you appropriate it, so high and glorious a thing as this? |
58812 | Is confession difficult? |
58812 | Is it a light thing that could have bound Me to this cross? |
58812 | Is it a light thing that could have reduced Me to such a state of woe? |
58812 | Is it a mere prejudice that melts before investigation? |
58812 | Is it a mere regularity of form and feature? |
58812 | Is it a stupid fanaticism? |
58812 | Is it hard to bear the remarks of companions? |
58812 | Is it hard to lose a little gain? |
58812 | Is it not a failure? |
58812 | Is it not a story to make one weep? |
58812 | Is it not an unconscious acknowledgment of the presence of God? |
58812 | Is it not superstition? |
58812 | Is it not very caustic? |
58812 | Is it now safe and secure? |
58812 | Is not God always ready to save the sinner, and to bestow the graces necessary to his salvation? |
58812 | Is not faith an act purely intellectual? |
58812 | Is not his fall certain? |
58812 | Is not his presence an offence? |
58812 | Is not the earth for the elect? |
58812 | Is not the natural reason and the natural conscience sufficient to tell us that sin is wrong? |
58812 | Is not this to betray the souls of his own children? |
58812 | Is she not afraid? |
58812 | Is that boy, the object of a mother''s dying tears and prayers, regular at the sacraments? |
58812 | Is that principle so deeply seated in our nature to have no play in Christianity? |
58812 | Is that what you will be punished for? |
58812 | Is the return we are actually making such as He deserves? |
58812 | Is there no trouble in your conscience? |
58812 | Is there not an impression in your minds that the law of God is too strict, or at least that it is too strict for you, and that you can not keep it? |
58812 | Is there nothing frightful to you in a sleepless night, or a sickbed? |
58812 | Is this question answered in the affirmative? |
58812 | Is thy heart weary and inconstant? |
58812 | It is true there are candles and holy water, but where are the pious prayers? |
58812 | Listen to the description which God Himself gives of the results of the gospel:"_ Who are these, that fly as clouds, and as doves to their windows? |
58812 | Look at it; see if it does not belong to me? |
58812 | Mary, dost thou not remember My words-- My promise-- that I would rise again? |
58812 | Mary,--dost thou not believe My angels, bearing testimony to My Resurrection? |
58812 | May He not dishonor it? |
58812 | May he not falsify his message? |
58812 | May we not worship God at home just as well? |
58812 | Me, the Creator of all things, to whom you owe all life and liberty? |
58812 | Men do not ask:"What shall I do to be saved?" |
58812 | Merely because he saw Him with his bodily eyes? |
58812 | Must I forever despair?" |
58812 | Must we go trembling all our days, and be terror- stricken at the hour of death? |
58812 | No matter: are you willing to serve God with a cold heart? |
58812 | No matter: you know what is right; are you willing to do it? |
58812 | Now, amid such ceaseless controversies, what means has our Lord left to protect and defend His people from doubt and error? |
58812 | Now, can salvation be a work so serious to them and so trivial for us? |
58812 | Now, how did these things happen? |
58812 | Now, if she did not merit heaven by becoming the Mother of God, how did she merit it? |
58812 | Now, if you can stop cursing before the priest, why can you not before your wife and children? |
58812 | Now, supposing the offence they take to be justly taken, which is not always the case, what does it prove? |
58812 | Now, to these persons it is a question of the most pressing urgency,"Am I now as I would wish to be when I die? |
58812 | Now, what else could be the result of all this, but a disesteem of Christianity itself? |
58812 | Now, what is all this? |
58812 | Now, what is the blight that destroys all their goodness? |
58812 | Now, what takes place under such circumstances? |
58812 | Now, what was it all about? |
58812 | Now, whence comes this deep and fixed certainty in religion? |
58812 | Now, who can tell us in practice when we have arrived at the limit of venial sin, when we have passed beyond it and are in mortal sin? |
58812 | Now, who does not see here the realization and fulfilment of the great promise of Christ which I have quoted as my text? |
58812 | Now, why is this? |
58812 | Now, why was this? |
58812 | Now, will you tell me that you can not help doing what the martyrs would not do to save them from death? |
58812 | O Dwight, what is there in such a situation to make one remain in it, if one could conscientiously leave it? |
58812 | O my brethren, is the service you are rendering Him at all worthy of Him? |
58812 | O my brethren, need I say more? |
58812 | O my brethren, why do we grovel on earth, when we might have our conversation in heaven? |
58812 | O thou who art afflicted, tossed with tempests and not comforted, what dost thou want?--what wouldst thou have? |
58812 | Of whom it can be said literally,"Whatever thou askest of Me I will do it,"because the condition of union with God is perfectly fulfilled? |
58812 | Oh, why did not the priest speak of this? |
58812 | On the principle of a Protestant, or a Catholic? |
58812 | On the principle of private judgment, or on faith in an infallible authority? |
58812 | One of the strongest things that St. Paul said in his defence before Agrippa was the appeal:"_ King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? |
58812 | Or has it a reasonable basis, and are its foundations deep in the laws of the human mind? |
58812 | Or that married woman who has stepped aside from the path of virtue, did she realize what she was doing? |
58812 | Or, acknowledging the truth you have heard, have you been careless about putting it in practice? |
58812 | Or, if it did, was the intercession of Christ insufficient that any other had to be called in to supplicate? |
58812 | Or, is that sympathy to be a barren sentiment, and to have no results? |
58812 | Or, like Abel, shall we take the firstlings of our flocks, and slay them in His honor? |
58812 | Or, like the Indian devotee, shall we throw ourselves under the wheels of the car that carries the image of the Divinity? |
58812 | Qu.--How many parts are there in a Sacrament? |
58812 | Qu.--What are the benefits whereof we are partakers thereby? |
58812 | Qu.--What is the inward part, or thing signified? |
58812 | Qu.--What is the outward part or sign of the Lord''s Supper? |
58812 | Shall I bring them up?" |
58812 | Shall I give my first- born for my wickedness, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?_"[ Footnote 97][ Footnote 97: Mich. vi. |
58812 | Shall I never see Jesus Christ again? |
58812 | Shall I offer holocausts unto Him, and calves of a year old? |
58812 | Shall she wait to see Him? |
58812 | Shall there be no sympathy between us? |
58812 | Shall we dress an altar, and pile upon it the smoking victims? |
58812 | Shall we make our children pass through the fire in His Name? |
58812 | Shall we never, after we have sinned, have again the assurance that we are pardoned? |
58812 | Shall we never_ hear_ that sweet consoling word:"_ Go in peace, thy sins are forgiven thee?_"Yes, Christ is risen. |
58812 | Shall we not feel an ample respect for each other, my brethren, when we think of what we are? |
58812 | Shall we, like Cain, gather the fairest fruits and flowers, and bring the basket before the Lord? |
58812 | Should our lives be cut off at this moment, of what kind of texture would they be found? |
58812 | So, I ask you, who are you? |
58812 | Some Catholic who has renounced, if not his faith, at least the practice of his faith? |
58812 | Such a friend? |
58812 | Suppose I am in mortal sin, how can I be forgiven? |
58812 | Suppose it is: may not the wind be speaking for the dead? |
58812 | Suppose you do refuse to listen to the warnings which Death suggests, are you therefore free from anxiety? |
58812 | Surely it is as a Catholic he believes? |
58812 | Tell me, O my brethren, did you not, when you were deeply plunged in sinful enjoyment, feel a dreadful pang at your heart? |
58812 | Tell me, did you not at the moment you sinned hear a stern voice speaking in the depths of your heart? |
58812 | Tell me, now that you stand in God''s holy presence, tell me now, is there not something within you that tells you, you are ruined? |
58812 | Tell me, tell me, young men, tell me, children, tell me truly, one and all, what have been the happiest moments of your life? |
58812 | That duty is irksome; is it a great matter if I omit it now and then?" |
58812 | The heart asks,"What is to become of the body that I loved so much?" |
58812 | The only question is, how is it to be attained? |
58812 | The people came to him and asked him,"What shall we do?" |
58812 | Then the officers of the custom came and asked:"What shall_ we_ do? |
58812 | Then, who are the Catholic bishops in Canada, Louisiana, Alabama, Florida, Texas, and California? |
58812 | They died rather than lift a hand to do a forbidden thing; have you not the same power over your hand that they had? |
58812 | This being so, how is it possible for a man of real merit to remain long unrecognized? |
58812 | This being so, is not her power of intercession fixed beyond dispute? |
58812 | This is the practical question for each one of us: To which of these classes do I belong? |
58812 | This is what the Psalmist expresses so beautifully:"_ Whither shall I go from Thy spirit? |
58812 | To commence with the commencement, then, what shall I say of Trinity Church? |
58812 | To go hence"with the sign of faith,"with the blessing of the Mother of Saints upon you, and the grace of her sacraments within your heart? |
58812 | To have the body of the dead taken away from us, is not that a grief? |
58812 | Upon what are its bases grounded? |
58812 | Very well; but how were they required to deny Christ? |
58812 | Was He not disposed to be obedient to her as his mother? |
58812 | Was he not a Christian? |
58812 | Was he not a friend of God, was not his soul beautiful in God''s sight? |
58812 | Was it for this that He hung on the cross, that_ only now and then_ we should omit some important duty? |
58812 | Was it for this that He sweat those great drops of blood, that we should live a slothful and irreligous life? |
58812 | Was it the hour of some earthly success or triumph? |
58812 | Was it the moments you have spent in sin? |
58812 | Was not God''s own heart as large as theirs? |
58812 | Was not the way of access to God open and easy for every one? |
58812 | Was there ever love like this? |
58812 | Well, is it not better to feel that this life is a state of exile? |
58812 | What aileth thee, O sea, tossed and driven with the waves? |
58812 | What are all the attainments of learned men to Him who is all- wise? |
58812 | What are all the conceptions of genius to Him who is all- beautiful, or the moral excellencies of good men to Him who is all- holy? |
58812 | What are those duties? |
58812 | What are you? |
58812 | What but sin? |
58812 | What could hinder me from being a Roman Catholic but for the fear of doing wrong? |
58812 | What devotion to pleasure? |
58812 | What did they want with Christ? |
58812 | What did you think of Mr. Bennett''s course? |
58812 | What does it matter? |
58812 | What does it mean? |
58812 | What does reason, what does conscience, what does self- interest say? |
58812 | What does the Holy Scripture say? |
58812 | What does the Holy Scripture say? |
58812 | What does the Scripture say? |
58812 | What does this mean? |
58812 | What excessive anxiety about this world? |
58812 | What grief is there that I have not removed?" |
58812 | What has He not done for you? |
58812 | What has gathered these crowds of busy, practical men? |
58812 | What have our past lives been? |
58812 | What is it that has destroyed the peace of so many families? |
58812 | What is it that has happened? |
58812 | What is it that has ruined so many reputations, that once were fair and unblemished? |
58812 | What is it, then, that gives such interest to this scene? |
58812 | What is that reason? |
58812 | What is that sacrifice? |
58812 | What is that worship? |
58812 | What is that? |
58812 | What is the cause of much of the sickness that affects our race? |
58812 | What is the cause of these convulsions of nature, and this terror of the people? |
58812 | What is the end for which God created us? |
58812 | What is the event that can interrupt the great harmonies of Heaven, and furnish the Angels with a new song? |
58812 | What is the history of this universe? |
58812 | What is the meaning of this? |
58812 | What is the point of this observation? |
58812 | What is the reason that Christian art has so far surpassed heathen art? |
58812 | What is the reason that every thing thus honors you? |
58812 | What is the sound that reaches us to- day? |
58812 | What is there, in the act of believing or disbelieving, that is of a moral nature, that deserves praise or blame? |
58812 | What is thy misery? |
58812 | What is thy sorrow? |
58812 | What is thy trial? |
58812 | What keeps them kneeling, or standing quietly in solid masses, for an hour before the exercises commence? |
58812 | What kind of a death naturally follows such a life? |
58812 | What kind of creature is that which renders to God a reluctant and imperfect service? |
58812 | What long periods of utter forgetfulness of God? |
58812 | What loss of time? |
58812 | What makes the character of a mother so beautiful but the trait of self- sacrifice? |
58812 | What more can we want? |
58812 | What must be the wickedness that can force Me to withstand the power of such an appeal?" |
58812 | What need for me to know the very words the priest is using? |
58812 | What of that? |
58812 | What other preacher can say the same words again and again, and never make us weary? |
58812 | What shall it then profit me what others have said in my favor or against me? |
58812 | What shall keep me back? |
58812 | What shall we do? |
58812 | What then? |
58812 | What though many refuse to listen? |
58812 | What was he then? |
58812 | What was his office? |
58812 | What was it that took place on the Cross? |
58812 | What will become of my companions whom I left on the earth, wild and reckless like my self? |
58812 | What wonder is it that men have imagined Fortune to be blindfold[ed], and the ups and downs of life the chance revolutions of her wheel? |
58812 | What would a master do if his slave should strike him? |
58812 | What years spent in neglect, or even in sin? |
58812 | What, then, delayed St. Mary Magdalene so long? |
58812 | What, then, is God''s estimate of sin? |
58812 | What, then, should be each one''s resolution? |
58812 | When did we shut our hearts to Thy grace?" |
58812 | When it speaks of a"way"to heaven, does it not mean that all must walk in that way to reach there? |
58812 | When you come to die, will you not wish to have those sins blotted out? |
58812 | Whence does it arise? |
58812 | Where are such tears shed as over the fresh grave of a self- forgetful friend? |
58812 | Where is there not a vacant seat at the table? |
58812 | Where were they to get bishops? |
58812 | Wherewith shall I kneel before the High God? |
58812 | Wherewith shall I kneel before the High God?" |
58812 | Which of the saints was ever wafted to heaven in this passive way? |
58812 | Which was the acceptable sacrifice? |
58812 | Which was the place where men ought to worship-- Mount Gerazin; or Mount Sion? |
58812 | Which was the right temple? |
58812 | While gratitude lives among men, what shall be the return given to Christ by those whom He has redeemed? |
58812 | Whither are you going, O holy priest, without your deacon? |
58812 | Who are they that are truly happy on this day? |
58812 | Who are they? |
58812 | Who are we? |
58812 | Who but He knew how perfectly to mingle dignity with familiarity, zeal with serenity, and austerity with compassion? |
58812 | Who can give peace to a soul that has sinned? |
58812 | Who can tell how many are living in a state of mortal sin, month by month, day by day, year by year? |
58812 | Who could ever speak an impure word before another if he thought of the dignity of a human soul? |
58812 | Who could listen to His voice in its untempered majesty and not be afraid? |
58812 | Who does not admire a generous, self- sacrificing man? |
58812 | Who is Christ? |
58812 | Who is he that shall condemn? |
58812 | Who is that, that is standing at the foot of his bed? |
58812 | Who is that? |
58812 | Who is the father of the rain, or who hath begotten the drops of dew? |
58812 | Who is there that needs to be told that the Blessed Virgin is splendid in sanctity, dazzling in beauty, and exalted in power? |
58812 | Who makes any sacrifice for it? |
58812 | Who of us does not know such? |
58812 | Who of us has not lost a friend? |
58812 | Who of us has not seen such? |
58812 | Who shall lay anything to the charge of the elect of God? |
58812 | Who shall this be whom Holy Scripture thus clothes with this tremendous power, if it be not the Blessed Virgin Mary? |
58812 | Who takes any pains for it? |
58812 | Who thinks about it? |
58812 | Who went first to China and India? |
58812 | Who will dare to break the seal? |
58812 | Who will roll the stone from the door? |
58812 | Who would lie, or cheat, or steal, if he thought of his soul? |
58812 | Who, I say, can wonder at this, when he looks around him, and sees how little the soul is valued? |
58812 | Who, then, shall be the favored child of man, the favored saint, who shall exercise this power in the fullest degree? |
58812 | Whom seekest thou?" |
58812 | Whom seekest thou?" |
58812 | Whom seekest thou?_"He challenges us. |
58812 | Whom seekest thou?_"These are the first words our Lord spoke after His Resurrection. |
58812 | Whose tones are there that linger in our ears like His, and come like a spell to our hearts in times of temptation and sorrow? |
58812 | Why are men so slow to be wise, and to be happy? |
58812 | Why are the angel and the demon there? |
58812 | Why are we not more active in laboring for them? |
58812 | Why are we so weak in temptation, so despairing in trial, when we might have the peace and joy of the children of God? |
58812 | Why are you not religious?" |
58812 | Why did our Lord become man? |
58812 | Why did you rush into the presence of your Maker without forethought? |
58812 | Why do men grope in darkness? |
58812 | Why do not men take advantage of this loving condescension? |
58812 | Why do summer and winter, seed- time and harvest, return so regularly? |
58812 | Why do they not converse with God? |
58812 | Why do they not think of Him? |
58812 | Why do we follow the Evil One, when He that is beautiful above the sons of men is our Master and our Lord? |
58812 | Why do we not take our place at once, where we shall wish to be found at our Saviour''s coming? |
58812 | Why do we set our hearts on creatures, when we might have the Creator for our friend? |
58812 | Why does He come at all to consciences which do not crave rest, and wills that need no strength? |
58812 | Why does he interrupt the Mass? |
58812 | Why does our Lord leave us subject to this strife? |
58812 | Why does the sun rise in the morning, and go down at night? |
58812 | Why dost thou seek the living among the dead?" |
58812 | Why has not the sound of the gospel gone into all lands, and its words to the end of the world? |
58812 | Why is Jesus Christ there? |
58812 | Why is it always thus? |
58812 | Why is it that the just man perisheth? |
58812 | Why is this? |
58812 | Why is this? |
58812 | Why should their influence be dreaded? |
58812 | Why should we fear? |
58812 | Why should we shut our eyes to the hosts of heaven that march unseen by our side? |
58812 | Why so? |
58812 | Why stand we all the day idle? |
58812 | Why tarry we here in the bondage of Egypt? |
58812 | Why, then, do they commit it? |
58812 | Why, who are you, my brethren? |
58812 | Will He be appeased with thousands of rams? |
58812 | Will His serene Majesty in heaven be affected because I on this earth am carried too far by passions? |
58812 | Will not a careless, thoughtless man, such as I have described, will he not be certain sometimes to go over the fatal line? |
58812 | Will those misgivings help you to die easily? |
58812 | Will you grieve because he has secured for himself the Blissful and Eternal Vision of God? |
58812 | Will you renounce your birthright? |
58812 | Will you tell me they were but seeking a_ more perfect_ life? |
58812 | Will you then forego as you do now those absolving words which our Lord has promised to ratify in heaven? |
58812 | Will you trust all to the uncertain chance of confession in that hour, or to a doubtful contrition? |
58812 | Will you wait, as your Protestantism requires you to do, till he is grown up, for him to form his religious convictions? |
58812 | Will you weep because one you love is taken away from sin, from temptation, from the trouble to come? |
58812 | Will you, by mortal sin, throw away that immortal crown? |
58812 | Will you, by sin, take the course that leads you away from your heavenly home? |
58812 | Wilt thou take a soul like that and place it in thy paradise?" |
58812 | Would it not be taken as an act of contempt and an offence? |
58812 | Would it not be the same, if he were to close His eyes, and yet be aware of His presence? |
58812 | Would it not seem, otherwise, that God made Himself a party to our sins by keeping silence? |
58812 | Would men speak so, if they realized that God and Christ were then and there present? |
58812 | Would they insult God to His face? |
58812 | Would you excuse a son from the guilt of parricide who should strike a knife to his father''s heart, and should miss his aim? |
58812 | Would you know Who it is Whom you have offended? |
58812 | Would you know what the Autumn teaches? |
58812 | Would you know who, at the end of the world, shall reap a rich harvest? |
58812 | Would you not like, as you go out of this world, to step on the firm rock of Peter? |
58812 | Would you not, like St. John, fall down before his feet and adore him? |
58812 | Yet what was the result of all? |
58812 | You were not wo nt to offer sacrifice without me your minister, wherein have I displeased you? |
58812 | [ Footnote 121] Who could look upon the Lord and live? |
58812 | [ Footnote 217] Do you understand? |
58812 | a sure, clear, easy way?" |
58812 | and are not we too called the"_ Sons of God?_"[ Footnote 208][ Footnote 203: Apoc. |
58812 | and are not we too promised a place at his right hand, and to"_ sit on thrones?_"[ Footnote 204] Is she called the"Morning Star?" |
58812 | and are not we too promised a place at his right hand, and to"_ sit on thrones?_"[ Footnote 204] Is she called the"Morning Star?" |
58812 | and besides Thee what do I desire upon earth? |
58812 | and does not our Lord''s question convey to us the keenest reproach? |
58812 | and who are my brethren? |
58812 | and who hath begotten them?" |
58812 | and why did He become Man in the way He did? |
58812 | are you not afraid to add to the sin of irreligion and injustice the crime of breaking faith with the dead? |
58812 | are you not ashamed to do that before the living God which you would be ashamed to do before a man like yourself?" |
58812 | are you sick? |
58812 | can I, a frail creature,"say they,"ignorant and passionate, can I do an injury to God? |
58812 | does he breathe at all? |
58812 | for Christ our Saviour, who did not refuse the Cross to give us an example of the obedience we owe His Father? |
58812 | has not the demon made out his case? |
58812 | he will say, what is this that I see and hear? |
58812 | how can men turn away from Catholicity? |
58812 | if you will not listen to reason, to God, to the angels; will you not listen to your companions lost? |
58812 | is he not a blot on the scene? |
58812 | is not this our misery, that we have left off striving? |
58812 | is this Christianity? |
58812 | it is hard to see one we love die, but is it not harder to our sensitive nature to bury them? |
58812 | my brethren, is not this joy? |
58812 | or was the money retained and squandered? |
58812 | or whither shall I flee from Thy face? |
58812 | or who laid the corner- stone thereof? |
58812 | or will He separate Himself from me eternally because I have happened to violate some law?" |
58812 | our times of grace? |
58812 | red- letter days in the calendar of our life? |
58812 | saved by''sprinkling?''] |
58812 | shall I do this wicked thing, and offend against God?" |
58812 | so prompt and eager in setting out, so tardy in arriving? |
58812 | that the Madonna is so far more beautiful than the Venus de Medicis? |
58812 | that the will is too weak to decide this fearful contest? |
58812 | that we are doing nothing, or at least nothing serious and worthy of our salvation? |
58812 | they were but following the counsels of perfection, which a man is free to embrace or decline? |
58812 | what is thy request? |
58812 | what voice is that which speaks:"_ Woman, why weepest thou?_"It is the voice of Jesus himself, of Jesus whom she mourns. |
58812 | what voice is that? |
58812 | what will it be to the sinful Catholic? |
58812 | who do not seek temptation, but invariably yield to it when it comes across them? |
58812 | why did you not think of these things before? |
58812 | would you hear with equanimity that you had a hopeless disease? |
58812 | { 214} And how do I establish my proposition? |
58812 | { 217} But have we not cause enough to honor man, in the fact that he has a soul, an immortal soul, a soul which shall one day see God? |
58812 | { 226} Is it hard to break a tie of long standing? |
58812 | { 262} Will you draw back, Christian? |
58812 | { 324} Was it for this that He died, that we should not commit_ quite so many_ mortal sins? |
58812 | { 328} If you are not bound to a perpetual fast, are you at liberty to darken your mind and inflame your passions by immoderate drinking? |
58812 | { 334} What is there in this execution thus to gather together all classes of the people? |
58812 | { 348} What kind of death often, in point of fact, follows such a life? |
58812 | { 356} Now, must we for ever go on in this uncertainty? |
58812 | { 359} So, my brethren, as you weep at the graves of your friends, those very friends stand near you and say,"Why weepest thou?" |
58812 | { 360} Has this day been a day of joy to you? |
58812 | { 390} Do you say that I put too much on the will? |
58812 | { 415} Do you ask what has been done for your souls? |
58812 | { 426} What are the precise obligations binding on me as a Christian? |
58812 | { 433} What is it that has impressed on men this universal fear of detection? |
58812 | { 442} They died rather than utter a sinful word; have you not as much power over your tongue as they? |
58812 | { 452} How does he receive it? |
58812 | { 465} Do you feel in yourselves a vocation to a religious or sacerdotal life? |
58812 | { 468} Well, ought you not, then, to rejoice at his safe departure? |
58812 | { 472} Do you call this a decent funeral?" |
58812 | { 492} How can we forego that sweet and solemn action? |
58812 | { 495} And what does all this mean to us? |
58812 | { 75} Do you know any thing about it? |
14614 | ''Mother, we may go out, may n''t we? 14614 ''The mallows wither in the garden, and the green parsley--''how does it go?" |
14614 | ''Was it Angela''s cake?'' 14614 ''Were you not frightened when you felt yourself at the head of the procession? |
14614 | ''What did you all think of the cake?'' 14614 A bird singing Wagner?" |
14614 | A fine evening, my man? |
14614 | A help for what, dear Mother? |
14614 | A long waste of life, not only of her life, but of mine,for he had travelled thousands of miles... to forget her? |
14614 | A school? |
14614 | A sonata? |
14614 | A strange man, so refined and intelligent-- why does he live here?... 14614 About Evelyn? |
14614 | After all, Owen, are they any more babies than we are? 14614 After all, what is the good in writing a disagreeable letter to her? |
14614 | Am I not to see you again? |
14614 | Am I to tell you? 14614 An estrangement, Owen? |
14614 | And I''ll present you with a key, so that when I am away you can spend your leisure in front of the picture.... Do you know whom I shall feel like? 14614 And after the orang- outang which you failed to meet?" |
14614 | And all these clothes, MÃ © rat-- what are they? |
14614 | And her cloak? |
14614 | And her piety-- have you noticed it? 14614 And how are the gazelles taken and the eagles recaptured?" |
14614 | And if he were to sell the property, Mother, you would all have to go back to your relations? |
14614 | And is there any need? |
14614 | And now you are going to leave us? |
14614 | And perhaps you would n''t have come if you had known I was here? |
14614 | And the albatrosses, I hope you did n''t catch one? |
14614 | And then all our meetings in the garden under the cedar- tree? |
14614 | And then? |
14614 | And what did Nature intend you to do? 14614 And what do you think of your veil, Sister Teresa? |
14614 | And what is the road like? |
14614 | And what was that? |
14614 | And when I leave? |
14614 | And when did he come last to you? |
14614 | And which do you think is the better part, Mother? |
14614 | And who is''he''? |
14614 | And why, Sister? 14614 And will you help me with my work?" |
14614 | And woman, what is she? 14614 And yet you fear, my dear child, you have no vocation?" |
14614 | And you believe in these things? |
14614 | And you ca n''t expect me to sympathise with people or with an idea that has done this? 14614 And you could not forget her in the desert?" |
14614 | And you have been in Rome ever since? 14614 And you must do something? |
14614 | And you preferred that Evelyn should be his mistress rather than that she shall go over to Monsignor? |
14614 | And you think I am a wicked counterpart? 14614 And you will be my best man, wo n''t you?" |
14614 | And you''ve told her? |
14614 | And you, Owen, does music still interest you,--she nearly said,"now that I am out of it?" |
14614 | And, Mother, if you reach heaven, will you promise me one thing, that you will come to me and tell me the truth? |
14614 | Are n''t you glad to see me? |
14614 | Are not these Bright Eyes beautiful? 14614 Are we to part like this? |
14614 | Are you at home to Mr. Dean, sir? |
14614 | Are you going to see her again? |
14614 | Are you sorry that I wish to be a nun? |
14614 | Built a cottage? |
14614 | But Cecilia could not desire such a dream? |
14614 | But I have n''t said a word; indeed--"But you will talk to me about it, wo n''t you? 14614 But did you not say that Sister Mary John was my counterpart?" |
14614 | But do you not think that the time spent in meditation might be spent more profitably, Father? 14614 But does the Prioress still believe that these rich Catholics will come to her aid?" |
14614 | But how are these birds carried? |
14614 | But how is she to be fed? |
14614 | But if God is in heaven and His Church upon earth, why should n''t there be miracles? 14614 But if I were n''t here you would leave?" |
14614 | But if I were to accept that engagement do you think I could remain a Catholic? |
14614 | But if she had met me in the beginning you would n''t have known her; and you would n''t consent to that so that she might be saved from Monsignor? |
14614 | But if you were my lover? |
14614 | But in France? 14614 But is there any one to carry my bag? |
14614 | But it is n''t true, Evelyn? 14614 But on what is she brooding, dear Mother?" |
14614 | But she must be exceedingly anxious to put a stop to such a pollution of the meditation? |
14614 | But the breast feathers? |
14614 | But the counterpart does n''t emanate out of hell? |
14614 | But there is nothing to see in Borneo? |
14614 | But what I would wish to understand, dear Mother, is this-- have I to decide either to leave the convent or to take the white veil? |
14614 | But what can one do, Miss Innes, when one is ill? 14614 But what does it matter?" |
14614 | But what happened? |
14614 | But what is taking you away? |
14614 | But what is the matter, Mother Philippa? |
14614 | But what is the use in irritating the poor man? 14614 But what is there different in you?" |
14614 | But what were you seeking in the Malay Archipelago? |
14614 | But what will become of him? 14614 But when Mr. Dean comes back to London?" |
14614 | But who are these boys? 14614 But who can it be?" |
14614 | But who is to publish them? |
14614 | But who will oppose us? |
14614 | But why is it strange, Veronica? |
14614 | But why should you think it was sinful, dear? |
14614 | But why the motives of''The Ring''? |
14614 | But why wo n''t you listen to Francis? 14614 But why, Evelyn, does that seem to you so strange that her task should have been revealed to her in middle age?" |
14614 | But why, Louise, do you begin to talk about clouds and birds? |
14614 | But would you go if she wrote to you? |
14614 | But you believe, Evelyn, that we do live again? |
14614 | But you did n''t do this, Owen? |
14614 | But you do n''t believe God desires that such a thing should come to pass? |
14614 | But you do n''t pray for dreams? |
14614 | But you do n''t think I have deceived you, Mother? |
14614 | But you have, dear Mother? |
14614 | But you hold a different opinion, Hilda? |
14614 | But you used to be so fond of cigars, Owen? |
14614 | But you will come to the park, wo n''t you? 14614 But you will not come to England?" |
14614 | But you will not say that I told you? |
14614 | But you wo n''t stay a long time, will you? |
14614 | But you, too,she said,"are inclined towards the school?" |
14614 | But you-- you are going away? |
14614 | But, Evelyn, why will you interrupt our talk? 14614 But, Hilda, why do you trouble her with questions as to whether she would like to be a nun or not? |
14614 | But, Louise, if I sing an''O Salutaris,''will you sing Schubert''s''Ave Maria''? |
14614 | But, Miss Innes, I thought you intended to leave the stage? |
14614 | But, Mother, do you regret that you came here? |
14614 | But, Mother, have I not offered to lend you the money? 14614 But, Mother, why did n''t you let me know before? |
14614 | But, dear Mother, do you think she will ever recover her health sufficiently for her to decide, and for us to decide, whether she has a vocation? |
14614 | But, my dear, is it really true that you have left the stage? 14614 By accident?" |
14614 | Ca n''t you, indeed? 14614 Can I see her?" |
14614 | Dead, Sister, dead? 14614 Dear Lady Ascott, you''ll forgive me?" |
14614 | Defend them, Asher? 14614 Did he say that he, too, heard voices?" |
14614 | Did she raise no difficulties? |
14614 | Did you ever see a more beautiful evening? 14614 Did you meet, my child, either of the men whom you spoke to me of?" |
14614 | Dinner is quite ready? |
14614 | Disappointed, my dear Evelyn? 14614 Distant country? |
14614 | Do n''t you hear it? |
14614 | Do you always dress as an Arab? |
14614 | Do you know who she is, Harding? |
14614 | Do you really mean that you are waiting for this board? 14614 Do you remember the way? |
14614 | Do you think I shall? |
14614 | Do you think not? |
14614 | Do you think we shall be able to talk alone? |
14614 | Do you think, Harding, I shall find any interest again in anything? |
14614 | Does he answer you when you whistle? |
14614 | Does it really seem to you an utterly unimportant matter? |
14614 | Eliza, what time is it? |
14614 | Evelyn, dear, how can you think these things? 14614 Evelyn, dear, of what are you thinking?" |
14614 | Evelyn, dear, shall we ever be in France again? |
14614 | Evelyn, my dear child, I have sent for you to ask if you feel well enough to- day to sing for us at Benediction? |
14614 | Evelyn, what is the matter? 14614 Forgotten what?" |
14614 | Frightened of what, dear one? |
14614 | Frightens you, my dear child? |
14614 | From the Amur? 14614 Glad to see you?" |
14614 | Grains of what? |
14614 | Has she a past like mine? 14614 Has she been in Italy, sir?" |
14614 | Have all the nuns counterparts? |
14614 | Have n''t I been to see her father? |
14614 | Have three months passed? |
14614 | Have you been so long in the convent without knowing what a counterpart is, Teresa? 14614 Have you ever made one before?" |
14614 | Have you never felt that feeling, Sister Teresa? 14614 Have you noticed, Sister Teresa, how beaming Sister Veronica has looked for the last day or two? |
14614 | Have you seen her? |
14614 | Hear what, dear? |
14614 | Her counterpart-- what''s that? |
14614 | Here, in an oasis? |
14614 | Hope for what, dear Mother? |
14614 | Horrible? 14614 How absorbed he is in his song, stave after stave; he seems to say,''You want more tunes? |
14614 | How are they identical, Mother? |
14614 | How are you, Miss Dingle? |
14614 | How are you, my dear Evelyn? 14614 How can Evelyn stop here listening to such nonsense?" |
14614 | How can I do otherwise? |
14614 | How did you hear about me? |
14614 | How did you know I was away? |
14614 | How far away is--? |
14614 | How is that, Mother? |
14614 | How long have I to live? |
14614 | How so, Sister Jerome? |
14614 | How was it the change came? |
14614 | I do n''t mean that you were actually prevented, but was there another reason? |
14614 | I hope you did n''t wait dinner for me? |
14614 | I suppose Monsignor comes here to see her? |
14614 | I thought you were a pipe smoker? |
14614 | I wonder if we shall ever have fine weather again? |
14614 | I''d like to see her, but what good would it do me or her? 14614 I''m afraid I do n''t, and--""And what, Mother Hilda? |
14614 | If what? |
14614 | If-- But what is the use of going over it again? |
14614 | If_ Sidna_ would like to return to Tunis? |
14614 | In the guest- room or in the novitiate, Reverend Mother? |
14614 | In what guise do they come? |
14614 | Is Sir Owen in? |
14614 | Is he far away in Paris, hearing her sing for the first time to Madame Savelli? 14614 Is he in the music- room?" |
14614 | Is he telling his own story, or is he telling ours? |
14614 | Is hoeing lighter work than digging? |
14614 | Is n''t it strange? 14614 Is she awake?" |
14614 | Is that all? 14614 Is that decided, Teresa?" |
14614 | Is that so, Mother? 14614 Is that the meaning of it all, Evelyn?" |
14614 | Is that what you have come to ask me? |
14614 | Is that why you did n''t come to the concert? |
14614 | Is there nothing we can do for you, Sir Owen? |
14614 | It is a disappointment to me, dear Mother? |
14614 | It is a very beautiful life, Mother Hilda; but I wonder if I have a vocation? |
14614 | It is permissible to have doubts on such a subject-- which is the better course, mercy or prayer? 14614 It seems so, Mother, does n''t it?" |
14614 | It was not, then, to profit by my advice that you consulted me? |
14614 | Matter? 14614 May I come in, dear Mother?" |
14614 | May I go into the garden? |
14614 | May I not go upstairs with you? |
14614 | May I pull down the blind, Mother? |
14614 | May we go into the garden, dear Mother? |
14614 | Mind the walk-- and you for companionship? 14614 Mother Philippa is an excellent woman,"Evelyn answered;"but as an administrator--""You do n''t believe in her?" |
14614 | Mother Superior tells me you have taught bullfinches the motives of''The Ring,''is it true? |
14614 | Mother, what does this mean? 14614 Must I tell you?" |
14614 | My dear Evelyn, what could have put such ideas into your head? |
14614 | My dear Harding, you do n''t mind my interrupting you? |
14614 | My dear child, why should n''t we be glad to have you back? 14614 My dear friend, I suppose she had to sell everything or nothing?" |
14614 | My poor little boys, what would happen to them while I was away? 14614 My valet? |
14614 | No carpet? |
14614 | No estrangement? |
14614 | No more than a sudden thought? 14614 No news of Tahar yet?" |
14614 | No; but if we pray for dreams? |
14614 | Not a success? |
14614 | Not even to save her from Monsignor? |
14614 | Now the bird is telling of sorrows other than ours-- isn''t that so, Evelyn? 14614 Now where could she have been all that time, and in the rain, thinking how she might kill herself?" |
14614 | Now who is this? 14614 Now will this happen?" |
14614 | Now, do you like the green? 14614 Now, how is all this to end?" |
14614 | Now, my dear Sir Owen, will you forgive me if I ask Evelyn to sing for us? 14614 Now, what is it that I hear about a refusal to get up to take your watch? |
14614 | Now, what is the matter, MÃ © rat? |
14614 | Now, why do you think that, Hilda? 14614 Now, would n''t you like to do some work on the other side of the table, Sister?" |
14614 | Now, you wo n''t think of anything until you have drawn out every nail, will you? 14614 Of course there are no strawberries?" |
14614 | Of course, I know you would n''t do anything that would displease me; you''ve been very kind, more kind than I deserve, but--"But what? |
14614 | Of what am I thinking? |
14614 | Of what are you thinking, Sister? |
14614 | Of what is she thinking? |
14614 | Of what, dear Mother? |
14614 | Of whom are you speaking? |
14614 | Oh, Evelyn, do n''t say that; she is not dead? |
14614 | Oh, I understand I You arrived the very day of her first appearance? |
14614 | Oh, so you''ve settled here? |
14614 | Oh, yes, dear Mother, why should n''t I sing for you? 14614 On what is she going to meditate?" |
14614 | One moment; tell me, it is only fair you should tell me, how our love of each other has altered your love of God? |
14614 | One who will see that the rule is maintained? |
14614 | Or because you thought you would n''t be able to resist him? |
14614 | Or do they think that it would be better for me to leave the convent? |
14614 | Or is it because you think I must be mad to stay here and to wear this dress? 14614 Or that it will ever come?" |
14614 | Ought n''t we to go up, Sister? |
14614 | Owe the money, Evelyn? |
14614 | Please, miss, may we stay up a little longer this evening? 14614 Prettier farther on? |
14614 | Prevent me? |
14614 | Really? 14614 Really? |
14614 | Recover myself? 14614 Shall I wait?" |
14614 | Shall we go this way, round by the lake, towards the glen? 14614 Shall you really be able to make a chair that one can sit upon?" |
14614 | Shall you? |
14614 | She is in no danger? |
14614 | She is so stupid; how could a counterpart care about her? 14614 Sins, Evelyn? |
14614 | Sir Owen, will you try to persuade her? 14614 Sister Evelyn, why do you ask? |
14614 | So he would n''t give you her address? |
14614 | So it is because light opera has come into fashion again that you are going to give up singing? 14614 So many as that?" |
14614 | So now you are going to settle down at Riversdale; your travels are over? |
14614 | So she sings for the children? 14614 So that is your story, MÃ © rat?" |
14614 | So that you may hand over to the nuns the money that the sale of your pictures and furniture procures at Christie''s? |
14614 | So when a bullfinch knows two motives you let him go? 14614 So you are quite determined?" |
14614 | So you believe, Owen, that the end is fated, and that I was created to come back after many wanderings to help these poor little crippled boys? |
14614 | So you think we shall never meet again, and that we are talking out our last talk on the edge of this gulf of sand? |
14614 | So you were praying that an angel might visit you; but what came was quite different? |
14614 | So you wished to forget me? 14614 Sorry that I have n''t forgotten you? |
14614 | Sorry, Sister Teresa? 14614 Surely the monk is n''t the counterpart you were speaking of just now?" |
14614 | Tell me, what did she look like? |
14614 | Teresa, dear, when you leave us what do you intend to do? 14614 That brig? |
14614 | The divine essence? |
14614 | The hunter? |
14614 | The most you could do under the circumstances? 14614 The park closes at nine, does n''t it, Sir Owen?" |
14614 | The street at this hour is like a ballroom, is n''t it? |
14614 | Then what stayed you was no more than a fear of displeasing me? 14614 Then, do you not think it better to spend the last term with us? |
14614 | There is her portrait, Harding; you like it, do n''t you? |
14614 | There was no quarrel between them, then, Sir Owen? |
14614 | They''re saying,''Was there ever any one so unreasonable? 14614 This poor child-- what work can he do?" |
14614 | To no one but priests and nuns? |
14614 | To whom? |
14614 | To you, Teresa? 14614 Very strange you should say''Sir Owen Asher''; why did n''t you say Sir Owen?" |
14614 | Vocation for the stage? |
14614 | Was it fated from the beginning that I should only, meet you here to part with you again? 14614 Was it that day? |
14614 | Was that the only reason? |
14614 | Was there ever such luck as mine, to come to the desert, where it never rains, and to find nothing but rain? |
14614 | Was there ever such weather? 14614 We are thinking?" |
14614 | We shall have to strip the altar, I suppose? |
14614 | Well, Hilda, come, tell me, have you said everything you have to say? 14614 Well, Monsignor, unless you repudiate the motives of those who went to Palestine to fight for the Holy Sepulchre, why should you repudiate mine?" |
14614 | Well, Mother Philippa, what is your opinion? |
14614 | Well, Sir Owen, there is nothing I should like more than to see mademoiselle married, only--"Only you do n''t think she''ll marry me? |
14614 | Well, Sister, how are you feeling? 14614 Well, for what did you pray? |
14614 | Well, if that is so, Owen-- and I wo n''t say you are utterly wrong-- why ca n''t you accept things as they are? |
14614 | Well, my good man, what do you want me to do? |
14614 | Well, what more natural than that a bird should sing his own song? |
14614 | Well, you know her appearance? 14614 What I do n''t understand is why you did n''t go next day?" |
14614 | What are you talking about? |
14614 | What birds? |
14614 | What can have happened to our dear Jack? |
14614 | What can she mean? 14614 What do I care about ruin? |
14614 | What do you mean? |
14614 | What does all this mean? |
14614 | What does he mean by saying I have his best wishes? 14614 What does one ever seek? |
14614 | What has happened? |
14614 | What inspired you to start this home, Evelyn? |
14614 | What is the meaning of this, Sister? 14614 What is there surprising in that?" |
14614 | What kind of furniture has she in the drawing- room? |
14614 | What shall I do when I return to London? |
14614 | What sort of place was it? |
14614 | What time is it? |
14614 | What will you do? 14614 What would the Bible be without its miracles? |
14614 | What would you have me do? 14614 What, then?" |
14614 | When are you going to leave us? |
14614 | When will men give up smoking pipes, I should like to know? |
14614 | When, Mother? |
14614 | Where is your valet, Owen? |
14614 | Who knows,her thoughts said,"who can say? |
14614 | Who knows? 14614 Who told you that?" |
14614 | Why did I ever leave you? 14614 Why did they choose to build up such a steep hillside?" |
14614 | Why look so far ahead? |
14614 | Why must you go? |
14614 | Why not, Louise? 14614 Why not?" |
14614 | Why should I? 14614 Why should I? |
14614 | Why should they be? 14614 Why should you think we do not wish to have you here?" |
14614 | Why, indeed, did I not come here? |
14614 | Why, then, not come with us? 14614 Why... what is it?" |
14614 | Will he never cease talking of her? |
14614 | Will she ever recover her mind sufficiently to know what she is doing? |
14614 | Will they never stop bidding? 14614 Will you see, Sister Agnes, that Sister Evelyn''s bed is prepared for her?" |
14614 | Will you sing Stradella''s''Chanson d''Eglise''or will you sing Schubert''s''Ave Maria''? 14614 Wo n''t you come into the drawing- room, Sir Owen?" |
14614 | Wo n''t you let me kiss you before you go? |
14614 | Would that make any difference? |
14614 | Would you care to come into the garden? |
14614 | Yes, I am very ill."And what has made you ill? |
14614 | Yes, I''ll call later; but first of all, tell me, MÃ © rat, when was the discovery made? |
14614 | Yes, are n''t they? |
14614 | Yes, did n''t we have fun that day? 14614 Yes, does n''t it? |
14614 | Yes, is n''t it sweet? |
14614 | Yes, it is rather strange, is n''t it, Sister? 14614 Yes, the evening is fine-- why not walk to London? |
14614 | Yes, yes, Asher, but tell me did you meet Tahar, and did you see gazelles hunted? |
14614 | Yesterday? 14614 Yet she has changed?" |
14614 | Yet you smoke cigars? |
14614 | You are determined upon this American tour? |
14614 | You came here, then, as Reverend Mother suspected, to try to persuade me away? 14614 You did n''t speak to her about your plans to induce her to accept the engagement?" |
14614 | You do n''t believe in miracles, Owen? |
14614 | You do n''t believe in miracles? |
14614 | You do n''t expect me to have gay thoughts to- day, do you, MÃ © rat? 14614 You do n''t like me to walk with you?" |
14614 | You do n''t mind dining at half- past seven? |
14614 | You do n''t think I was right? |
14614 | You do n''t think then, Owen, that every one has a destiny? |
14614 | You do n''t wish me,she said,"to talk about myself? |
14614 | You have come to the conclusion that perhaps a good deal of time is wasted in this garden, which might be devoted to good works? |
14614 | You have n''t seen my garden, or the cliffs? 14614 You have no intention of joining the Order?" |
14614 | You have seen now everything the world has to show? |
14614 | You hope not? 14614 You include women?" |
14614 | You knocked? |
14614 | You know Mr. Harding? 14614 You look after these boys, and go up to London to earn their living?" |
14614 | You mean Teresa''s bullfinches, Mademoiselle Helbrun? 14614 You mean a sudden scruple of conscience? |
14614 | You mean about my leaving? |
14614 | You mean to become a novice and then to become a nun and live here with you? |
14614 | You mean when you found me sitting on the wall of an olive- garth? 14614 You mean, dear Mother, that Evelyn must either leave us or join the community?" |
14614 | You met her? |
14614 | You promised me-- But I suppose digging tired you? |
14614 | You say it was between eleven and twelve she came back? |
14614 | You say she will recover? |
14614 | You seem very sad, Mother? |
14614 | You think I shall end in a convent, Evelyn? |
14614 | You think before taking the veil she should receive more religious instruction from you? |
14614 | You think he did n''t want to come to see me? 14614 You think me frivolous, or at least changeable, Reverend Mother?" |
14614 | You think she tied these together so that she might hang herself? |
14614 | You think she will marry me? |
14614 | You think so, dear Mother? |
14614 | You think so? |
14614 | You think that if she had n''t a vocation she would have left us before? 14614 You think that, MÃ © rat? |
14614 | You think that? 14614 You think, Sir Owen, that she intended to drown herself?" |
14614 | You will never see Riversdale again, perhaps? |
14614 | You will stay here to- night? |
14614 | You would be very lonely? |
14614 | You would like to see my property? |
14614 | You''ll want to buy me an expensive piece, unsuitable to my cottage, wo n''t you, Owen? |
14614 | You? |
14614 | Your perception? 14614 Your poor people are your occupations since you left the stage?" |
14614 | ''Manchuria? |
14614 | A bell rang, and Evelyn said:"Now, Mother, will you take my arm and we''ll go down to chapel together?" |
14614 | A dark look gathered in her face,"vanishing like the shadow of a black wing over a sunny surface,"Owen said to himself,"Now what has frightened her? |
14614 | A material animal?" |
14614 | A slight shudder passed through Evelyn''s face, and she asked,"Where is Ulick?" |
14614 | After all what better reward could he have hoped for? |
14614 | After all, what is Nature? |
14614 | After all, why not admire the things of a thousand years ago as well as those of yesterday?" |
14614 | All your writing-- now could n''t I do some of it for you?" |
14614 | And Evelyn would answer,"Those who would take the last place are put up first-- isn''t that it, Mother Winifred?" |
14614 | And God? |
14614 | And can you accept negation willingly as your fate?" |
14614 | And for how long?" |
14614 | And he led Owen towards Hanover Square, wondering if Owen would approve of his choice? |
14614 | And her piano-- why, my God, she is selling her piano!-- What is to become of that woman? |
14614 | And how far would she be justified in exercising all her influence to keep Evelyn? |
14614 | And how shall I live here without you?" |
14614 | And how should I have lived?" |
14614 | And if she were to die in my absence would not the memory of my desertion haunt me for ever? |
14614 | And no boy on the common knows the bird music from''Siegfried''? |
14614 | And tell me, were n''t you a little disappointed?" |
14614 | And the acts of the Little Sisters of the Poor all over the world-- are you sure they did not influence you?" |
14614 | And the lay sisters-- what would become of them and our duties towards them-- they who have worked for us all these years? |
14614 | And the result of all this flummery was:"Now, why should you not stay with us, dear, only a little while longer? |
14614 | And the singers who were my friends-- what should I speak to them about? |
14614 | And then the question was, could the doorway be barricaded in such a way as to prevent the intrusion of further visitors? |
14614 | And then, speaking at the end of a long silence, she said,"Why did you send away Sister Mary John? |
14614 | And what did she say about me?" |
14614 | And what nobler cause for a man''s rage? |
14614 | And why had he found her door bolted? |
14614 | And you are lonely now without her?" |
14614 | And you still believe that a calamity would have befallen you?" |
14614 | And you wanted to come to see me, did n''t you?" |
14614 | And you, Sister Angela, have got a counterpart; wo n''t you tell Teresa about him?" |
14614 | And you-- when did you return?" |
14614 | And, besides, I knew she did n''t want to see me, so what was the good in forcing myself upon her?" |
14614 | Are n''t they provoking birds? |
14614 | Are n''t they wonderful? |
14614 | Are n''t you pleased, Jerome, to have one younger than yourself?'' |
14614 | Are they not always telling of the suffering doubt caused them? |
14614 | Are you dining anywhere?" |
14614 | Are you happy here?... |
14614 | Are you ill?" |
14614 | Are you so tired as all that?" |
14614 | Are you sure that our prayers had nothing to do with it? |
14614 | Are you telling the truth, Sister?" |
14614 | At these words Asher sprang to his feet, yelling:"Why should n''t I give way to my feelings? |
14614 | At these words the Prioress''s face lit up, and she said,''Well, Mother Hilda, I suppose you are satisfied?'' |
14614 | Between sleeping and waking a thought emerged which kept him awake till morning:"Why had Evelyn returned to the stage?" |
14614 | Blame often falls on innocent shoulders, for how could she have foreseen the increased taxation? |
14614 | But Evelyn might herself wish to leave to- morrow, and if so what inducements, what persuasion, what pressure should be used to keep her? |
14614 | But as the nuns may come round the corner at any minute I had better ask you at once if you are going to stop here?" |
14614 | But do n''t I know how dear that moment is to you? |
14614 | But do they come in the summer- time in the garden, while the sun is out?" |
14614 | But does she care for the race-- for mankind more than for beastkind? |
14614 | But he would never see her again, so what was the good of writing down these songs? |
14614 | But how did you find me out?" |
14614 | But how long have you been here?" |
14614 | But if his end were captivity, slavery? |
14614 | But if one prays?" |
14614 | But is my heart as hard as a diamond?" |
14614 | But now, here in this house, where everything is different, do you not feel the love of life coming back upon you? |
14614 | But of what avail to begin again? |
14614 | But she is not dead?" |
14614 | But tell me, why, when you had taught them, did you let them fly away?" |
14614 | But the Prioress, where is she?" |
14614 | But the thought was very clear and distinct?" |
14614 | But there is no estrangement between us?" |
14614 | But was it she who had resisted? |
14614 | But what about singing at Benediction to- day? |
14614 | But what business had taken Sir Owen out of London, and so suddenly? |
14614 | But what do you mean?" |
14614 | But what does it matter to me whether she returns or not? |
14614 | But what is the matter, Sister? |
14614 | But what is the meaning of our story? |
14614 | But what use to break the music, audible and inaudible, with such weak words? |
14614 | But what was the good in reminding the Prioress of Sister Mary John? |
14614 | But what was the sign?" |
14614 | But what would it profit her to see Evelyn for a few years if she should lose her for eternity? |
14614 | But who among you will be able to reorganise it? |
14614 | But why did you go there?" |
14614 | But why do you ask?" |
14614 | But why wait in Berkeley Square? |
14614 | But why? |
14614 | But wo n''t you introduce me to Mademoiselle Helbrun? |
14614 | But would such a dashing coat suit him as well as it did its originator, and dare he wear the fancy waistcoats Owen was pressing upon him? |
14614 | But would the convent always be as necessary to her as it was to- day? |
14614 | But you asked me to go to the Prioress saying she must see you-- have you forgotten, Sister Evelyn? |
14614 | But you fear I shall live too long? |
14614 | But you, Asher, do n''t you think you might run down to Dulwich and interview the old gentleman? |
14614 | But, Monsignor, does my father exaggerate? |
14614 | But, again, of what avail? |
14614 | Can you find out for me?" |
14614 | Could it be that Owen had seen them in the park sitting under the limes? |
14614 | Could she undo her life to follow him? |
14614 | Did I ever seriously think of such a thing?'' |
14614 | Did MÃ © rat give it to you?" |
14614 | Did n''t it seem strange to you, Evelyn, that I should sleep so near and not come to say good- night? |
14614 | Did n''t you notice that man in the trap in front of us as we came from the station? |
14614 | Did she say that she regretted leaving the stage? |
14614 | Did she still cling to this belief? |
14614 | Did she understand what he was feeling-- the mystery of their lives written in the stars, sung by the nightingale and breathed by the flowers? |
14614 | Did she understand? |
14614 | Did you never see one in the garden, in a shady corner? |
14614 | Did you never write to her?" |
14614 | Do n''t you agree?" |
14614 | Do n''t you hear him?" |
14614 | Do n''t you hear the Sword motive? |
14614 | Do n''t you know mademoiselle has taken a religious turn?" |
14614 | Do n''t you see I am? |
14614 | Do you intend to return to the stage?" |
14614 | Do you know if our sins are ever forgotten, Louise?" |
14614 | Do you know what I mean, Sister?" |
14614 | Do you never get tired?" |
14614 | Do you never think of these things, Hilda?" |
14614 | Do you never wish for your own country?" |
14614 | Do you remember Italy, MÃ © rat? |
14614 | Do you remember at first whole days passed without her speaking? |
14614 | Do you remember the look with which you greeted me-- do you remember that cup of tea?" |
14614 | Do you remember when we met for the first time?" |
14614 | Do you think I have n''t noticed her deference to the very slightest word that Father Ambrose deigns to speak to her? |
14614 | Do you want it?" |
14614 | Does Nature care whether we live or die? |
14614 | Does he mean that he would prefer me to be her lover, if that would save her from religion? |
14614 | Does n''t it seem hard, Monsignor? |
14614 | Does she care for either? |
14614 | Eliza has told you?" |
14614 | Evelyn, dear, this question has been running in my mind some time back-- is it well for you to remain a postulant any longer? |
14614 | Every day I expect to hear from my father, and if he wishes--""But if he does n''t require you? |
14614 | Every one follows a thread, but whither do the threads lead? |
14614 | Father Daly promised to think the matter over, and Sister Winifred said:"But you must know we shall have much opposition?" |
14614 | For instance, Sister Mary John-- who will doubt her vocation? |
14614 | For who was so faithful to her friends? |
14614 | Going away for ever? |
14614 | Going whither? |
14614 | Had all the novices taken leave of their senses? |
14614 | Had any of them come from Riversdale? |
14614 | Had he not charmed her before? |
14614 | Had he not done so himself? |
14614 | Had she caught some of Evelyn''s madness... or was she in an enchanted garden? |
14614 | Had the convent rule left her sufficient sensibility to understand such simple human truths? |
14614 | Had they gone mad?... |
14614 | Has any saint attained to such a degree of perfection as to wish his past had never existed? |
14614 | Has n''t she done it beautifully?" |
14614 | Have n''t I said so? |
14614 | Have n''t I told you already how--?" |
14614 | Have n''t you noticed that our congregation is beginning to fall away? |
14614 | Have you confessed?" |
14614 | Have you given us your full reasons for not wishing Evelyn to take the veil if she should decide to do so? |
14614 | Have you heard of Sister Cecilia''s adventure with her counterpart?" |
14614 | Have you lost your voice?" |
14614 | Have you not thought that we are looking forward to the time when you should be one of us?" |
14614 | He might question him? |
14614 | Her love of me, you mean?" |
14614 | Her senses had kindled for him once, why should n''t they kindle again? |
14614 | How can I thank you for those ten years?" |
14614 | How can I think of any other? |
14614 | How can they be? |
14614 | How could I think such a visitation sinful? |
14614 | How could he admire one who slipped her neck into a spiritual halter and allowed herself to be led? |
14614 | How could it be otherwise? |
14614 | How could she have loved him? |
14614 | How could they have learned the motives unless from me?" |
14614 | How could you live among such babies?" |
14614 | How did you find my address? |
14614 | How extraordinary that event was, extraordinary as the stars above us; my going down that evening and hearing you sing? |
14614 | How is it you have never reproached me before?" |
14614 | How is it, Mother, that no great writer has ever given us a portrait of Jeanne?" |
14614 | How is it?" |
14614 | How is one to regret that one is oneself? |
14614 | How many are there who have relations who would take them in? |
14614 | How many letters would that be a year, Harding?" |
14614 | How much has happened since then? |
14614 | How often have I told you that? |
14614 | How old are you, Teresa?" |
14614 | How shall I endure it?" |
14614 | How was it he could not put her out of his mind? |
14614 | How were it possible to discover one? |
14614 | How will you answer her?" |
14614 | I am in the world, am I not?" |
14614 | I do n''t want to appear unreasonable, but how could I go on singing even if I wished to go on? |
14614 | I feel sure the Bishop will decide against us, and what can we do with the school? |
14614 | I have been boring you long enough, have n''t I? |
14614 | I have been thinking of a name for you-- what do you think of''Teresa''?" |
14614 | I know you wo n''t, I know you wo n''t, so why did I come all this long way?" |
14614 | I shall be in the earth too-- in how many years? |
14614 | I suppose a great part of your time is spent in gardening?" |
14614 | I suppose,"she added,"Veronica has told you that our counterparts are a little secret among ourselves? |
14614 | I thought it might affect you in the same way-- what is it?" |
14614 | I used to sit on the seashore, crying all day, and my little child used to put his arms about me and say,''What is mammie crying for?'' |
14614 | I wonder how it is that you do n''t understand?" |
14614 | I wonder what he will think of you? |
14614 | I wonder what your life will be when I''m gone?" |
14614 | If Asher and Monsignor were to meet that night? |
14614 | If I am satisfied, who should have the right to grumble? |
14614 | If Sister Mary John left, how was Evelyn to be persuaded to take the veil? |
14614 | If he did n''t marry--he could marry nobody but her-- what would he do with his life? |
14614 | If she is going away with Ulick what does it matter under what trees they sat?" |
14614 | If she were to read his disappointment on hearing that she was no longer in the convent? |
14614 | If so, what punishment would the poet devise for her? |
14614 | If you leave here, what will become of you? |
14614 | If you leave the stage what will you do with your time? |
14614 | In Dulwich? |
14614 | In speaking of this life, one hardly knows what words to employ, so inadequate are words to express one''s meaning, or shall I say one''s feeling? |
14614 | In three months? |
14614 | In whose company are you now?" |
14614 | Innes?" |
14614 | Innes?" |
14614 | Into what design? |
14614 | Is it possible that his ideas meet with no opposition? |
14614 | Is n''t it strange? |
14614 | Is n''t it uncanny? |
14614 | Is n''t that so, Mother Hilda?" |
14614 | Is that the meaning you read in the song of the nightingale, in the stare of the moon and the perfume of the garden? |
14614 | It had almost been decided, for had she not told Sister Agnes to take Evelyn to the novitiate? |
14614 | It told her that he had been waiting for her; why had n''t she come to his room? |
14614 | It was a privation to remain at home thinking-- What did you sing?" |
14614 | It would have been easy to lay his hands upon her shoulder, saying,"Evelyn, are we to be parted?" |
14614 | It would n''t be human, and I do n''t think you would like me any better if I did-- now would you, Evelyn? |
14614 | Look, Evelyn, do you see that boy and girl walking under the hedge with their arms entwined? |
14614 | Looked at from the outside, what is it but a little vanishing dust? |
14614 | May I ask her about them?" |
14614 | Mother Hilda and Mother Philippa know nothing of these stories?" |
14614 | Mother Hilda is with her""But her name?" |
14614 | Mother Hilda''s instruction in the novitiate seems childish, yet why is it more childish than a hundred other things? |
14614 | Mother Philippa-- what do you think, dear?" |
14614 | Must I?" |
14614 | My animosity to religion may have worn away some edge off her mind, do n''t you see? |
14614 | My finding you at Dulwich-- Evelyn, have you ever thought enough about it? |
14614 | No one has ever yet given a portrait of a great saint, of St. Teresa-- what can any one tell us that we do not already know?" |
14614 | Nobody came knocking at your door last night?" |
14614 | Nothing happened to prevent you?" |
14614 | Now are you convinced?" |
14614 | Now three months have passed-- haven''t I been obedient?" |
14614 | Now was it that she might lack the force of character to leave the convent when the time came... after the Prioress''s death? |
14614 | Now what could he say to win her out of this dreadful gloom? |
14614 | Now what was there to find fault with in the grey he had chosen? |
14614 | Now with whom would she go down? |
14614 | Now, Mother, is n''t the story a wonderful one? |
14614 | Now, about what?" |
14614 | Now, goodbye, I''ll come to see you again, may I not?" |
14614 | Now, of what are you thinking? |
14614 | Now, what are the novices so eager about?" |
14614 | Now, what could she be rude about to you?" |
14614 | Now, what did she think of the singing? |
14614 | Now, what was the cause of this sudden realisation, this sudden scruple? |
14614 | Now, who had persuaded her? |
14614 | Now, why did you do this? |
14614 | Now, why do you defend them?" |
14614 | Now, why should she have gone back to the stage? |
14614 | Oases die, but do new ones rise from the desert? |
14614 | Of that suit of clothes which you have had for six years or of my marriage-- which?" |
14614 | Of the intrigue she had been carrying on with Ulick Dean? |
14614 | Of what do they remind me?" |
14614 | Of what should he speak to her? |
14614 | Of what use?" |
14614 | Only to sing operas?" |
14614 | Or had he returned to these shores and islands merely because there was no other sea in which one could yacht? |
14614 | Or is he standing with her looking over the bulwarks of the_ Medusa_, seeing the shape of some Greek island dying in the twilight?" |
14614 | Or is it that an opposition is preparing behind an ambuscade of goodwill? |
14614 | Or was he down at the end of the passage? |
14614 | Or would it be enhanced? |
14614 | Owen could not bring himself to ask if Evelyn had accepted the engagement-- what was the good? |
14614 | Owen, where was he? |
14614 | Owen-- would he sit in his study thinking of his lost happiness or would he try to forget it in some picture- dealer''s shop? |
14614 | Perhaps he had been walking with her in the park? |
14614 | Perhaps some had been hatched under his own eaves? |
14614 | Perhaps what happened may have been divinely ordered to bring her back to us? |
14614 | Perhaps you would like to see her, Sir Owen?" |
14614 | Poor Lena, what has become of her? |
14614 | Shall we go into the garden for a little walk before supper? |
14614 | She seemed to have very little strength-- or was it will that she lacked? |
14614 | Should I be able to forgive myself? |
14614 | Should he pretend that he knew nothing of it? |
14614 | Sir Owen, I count upon you to persuade her to stay until to- morrow, and you will show her the glen, wo n''t you? |
14614 | Sister Lawrence-- would you like to see her on the roadside, or carried to the workhouse? |
14614 | Sister Winifred might be elected...."Who will have the strength to turn the convent into an active Order when I am gone?" |
14614 | So Mr. Dean came here?" |
14614 | So he said,"My good friend how is it that your cooks make equally good coffee?" |
14614 | So here is where you live, you and she; and that is her writing- table?" |
14614 | So it is you, Teresa? |
14614 | So what is to be done?" |
14614 | So why should it be so important that a woman should be true to her lover?" |
14614 | So you sing every day at Benediction, do you, Evelyn? |
14614 | So you think, Evelyn, you will never return to the stage?" |
14614 | So- and- so, did you hear what he said?''" |
14614 | Something had happened to her in Rome-- what? |
14614 | Spite?" |
14614 | Still, if one may differentiate at all between the French and English races( but is there a French and English race?) |
14614 | Surely miracles can not have ceased with the nineteenth century? |
14614 | Surely there is something else for us to talk about?" |
14614 | Tea or coffee? |
14614 | Tell me what her rooms were like?" |
14614 | Tell me, Evelyn, how do you spend your time?" |
14614 | Tell me, were n''t you surprised to hear I had left the convent? |
14614 | That is how the mystics talk-- isn''t it? |
14614 | That long letter on the writing- table, which Owen put away so mysteriously-- could it be to Evelyn? |
14614 | The bullfinch is a homely little bird, almost as domestic as the robin; they just stay here, is n''t that it?" |
14614 | The doors of those mansions where she has gone to live are not very strong, are they, MÃ © rat? |
14614 | The future? |
14614 | The last book you read, the last person you meet--""Do you think I am so frivolous, so changeable as that, dear Mother?" |
14614 | The man who knows, or thinks he knows, whither he is going commands our respect, and we are willing to follow--""Even though he is the stupider?" |
14614 | The novices said,''How do you do?'' |
14614 | The nun''s face changed expression, and Evelyn sat reading it,"Do you think she is jealous of the time we spend together? |
14614 | The people here do n''t interfere with you? |
14614 | The quickest way of being married was in a registry office, but would Evelyn look upon a civil marriage as sufficient? |
14614 | The sin of liking one man a little better than another?" |
14614 | The substance has been infected--""What makes you say all this, Asher?" |
14614 | The women sat looking at each other, and at the end of a long silence the Prioress said:"It is impossible for us to take your money, my child?" |
14614 | Then why do n''t you go and hunt him out... frighten him away? |
14614 | There is a meaning, Evelyn, in our lives for certain, but are you reading it aright?" |
14614 | There never was anybody quite so good, do you think there was, MÃ © rat?" |
14614 | They accept the religions men invent, and sometimes they become saints, and they accept our moralities-- what can they do, poor darlings, but accept? |
14614 | They are ignorant, but of what are they ignorant? |
14614 | This answer seemed to exhaust Sister Cecilia''s interest in the question, and, handing Evelyn two more candles, she asked,"Do you want me any more?" |
14614 | This was the life that would cure him-- how soon? |
14614 | Timbuctoo? |
14614 | To lead her thoughts out of this trouble-- was there no way? |
14614 | To please him Ulick attributed all his criticism of the singers to Evelyn, and Owen said:"Extraordinary, is n''t it? |
14614 | Was he really going to ride this horse for many hours? |
14614 | Was her gift connected in some obscure way with the moral crisis which had drawn her into this convent? |
14614 | Was it Owen? |
14614 | Was it Ulick Dean? |
14614 | Was it contempt for the world''s ignorance in matters of art that filled her heart? |
14614 | Was it dun? |
14614 | Was it really so? |
14614 | Was it tawny? |
14614 | Was that all? |
14614 | Was the hawk kept in a cage or chained to the perch? |
14614 | Was there ever a more beautiful day? |
14614 | Was there ever such a season?" |
14614 | We all know the bitterness of it-- don''t we?" |
14614 | We have a chance of redeeming the convent from debt-- will you accept the responsibility?" |
14614 | We need not wear cloaks, need we? |
14614 | Well, he had seen a falcon kill a partridge, but would the falconer be able to lure back his hawk? |
14614 | Were these two in America together? |
14614 | Were you at the concert?" |
14614 | What are you speaking about?" |
14614 | What can a writer add to what Nature has given? |
14614 | What could I answer? |
14614 | What could have happened to her?" |
14614 | What could he say to her worth saying at such a moment? |
14614 | What could he say?" |
14614 | What do we mean when we speak of Nature? |
14614 | What do you mean?" |
14614 | What do you mean?" |
14614 | What do you think I came here for?" |
14614 | What do you think of it? |
14614 | What does it matter to whom you owe the money? |
14614 | What had they been talking about? |
14614 | What has become of that young man?" |
14614 | What have you come to tell me?" |
14614 | What is her story?" |
14614 | What is this?" |
14614 | What is your dislike to Evelyn?" |
14614 | What language was being spoken over yonder? |
14614 | What name?" |
14614 | What sins? |
14614 | What strange transformation has taken place in you?" |
14614 | What was the good of anything? |
14614 | What will become of you? |
14614 | What will he think of my bringing my notices to read to you? |
14614 | What would his life be without remembrance of Evelyn? |
14614 | What would you like me to sing?"'' |
14614 | When I opened the door he said,''Where is mademoiselle?'' |
14614 | When are you leaving?" |
14614 | When one has made up one''s mind to live a certain kind of life--""But, Evelyn, who is preventing you from living up to your ideal? |
14614 | When will you come again?" |
14614 | When would that happen? |
14614 | Whence had they come? |
14614 | Whenever Sister Mary John heard the saw cease she cried out,"Now, Sister Evelyn, what are you thinking about? |
14614 | Where did she keep her clothes? |
14614 | Where does Nature begin? |
14614 | Where does she end? |
14614 | Where have you been?" |
14614 | Where were they hanging? |
14614 | Where? |
14614 | Which was the better description of the two? |
14614 | Which will you have, dear? |
14614 | Which would prevail? |
14614 | Which? |
14614 | Who are these counterparts?" |
14614 | Who knows? |
14614 | Who will accompany you?" |
14614 | Whom do I know in France? |
14614 | Whom will they elect? |
14614 | Why are we not lovers?" |
14614 | Why ca n''t you do the same?" |
14614 | Why could n''t he accept an Arab girl-- Bà © clère''s girl? |
14614 | Why did he love her? |
14614 | Why did she come here? |
14614 | Why did you let her go?" |
14614 | Why did you not come here at once?" |
14614 | Why did you say that the Evelyn of old is dead?" |
14614 | Why do you move away?" |
14614 | Why is it, Harding, that a man should love one woman so much more than another? |
14614 | Why is love the most melancholy of all joys? |
14614 | Why not a donkey? |
14614 | Why not go one step farther and make Miss Dingle a postulant? |
14614 | Why not teach music here?" |
14614 | Why not? |
14614 | Why not?" |
14614 | Why should I trouble myself? |
14614 | Why should any rule remain for ever the same? |
14614 | Why should he sing and no other thrush sing it? |
14614 | Why should n''t he rage?" |
14614 | Why should n''t it be? |
14614 | Why should she be so determined?" |
14614 | Why should the hawk leave its prey for such a mock? |
14614 | Why should you leave us at all?" |
14614 | Why should you wait here till I am dead? |
14614 | Why speak in this way?" |
14614 | Will it never cease raining and blowing?" |
14614 | Will you come up to the organ loft?" |
14614 | Will you forgive me?" |
14614 | Will you recommend to me some man of business who will carry out the sale of my house for me, and settle everything?" |
14614 | With whom is she living? |
14614 | Women generally marry when it is pressed upon them sufficiently, do n''t you think so, Harding?" |
14614 | Would Sir Owen prefer that they should put in at Palermo or Tunis? |
14614 | Would he ever be at rest while she was abroad? |
14614 | Would it not be well for me to speak to the Prioress on the subject?" |
14614 | Would it not have been better for them both if she had remained in her convent? |
14614 | Would she find courage to tell them that she did not wish to take final vows? |
14614 | Would the future Virgil regard her as an assuagement, a balm? |
14614 | Would you have me go on singing operas? |
14614 | Would you like to try some music over with me and forget the birds?" |
14614 | XIII"Has Mr. Dean come in?" |
14614 | XXI"What are you looking for, Sister Evelyn?" |
14614 | Yet he loved her-- or was it the memory of their love that he loved? |
14614 | Yet why should n''t such a thing happen? |
14614 | You are Reverend Mother here, it is for us to obey; only since you ask me--""Ask you, Hilda? |
14614 | You are in Wimbledon Convent, with Sister Agnes; what is the matter?" |
14614 | You are not angry with me for asking you these questions? |
14614 | You are singing to- day? |
14614 | You are sure she will recover?" |
14614 | You call this country distant? |
14614 | You can help me a little with it, ca n''t you?" |
14614 | You did n''t expect to meet me, did you?" |
14614 | You did n''t expect to see me? |
14614 | You do n''t believe in Evelyn''s vocation?" |
14614 | You do n''t believe me, Harding? |
14614 | You do n''t know the glen? |
14614 | You do n''t know what I mean?" |
14614 | You do n''t mean that anybody comes into the convent?" |
14614 | You do n''t mind my arguing with you a little, because in doing so I become clear to myself?" |
14614 | You do n''t tell me you are going away? |
14614 | You have come here, sent by Owen Asher or by Ulick Dean-- which is it?" |
14614 | You have n''t half told me what there is to tell-- the Prioress and the sub- Prioress, you never liked her?" |
14614 | You have n''t seen the inscription, have you?" |
14614 | You have never heard the story of the foundation of our Order? |
14614 | You have sung how many operas? |
14614 | You know that well enough-- am I not right, Mother Philippa?" |
14614 | You know the way to her room?" |
14614 | You know what I mean?" |
14614 | You know what I said about your singing, how it disturbed me and prevented me from praying? |
14614 | You never loved me as you love this idea, Evelyn?" |
14614 | You owe it to somebody, and he is pressing you for it-- isn''t that so? |
14614 | You promise me this? |
14614 | You remember my promise to arrange a concert tour as soon as I was free? |
14614 | You remember, Evelyn, when I returned to Dulwich-- I had been nearly wrecked off the coast of Marseilles?" |
14614 | You think I do n''t know that I am spoken of as a mere secular priest? |
14614 | You understand?" |
14614 | You want to drive her into a convent, do you?" |
14614 | You were inspired to leave the stage, but whence did that inspiration come? |
14614 | You will admit that?" |
14614 | You will come to Thornton Grange, wo n''t you, and spend a few days with us?" |
14614 | You will come to see me when you are in London... when you have a moment?" |
14614 | You will excuse me?" |
14614 | You will pray that I may be a great success, wo n''t you? |
14614 | You will return to France some day?" |
14614 | You will tell me about it? |
14614 | You will tell me where she is, wo n''t you?" |
14614 | You would have me believe that you will be true to this creed? |
14614 | You would like to have me back on the stage?" |
14614 | You would n''t like me to be yours?" |
14614 | You''d like to hear her sing-- wouldn''t you?" |
14614 | You''ll excuse me, Mother Superior? |
14614 | You''ll excuse me, Owen, I shall be back with you in about half an hour?" |
14614 | You''ll forgive me the trickery, wo n''t you?" |
14614 | You''ll sign the agreement?" |
14614 | You''re not sorry?" |
14614 | You''ve been away, have n''t you?" |
14614 | and her voice, too-- you do n''t agree with me?" |
14614 | anything so horrible? |
14614 | do n''t you understand? |
14614 | if after some new adventure she should return to the python? |
14614 | in six? |
14614 | in ten years? |
14614 | is n''t he pretty, with his red breast and black, beady eyes?" |
14614 | the Prioress asked herself,"or is she thinking of anything? |
14614 | what about my glue? |
14614 | what sort of end? |
14614 | who knows?" |
7284 | Eighty and six years have I served Him, and He has never done me a wrong; how could I then blaspheme my King, who hath saved me? |
7284 | Is this the city that men call the perfection of beauty, the joy of the whole earth? |
7284 | Where Is He that brought them up out of the sea with the shepherd of His flock? 7284 Where is the dwelling- place of the lions, and the feeding- place of the young lions?" |
7284 | 1. Who discovered America? |
7284 | 1. Who founded the Assyrian Empire? |
7284 | 1. Who is Ahasuerus supposed to have been? |
7284 | 1. Who was the first Asmonean King? |
7284 | 1. Who was the first believing monarch? |
7284 | 1. Who were the Chaldeans? |
7284 | 1. Who were the Egyptians? |
7284 | 1. Who were the Greeks? |
7284 | 1. Who were the two brothers who reigned together? |
7284 | 10. Who took the choice of the Pope for a time? |
7284 | 10. Who was the great and good English King? |
7284 | 10. Who were the Romans? |
7284 | 10. Who were the chief martyrs of the persecution of Valerian? |
7284 | 11. Who took the choice of the Pope from the German Emperor? |
7284 | 11. Who was chosen to be saved out of the descendants of Seth? |
7284 | 11. Who was the Swiss reformer? |
7284 | 11. Who was the successor of Ahaz? |
7284 | 11. Who were the patriarchs of the Church? |
7284 | 11. Who were their chief enemies? |
7284 | 12. Who conquered Rome? |
7284 | 12. Who tried to obtain a General Council? |
7284 | 12. Who was the high priest? |
7284 | 12. Who was the last King of Samaria? |
7284 | 12. Who were the chief enemies of Israel? |
7284 | 13. Who interrupted the writing? |
7284 | 13. Who preached repentance at Antioch? |
7284 | 13. Who was Athaliah? |
7284 | 13. Who was the other assistant who arrived? |
7284 | 14. Who alone could obtain law and justice? |
7284 | 14. Who became prophet after Elijah? |
7284 | 14. Who is thought to have been the great prophet of Idumea? |
7284 | 14. Who reigned over the rest of Israel? |
7284 | 14. Who was the first Christian King of France? |
7284 | 15. Who caused our present translation of the Bible to be made? |
7284 | 15. Who executed judgment on the house of Ahab? |
7284 | 15. Who had long ago described the Romans exactly? |
7284 | 15. Who was the great martyr of Trajan''s persecution? |
7284 | 16. Who resisted their claim? |
7284 | 16. Who succeeded Maccabaeus? |
7284 | 16. Who was set up instead of Jehoahaz? |
7284 | 16. Who was the Roman general? |
7284 | 16. Who were the companions of St. Paul''s second journey? |
7284 | 17. Who was the first missionary to the Saxons? |
7284 | 17. Who was the first of the Prophets and last of the Judges? |
7284 | 17. Who were to be in the covenant after him? |
7284 | 18. Who sent St. Augustin? |
7284 | 18. Who was the British martyr? |
7284 | 19. Who made intercession for the fulfilment of these prophecies? |
7284 | 19. Who shielded the Britons? |
7284 | 19. Who was Jehoiakim''s enemy? |
7284 | 19. Who was the first Christian Saxon King? |
7284 | 19. Who were the Athenian philosophers? |
7284 | 19. Who were the martyrs of the English Reformation? |
7284 | 2. Who was the chief Greek god? |
7284 | 2. Who was the first king of Israel? |
7284 | 2. Who were the first inhabitants of America? |
7284 | 2. Who were the leaders of the return? |
7284 | 20. Who first succeeded him? |
7284 | 20. Who succeeded him? |
7284 | 20. Who turned them back? |
7284 | 20. Who was St. John''s other pupil? |
7284 | 21. Who was the great champion of the truth? |
7284 | 22. Who reigned in Uzziah''s stead? |
7284 | 22. Who succeeded him, and by what means? |
7284 | 22. Who was the King of Nineveh after Sennacherib? |
7284 | 22. Who were the two allies against Judah? |
7284 | 23. Who began to prophesy in Uzziah''s time? |
7284 | 23. Who gained the chief power at Rome? |
7284 | 23. Who governed Babylon? |
7284 | 23. Who governed Judea? |
7284 | 23. Who was the successor of Simon? |
7284 | 24. Who finished the conversion of the Gauls? |
7284 | 24. Who was the last of the prophets? |
7284 | 26. Who became King of Persia? |
7284 | 26. Who succeeded Augustus, and in what year? |
7284 | 26. Who was Herod? |
7284 | 28. Who divided his power on his death? |
7284 | 28. Who was his successor? |
7284 | 29. Who reigned after Hezekiah? |
7284 | 3. Who reigned after Aristobulus? |
7284 | 3. Who was Zerubbabel? |
7284 | 3. Who was their chief god, and how was he worshipped? |
7284 | 30. Who had the keeping of the Scriptures? |
7284 | 30. Who put an end to the reign of Hyrcanus? |
7284 | 31, 32, 8. Who were the prophets of Josiah''s time? |
7284 | 31. Who was the last King of Judah? |
7284 | 33. Who was Herod''s wife? |
7284 | 33. Who were the chief crusaders? |
7284 | 34. Who was High Priest? |
7284 | 34. Who was the first martyr? |
7284 | 34. Who were the first disciples? |
7284 | 35. Who were accepted in their stead? |
7284 | 36. Who succeeded Tiberius? |
7284 | 38. Who had become Emperor of Rome? |
7284 | 38. Who was the great Pharisee convert? |
7284 | 4. Who after Alexander Janneus? |
7284 | 4. Who overthrew the house of Jeroboam? |
7284 | 4. Who was the Egyptian king who invaded Judea? |
7284 | 41. Who boasted over Jerusalem? |
7284 | 42. Who was the first Gentile convert? |
7284 | 46. Who was the prophet who spoke against Edom? |
7284 | 5. Who alone survived to hear of the destruction of Jerusalem? |
7284 | 5. Who began to preach against indulgences? |
7284 | 5. Who succeeded Rehoboam? |
7284 | 5. Who was chosen in Saul''s stead? |
7284 | 5. Who were the sons of Ishmael? |
7284 | 53 What was going on in Britain? |
7284 | 54. Who was Roman Emperor? |
7284 | 6. Who fostered the ill- will between the brothers? |
7284 | 6. Who ruled the Roman empire? |
7284 | 6. Who succeeded Abijah? |
7284 | 6. Who succeeded Mattathias? |
7284 | 6. Who tried to prevent their cruelty? |
7284 | 6. Who were the Phoenicians? |
7284 | 7. Who had the chief power in the Western Churches? |
7284 | 7. Who subdued all the rest of Greece? |
7284 | 7. Who was Mahomet? |
7284 | 7. Who was the great western emperor? |
7284 | 7. Who was the reigning King of Babylon? |
7284 | 7. Who were the royal children brought up as slaves? |
7284 | 8. Who conquered Britain? |
7284 | 8. Who was appointed to lead them out? |
7284 | 8. Who were the chief gods of the Canaanites? |
7284 | 9. Who was the Catholic Emperor? |
7284 | 9. Who was their companion? |
7284 | 9. Who were the martyrs of Carthage? |
7284 | After what pattern were the Services moulded? |
7284 | Antioch? |
7284 | Before what tribunals was he brought? |
7284 | By how many persons was it made? |
7284 | By what means did Pompey take Jerusalem? |
7284 | By what means did he try to repair the loss of Vashti? |
7284 | By what names was his son called? |
7284 | By what names were the descendants of Esau called? |
7284 | By what rite was He made obedient to the Law? |
7284 | By whom had His Name been previously borne? |
7284 | By whose favour had Jehoiakim been set up? |
7284 | For how long a period did the rule of the Judges last? |
7284 | For what was Solomon''s reign remarkable? |
7284 | From which son of Adam was the Seed of the woman to spring? |
7284 | How alone could his guilt be atoned for? |
7284 | How are such Churches still one? |
7284 | How arose the name of Maccabees? |
7284 | How bad education fitted him to be an apostle to the Gentiles? |
7284 | How did Alaric treat Rome? |
7284 | How did Constantine change the capital of his empire? |
7284 | How did Cyrus attempt to gain an entrance? |
7284 | How did Darius go out to battle with him? |
7284 | How did David regulate the service before the Ark? |
7284 | How did England separate from the Pope? |
7284 | How did Esarhaddon fill the empty land of Samaria? |
7284 | How did Esther conduct her intercession? |
7284 | How did God reveal Himself to Moses? |
7284 | How did Haman seek revenge for Mordecai''s scorn? |
7284 | How did He show how the sins of which His disciples were sensible might be removed? |
7284 | How did Herod gain favour from Antony? |
7284 | How did Herod make himself King? |
7284 | How did Herod try to make up for his crimes? |
7284 | How did Jehoram act on coming to the throne? |
7284 | How did Jeroboam forfeit these blessings? |
7284 | How did Joash reign? |
7284 | How did Pompey arrange the affairs of the Jews? |
7284 | How did Rehoboam bring about the accomplishment of the sentence on Solomon? |
7284 | How did Seth''s children fall away? |
7284 | How did Solomon fall away? |
7284 | How did St. Ambrose resist the Empress Justina? |
7284 | How did St. Paul and St. Peter die? |
7284 | How did St. Paul differ with St. Barnabas? |
7284 | How did Theodosius punish the murder? |
7284 | How did he humiliate himself? |
7284 | How did he live at Rome? |
7284 | How did he punish disobedience? |
7284 | How did he show his want of faith? |
7284 | How did he show that he was uplifted? |
7284 | How did he spend his time after his conversion? |
7284 | How did he spread his religion? |
7284 | How did it again become prosperous? |
7284 | How did our Lord sanctify baptism? |
7284 | How did she do honour to the holy places? |
7284 | How did the Christians profit by the warning? |
7284 | How did the Council of Trent end? |
7284 | How did the Israelites forfeit the covenant? |
7284 | How did the Jews at Babylon show their constancy? |
7284 | How did the Jews bring punishment on themselves? |
7284 | How did the Ninevites receive the message? |
7284 | How did the Roman Catholics treat them? |
7284 | How did the Romans extend their dominion? |
7284 | How did the Romans prove that they could not be trusted with the choice? |
7284 | How did the Romans rule their conquered provinces? |
7284 | How did the Samaritans revenge themselves? |
7284 | How did the Spaniards use the Indians? |
7284 | How did the Theban legion witness their confession? |
7284 | How did the heathen try to find out what they did? |
7284 | How did the remnant act who were left in Judea? |
7284 | How did they arrange themselves at their assemblies? |
7284 | How did they meet for worship? |
7284 | How did they misread the prophecies? |
7284 | How did they treat Jerusalem? |
7284 | How do the Mahometans honour Mecca? |
7284 | How far did Alexander spread his conquests? |
7284 | How far did his second journey extend? |
7284 | How far did his third journey extend? |
7284 | How far did they extend their conquests? |
7284 | How had Jeremiah foretold the taking of Babylon by the Medes? |
7284 | How had Nehemiah obtained leave to come and assist? |
7284 | How had St. Paul first been converted? |
7284 | How had Zechariah predicted the fall of the Priests? |
7284 | How had baptism with water been already employed? |
7284 | How had the Jews called down vengeance on themselves? |
7284 | How had the Roman power decayed? |
7284 | How had the Services of the Church come to be in an unknown tongue? |
7284 | How had the apostles been martyred? |
7284 | How has the Pope been ever since elected? |
7284 | How have they lived ever since? |
7284 | How is Severus memorable in Britain? |
7284 | How is the Church still one inwardly? |
7284 | How long did David reign? |
7284 | How long did these evil times last? |
7284 | How long did they wander there? |
7284 | How long was Jerusalem in the hands of the Christians? |
7284 | How long was it since the walls of Jerusalem had been built? |
7284 | How long was the house of Jehu to continue? |
7284 | How long were the Israelites in Egypt? |
7284 | How many Israelites did Moses lead into the wilderness? |
7284 | How many Jews returned from the captivity? |
7284 | How many believers met at first? |
7284 | How many bishops signed the Nicene Creed? |
7284 | How many horns had sprung up in Daniel''s vision of the Roman power? |
7284 | How soon did St. Ambrose reconcile Theodosius to the Church? |
7284 | How soon was a new Tyre built? |
7284 | How soon was the Temple begun? |
7284 | How was Ahab influenced? |
7284 | How was Alexander received at Jerusalem? |
7284 | How was Arius punished? |
7284 | How was Constantine converted? |
7284 | How was Daniel''s inspiration first made known? |
7284 | How was Daniel''s prayer answered? |
7284 | How was David prepared for the throne? |
7284 | How was God entreated to grant it to them again? |
7284 | How was Ireland converted? |
7284 | How was Jacob''s name changed? |
7284 | How was Joash preserved? |
7284 | How was Mattathias first roused to resistance? |
7284 | How was Moses instructed in their observances? |
7284 | How was Moses prepared for the work? |
7284 | How was Palestine divided? |
7284 | How was Spain brought to the Catholic faith? |
7284 | How was St. Chrysostom promoted? |
7284 | How was St. Ignatius put to death? |
7284 | How was St. John a martyr in will? |
7284 | How was he brought to a sense of his cruelty? |
7284 | How was he called off? |
7284 | How was he chosen? |
7284 | How was he consecrated? |
7284 | How was he introduced to the apostles? |
7284 | How was he persecuted? |
7284 | How was he prevented from making war on Jeroboam? |
7284 | How was he punished? |
7284 | How was he rescued from violence both of Jews and Romans? |
7284 | How was he restored to the throne? |
7284 | How was he treated in England? |
7284 | How was it frustrated? |
7284 | How was it frustrated? |
7284 | How was it made known that the Gospel might be preached to the Gentiles? |
7284 | How was it punished? |
7284 | How was it that there was less ignorance than formerly? |
7284 | How was it tried under Julian? |
7284 | How was the Ark sent back? |
7284 | How was the Church in England restored? |
7284 | How was the Church persecuted? |
7284 | How was the Church spared from communion with Arius? |
7284 | How was the Church tried under Constantius? |
7284 | How was the Divine Presence marked there? |
7284 | How was the Empire divided? |
7284 | How was the English Church purified? |
7284 | How was the Roman army composed? |
7284 | How was the bringing near in prayer made known? |
7284 | How was the danger turned away? |
7284 | How was the entrance effected into the Temple? |
7284 | How was the great Sacrifice to be partaken of? |
7284 | How was the great work completed? |
7284 | How was the inheritance of the tribes arranged? |
7284 | How was the power of the Popes misused? |
7284 | How was the rent made between the Greek and Latin Churches? |
7284 | How was the schism increased between the Greek and Roman Churches? |
7284 | How was the sin of Ahaz punished? |
7284 | How was the sin of Uzziah punished? |
7284 | How was the swiftness of his conquests shown? |
7284 | How was the true Cross recovered? |
7284 | How was the world punished? |
7284 | How were our Lord''s predictions of fearful sights and signs from Heaven fulfilled? |
7284 | How were the Babylonians prevented from being on the watch? |
7284 | How were the High Priests appointed after the murder of Aristobulus? |
7284 | How were the Israelites governed? |
7284 | How were the Jews becoming corrupted? |
7284 | How were the Jews dispersed? |
7284 | How were the Jews obliged to build? |
7284 | How were the Jews saved? |
7284 | How were the Jews treated? |
7284 | How were the Northmen converted? |
7284 | How were the crimes of Manasseh punished? |
7284 | How were the men of Antioch relieved? |
7284 | How were the visions explained to Daniel? |
7284 | How were they neglected? |
7284 | How were they supported there? |
7284 | How were they trained in the wilderness? |
7284 | How were they treated in Egypt? |
7284 | How were those who found fault punished? |
7284 | In the year 166, Judas Maccabà ¦ us set up his standard, with the motto,"Who is like unto Thee, O Lord, among the gods?" |
7284 | In what apocryphal book are they recorded? |
7284 | In what book in the Bible is this history related? |
7284 | In what manner did the western Church regard the Pope? |
7284 | In what manner were Christians brought to trial? |
7284 | In what persecution did St. Polycarp suffer? |
7284 | In what reign was the Prayer Book translated? |
7284 | In what state did he find the city? |
7284 | In what state was the Earth when first created? |
7284 | In what state was the Persian Empire? |
7284 | In what tongue were the early Scriptures? |
7284 | In what were the people too prone to trust? |
7284 | In what year did Alexander enter Asia? |
7284 | In what year did Titus besiege Jerusalem? |
7284 | In what year did he die? |
7284 | In what year did he die? |
7284 | In what year did the Israelites enter Canaan? |
7284 | In what year did the Jews pass from the Egyptian to the Syrian power? |
7284 | In what year did the schism begin? |
7284 | In what year of the world did Augustus number his people? |
7284 | In what year was the Flood? |
7284 | In what year was the decree for the restoration of Jerusalem given? |
7284 | In what year was the flight of Mahomet? |
7284 | Into what danger did Ahab send him? |
7284 | Into what error did Constantine fall? |
7284 | Into what tongue did he translate the Bible? |
7284 | Of what race was Esther? |
7284 | Of what race were they the parents? |
7284 | Of what tribe was David? |
7284 | Of what were the feet of Nebuchadnezzar''s statue made? |
7284 | On what conditions was Saul to reign? |
7284 | Paul and Barnabas first set apart? |
7284 | To what bishops did he write instructions? |
7284 | To what trial was man subjected? |
7284 | To what were they most devoted? |
7284 | To which of them did the Jews belong at first? |
7284 | To whom did Judea give itself up? |
7284 | To whom did he give them? |
7284 | To whom did they always go first? |
7284 | To whom was his chief church dedicated? |
7284 | To whose decision was the dispute referred? |
7284 | Under what form did they first learn Christianity? |
7284 | Was he really childless? |
7284 | What Church was founded by St. Mark? |
7284 | What Church was left by St. Thomas? |
7284 | What Church was left in Ethiopia? |
7284 | What Churches have Bishops? |
7284 | What Father of the Church was converted at this time? |
7284 | What Greek emperor tried to prevent image worship? |
7284 | What Roman general first invaded Palestine? |
7284 | What acknowledgment did Nebuchadnezzar make? |
7284 | What additions were made to the Holy Scriptures in Hezekiah''s time? |
7284 | What advantages did they derive from the Roman power? |
7284 | What alarm befell the East? |
7284 | What alliance did he make? |
7284 | What answer did Huldah make to Josiah''s inquiries? |
7284 | What apocryphal book mentions the history of an Israelite captive? |
7284 | What apocryphal history is supposed to have taken place at this time? |
7284 | What apostle ruled the Church at Rome? |
7284 | What are the Epistles of his captivity? |
7284 | What are the prophecies of Solomon? |
7284 | What are the writings of St. John? |
7284 | What are the writings of St. Peter? |
7284 | What argument did he hold at Athens? |
7284 | What arrangement did Ezra make for public worship? |
7284 | What arrangements did Caesar make in Palestine? |
7284 | What attempt was made by Ptolemy Philopator? |
7284 | What awful warning interrupted Belshazzar''s feast? |
7284 | What bad spirit rose up in Europe? |
7284 | What became of Ahaziah? |
7284 | What became of Antiochus the Great? |
7284 | What became of Aristobulus? |
7284 | What became of Babylon after his death? |
7284 | What became of Darius? |
7284 | What became of Ishbosheth? |
7284 | What became of Japhet''s children? |
7284 | What became of Jehoiachin? |
7284 | What became of Jeremiah? |
7284 | What became of Jonathan? |
7284 | What became of Julius Caesar? |
7284 | What became of Shem''s children? |
7284 | What became of St. James the Less? |
7284 | What became of Valerian? |
7284 | What became of the English monasteries? |
7284 | What became of the Jews? |
7284 | What became of the schismatical priest? |
7284 | What became of the treasures of the Temple? |
7284 | What befell Alexander at Babylon? |
7284 | What benefit did Mordecai do the king? |
7284 | What blessed mystery was instituted on the night before the Passion? |
7284 | What books are thought to have been compiled by Ezra? |
7284 | What books were written by Moses? |
7284 | What caused his return to Jerusalem? |
7284 | What change for the better passed over the Jews? |
7284 | What checked him in this expedition? |
7284 | What children did he leave? |
7284 | What cities did Alexander take in Palestine? |
7284 | What city did Alexander build in Egypt? |
7284 | What city did Omri make his capital? |
7284 | What city did he wish to make his capital? |
7284 | What claim had the Popes set up? |
7284 | What colony did Ptolemy Lagus bring into Egypt? |
7284 | What condition was the city found to be in? |
7284 | What conquest was made by John Hyrcanus? |
7284 | What council was held against it? |
7284 | What countries are Roman Catholic? |
7284 | What country did the Turks conquer? |
7284 | What country had Julius Caesar invaded? |
7284 | What country was won back by the Christiana? |
7284 | What creed was drawn up at Nicea? |
7284 | What crime brought on them the loss of the Ark? |
7284 | What crimes did Herod''s jealousy of the royal line lead him to commit? |
7284 | What cruelty was attempted by him on his return to Egypt? |
7284 | What danger did the English Church undergo? |
7284 | What deceit was practised upon the people? |
7284 | What decision did the foreign Reformers come to as to their Bishops? |
7284 | What deliverers were raised up for the Jews? |
7284 | What devotions were arranged by St. Gregory? |
7284 | What did Charles I. try to do for Scotland? |
7284 | What did Jeremiah predict concerning Jehoiakim? |
7284 | What did Jerusalem thenceforth become? |
7284 | What did Sadoc declare after him? |
7284 | What did all the ceremonies shadow out? |
7284 | What did he declare that he had seen? |
7284 | What did he do for Church music? |
7284 | What did he say of himself at the tribunal? |
7284 | What did he say of himself? |
7284 | What did the Feast of Weeks commemorate? |
7284 | What did they build there? |
7284 | What did they do with the library at Alexandria? |
7284 | What difference did his conquest make to the East? |
7284 | What difference of opinion was there between east and west? |
7284 | What different decisions were arrived at in the east and west? |
7284 | What discovery was made in cleansing the Temple? |
7284 | What dispute broke out between the sons of Alexandra? |
7284 | What do these horns signify? |
7284 | What error did she make in the celebration of the Holy Communion? |
7284 | What errors began to prevail? |
7284 | What evil habit prevailed in their days? |
7284 | What evils prevailed in the East? |
7284 | What evils were prevailing in the colonies? |
7284 | What expedition was predicted in the 18th verse? |
7284 | What exploits were done by Herod? |
7284 | What false religion sprang up? |
7284 | What feast was appointed in remembrance of the deliverance from Egypt? |
7284 | What festival was taking place? |
7284 | What fresh aid was given to the building at Jerusalem? |
7284 | What fresh confession of faith was made at the Council of Constantinople? |
7284 | What fresh heresy had arisen? |
7284 | What general expectation prevailed? |
7284 | What generous action was done by the Ephraimites? |
7284 | What good works were done? |
7284 | What great Phoenician city had they conquered? |
7284 | What great act of self- sacrifice marked the last Triumph? |
7284 | What great confession of Catholic truth was drawn up at this time? |
7284 | What great deliverance was given to the Jews? |
7284 | What great deliverances were vouchsafed to Jehoshaphat? |
7284 | What great mercy was vouchsafed to Hezekiah? |
7284 | What had Augustus been told at a heathen temple? |
7284 | What had been the doctrine of Joseph? |
7284 | What had been the intention of Titus with regard to the Temple? |
7284 | What had been the object of the Law which St. John brought to a point? |
7284 | What had been the promise to Abraham''s faith? |
7284 | What harm did Charles le Magne''s grant do at Rome? |
7284 | What harm did the Jesuits do at home? |
7284 | What heresies were there taught? |
7284 | What hymns are ascribed to St. Ambrose? |
7284 | What injury did Nebuchadnezzar inflict in 606? |
7284 | What instance of self- denying faith was given by them? |
7284 | What interference befell the Jews? |
7284 | What is a Father of the Church? |
7284 | What is a heresy? |
7284 | What is counted from this date? |
7284 | What is the Greek translation called? |
7284 | What is the description of Nineveh? |
7284 | What is the hymn of praise said to have been sung by them in the furnace? |
7284 | What is the inward work of the Holy Spirit? |
7284 | What is the meaning of Catholic? |
7284 | What is the meaning of Church? |
7284 | What is the meaning of the name Jerusalem? |
7284 | What is the present state of Idumea? |
7284 | What is the present state of Nineveh? |
7284 | What is the tradition about the Creed? |
7284 | What is told us of St. Ignatius as a child? |
7284 | What judgment is recorded of Daniel in the Apocrypha? |
7284 | What kind of country was Canaan? |
7284 | What kind of kings followed Ptolemy Euergetes? |
7284 | What kind of place was Egypt? |
7284 | What kings reigned next? |
7284 | What lands were peopled by Ham''s children? |
7284 | What language was much learnt from his time? |
7284 | What languages were everywhere spoken? |
7284 | What led to the conversion of the English? |
7284 | What marriage took place between the royal families of Egypt and Syria? |
7284 | What measure was taken to keep Isaac from becoming mixed with idolators? |
7284 | What miseries came upon the west? |
7284 | What name was first given at Antioch? |
7284 | What name was given to the patriarch of Rome? |
7284 | What nations had attacked the Romans? |
7284 | What offence was given at Thessalonica? |
7284 | What other conquest did Nebuchadnezzar effect? |
7284 | What partial reformation took place in Israel? |
7284 | What people were brought to the West Indies to work for the colonists? |
7284 | What portion first was lost to Rome? |
7284 | What power did Charles le Magne give the Pope? |
7284 | What prayer is known by his name? |
7284 | What presumptuous act did Pompey commit? |
7284 | What profanation did Ahaz commit in the Temple? |
7284 | What profane attempt did Julian make? |
7284 | What proof did the other princes give of their faith? |
7284 | What proofs were given that the Lord is the only God? |
7284 | What prophecy thus had a fulfilment? |
7284 | What prophecy was fulfilled by Judea having an Edomite king? |
7284 | What prophet warned him? |
7284 | What prophet was carried off in this captivity? |
7284 | What prophet was sent to warn the Ninevites? |
7284 | What prophet was then carried captive? |
7284 | What prophetic book besides Jonah is concerned with Nineveh? |
7284 | What punishment did the Fall bring on man? |
7284 | What purification did Mattathias make? |
7284 | What race of Mahometans came from the east? |
7284 | What rebuke did Haggai give the Jews? |
7284 | What reformation did Josiah make? |
7284 | What reformations did Ezra and Nehemiah bring about? |
7284 | What regulations for the Roman empire were made by Augustus? |
7284 | What remains have we of the ancient Egyptians? |
7284 | What request was made by these heathen colonists? |
7284 | What respect did they pay to religion? |
7284 | What revenge was taken for the murder of Berenice? |
7284 | What revolt took place in the time of Darius? |
7284 | What reward did the Pope hold out? |
7284 | What rule did the Pope bear? |
7284 | What rule did the Roman Church make about the clergy? |
7284 | What sacrilegious attempt was made in the time of Seleueus? |
7284 | What saints lived about that time? |
7284 | What schism arose in England? |
7284 | What sea was named from them? |
7284 | What signs of the covenant did they carry with them? |
7284 | What story is told of Zerubbabel''s gaining favour with Darius? |
7284 | What story is told of his destroying the worship of Bel? |
7284 | What success did Jonathan gain? |
7284 | What success did the crusaders meet with? |
7284 | What terrible apostasy took place among the Jews? |
7284 | What terrible massacre did Saul commit in his hatred of David? |
7284 | What that on which Pilate condemned Him? |
7284 | What title did Zerubbabel bear? |
7284 | What token of faith was required of the Israelites at their departure? |
7284 | What tongue was commonly spoken after the captivity? |
7284 | What translation did Luther make? |
7284 | What translation was made in the time of Ptolemy Philadelphus? |
7284 | What tribes were left to him? |
7284 | What troubles did Pompey meet with at home? |
7284 | What two names had the successor of Josiah? |
7284 | What victories did the Ninevites gain? |
7284 | What vows were knights made to take? |
7284 | What war was predicted in Daniel xi.? |
7284 | What warnings did he receive? |
7284 | What wars were preached in the Middle Ages? |
7284 | What was Chittim? |
7284 | What was Daniel called? |
7284 | What was David''s great excellence? |
7284 | What was Ezekiel''s lamentation for the sons of Josiah? |
7284 | What was Helena''s expedition to Jerusalem? |
7284 | What was Herod''s last crime? |
7284 | What was Jehoshaphat''s great error? |
7284 | What was Josiah''s situation with regard to his neighbours? |
7284 | What was Nebuchadnezzar''s second dream? |
7284 | What was Nehemiah''s great work? |
7284 | What was Saul''s great error? |
7284 | What was Simon''s work with regard to the Holy Scripture? |
7284 | What was Zedekiah''s duty? |
7284 | What was fulfilled by the one great Sacrifice? |
7284 | What was his character? |
7284 | What was his false prophecy called? |
7284 | What was his first mission? |
7284 | What was his first station? |
7284 | What was his great act of tyranny? |
7284 | What was his last thanksgiving? |
7284 | What was it that made the Roman power so terrible? |
7284 | What was it that prevented the Jews from recognizing the Messiah? |
7284 | What was meant by an indulgence? |
7284 | What was meant by purgatory? |
7284 | What was revealed to Daniel in his last vision? |
7284 | What was revealed to St. John in a vision? |
7284 | What was the Greek power in Nebuchadnezzar''s dream? |
7284 | What was the Roman standard? |
7284 | What was the Tabernacle to figure? |
7284 | What was the accusation on which the Jews condemned Him? |
7284 | What was the beginning of David''s kingdom? |
7284 | What was the bishopric of St. Ambrose? |
7284 | What was the cause of the tumult at Ephesus? |
7284 | What was the character of Ahaz? |
7284 | What was the character of Amon? |
7284 | What was the character of Cyrus? |
7284 | What was the chief Arabian tribe called? |
7284 | What was the condition of Jerusalem? |
7284 | What was the consequence of French unbelief? |
7284 | What was the consequence of their falling from the true worship? |
7284 | What was the consequence? |
7284 | What was the danger of the Western Church? |
7284 | What was the date of Constantine''s conversion? |
7284 | What was the date of Ezra''s arrival? |
7284 | What was the death of Eleazar? |
7284 | What was the death of St. Mark? |
7284 | What was the death of the apostate Menelam? |
7284 | What was the decision of the first Council? |
7284 | What was the desolation of Jerusalem? |
7284 | What was the difference between a martyr and a confessor? |
7284 | What was the difference between circumcision and baptism? |
7284 | What was the difference between the Medes and Persians? |
7284 | What was the difference between the covenant with Abraham, and the covenant on Mount Sinai? |
7284 | What was the difference between the sin of Jeroboam and the sin of Ahab? |
7284 | What was the difference between the treatment which the Apostles received from the Jews and Romans? |
7284 | What was the effect on Nebuchadnezzar? |
7284 | What was the effect upon Judah? |
7284 | What was the end of Antiochus Epiphanes? |
7284 | What was the end of Cambyses? |
7284 | What was the end of Herod Agrippa? |
7284 | What was the end of Jehoiakim? |
7284 | What was the end of Nineveh? |
7284 | What was the end of Pilate? |
7284 | What was the end of Saul? |
7284 | What was the end of Seleueus? |
7284 | What was the end of Simon? |
7284 | What was the end of the Pharaohs? |
7284 | What was the end of the house of Jeroboam? |
7284 | What was the faith of the Teutons? |
7284 | What was the fate of Ahab? |
7284 | What was the first dream of Nebuchadnezzar? |
7284 | What was the first measure of Zerubbabel and Joshua? |
7284 | What was the first vision of Daniel? |
7284 | What was the further history of St. Barnabas? |
7284 | What was the great expedition of Xerxes? |
7284 | What was the great merit of Josiah? |
7284 | What was the great sin of France? |
7284 | What was the great wilfulness of these kings? |
7284 | What was the great work of Judaa Maccabà ¦ us? |
7284 | What was the great work of St. Jerome? |
7284 | What was the heresy of Arius? |
7284 | What was the history of Herod Agrippa? |
7284 | What was the interpretation? |
7284 | What was the interpretation? |
7284 | What was the manner of his death? |
7284 | What was the martyrdom of St. John the Baptist? |
7284 | What was the meaning and the fulfilment? |
7284 | What was the meaning of the name Apostles? |
7284 | What was the meaning of the two horns of the Ram? |
7284 | What was the meaning? |
7284 | What was the most learned of all cities? |
7284 | What was the name of all the Greek kings of Egypt? |
7284 | What was the name of the great King of Macedon? |
7284 | What was the name of the successor of Antiochus? |
7284 | What was the next conquest attempted by the Assyrians? |
7284 | What was the object of Augustus? |
7284 | What was the occasion of the appointment of the deacons? |
7284 | What was the occasion of the first Council of the Church? |
7284 | What was the old way of choosing a bishop? |
7284 | What was the only inheritance left for him? |
7284 | What was the power which was to overcome the Assyrian? |
7284 | What was the proof of Daniel''s faith? |
7284 | What was the prophecy of the Redeemer during this period? |
7284 | What was the punishment of Pompey''s sacrilege? |
7284 | What was the punishment of the Israelites? |
7284 | What was the real cause of this taxation? |
7284 | What was the rebuke for his display? |
7284 | What was the religion of the Persians? |
7284 | What was the remarkable difference between these and Christian martyrs? |
7284 | What was the remarkable end of Galerius? |
7284 | What was the second order of the ministry? |
7284 | What was the second vision of Daniel? |
7284 | What was the sedition of Antioch? |
7284 | What was the sin of Amaziah? |
7284 | What was the sin of Uzziah? |
7284 | What was the site of the Temple? |
7284 | What was the state of all the world? |
7284 | What was the state of the Persian court? |
7284 | What was the story of the Thundering Legion? |
7284 | What was the story of the impostor, Smerdis? |
7284 | What was the synagogue service? |
7284 | What was the token of the covenant with Abraham? |
7284 | What was the trust of the Babylonians? |
7284 | What was the work of St. Benedict? |
7284 | What was the year of Alexander''s death? |
7284 | What was the year of the taking of Jerusalem? |
7284 | What was their first journey? |
7284 | What was their practice on the Lord''s Day? |
7284 | What was therefore done when the Law was read? |
7284 | What was to be his punishment? |
7284 | What was to be the recompence for the toils of the siege of Tyre? |
7284 | What were Darius''s two vain expeditions? |
7284 | What were David''s conquests? |
7284 | What were David''s exploits? |
7284 | What were Ezekiel''s chief prophecies of the Redeemer? |
7284 | What were Isaiah''s chief prophecies of our Lord? |
7284 | What were Luther''s party called, and why? |
7284 | What were St. Lawrence''s treasures? |
7284 | What were built at this time? |
7284 | What were his troubles at Jerusalem? |
7284 | What were the Roman triumphs? |
7284 | What were the believers in the new Covenant to be called? |
7284 | What were the chief cities of the Phoenicians? |
7284 | What were the conquests predicted in the 15th verse? |
7284 | What were the different missions of the Apostles? |
7284 | What were the disciples of Sadoc called? |
7284 | What were the doctrines of the Sadducees? |
7284 | What were the events of Domitian''s persecution? |
7284 | What were the events of his voyage to Rome? |
7284 | What were the feelings of the people? |
7284 | What were the first- fruits of His coming? |
7284 | What were the four horns? |
7284 | What were the habits of the Edomites? |
7284 | What were the habits of the early Christians? |
7284 | What were the habits of the monks and nuns? |
7284 | What were the idols of Egypt? |
7284 | What were the instances of St. John''s love? |
7284 | What were the most remarkable martyrdoms? |
7284 | What were the names of the Greek kings of Syria? |
7284 | What were the rejoicings? |
7284 | What were the requirements and promises of the Koran? |
7284 | What were the sacrifices to foreshow? |
7284 | What were the sufferings of Jeremiah in the siege of Jerusalem? |
7284 | What were the terms of the covenant with Abraham? |
7284 | What were the terms of the covenant with Noah? |
7284 | What were those called who held aloof from them? |
7284 | What were those called who retired from the world? |
7284 | What were written at Corinth? |
7284 | What wickedness was being perpetrated at Jerusalem? |
7284 | What wonders were wrought on the Egyptians? |
7284 | What work did Simon complete? |
7284 | What work did the Jesuits do in South America? |
7284 | What writings did St. Augustine leave? |
7284 | What yoke did the Romans impose on Syria? |
7284 | When did St. Paul''s third journey begin? |
7284 | When did the Israelite kingdom begin? |
7284 | When was Constantine baptized? |
7284 | Where did he die? |
7284 | Where did the Edomites live? |
7284 | Where did the ark first rest? |
7284 | Where had Edom''s fell been foretold? |
7284 | Where had directions been given for the new Temple? |
7284 | Where had the fall of Tyre been predicted? |
7284 | Where had the greatness of Joseph''s children been foretold? |
7284 | Where is He that put His Holy Spirit within him?" |
7284 | Where is the ruin of Egypt foretold? |
7284 | Where was the Ark? |
7284 | Where was the Samaritan temple? |
7284 | Where was the first seat of the Tabernacle in Canaan? |
7284 | Where was the latter part of St. John''s life spent? |
7284 | Where was the meeting held? |
7284 | Where were the Israelites placed? |
7284 | Where were they brought to a stop? |
7284 | Which Apostle was first martyred, and by whom? |
7284 | Which Epistles were written in his third journey? |
7284 | Which Gospel is said to have been here written? |
7284 | Which Gospel was superintended by St. Peter? |
7284 | Which King of Nineveh was contemporary with Ahaz? |
7284 | Which apostles left writings? |
7284 | Which are Calvinist? |
7284 | Which are Greek Catholic? |
7284 | Which are Lutheran? |
7284 | Which book in the Holy Scripture mourns over it? |
7284 | Which by the English and Dutch? |
7284 | Which day of the week was to be kept in remembrance of their rescue? |
7284 | Which is St. Paul''s last Epistle? |
7284 | Which of Isaac''s sons was chosen? |
7284 | Which of Noah''s sons was chosen? |
7284 | Which of the Greek princes came in contact with Palestine? |
7284 | Which part of America was settled by the Spaniards? |
7284 | Which son of Abraham inherited the promise? |
7284 | Which son of Jacob was to be father of the promised Seed? |
7284 | Which was the first of the Gospels? |
7284 | Which was the first persecution? |
7284 | Which were the two chief Greek cities? |
7284 | Whither was Jehoahaz carried captive? |
7284 | Who could withstand such wonders? |
7284 | Whom did God separate among the sons of Shem? |
7284 | Whom did they choose into the place of Judas? |
7284 | Whose was the fiercest persecution? |
7284 | Why are Calvinists called Presbyterians? |
7284 | Why are churches turned to the east? |
7284 | Why are the people allowed to come into the chancel, not kept out like the Israelites? |
7284 | Why could he not be set at liberty? |
7284 | Why could not the Holy Land be kept? |
7284 | Why could not the Temple be saved? |
7284 | Why could she not entirely destroy the seed royal? |
7284 | Why did Ahaz seek the alliance of Tiglath Pileser? |
7284 | Why did Sapricius fail? |
7284 | Why did Trajan dislike them so much? |
7284 | Why did he hold out against her? |
7284 | Why did not Moses enter the land of Canaan? |
7284 | Why did not the Israelites occupy the whole of their territory at once? |
7284 | Why did the Greeks object to the new words in the Creed of Constantinople? |
7284 | Why did the Italian clergy hinder inquiry? |
7284 | Why did the Pope think he had a right over them? |
7284 | Why does the font stand near the entrance? |
7284 | Why is it supposed that his father was only the adopted son of Jehoiachin? |
7284 | Why was Abel''s offering the more acceptable? |
7284 | Why was Archelaus deposed? |
7284 | Why was Esau rejected? |
7284 | Why was Jeremiah persecuted? |
7284 | Why was all intercourse with the Samaritans forbidden? |
7284 | Why was crucifixion the manner of His death? |
7284 | Why was he forced to go out to battle? |
7284 | Why was it not a true Council? |
7284 | Why was not David permitted to build the Temple? |
7284 | Why was not the Creed commonly rehearsed? |
7284 | Why was the Law of Moses so awful to Josiah? |
7284 | Why was the city more than usually filled? |
7284 | Why was the family of Mattathias called Asmonean? |
7284 | Why were the Israelites to be kept separate from other nations? |
7284 | Why were the Jews so utterly rejected? |
7284 | Why were the people so ignorant? |
7284 | Why were they like iron? |
7284 | Why would not Mordecai bow down to Haman? |
7284 | With what outward signs was His coming manifested? |
7284 | With whom did Jonathan make a treaty? |
7284 | where the Light upon the Mercy- seat? |
7284 | where the Urim and Thummim? |
7284 | where the manna? |
7284 | xi.? |
4687 | ''S''at so? |
4687 | ''S''at so? |
4687 | A nurse? |
4687 | A strike is pretty hard, when you have these to think of, is n''t it? |
4687 | A writer? |
4687 | All? 4687 And Billy, is he the one they talk to, the Carpenters I mean-- the authorities?" |
4687 | And Ma yells up,''What are you two layin''awake about?'' |
4687 | And Mary Peacock-- did you know her? 4687 And a little bit mad in spots?" |
4687 | And are Mr. Oliver''s-- are the men out? |
4687 | And he-- he cares, does he? |
4687 | And how''s Alfie doing? |
4687 | And how''s that? |
4687 | And if we were engaged it would be all right, is that it? |
4687 | And it''s all right? 4687 And just what has a strike like this to do with that, Billy?" |
4687 | And no''Halma''? |
4687 | And now, children,said the writer, when at last they were in the empty, chilly darkness of the street,"where can I get you a carriage? |
4687 | And now, why do n''t you go to bed, Jinny darling? |
4687 | And pwhats dthat, me dar- r- rlin''? |
4687 | And the day we marked up the steps with chalk and Auntie sent us out with wet rags? |
4687 | And to whom is this book going to be dedicated? |
4687 | And were you married then? |
4687 | And what about Jo? |
4687 | And what about the chiffon? |
4687 | And what about you, Sue? |
4687 | And what are your own plans, Sue? |
4687 | And what are your own plans, Sue? |
4687 | And what are your plans for to- morrow, girls? |
4687 | And what does Mr. Oliver say? |
4687 | And what does Verriker say of your eyes, Jinny? |
4687 | And what''s the significance of all that? |
4687 | And when do you think, children? |
4687 | And will she be cured? |
4687 | And will you really let it stay that way? |
4687 | And you will let me think it over? |
4687 | And you-- are you still crazy about that mutt? |
4687 | And-- and is there much suffering yet? |
4687 | Any plan for to- day, Sue? |
4687 | Anything I can do, Mary Lou? |
4687 | Anything new? |
4687 | Are n''t these cunnin'', Lou? |
4687 | Are n''t we all born pretty much as we''re going to be? 4687 Are n''t you coming, Em?" |
4687 | Are n''t you going over for the tennis? |
4687 | Are the Saunders here? |
4687 | Are we all actors? 4687 Are we all ready?" |
4687 | Are we going to have lunch to- day? |
4687 | Are you dated for to- morrow night? |
4687 | Are you going as far as Japan, my dear? |
4687 | Are you going to be open at all to- morrow? |
4687 | Are you so happy, Bill? |
4687 | Are you so sure that you have n''t a vocation, Georgie? |
4687 | Are you sure you''ve read every word on that page, Bill,--every little word? |
4687 | Are you taking something for it? |
4687 | Are you trying to throw me down? 4687 Aunt Josephine,"Susan said, really shaken out of her nonsense by the serious tone,"do you honestly think it''s a drawback? |
4687 | Beg pardon? 4687 Beg pardon?" |
4687 | Bill, do n''t you honestly think that they''re smarter than other children, or is it just because they''re mine? |
4687 | Billy, do you love me? |
4687 | Billy, how could I? 4687 Billy, why are n''t you asleep?" |
4687 | Billy,said Susan, taking his arm and walking him along very rapidly,"I''m going away--""Going away?" |
4687 | But Billy has a little preliminary conference in his room first? |
4687 | But I''m with Georgie now,--unless,she added prettily,"you''ll let me stay here for a day or two?" |
4687 | But Ma-- Ma and I-- and Sue, too, do n''t you, Sue? |
4687 | But WHY am I different? |
4687 | But are n''t there some exceptions? |
4687 | But better than all,Mary Lou announced,"that great German muscle doctor has been twice to see Mary,--isn''t that amazing? |
4687 | But do n''t you wish we did n''t? |
4687 | But do you love me? |
4687 | But have n''t you noticed how Ella tries to get you away from me? 4687 But honestly, Sue, do n''t you get mad when you think that about the only standard of the world is money?" |
4687 | But how can it be annulled, Mary Lou? |
4687 | But how did you get it? |
4687 | But how did you get it? |
4687 | But if the rich man was just as good and brave and honest and true as the poor one? |
4687 | But in the fall---she made a bold appeal to his interest,"--in the fall I think I shall go to New York?" |
4687 | But is he here? |
4687 | But suppose you''re one of those persons who get into a groove, and simply ca n''t live? 4687 But vurry, vurry de- ah,"supplemented Peter,"are n''t we?" |
4687 | But we never said nothing, did we, Gert? 4687 But what''s the difference?" |
4687 | But why wo n''t you and Miss Lord run up to see Chrissy for a few moments, Miss Brown? 4687 But why? |
4687 | But why? |
4687 | But you do n''t think that the poor, as a class, are happier than the rich? |
4687 | But you hate to go, do n''t you? |
4687 | But you will be when he asks you? |
4687 | But you would n''t marry just for that, dear? 4687 But you, you villain-- where''ve you been?" |
4687 | But, Aunt Jo, what does she pay? |
4687 | But, Auntie, are n''t they going to be divorced? |
4687 | But, Bill, how do we know we can manage it financially? |
4687 | But, Bill,said Susan to- night,"would n''t you like to order once without reading the price first and then looking back to see what it was? |
4687 | But, Billy, does n''t that seem terrible? 4687 But, Peter, is there really something in it?" |
4687 | But, Stephen-- what about tickets? |
4687 | But, Sue, shall you be content to have Billy slave as he is slaving now,she presently went on,"right on into middle- age?" |
4687 | But, Thorny,she presently submitted,"is n''t Peter Coleman in college?" |
4687 | But, darling, you honestly are n''t afraid? 4687 But, of course, if Mamma takes Baby abroad in the spring,--you see how it is? |
4687 | But,--good heavens, what happened? |
4687 | But-- can''t you see? 4687 But-- it might n''t be so-- with a rich man?" |
4687 | Ca n''t we have dinner together this evening, Sue? 4687 Can a nice girl DO that?" |
4687 | Can you HEAR me? 4687 Can you beat it?" |
4687 | Conceited? 4687 Could n''t he be cured, Miss Baker?" |
4687 | Could n''t? 4687 D''ye know what the old man is going to do now? |
4687 | D- d- did we? |
4687 | Did Ken say anything to you? |
4687 | Did YOU know that? |
4687 | Did he call? 4687 Did he call?" |
4687 | Did he send you a Christmas present? |
4687 | Did n''t I? 4687 Did n''t Peter send it to you?" |
4687 | Did n''t you like him? |
4687 | Did n''t you nearly DIE, Ma? |
4687 | Did n''t, hey? |
4687 | Did she-- did she seem to think it was odd, Betts? |
4687 | Did you know I was asked to the Juniors this year? |
4687 | Did you notice that Peyton Hamilton leaned over and said something to me very quickly, in a low voice, this morning? |
4687 | Did-- did Miss Thornton get home all right? |
4687 | Do I know him? |
4687 | Do I look like a person about to go to a Browning Cotillion, or to take a dip in the Pacific? |
4687 | Do I not know them myself? |
4687 | Do n''t let me interrupt you, but is Susan here? |
4687 | Do n''t that look like twenty cents? |
4687 | Do n''t the house seem still? 4687 Do n''t you LOVE it?" |
4687 | Do n''t you find her very dear and simple? |
4687 | Do n''t you know that a man has no respect for a girl who does n''t keep him a little at a distance, dear? |
4687 | Do n''t you like him? |
4687 | Do n''t you love it when we stop people on the crossings? |
4687 | Do n''t you love it? 4687 Do n''t you suppose I''d much RATHER not work?" |
4687 | Do n''t you want to take your hat off, Sue? |
4687 | Do n''t you? |
4687 | Do ye feel like ye could eat a little mite, Pa? |
4687 | Do you SUPPOSE so? |
4687 | Do you care a little, Susan? |
4687 | Do you know Pompilia? 4687 Do you know how to stuff them, Anna?" |
4687 | Do you know where Mrs. Fox went to? |
4687 | Do you like that, son? 4687 Do you love me, Billy?" |
4687 | Do you mean that she wo n''t let him bring Georgie there? |
4687 | Do you mean that you do n''t think he ever meant to get a divorce? |
4687 | Do you mean that you''ve been facing this for a month? 4687 Do you mean they-- FIRED you?" |
4687 | Do you mind my asking, Sue? |
4687 | Do you really think you''ll be rich some day, Billy? |
4687 | Do you really want me to take the boys away for a few days? |
4687 | Do you remember Miss Fish,--the old girl whose canary we hit with a ball? 4687 Do you think we will ever reach our ideals, Aunt Jo, as she has hers?" |
4687 | Do you think you can deceive me about it? |
4687 | Do you wonder people go crazy to get hold of money? |
4687 | Do you, Willie darling? |
4687 | Does anybody change? |
4687 | Does n''t he? |
4687 | Does n''t it seem FUNNY to you that we''re right in the middle of a strike, Bill? |
4687 | Does n''t it seem a shame? |
4687 | Does n''t that seem horrible? 4687 Does n''t the darling look comfortable and countryish, Bill?" |
4687 | Does n''t this kitchen look awful? |
4687 | Does this new thing worry you? |
4687 | Eleanor Harkness? 4687 Emily home?" |
4687 | Engaged? |
4687 | Everything else being equal, Sue,she pursued,"would n''t you rather be rich?" |
4687 | Excuse me,said Susan,"but do you know where Mr. William Oliver lives, now?" |
4687 | Fall? |
4687 | Feeling better? |
4687 | Friends? |
4687 | Gee, why not? |
4687 | Get busy at what? |
4687 | Get the butter, Mary Lou? |
4687 | Girls gone? |
4687 | Give her? 4687 Gosh, you''re crazy about it, are n''t you?" |
4687 | Green tea, dear? 4687 Had you a nurse in mind?" |
4687 | Had your breakfast? |
4687 | Has she been in bed? |
4687 | Has who come? |
4687 | Hat come? |
4687 | Have you any fault to find with Auntie''s provision for you, dear? |
4687 | He might do more good that way than in any other,mourned Anna rebelliously,"and my goodness, Sue, is n''t his first duty to you and the children?" |
4687 | He really has ever so much better brains than I have, do n''t you know? |
4687 | He said a man named Edward Harris---"Sure it was n''t Frank Harris? |
4687 | He-- WON''T? |
4687 | He-- but he-- he makes love to you, does n''t he? |
4687 | He-- he was glad, was n''t he? 4687 Headache?" |
4687 | Hello, Dan, hello, Gene; how are ye, Jim? |
4687 | Hello, Sue, that your oldest? 4687 Heroic? |
4687 | How about a fool trip to the Chutes to- morrow night? |
4687 | How about it, Sue? |
4687 | How about it, Sue? |
4687 | How are all of them? |
4687 | How are we better? |
4687 | How do I get to the library? |
4687 | How do you do, Miss Brown? |
4687 | How do you do, Peter? |
4687 | How do you do, how do you do? |
4687 | How do you mean that it''s not easy? 4687 How do you mean?" |
4687 | How goes it to- day? |
4687 | How late did you walk, Bill? |
4687 | How long are you going to call me that? |
4687 | How long are you going to wait? |
4687 | How much are these? 4687 How much money do you want?" |
4687 | How much? |
4687 | How should I take it? |
4687 | How''s it going, Jarge? |
4687 | How''s she? |
4687 | How-- why should that be so good? |
4687 | However, the next morning we rushed over to the Cudahys-- you remember that magnificent old person you and Conrad met here? 4687 Huh?" |
4687 | I adore you, Sue-- isn''t this fun? |
4687 | I beg pardon? 4687 I beg your pardon--?" |
4687 | I do n''t? 4687 I may not do that--""You may n''t? |
4687 | I said-- but where are you going? |
4687 | I think Fillmore Street''s as gay as Kearney, do n''t you, Mary Lou? 4687 I thought one day we said that when I was forty- five and you were forty- one we were going to get married?" |
4687 | I want this one-- I want these, please,--will you give me this one? |
4687 | I will the minute I get another,said Susan, morosely, adding anxiously,"Do I look a perfect fright, Thorny? |
4687 | I wonder if Ma would miss us if we took the car out to the end of the line? 4687 I wonder if, when we get to another world, EVERYTHING we do here will seem just ridiculous and funny?" |
4687 | I''ll bet he gets a good salary? |
4687 | I''ll get right into my things, a breath of air will do us both good, wo n''t it, Sue? |
4687 | I''m going to have this, are n''t I, Miss Brown? 4687 I''m not a monkey, and_ I_ do n''t think I''m a madcap? |
4687 | I-- get out? |
4687 | I? 4687 I? |
4687 | I? 4687 I?" |
4687 | I? |
4687 | If one of those girls came to us a stranger,Susan declared, with a heaving breast,"do you suppose we''d treat her like that?" |
4687 | If you do n''t care, why are you talking about it? |
4687 | Is either of you ladies sailing? |
4687 | Is n''t it damned interesting? |
4687 | Is n''t it gorgeous, girls? 4687 Is n''t it? |
4687 | Is n''t she sweet? |
4687 | Is n''t she wise? |
4687 | Is n''t this fun? |
4687 | Is n''t this little one with a baby''s face sweet? |
4687 | Is n''t this thrilling, Sue? |
4687 | Is that all? |
4687 | Is that so? |
4687 | Is that the boys coming back? |
4687 | Isabel? |
4687 | It does n''t sound like me now, does it? 4687 It would be the very quietest and quickest and simplest wedding that ever was, would n''t it?" |
4687 | It''s about the office, is n''t it? |
4687 | Just put your head in the door and say,''Mother, how do you stuff a turkey?'' |
4687 | Kate Richardson simply has n''t come, and if you''ll fill in until she does----You say hearts? |
4687 | Listen,said Miss Thornton, in a low tone,"I met George Banks on the deck this afternoon, see? |
4687 | Lizzie, who was it? |
4687 | Look here, who you pushing? |
4687 | Look there, Bill, what are those people getting? |
4687 | Lord, are n''t you working now? |
4687 | Lord, did n''t you hate French? |
4687 | Lord, where do all these widows come from? |
4687 | Love- letter, Sue? |
4687 | Mad at me, Thorny? |
4687 | Mama, did you ask that woman here to play cards? |
4687 | Married? |
4687 | Marry you? |
4687 | Me? |
4687 | Miss Brown, did you see this bill Mr. Brauer speaks of? |
4687 | Miss Cashell, did you? |
4687 | Miss Saunders? |
4687 | My fault? |
4687 | My little girl,he said, gravely,"did you think that I was going to leave you behind?" |
4687 | My very dear little girl, what IS it? |
4687 | New York? |
4687 | Next waltz-- one after that, then? |
4687 | No, but who have you got a date with? |
4687 | No, does it? 4687 No,"he said,"whatever comes of it, or however we suffer for it, I love you, and you love me, do n''t you, Susan?" |
4687 | No; but is it really and truly serious this time, Bill? |
4687 | Nobody else knows? |
4687 | Noisy, are n''t we, Sue? |
4687 | Not a quarrel with Peter? |
4687 | Not between you and Billy? |
4687 | Not dying? 4687 Now I was talking to Mrs. Carroll Sunday--""Oh, how are the Carrolls?" |
4687 | Now you mark my words, Susan, it wo n''t last-- things like this don''t--"But-- but do n''t they sometimes last, for years? |
4687 | Now, Bill, why do you worry---? |
4687 | Of course she''s better-- You''re all right, are n''t you? |
4687 | Of me? |
4687 | Oh, Billy,Susan''s eyes widened childishly,"do n''t you honestly think so?" |
4687 | Oh, Sue-- right down at the end of Fifth Avenue-- but you do n''t know where that is, do you? 4687 Oh, Susan?" |
4687 | Oh, and how''s Anna? |
4687 | Oh, are we going to be married? |
4687 | Oh, have you a ranch? |
4687 | Oh, honestly? |
4687 | Oh, what''s your hurry? |
4687 | Oh, why must you go, Sue? |
4687 | Oh, will you? |
4687 | Oh---? |
4687 | Oh? 4687 Oh?" |
4687 | On the Nippon Maru? |
4687 | Or''Has the governess of the gardener some meat and a pen''? |
4687 | Ought he marry? |
4687 | Ought n''t this be firm? |
4687 | Oysters? |
4687 | Pauline, put these back, will you, please? |
4687 | Perhaps tea will help it? |
4687 | Perhaps you''ve promised the next? |
4687 | Peter Coleman, is n''t it? |
4687 | Peter Coleman? |
4687 | Peter is in Santa Barbara, is n''t he? |
4687 | Peter, could n''t you dine with us, at Auntie''s, I mean? |
4687 | Peter? 4687 Planked steak,"Susan hunted for it,"would it be three dollars?" |
4687 | Positorily not? 4687 Quite a French sentence,''does the uncle know the aunt''?" |
4687 | Radiate happiness? |
4687 | Remember Stephen Bocqueraz that Brownie introduced to you just before supper? |
4687 | S''listen, Susan,said Miss Thornton, leaning on the desk,"are you going to the big game?" |
4687 | Say, Sue, ought n''t those blankets be out here, airing? |
4687 | Say, did you ever know that he made a pretty good thing out of Mrs. Carroll''s window washer? |
4687 | Say, let''s go over to the hotel and have a dance, what? |
4687 | Say, listen, Susan, can you come over to the Carrolls, Sunday? 4687 Say, look here, look here-- didn''t my uncle introduce us once, on a car, or something? |
4687 | Say, what''s that song about''I''d leave my happy home for you,''Bert? |
4687 | See here, Miss Brown,she called out, after a few moments, noticing Susan,"do n''t you want to come for a little spin with me?" |
4687 | See, now,said Madame Vera in a low tone, as she followed Susan to the door,"You do not come into my workshop, eh?" |
4687 | Serious? 4687 Shall I ask Santa Claus to send it?" |
4687 | Shall I get that? |
4687 | Shall you go to Nevada City with the Eastmans, Sue? |
4687 | Shall you stay here until Sunday, or would you rather be with your own people? |
4687 | She fainted away!--Didn''t you hear her fall?--I did n''t hear a thing!--Well, you fainted, did n''t you?--You felt faint, did n''t you? |
4687 | She says these are five, Lizzie; do you like them better than the little holly books? |
4687 | She''s quite wonderful, is n''t she? |
4687 | Sister, is it? |
4687 | So he goes away to Japan, does he? 4687 So you''re not going out with me any more?" |
4687 | Somebody coming to see you, dear? |
4687 | Stephen ca n''t shake his wife, I suppose? |
4687 | Still sleepy? |
4687 | Still, you could rent that house? |
4687 | Sue him? 4687 Sue, are n''t we going to have fun-- doing things like this all our lives?" |
4687 | Sue, dear,said the mother,"are you going to be warm enough up in the forest? |
4687 | Sue, do n''t you think it would be fun to try some of me in my Mandarin coat? 4687 Sue,--you wo n''t be angry?" |
4687 | Sunday too soon? 4687 Sure, but why do n''t you do''em yourself, Susan, and save your two bits?" |
4687 | Surely you have n''t equivocated about it, Susan? |
4687 | Surely, you''re going to open your presents to- night, Nance? |
4687 | Susan, when I was looking straight up into Mrs. Carter''s face,--you know the way I always do!--she laughed at me, and said I was a madcap monkey? 4687 Susan, you little turkey- buzzard--"It was the old Peter!--"where''ve you been all evening? |
4687 | Susan,he said, coming back, after a moment,"have I ever done anything to warrant-- to make you distrust me?" |
4687 | Susan,he said, very quietly,"you are my girl-- you are MY girl, will you let me take care of you? |
4687 | Susan? 4687 Susan?" |
4687 | Tell everyone that I''m lying down with a terrible headache, wo n''t you? |
4687 | That other fellow, eh? |
4687 | That you, Susan? 4687 That''ll suit you, Wil''lum, I dunno?" |
4687 | That''s so, he was coming down to- day, was n''t he? |
4687 | That''s so-- I was crazy about her once, was n''t I? |
4687 | Then hustle and unpack the eats, will you? 4687 Then you can see how it would cut a fellow all up to leave them?" |
4687 | There was a crash? |
4687 | Tired, dear? |
4687 | To whom? |
4687 | Too tired to go to church with Mary Lou and me, dear? |
4687 | Twenty cents for WHAT? |
4687 | Two in a cup, Martini,Emily would say, settling into her seat, and the waiter would look deferentially at Susan,"The same, madam?" |
4687 | WHAT''S none of his business? |
4687 | WON''T? |
4687 | Want some chocolates? |
4687 | Want to go to a bum show at the''Central''to- night? |
4687 | Was she going to wear it? |
4687 | Was that the day I broke the pitchers, Ma? |
4687 | Was there ever such a heavenly place, Billy? |
4687 | We could send that? |
4687 | We were-- How do you do? 4687 We''ll trim up the house like always, wo n''t we, Betts?" |
4687 | We''ve only been fooling, have n''t we? |
4687 | Well, Evangeline, how''s Sat.? 4687 Well, Susan, light of my old eyes, had enough of the rotten rich?" |
4687 | Well, WOULDN''T you? |
4687 | Well, are n''t they all darlings? |
4687 | Well, are n''t we? |
4687 | Well, but what then, Sue? |
4687 | Well, do n''t you think you are? |
4687 | Well, had you ordered a pillow of violets with shaky doves? |
4687 | Well, is n''t it? |
4687 | Well, let me see-- I''ve been thinking of you lately, Sue, and wondering why you never thought of settlement work? 4687 Well, suppose we go off and have dinner somewhere, to- morrow?" |
4687 | Well, then, are we to let people know that in twenty years we intend to be married? |
4687 | Well, then, shall I get tickets for Monday night? |
4687 | Well, then, why do they live here? |
4687 | Well, what did you have to SEE her for, Mama? |
4687 | Well, what do you care? |
4687 | Well, what do you think of the Ironworks Row? |
4687 | Well, what do you think? |
4687 | Well, what do you want me to do? 4687 Well, why do n''t you come?" |
4687 | Well, why do you make such a fuss about it? |
4687 | Well, will you girls call me? 4687 Well,"he laughed,"do n''t be so polite about it!--I''ll see you to- morrow?" |
4687 | Well-- well, did he make more than THAT? |
4687 | Well--Susan turned suddenly to Betsey,"Why do n''t you trot up and ask, Betts?" |
4687 | Well--? |
4687 | Well; at one? 4687 What IS it?" |
4687 | What WOULDN''T you give to be going? 4687 What YOU''D do?" |
4687 | What about that thing with the Persian embroidery? 4687 What are you afraid of, little girl?" |
4687 | What car are you making for? |
4687 | What d''ye mean by rotten? |
4687 | What did I come here for? |
4687 | What did you say, William dear? |
4687 | What did you say? |
4687 | What do YOU think? |
4687 | What do they concede, Bill? |
4687 | What do you care if she does? |
4687 | What do you do, just watch''em? |
4687 | What do you mean? 4687 What do you pay?" |
4687 | What do you think of sponging her face off with ice- water? |
4687 | What do you think, my own girl? |
4687 | What do you think? |
4687 | What does Anna say? |
4687 | What does she know about it? |
4687 | What else did he say? |
4687 | What first, Sue? |
4687 | What for? |
4687 | What for? |
4687 | What happened? |
4687 | What have you been doing now? |
4687 | What is it, Susan? |
4687 | What is it, dear? |
4687 | What is it- what is it? |
4687 | What is it? |
4687 | What is it? |
4687 | What is it? |
4687 | What looks odd? |
4687 | What makes my girl suddenly look so sober? |
4687 | What more can I do? 4687 What new thing?" |
4687 | What shall I do, Sue? |
4687 | What sort of a gown did you want, dear? |
4687 | What the DEUCE are you raving about? |
4687 | What was your rush yesterday? |
4687 | What was? |
4687 | What were you going to wear? |
4687 | What would it cost us, Thorny? |
4687 | What would you order if you could, Bill? |
4687 | What''s all the news, Sue? 4687 What''s he doing that for?" |
4687 | What''s that? |
4687 | What''s the conference about? |
4687 | What''s the matter with our-- our getting married, Susan? 4687 What''s the matter-- very sick?" |
4687 | What''s the matter? |
4687 | What''s the matter? |
4687 | What? |
4687 | What? |
4687 | What? |
4687 | When are you boys going to Mill Valley for greens? |
4687 | When are you going to come and spend a week with me? |
4687 | When has Philip ever been such an unmitigated comfort, or Betts so thoughtful and good? |
4687 | When you came here it was just an experiment, was n''t it? |
4687 | When''d they come? |
4687 | Where shall we walk? 4687 Where''s everybody?" |
4687 | Where''s your livery stable? |
4687 | Where''ve YOU been? |
4687 | Where''ve you been all this time? 4687 Where''ve you been?" |
4687 | While--? |
4687 | Who is it, dear? |
4687 | Who said so? |
4687 | Who was it, Mary Lou? |
4687 | Who''s Georgie talking to? |
4687 | Who''s she? |
4687 | Who''s that? |
4687 | Who''s that? |
4687 | Who? 4687 Who?" |
4687 | Why a special delivery-- and why here-- and what is it? |
4687 | Why could n''t I? |
4687 | Why did n''t you walk through Front Office? |
4687 | Why do n''t you forbid Joe O''Connor the house, Auntie? |
4687 | Why do n''t you talk to me? |
4687 | Why not take a magazine agency, then? 4687 Why not?" |
4687 | Why should I be? |
4687 | Why should she? |
4687 | Why should you? |
4687 | Why would n''t it be true? |
4687 | Why would n''t they? 4687 Why, Lord; why does n''t Ella count you in on these things?" |
4687 | Why, how do I know? |
4687 | Why, what is it? |
4687 | Why, what''s the matter? |
4687 | Why? |
4687 | Will she sue him, Thorny? |
4687 | Will they get it? |
4687 | Will you come across the hall into the little library with me and talk about it for two minutes? |
4687 | Will you hurry this bill, Miss Brown? |
4687 | Will you say that I am here, Hughes? |
4687 | With the others? |
4687 | Wo n''t you sit down? 4687 Wo n''t you tell me about it?" |
4687 | Wonderful sight, is n''t it? |
4687 | Would I have come straight to you, if I had agreed? |
4687 | Would a nice girl DO that? 4687 Would n''t you honestly like another piece of plum pie, Sue?" |
4687 | Would you advise it, Aunt Jo? |
4687 | Would you care, if it did? |
4687 | Would you? |
4687 | YOU''D rather be up here just quietly with me, would n''t you, Sue? |
4687 | Yes, I noticed those, did you see these, darling? |
4687 | You believe in the law of compensation, do n''t you, Aunt Jo? |
4687 | You ca n''t do it, and you''re afraid to say so, is that it? |
4687 | You ca n''t hurt that dress, can you, Sue? |
4687 | You could n''t come, anyway, I suppose? |
4687 | You do n''t know what to do? |
4687 | You do n''t like Con? 4687 You do n''t suppose God would take her away from me, Sue, because of that nonsense about wanting a boy?" |
4687 | You gave me a little cologne bottle filled with water, and one of those spools that one braids worsted through, do you remember? |
4687 | You have n''t wasted your good money on a ticket yet, I hope, dear? |
4687 | You know that it means going away with me, little girl? |
4687 | You know that mustard- colored linen with the black embroidery that Dolly''s worn once or twice, do n''t you? |
4687 | You mean,said Susan, scarlet- cheeked,"that-- that just my going with you will be sufficient cause?" |
4687 | You said''no''? |
4687 | You see that? 4687 You wo n''t? |
4687 | You''d like that, would n''t you? |
4687 | You''re dated three- deep for Thursday night, I presume? |
4687 | You''re dead, are n''t you? |
4687 | You''re young, are n''t you? 4687 Your lead, Miss Brown---""Mine? |
4687 | Your mother''s ill? |
4687 | ''Is it a sin to whistle?'' |
4687 | ''Watts?'' |
4687 | ''Why do n''t you?'' |
4687 | ''Will you tell me,''he says,''why I have to put my wife into rooms like these?'' |
4687 | ---But you do n''t mean that you want ME?" |
4687 | ---Is it going to be too cold out here for you, Sue?" |
4687 | A child of seven?" |
4687 | A four- spot? |
4687 | After all, why should she not call? |
4687 | After we''re married?" |
4687 | And Clem of course tore our little dream to rags---""Oh, HOW?" |
4687 | And Mary Lou,--did you know that they had a little girl? |
4687 | And Susan heard a jovial echo of"Can a nice girl DO that?" |
4687 | And after that---? |
4687 | And has n''t he an awful old mother, or someone, who said that she''d never let him come home again if he married?" |
4687 | And how would the thing SOUND-- a railroad magnate owning the''Protest''?" |
4687 | And just before lunch Ma came up, and-- she looked chalk- white, did n''t she, Jinny?" |
4687 | And somebody added thoughtfully,"Can a nice girl DO that?" |
4687 | And the child-- what could she teach a child of its mother? |
4687 | And the second- hand type- writer we were always saving up for?" |
4687 | And then he says,''Yes, I knew that,''he says,''but do you know who''s going to take her place?'' |
4687 | And to come home to that dreadful WOMAN, his mother? |
4687 | And what do they say now of Jinny? |
4687 | And what was she to do now, to- morrow and the next day and the next? |
4687 | And what will theirs, in time?--Peel these, will you?" |
4687 | And what would you like best to do, Sue?" |
4687 | And what''s that?" |
4687 | And what''s this I hear of your throwing down Phil completely, and setting up a new young man?" |
4687 | And when, in November, Peter stopped her on the"deck"one day to ask her,"How about Sunday, Sue? |
4687 | And who do you suppose it was?" |
4687 | And who knows? |
4687 | And who''s home?" |
4687 | And you''ll be here in the morning as usual, Miss Lord? |
4687 | And you''re good- looking, are n''t you?" |
4687 | And, Sue, did you know, the second gong has been rung? |
4687 | And, Sue, will you wait, like a love, and see that we get something to eat at twelve-- at one? |
4687 | And, as if the thought of Josephine had suggested it, she added to Philip in a low tone:"Listen, Phil, are we going to sing to- night?" |
4687 | And, beginning thus, what would he feel after a few years of poverty, dark rooms and unpaid bills? |
4687 | Anyway, it seemed a good chance to give them a lift, do n''t you know?" |
4687 | Anyway, then Papa-- dear me, how it all comes back!--Papa says, fairly shouting,''Well, why ca n''t I have that suite?'' |
4687 | Are n''t we going to tea with Isabel Wallace?" |
4687 | Are n''t you glad you do n''t have to go?" |
4687 | Are you going to dinner there? |
4687 | Are you on? |
4687 | As Clem said, where would Billy be the minute they questioned an article of his, or gave him something for insertion, or cut his proof? |
4687 | Auntie''s well, and Mary Lou? |
4687 | Baxter?" |
4687 | Baxter?" |
4687 | Billy''s a hero, if you like,"she added, suddenly,"Did I tell you about the fracas in August?" |
4687 | Brauer?" |
4687 | Brauer?" |
4687 | But by whose decree might some of these be set aside, and ignored, while others must still be observed in the letter and the spirit? |
4687 | But how did other girls manage it? |
4687 | But if Lydia''s life was limited, what of Mary, whose brain was so active that merely to read of great and successful deeds tortured her like a pain? |
4687 | But if you''re dead--?" |
4687 | But immediately he added,"How about to- morrow, Jimsky?" |
4687 | But in what was he ever conventional; when did he ever do the expected thing? |
4687 | But is n''t it wonderful to-- to do it all together-- to be married?" |
4687 | But it would hardly be my place to interfere in business, when I do n''t know anything about it, would it? |
4687 | But marry that pampered little girl to some young millionaire, Sue, and what will her children inherit? |
4687 | But mean odd to other people if you go and I don''t- don''t you think so, Sue?" |
4687 | But obviously, some of it was said in all honesty, she thought, or why should he take the trouble to say it? |
4687 | But what about Thursday night?" |
4687 | But what of Stephen? |
4687 | But what''s the rent?" |
4687 | But you wo n''t go back with the others, dear? |
4687 | But, Sue, if I were a divorced man now, would you let it be a barrier?" |
4687 | But-- did you see the''Protest''last week?" |
4687 | Carroll?" |
4687 | Coleman''s rich, he can marry if he pleases, and he wants what he wants--- You could n''t just stop short, I suppose? |
4687 | Coleman?" |
4687 | Come on, and we''ll have tea at the club?" |
4687 | Come on, now, what''s the matter, all of a sudden?" |
4687 | D''ye hear that, Mama?" |
4687 | Did Margaret tell you about Richard and Ward, last Sunday? |
4687 | Did you ask her to your bridge lunch?" |
4687 | Did you go down and see the cabins; are n''t they dear? |
4687 | Do YOU think I''m funny and odd, Sue?" |
4687 | Do my eyes show?" |
4687 | Do n''t you care, Susan, what''s the difference?" |
4687 | Do n''t you love it?" |
4687 | Do n''t you love that?" |
4687 | Do n''t you remember I said I needed it, too?" |
4687 | Do n''t you remember? |
4687 | Do n''t you remember?" |
4687 | Do n''t you think that''s better?" |
4687 | Do n''t you wish something exciting would happen?" |
4687 | Do you honestly think they are any better than you are?" |
4687 | Do you know Alice Meynell and some of Patmore''s stuff, and the''Dread of Height''?" |
4687 | Do you know Clare Yelland? |
4687 | Do you know where she kept them?" |
4687 | Do you see anything of our dear friend Emily in these days?" |
4687 | Do you think that this is fair?" |
4687 | Do you wonder I think it''s worth while to educate people like that?" |
4687 | Do you?" |
4687 | Does n''t he know your mother?" |
4687 | Does n''t that give her a chance for self- development, and a chance to make herself a real companion to her husband?" |
4687 | Does that seem very strange to you? |
4687 | Ella gave her little sister a very keen look,"Vera Brock?" |
4687 | Ella is dreadful when she''s angry,--I do n''t know quite what I will do, if this ends my being here---""Why should it?" |
4687 | Ella would irritably demand, when her autocratic"Who''d you see to- day? |
4687 | Emily chattered of Miss Polk,"she seemed to think I was so funny and so odd, when we met her at Betty''s,"said Emily,"is n''t she crazy? |
4687 | For we ARE very old friends, are n''t we, Peter?" |
4687 | For what? |
4687 | Gerald?" |
4687 | Going up to see Ken?" |
4687 | Had Mrs. Wallace telephoned-- had the man fixed the mirror in Mr. Furlong''s bathroom-- had the wine come? |
4687 | Had Susan noticed him with older people? |
4687 | Had n''t you better change your mind and send me a book? |
4687 | Had not the promise of that happy day been a thousand times fulfilled? |
4687 | Had one month''s work been so noticeable? |
4687 | Had she deserved this slight in any way? |
4687 | Half this fuss is because they want to get rid of him-- they want him out of the way, d''ye see? |
4687 | Have you any feeling of resentment?" |
4687 | Have you found the Saunders party?" |
4687 | He had n''t been seriously hurt?" |
4687 | He returned to his own thoughts, presently adding,"Why do n''t you borrow a dress from Isabel?" |
4687 | He was more polite, more gentle, more kind that she remembered him-- what was missing, what was wrong to- day? |
4687 | He''s at the Hall, Joe, I dunno?" |
4687 | Her life is full of ease and beauty and power-- doesn''t that count? |
4687 | Here''s what he said first: he says,''Miss Thornton,''he says,''did you know that Miss Wrenn is leaving us?''" |
4687 | How answer it most effectively? |
4687 | How are you going to make it?" |
4687 | How are you?" |
4687 | How are you?" |
4687 | How could he manage what he did n''t understand? |
4687 | How do you do, Miss Brown? |
4687 | How false and selfish and shallow it seemed; had Peter always been that? |
4687 | How long since you''ve been over there, Sue?" |
4687 | How many of them are already in institutions?" |
4687 | How many pieces?" |
4687 | How much was real on her own? |
4687 | How''s that?" |
4687 | How''s the kid, Sue?" |
4687 | I could n''t see who she was with--""A party?" |
4687 | I go up two or three times a day, but she wo n''t talk to me.--Sue, ought this have more paper?" |
4687 | I have a date, but I think I can get out of it?" |
4687 | I nearly put your eye out, did n''t I? |
4687 | I never dreamed that it was Miss Saunders; how should I? |
4687 | I suppose Auntie would n''t stand for a dinner?" |
4687 | I want to work, and do heroic things, and grow to BE something, and how can I? |
4687 | I was going off with Russ on Sunday, but I''ll get out of it, and we''ll go see guard mount at the Presidio, and have tea with Aunt Clara, what?" |
4687 | I wonder if you could fix her hair like she wore it, and I''ll have to get her teeth---""Her what?" |
4687 | I wonder, Sue,"the mild banter ceased,"if you could get Mary''s dinner? |
4687 | I''m chaperoning a few of the girls down to the Palace for a cup of tea, Miss Brown,--perhaps you will waive all formality, and come too?" |
4687 | If Peter Coleman went out of her life, what remained? |
4687 | If Susan wanted a position why did n''t she apply to Madame Vera? |
4687 | If it rains, you and I''ll go to the Orpheum mat., what do you say?" |
4687 | If they were to live there, would this thing fit-- would that thing fit-- why not see paperers at once, why not look at stoves? |
4687 | Instead of the natural"What on earth are you talking about?" |
4687 | Is Elsie Kirk there?" |
4687 | Is Phil behaving?" |
4687 | Is he crazy? |
4687 | Is n''t Joe my property? |
4687 | Is n''t anything real?" |
4687 | Is n''t it DREADFUL?" |
4687 | Is n''t it lovely?" |
4687 | Is n''t she a peach? |
4687 | Is n''t she awful, Margaret? |
4687 | Is n''t she sweet?" |
4687 | Is she going to get forty?" |
4687 | Is there somebody?" |
4687 | Just after dinner she had waylaid William Oliver, with a tense,"Will you walk around the block with me, Billy? |
4687 | Just say,''Mother, do you realize that Christmas is a week from to- morrow?'' |
4687 | Let them form another club, exactly like it, would n''t that be the wiser thing? |
4687 | Listen, girls, did you hear Ward to- day? |
4687 | Love''s token, do n''t you know?" |
4687 | Mama and Baby and I have talked this thing all over, Susan,"she added casually,"and we want to know what you''d think of coming to live with us?" |
4687 | Maybe you''d do it, Lizzie?" |
4687 | Mr. Oliver? |
4687 | My dearest, you DO care?" |
4687 | Now she asked simply:"Where can I serve?" |
4687 | Of course his wife is particularly well and husky?" |
4687 | Of course they do n''t pay much, but money is n''t your object, is it?" |
4687 | Of what could she complain? |
4687 | Oh, I see, you write notes in the margins-- corrections?" |
4687 | Only ourselves, and Billy, who is as close to you as a dear brother could be, and Joe---""Oh, is Georgie going to tell Joe?" |
4687 | Or,"Susan, when did you begin to like me?" |
4687 | Orange- Pekoe? |
4687 | Overshoes,"the inventor would pursue,"fleece- lined leggings, coming well up on your-- may I allude to limbs, Miss Wrenn?" |
4687 | Peter saw her to the door,"Shall you be going out to- night, sir?" |
4687 | Peter, will you take Connie? |
4687 | Presently she said:"Billy?" |
4687 | Ready to go down?" |
4687 | Say that if he''ll recognize the union-- that''s the most important thing, is n''t it?" |
4687 | Say, Susan, has he come?" |
4687 | See here, Susan, I''m dated with Barney White in Berkeley to- night-- is that all right?" |
4687 | She and Thorny departing never tailed to remark,"How can they do it for twenty- five cents?" |
4687 | She began to say"Not really?" |
4687 | She had not come to ask a favor of this more fortunate woman, but-- the thought flashed through her mind-- suppose she had? |
4687 | She herself hoped for a little girl, would n''t it be sweet to call it May? |
4687 | She would make some brief excuse to Mrs. Fox,--headache or the memory of an engagement--"Do you know where Mrs. Fox is?" |
4687 | She"had St. Joseph"for Easter, she said, would Virginia help her"fix him"? |
4687 | Should Peter be treated a little coolly; Emily''s next overture declined? |
4687 | Should she have come away directly after luncheon? |
4687 | So I just said,''What is it?'' |
4687 | So I said,''Well, is it a matter of international importance?''" |
4687 | So that if it had n''t been for me--''""But, Thorny, what''s she leaving for?" |
4687 | Steal?" |
4687 | Step in here, will you, please? |
4687 | Such varied and wonderful gifts? |
4687 | Suppose that she hinted at herself as consoled by some newer admirer? |
4687 | Suppose you died?" |
4687 | Suppose your aunt is out?" |
4687 | Susan could not turn over in the night without arousing Mary Lou, who would mutter a terrified"What is it-- what is it?" |
4687 | Susan had time to think his voice a little deep and odd before he added, with an effort,"We''ll come back here often, wo n''t we? |
4687 | Susan said, in quick uneasiness,"ARE you angry?" |
4687 | Susan thought of the woman in the next room, wondered if she was lying awake, too, alone with sick and sorrowful memories? |
4687 | Susan would have her hour, would try to keep the tenderness out of her"When do I see you again, Peter?" |
4687 | Tell me,"Miss Saunders lowered her voice,"is Mrs. Baxter in? |
4687 | That is something, eh? |
4687 | The blanket has n''t gotten over his little face, has it?" |
4687 | The doctor just came up the steps, Bill, will you go down and ask him to come right up? |
4687 | Then abruptly she added:"Can you lunch with me to- morrow-- no, Wednesday-- at the Town and Country, infant?" |
4687 | There''s only one thing for you to do?" |
4687 | Tickets? |
4687 | To C. G. N. How shall I give you this, who long have known Your gift of all the best of life to me? |
4687 | To- day the phrase,"Would a nice girl DO that?" |
4687 | Up behind the convent here?" |
4687 | Want to finish this with me?" |
4687 | Was he not still sweet and big and clean, rich and handsome and popular, socially prominent and suitable in age and faith and nationality? |
4687 | Was it Auntie? |
4687 | Was it something that she should, in all dignity, resent? |
4687 | Was n''t it better to do that sort of thing with money than to be a Mary Lou, say, without? |
4687 | Was that it?" |
4687 | We did n''t see this coming when we married on less than a hundred a month, did we?" |
4687 | We said we were going to start a stock- ranch, and raise racers, do n''t you remember?" |
4687 | Well, after we got seated-- we had a table way at the back-- I suddenly noticed Violet Kirk, sitting in one of those private alcoves, you know--?" |
4687 | Well, let''s walk the pup? |
4687 | Were you at the Columbia?" |
4687 | What ARE the blue- prints?" |
4687 | What WAS the secret of living honestly, with the past, with the present, with those who were to come? |
4687 | What about the net one she wore to Isabel''s?" |
4687 | What about the schools?" |
4687 | What at?" |
4687 | What consolation for a woman who set her feet deliberately in the path of wrong? |
4687 | What could she do, except appear friendly and responsive? |
4687 | What could she say to hold the interest of this radiant young princess? |
4687 | What could the happy Susan do but pin on a rose with the crescent, her own cheeks two roses, and go singing down to dinner? |
4687 | What did I break?" |
4687 | What did she know-- what could she do? |
4687 | What do they know?" |
4687 | What do you know about that, Clem?" |
4687 | What do you think?" |
4687 | What do you, of all women, know about the problems and the drawbacks of a life like mine?" |
4687 | What does she know about it, anyway? |
4687 | What girl, for instance?" |
4687 | What happens next?" |
4687 | What if she got up and went silently, swiftly out? |
4687 | What if vows and protestations, plans and confidences were still all to come, what if the very first kiss was still to come? |
4687 | What is it, Stephen? |
4687 | What is it?" |
4687 | What is it?" |
4687 | What is it?" |
4687 | What is there in that to embarrass you?" |
4687 | What is this special great need?" |
4687 | What more can I do?" |
4687 | What of these petty little hopes and joys and fears that fretted her like a cloud of midges day and night? |
4687 | What pleasanter prospect could anyone have? |
4687 | What should she be feeling now? |
4687 | What then? |
4687 | What then? |
4687 | What was it?" |
4687 | What was she to do this moment, indeed? |
4687 | What were you going to say?" |
4687 | What would a stronger woman have done? |
4687 | What''d you do?" |
4687 | What''ll it be?" |
4687 | What? |
4687 | When was I ever rude to your mother?" |
4687 | When was it that Billy always began to take his place at Susan''s side, at the campfire, their shoulders almost touching in the dark? |
4687 | When we were talking about it Monday she said she''d rather I didn''t--""Oh, she did? |
4687 | Where are these good people?" |
4687 | Where did you think?" |
4687 | Where do you THINK I got it? |
4687 | Where first? |
4687 | Where had Susan been hiding-- and how wonderfully well she was looking-- and why had n''t she come to see Isabel''s new house? |
4687 | Where''s everyone?" |
4687 | Where?" |
4687 | Who is it? |
4687 | Who said Joe Chickering belonged to you? |
4687 | Who would give away the bride? |
4687 | Whom are you going with to- night? |
4687 | Why are n''t they enough? |
4687 | Why ca n''t you stay at home, doing all the little dainty, pretty things that only a woman can do, to make a home lovely?" |
4687 | Why could n''t you?" |
4687 | Why did a keen pain stir her heart, as she stood idly twisting it in her fingers? |
4687 | Why did n''t you have Chow Yew say that you were out?" |
4687 | Why did she say that?" |
4687 | Why do n''t you come?" |
4687 | Why do n''t you go to bed, Sue?" |
4687 | Why do n''t you let us call for you? |
4687 | Why do n''t you stay in your own crowd?" |
4687 | Why not work for that?" |
4687 | Why not, having advanced a long way in this direction, to each other? |
4687 | Why not?" |
4687 | Why should she not trust this man, whom all the world admired and trusted? |
4687 | Why?" |
4687 | Will ye be seated, ladies? |
4687 | Will you do your fat friend a favor?" |
4687 | Will you let me take care of you, dear? |
4687 | Will you run up with these to Ken-- and take these violets, too?" |
4687 | Will you trust me? |
4687 | Will you? |
4687 | Would Susan come to them for Thanksgiving and stay until Josephine''s wedding on December third? |
4687 | Would n''t you honestly rather have Jo, say, marry a rich man than a poor man, other things being equal?" |
4687 | Would you like that?" |
4687 | Would you like to have a look downstairs before we go to lunch?" |
4687 | You and I''ll get married, d''ye see?" |
4687 | You ca n''t care for him?" |
4687 | You could n''t simply turn down all his invitations, and refuse everything?" |
4687 | You could n''t take the public school examinations, could you, Miss Lydia? |
4687 | You go to lunch with Miss Emily Saunders, and to Burlingame with Miss Ella Saunders, you get all sorts of handsome presents-- isn''t this all true?" |
4687 | You made it---?" |
4687 | You shall have your circle--""But I thought you were not going to Japan until the serial rights of the novel were sold?" |
4687 | You young folks going to give us a wedding?" |
4687 | You''re engaged to him?" |
4687 | Your scones on that side, and mine on this, and my butter- knife between the two, like Prosper Le Gai''s sword, eh?" |
4687 | and then, if you can, just go right on boldly and say,''Mother, you wo n''t spoil it for us all by not coming downstairs?''" |
4687 | gasped Mrs. Fox,--"ask Miss Brown to come and have tea with us, is that it? |
4687 | he asked for the third ensuing, and surrendered Susan to some dark youth unknown, who said,"Ours? |
4687 | he said absently, adding eagerly,"Say, why ca n''t you come and help me buy some things this afternoon? |
4687 | instead of"Sat- so?" |
4687 | mourned her aunt,"why ca n''t you stay here happily with us, lovey? |
4687 | or"Ca n''t you remember what it was Isabel said that she was going to get? |
4687 | pursued Dolly, to Susan,"why do n''t you come down and spend a week with me? |
4687 | said an aged gentleman who was known for no good reason as"Major,""what''s all this? |
4687 | said he,"do''ee smell asparagus?" |
4687 | said the young woman,"but AREN''T you Stephen Graham Bocqueraz? |
4687 | she laughed proudly,"Do you think you could have sent Ferd away with an excuse? |
4687 | she said, gaily,"be you a- follering of me, or be I a- follering of you?" |
4687 | sobbed Mary Lou,"will she get well?" |
4687 | whispered the foolish, fond little mother,"and we''ll go into town next week and buy all sorts of pretty things, shall we? |
39367 | ''And spoke not her majesty at all?'' 39367 ''Do?'' |
39367 | ''Do?'' 39367 ''Faix, you''ll finish me, I''m afeerd,''said Jem, seeing they were in earnest with him;''but what will you do if I''m drowned?'' |
39367 | ''I must fight you or leap the pond, is it?'' 39367 ''Is it me? |
39367 | ''Kavanagh,''said Sir Harry,''you will want some one to stand by you as a friend in this business; would you wish me to be your friend?'' 39367 ''My love, wilt ope thy window? |
39367 | ''When will our journey end? 39367 Ah, Madame, how can that be? |
39367 | Ah, Madame,said Jean, with ever so little bitterness in his tone,"what would you? |
39367 | Ah, Mr. Olifant, is it you? 39367 Ah, then now, Winny, ca n''t you guess? |
39367 | Ah, then, what would tire me? 39367 Alack, good sir,"cries she,"is there no type good enough to set them in?" |
39367 | An''now, what''s to be done? |
39367 | And Kate and Polly,I asked,"are they privy to the dangers that you do run, and have they no like ambition?" |
39367 | And art thou not sorry, Jack,I asked him one day,"to leave poor Edmund, who loves thee so well?" |
39367 | And art thou reconciled, Edmund? |
39367 | And can her lover be expected to wait till Auguste has grown up into a strong man? |
39367 | And do those in London always live in that smoke? |
39367 | And do you expect never to love any one better than my mother? |
39367 | And do you greatly love my Lady Mounteagle? |
39367 | And do you know where we are going? |
39367 | And do you likewise love the Duke of Norfolk, Mistress Ann? |
39367 | And do you live alone with my lord now in these grand chambers? |
39367 | And doth my Lord of Surrey take the matter to heart? |
39367 | And doth she not care to be ugly? |
39367 | And has your hope been frustrated? |
39367 | And hath my lord been to court? |
39367 | And how did her highness catch Mistress Arundell? |
39367 | And is she, then, not fair? |
39367 | And may I go with you to the prisons? |
39367 | And of whom did he learn his science? |
39367 | And that dear Jean, where is he? |
39367 | And the stoker? |
39367 | And thou, Constance,my lady said,"dost thou not think on marriage?" |
39367 | And touching the Duke of Norfolk,Mistress Ward did ask,"what is like to befal him?" |
39367 | And welcome, Tom; what is it? |
39367 | And what are the sins I must confess? |
39367 | And what fair nymph owns this rare suit, sweetest Kate? |
39367 | And what have you to say against old Mick Murdock? |
39367 | And what shall be thy posy, Nan? |
39367 | And what will you do with all that money, Jamesy? 39367 And where doth my father stay at this present time?" |
39367 | And wherefore art thou then in London? |
39367 | And wherefore no more,quoth he,"since that hath wit in it?" |
39367 | And who do you affection beside her grace your mother, and my lady your grandam, Mistress Ann? |
39367 | And who, then, doth price them? |
39367 | And will they kill us if they come? |
39367 | And wives,quoth Mistress Southwell,--"what of their skill therein, gentlemen?" |
39367 | And you left after that little affair? |
39367 | And you? |
39367 | And you? |
39367 | And, prithee, what jewels had she on, sweet coz? |
39367 | Any news from the worldt above? |
39367 | Are there not also ear- rings? |
39367 | Are they good to you? |
39367 | Are you sure? |
39367 | Arra, did n''t I? 39367 At what hour must you be on foot, reverend father?" |
39367 | Ay, lass, how d''ye do? |
39367 | Been keeping a coast- guard night, sir? |
39367 | But I may grow still, may I not? |
39367 | But am I not to flower at all this year? |
39367 | But his grace,I answered,"is, I hope, in safety at present, and in his own house?" |
39367 | But how, then, doth she serve a Catholic lady? |
39367 | But is it possible, Mr. Robert, that Mrs. Wickham and you do n''t see one very great objection? |
39367 | But none of note? |
39367 | But surely,I cried,"my lord''s spirit is too noble to stomach so mean a treatment of his lady?" |
39367 | But what harm can he do, James? |
39367 | But what,said the lady,"is this in the corner? |
39367 | But why should we do that? |
39367 | But you might give something for it, to- night, sweet Alexis, if you knew it was in danger? |
39367 | But,said Miss Wild- Rose and her party all in a breath,"do you mean that we shall all bear roses like that?" |
39367 | But,said the princess,"am I to be left behind pining in this forlorn dungeon of a castle?" |
39367 | Can I do anything for you? |
39367 | Can nothing be done for her? |
39367 | Can you pick it up with your eyes? |
39367 | DEAR MISTRESS CONSTANCE( thus the sweet lady wrote),--"Wherefore this long silence and neglect of your poor friend? |
39367 | Devils of hell- fire, horned and terrible, Infamous dogs, why sit ye idle? 39367 Did n''t you hear him? |
39367 | Do n''t you see it, ma''am,he said,"growing against the wall? |
39367 | Do you know how he passed through this trial? |
39367 | Does not she like to knit? |
39367 | Does she suffer? |
39367 | Doth she herself visit the prisoners she spoke of? |
39367 | Edmund,I cried, scarce able to speak for haste,"is he in London? |
39367 | Eugénie,she asked,"what are you doing there, and why do you cry?" |
39367 | For his wisdom, or for his folly, good Mistress Ward? |
39367 | For how long? 39367 God grant it, sir; but do n''t you see that I must not act on chance? |
39367 | Good morrow kindly, Winny; wo n''t you come in and sit down awhile? |
39367 | Good, my little fox; but why did you come on your master''s horse? |
39367 | Grace,she sobbed,"can you ever forgive me? |
39367 | Had you any chat with her last night, Tom? 39367 Hast thou not gowns enough, wench?" |
39367 | Hast thou seen a priest, cousin Constance? |
39367 | Hath she so resolved? |
39367 | Have I set you thinking, Tom? |
39367 | Have you been to court likewise, dear lady? |
39367 | Have you been walking far, Winny? 39367 Have you yet made your first communion, Mistress Ann?" |
39367 | He inquired for me? |
39367 | He is strong on his legs, is it not, Madame? |
39367 | Her children? |
39367 | His spirits are so high, see you? 39367 How can I help it? |
39367 | How daar you call me an ould woman, you vagabone? 39367 How did it happen?" |
39367 | How did you get a hoult of it, Jamesy avic? |
39367 | How goes it, my sister? |
39367 | How have you lived since?'' 39367 How much did you take up out of the tub, Jamesy?" |
39367 | How much will you give for your life, my little fox? |
39367 | How old is Jean? |
39367 | How prove you that, madam? |
39367 | How so, Polly? |
39367 | How so, cousin Constance? |
39367 | How so? |
39367 | How so? |
39367 | How? 39367 I have scarcely had time for a word yet,"he said;"but how are they all in Yorkshire?" |
39367 | I heard,said the courier,"that some one attempted to strangle the sweet child, that was----?" |
39367 | If Edmund Genings asketh me, reverend father, if I have heard mass to- day, what must I answer? |
39367 | In the name of heaven, what is it? |
39367 | In this way, coz,quoth Polly:"she doth often ask the ladies round her chamber,''If they love to think of marriage?'' |
39367 | Is Emile his father? |
39367 | Is he a child? |
39367 | Is he alive now? |
39367 | Is his grace gone? |
39367 | Is it now? 39367 Is it possible, sweet fox, that I have found your nest? |
39367 | Is it that poor penniless pauper, depending on his day''s labor? 39367 Is it that thou art by chance this monsieur whom they call?" |
39367 | Is it you, Darby? 39367 Is she alone?" |
39367 | Is that the way with you, Tom? |
39367 | Is there a unity of plan? 39367 Is there a unity of type?" |
39367 | Is there anything else you would like? |
39367 | It is a pleasure to see them, is it not? |
39367 | Jean made those shoes; ar''n''t they droll? 39367 Lumpers you mane, Andy; was n''t I there?" |
39367 | Madame and these Messieurs are English, is it not? |
39367 | May I ask whom you think of elevating to the vicarage? |
39367 | My dearest Bob, why? 39367 My little favorite?" |
39367 | No, Winny, you wo n''t leave me that way, will you? 39367 No,"she replied with an innocent laugh;"what would Mrs. Wickham do without me?" |
39367 | Nor has been? |
39367 | Now is it possible, Deane, that you think we would ever interfere with that? 39367 Now,"I cried,"what should be the greatest torment a parent could inflict on a child?" |
39367 | Oh, Tom Murdock, Tom Murdock, why are you Tom Murdock? 39367 One thing more, Polly; do you prefer any one else?" |
39367 | Perhaps, however,he said,"as monsieur is used to glacier expeditions, he would like to accompany us in our search, and so to carry his axe himself?" |
39367 | Report does not always speak the truth, Kate; do n''t you know that? |
39367 | Shall I write and urge him to come back? |
39367 | So soon? |
39367 | Tell me, my good Alexis, whom do you rob now? 39367 That little Agnes{ 165} you used to tell us of, that was so dear to her poor mother, how has it fared with her?" |
39367 | That was good, Alexis, was it not? 39367 The world hath mightily cried up this book, though it hath not a good liking in me, though I had tried but( by?) |
39367 | Then his is the special train ordered at nine, that I am to go with? |
39367 | Then would you not be afraid to die on a scaffold,I asked,"or to be hanged, Mistress Ward?" |
39367 | Then you do not go to Protestant service? |
39367 | Then you do not hear mass,I said, sorrowfully,"or confess your sins to a priest?" |
39367 | They are so unwholesome for Auguste, seest thou? |
39367 | We believe your good tidings,they said;"but tell us, must we change our lives wholly and entirely? |
39367 | Well, I brought her home dacent, boys; an''what can ye say to her? |
39367 | Well, master, at what school did you study your art? |
39367 | Well, twelve francs; will you trade at that price? |
39367 | What are you called, my child? |
39367 | What can he have to say? 39367 What feast are you celebrating today?" |
39367 | What have you here? |
39367 | What is confession? |
39367 | What is farewell, now? 39367 What is this?" |
39367 | What is''t thou wishest, bull- dog outrageous-- Fetid, infected, abhorrent, mendacious? 39367 What more glorious title of nobility,"says Monseigneur the Duke d''Aumale,"than to count saints and martyrs among one''s ancestors?" |
39367 | What news of my brothers and my sisters- in- law? 39367 What news of my brothers? |
39367 | What shall it be? |
39367 | What ugly sober flowers are these, Nan, that thou art playing with? |
39367 | What wrote the good bishop? |
39367 | What''s to be done, is it? |
39367 | What, in the name of all the devils in hell, will you have? |
39367 | What, the queen? |
39367 | What, up yet, little one? |
39367 | What,cried Polly,"is Pecora Campi to roam amidst the roses, and go in and out at his pleasure through the bishop''s gate? |
39367 | When? |
39367 | Where do you live? |
39367 | Where is Jean? |
39367 | Where is he? |
39367 | Where,_ avic ma cree?_"Beyant at Tony Kilroy''s. |
39367 | Who is this Jean? |
39367 | Who made the wig? |
39367 | Who will presume to deny that it is real and genuine? |
39367 | Who, Kitty? 39367 Why are we to have no mass, sweet mother?" |
39367 | Why did you not take the money, then? |
39367 | Why that, Mick? |
39367 | Why, pray? 39367 Why? |
39367 | Will Emile be glad to see you? |
39367 | Will the marriage take place now, at last? |
39367 | Will you go home now? |
39367 | Would you,asked her aunt,"rather be the niece of a lady of honor, or the niece of one who refused to be such?" |
39367 | You are very happy, Grace? |
39367 | You seem sad,he said to him;"has any misfortune happened to you?" |
39367 | You understand a little Italian, I think? |
39367 | You will prepare for confession, then? |
39367 | _ Der_.--Ant make ter meshage run out a ter mouthsh before tey shpeake vit te king? |
39367 | ''And had you such pleasant sports each day, brother?'' |
39367 | ''And prithee wherefore no?'' |
39367 | ''And prithee, Phil, what were her highness''s words?'' |
39367 | ''And what is Will to be?'' |
39367 | ''And what mighty things are those, sir?'' |
39367 | ''And where is his grace at present?'' |
39367 | ''Did n''t I leap the gray horse over the big pond?'' |
39367 | ''What said her highness when she saw he heeded not her commands?'' |
39367 | ''Why ca n''t they let us dress as we like?'' |
39367 | A low curl on your head like a bull, or dangling locks like a spaniel? |
39367 | A pent- house on your upper lip, or an alley on your chin? |
39367 | A thought all at once occurred to me:''You hate the Jesuits,''said I to myself;''is not hatred a sin? |
39367 | A young boy he deems him first, But when had mortal such a calm pure smile Since our first father lost his purity? |
39367 | Abdon and Sennen?" |
39367 | Ability is not fortune, else why does genius slave? |
39367 | Afterward Madame de Staël came up and said,"I had been told that you desired my acquaintance; was I misinformed?" |
39367 | Again: why go specially to Rome? |
39367 | Ah, Monsieur, is it not that he breathes a little, my dear little one? |
39367 | Alas, alas, can I say that I regret it? |
39367 | Alfred yawned, and replied:"My dear Bob, do n''t you remember that I was never fond of trouble? |
39367 | Am I alive or dead? |
39367 | Am I not young? |
39367 | Among the ladies of the court, or in the audience in his pit? |
39367 | And again, is not despotism itself madness in disguise? |
39367 | And did not Origen( whom we suppose to be then teaching) call the"Shepherd""divinely inspired?" |
39367 | And goest thou to his arms? |
39367 | And how came ye, Mr. Edmund, to be concealed in this Popish den? |
39367 | And how could the animal be made longer than he is high, and higher than he is broad? |
39367 | And how would this fact be ascertained, to settle the inheritance of an estate? |
39367 | And if I say it, can I find words more weighed, measured, and deliberate than those I have used? |
39367 | And if so in ordinary life, why not in the freaks and starts of despotism? |
39367 | And if there is a change in the location of parts, how is there a unity of plan?" |
39367 | And if we can not say that there is only one nervous system, can we affirm that there is only one type?" |
39367 | And in what consisted that complete though limited excellence? |
39367 | And is not this the conception we moderns form of the brain? |
39367 | And my vow? |
39367 | And now arose the very embarrassing inquiry: What was next to be done? |
39367 | And now, it may be asked, what of Eugénie? |
39367 | And prithee, Mistress Constance,"said the good priest, turning to me,"canst keep a secret and be silent, when men''s lives are in jeopardy?" |
39367 | And so you are at Merton?" |
39367 | And their deaths? |
39367 | And unless what?" |
39367 | And was not Christianity a philosophy? |
39367 | And was the poor lady of better cheer for thy company?" |
39367 | And what if you be mistaken after all, and, if mistaken, crushed for ever by the result? |
39367 | And what was the profit of all the plotting, and all the unjust warfare, waged by men single or in masses against those they considered their foemen? |
39367 | And whence did Shakespeare derive his models? |
39367 | And who knows, Nan, what may befal thee, and what need thou mayst have of the like advantages?'' |
39367 | And why does his punishment fall upon her? |
39367 | And why not? |
39367 | And why should Father Capecelatro, being an Italian, figure with the French name of_ Alphonse_? |
39367 | And yet what passes in the mind of this child during the moments which she spends in the attitude of prayer? |
39367 | And yet, when everybody else is silent, it may be very naturally asked, Have I a single claim to put forward upon your attention and indulgence? |
39367 | And your mother, what of her?" |
39367 | And, first there is the question, Were all these martyrs? |
39367 | And, with such a consciousness, how could any one regard his past spiritual life in the Church of England as a mockery? |
39367 | Another question arises, Were they English, or were there English amongst them? |
39367 | Are they as great vagabonds as I? |
39367 | Are they hard truths or hard epithets? |
39367 | Are we to say, any more than we should with regard to the fictitious works of which I have just spoken, that there is no truth in them? |
39367 | As the talk went on, the stoker seemed pressing the guard on some part of the story with a most vindictive eagerness, repeatedly asking,"His name? |
39367 | At what epoch did man for the first time tread the surface of our globe? |
39367 | Ay, there was another question, Was Winny inclined for him? |
39367 | Beside, is it true that nuns are useless? |
39367 | Bowing his head, no word save three He spoke--_"Quo vadis, Domine? |
39367 | Breathed he one word in his deep, earnest whispering? |
39367 | Bringing it down so far, we may ask, what was the common, and we may say the vulgar, opinion of the people regarding it? |
39367 | But an if they be so bad as some do say, why does his grace run his head into danger for the sake of the Popish queen, as men do style her? |
39367 | But as to animals, what influence can the soil exercise over them? |
39367 | But because it missed_ the_ opportunity that fitted it? |
39367 | But does it not seem a frightful number of persons to be massacred? |
39367 | But does its ultimate and most profound principle lie therein? |
39367 | But have hanging committees no appreciation that there is such a thing as progress? |
39367 | But he is well, and as good a shot as in the old Oxford days?" |
39367 | But how are we to understand this repletion of the Church with God? |
39367 | But how has the Florentine poet merited such high consideration? |
39367 | But how is the beauty of the object{ 260} perceived? |
39367 | But how is the interior of the Church related to the exterior? |
39367 | But how? |
39367 | But how? |
39367 | But in what relation does the latter stand to the interior catholicity of the Church? |
39367 | But is not this to revolutionize the whole history of these wonderful excavations? |
39367 | But now, is there anything in the extreme opposite of all this which I am not? |
39367 | But of which day? |
39367 | But that inward principle, the marrow of the Church, where are we to look for it? |
39367 | But then what do they? |
39367 | But to say nothing of the example of the saints, are not nuns useful to each{ 309} other? |
39367 | But upon what rests this privilege of the Church? |
39367 | But what have I done to be saved from the fire? |
39367 | But what is the badge of this more profuse dispensation of the Spirit, thus recognized in Scripture as the peculiar mark of Christianity? |
39367 | But what is the cause of the great influence which this poem has exerted on mankind? |
39367 | But what is the productive cause of all? |
39367 | But what was I going to ask you? |
39367 | But what, I pray you, sir, did her majesty write?" |
39367 | But whence came the errors and unbeliefs against which they wrote? |
39367 | But where is the guarantee for the correctness of that standard, or the security for its general acceptance? |
39367 | But where was the line to be drawn? |
39367 | But whither am I leading you, gentle reader? |
39367 | But why go to climate, to Plato, to Pythagoras, and to Buddha, to account for what is one of the most striking recommendations of the gospels? |
39367 | But would n''t it be a fine thing, Winny dear, to have our children able to hold up their heads with the best in the county, in a manner?" |
39367 | But would the First Consul adopt this plan? |
39367 | But, Hessie, I will only ask you one question: Can you-- do you think you ought to waste a regret on such a person?" |
39367 | But, are we to reject them on that ground altogether? |
39367 | But, contrariwise, Do bullets in battle the wicked select? |
39367 | By his deep knowledge of life and of human nature? |
39367 | By his religious and political views? |
39367 | By the perfection and the poetic charm of his expression and language? |
39367 | By the philosophic and moral truths which he has woven into his poem? |
39367 | By- and- by she said,"Grace, can it be that he has not asked you to be his wife?" |
39367 | C''est simple, n''est ce pas?" |
39367 | Can I not study? |
39367 | Can this cock- pit hold The vasty fields of France? |
39367 | Can we not recognize an antagonism between the development of brute force and of the quality of mind? |
39367 | Ceases the hum, a sudden silence falls On all around, the tramp of armed men Rings through the air; and hark, what further sound? |
39367 | Come, my Guy, is it so?" |
39367 | Come, what is your life worth, that you buy it with only your master''s money? |
39367 | Could Hirscher have reached any other conclusion? |
39367 | Could he be some country magnate who made it a duty to cultivate the acquaintance of every visitor to Linbeach? |
39367 | Could he put the confusion straight? |
39367 | Could she fancy for one moment that Louis would exalt her to the rank of his wife? |
39367 | Could they not dispute about the Absolute Being? |
39367 | DOMINE, QUO VADIS? |
39367 | Dear angel, say, Why have I now no fear at meeting him? |
39367 | Dearest, where shall I be at this day, at this hour, at this minute, next year? |
39367 | Did he call him one?" |
39367 | Did he consort with banished princes, and partake of their sports or their sufferings? |
39367 | Did he or his mother ever calculate on what was likely to come of that near companionship? |
39367 | Did not Clement, of blessed memory, consider Hernias as authentic, or, at any rate, the Epistle of Barnabas, which was quite a parallel case? |
39367 | Did she intend taking them by storm, and quartering herself upon me, whether I liked it or not? |
39367 | Did you ever thry?" |
39367 | Do you know I have made a novena that you may be made sergeant before the beginning of next year? |
39367 | Do you know where we are?" |
39367 | Do you know, Winny, I''m very thirsty?" |
39367 | Do you remember the morning you found us fighting in the breakfast- parlor? |
39367 | Do you think sich a_ sprissawn_ as you could keep me from it, an''I wantin''its darlin''carkiss for the table o''my lord, the Mac Donogh?" |
39367 | Does he know many people living in the place?" |
39367 | Does he wish the sky to pour Souls by thousands running o''er? |
39367 | Does his mother go? |
39367 | Does one attain the same depth of view from the Catholic stand- point? |
39367 | Does she leave lamentation for chaps without sense? |
39367 | Does the influence of the soil perfect the_ instinct_ of animals as well as their bodies? |
39367 | Does this reason lie simply in a free, voluntary determination of Christ, or in the interior essence of the Church herself? |
39367 | Domine Quo Vadis? |
39367 | Doth it not seem to you that the box which they do carry betokens them to be such worthy persons as I wish them to prove?" |
39367 | Durand?" |
39367 | Est- ce par chance Monsieur Babébibo- BOU?" |
39367 | Every now and then a dim figure stole up to us with an eager sad whisper, asking,"How goes it? |
39367 | Felton?" |
39367 | First, you may ask what is the age of this inscription? |
39367 | For thee we have forfeited heaven and all, To suffer such evils as no one can measure-- And now, is cursing your only pleasure?" |
39367 | For why? |
39367 | From what source do they descend? |
39367 | Further, if Signor Bianconi''s assumption hold good, then may we not have done amiss in banishing the"roc"to the realms of fiction? |
39367 | Had men come upon the scene when they roamed their native wilds? |
39367 | Has it not been a beautiful day?" |
39367 | Has not she who dissuades a ruler from an iniquitous measure done something toward saving his soul? |
39367 | Has there been, in the last fifty years, any marked increase of crime? |
39367 | Has_ it_ given man that intelligence which, better than all zoological characters, especially distinguishes him from the brute creation? |
39367 | Hast thou had ill news, my Constance?" |
39367 | Hast thou not heard of those, who after loss Of hand or foot, still cried that they had pains In hand or foot, as though they had it still? |
39367 | Have not those from whom such truculent orders emanate a terrible account to render? |
39367 | Have not you, ever since you came into this business, been free to observe your holy days in your own way? |
39367 | Have these recusants imprisoned you with some foul intent, or perverted you by their vile cunning?" |
39367 | Have these, thy bounties, drawn to thee man''s race, That stood so far aloof? |
39367 | Have they not rather His soul subjected? |
39367 | Have we ever done so by word, or look, or deed, in all the years we''ve known you? |
39367 | Have we not always been ready-- even when my mother''s spirits were at the lowest-- to spare Polly to go to mass or confession? |
39367 | Have you any particular devotion to those saints?" |
39367 | Have you been all this time finding out that it is a good thing to be George Wickham''s eldest son?" |
39367 | Have you broken M. Carton''s spectacles, torn our sister''s cap, and scratched a blind child?" |
39367 | Have you ever seen a little bonne more pretty? |
39367 | Have you seen any of the Fordes lately?" |
39367 | Have you, then, also, been in a passion, my sister? |
39367 | Having been roughly received by the janitors, they sounded their grievance aloud:"_ Don_.--Ish it te fashion to beate te imbashaters here? |
39367 | He has been to Italy, to Switzerland, to England-- know I where? |
39367 | He sat still for a few moments, and then commenced walking about the room, and abruptly asked:"What brought you here, Alexis?" |
39367 | He surveyed me so inquisitively out of his merry blue eyes, that the thought crossed me, could this be the veritable Sir Philip? |
39367 | He was prouder than on the evening of Champaubert, when Napoleon said,"Soldiers of the 110th, you are heroes?" |
39367 | Here''s a creature made carefully-- carefully made Put together with craft, and then stampt on, and why? |
39367 | His name?" |
39367 | Hitherto All has been darkness since I left the earth; Shall I remain thus sight- bereft all through My penance- time? |
39367 | How can anything utterly supernatural attain an adequate form of expression by mere natural development? |
39367 | How can this be regarded as"the great bulwark in God''s hand against infidelity?" |
39367 | How could he ever have supposed that she preferred any one else? |
39367 | How could he, when his windpipe was cut? |
39367 | How did he appear? |
39367 | How did they take the news of my departure for America? |
39367 | How did you get out of that little affair at Warsaw? |
39367 | How do you like my scheme, little fox? |
39367 | How does this explanation comport with the doctrine of Scripture just expounded? |
39367 | How is it that we know nothing of his method of composition? |
39367 | How is this law proved? |
39367 | How much? |
39367 | How should I restore happiness to my little sister? |
39367 | How should you fancy to have your pretty ears bored with a rougher instrument than Master Anselm''s the jeweller?" |
39367 | How then can the Church be filled with God in a greater degree than the world without? |
39367 | How then did Shakespeare contrive to paint so highly- finished and yet so complex an image? |
39367 | How, then, can a movement which makes war on the Church claim to be an advance of the human mind in the right direction? |
39367 | How, then, is the inhabitation of the Spirit, which is identical with that of Christ, in the Church brought about? |
39367 | Humanity is progressive; is not its progression made manifest by these zoological revelations? |
39367 | I am really hurt, and feel that we do n''t deserve this?" |
39367 | I am, however, dangerously ill. Must I, then, quit all these possessions which thou thyself hast given me, my God? |
39367 | I ask, could a verification be more complete than this? |
39367 | I asked her for what purpose she had gone there; whether to be cured of bodily ailments or to consult him on spiritual matters? |
39367 | I asked, encircling her waist in my arms;"and wherefore has good Mr. Bryan gone away?" |
39367 | I dunna did Tom ever spake to herself, Mick?" |
39367 | I had come to ask something from St. Eugène? |
39367 | I have interpolated the missing text where it seemed obvious and left"??" |
39367 | I have interpolated the missing text where it seemed obvious and left"??" |
39367 | I hope she is better now?" |
39367 | I longed to lay my head on my mother''s knee and say,"Did he ask for me?" |
39367 | I now mildly brought her back to the point:"Does he see anything of the visitors?" |
39367 | I perceived what sorrowful heed thou didst lend to his recital; but has it painfully dwelt in thy mind since?" |
39367 | I pray you who read this, could aught be more indiscreet than, in a thoughtless manner, to have summoned these two to dispute? |
39367 | I pray you, gentlemen and ladies, can anything more ingenious than this practice be thought on?" |
39367 | I said,"No, mother, why should we quarrel?" |
39367 | I said,"hath my lord been so deluded?" |
39367 | I say to those who talk to me of politics,''How many shares will you take in this or in that?'' |
39367 | I see not those false spirits; shall I see My dearest Master, when I reach his throne? |
39367 | I seen the fung of his pump loose myself; did n''t I help to shut it for him, afther he fell?" |
39367 | I suppose you do n''t know him, do you, sir?" |
39367 | I''ll go to your father this moment, and let him know what''s going on--""And who do you dare to call''a whelp,''Tom Murdock? |
39367 | I, hearing this, answered that to do so were a great pity; to whom she replied,"Why, who was Thomas a Kempis?" |
39367 | I-- I suppose you do n''t object to smoking?" |
39367 | If Aristotle and Plato, Epicurus and Zeno, had their lecturers, should not Jesus Christ have schools and teachers too? |
39367 | If Christianity was truly called a philosophy, what should we expect in its champion but that he should be a philosopher? |
39367 | If it was right to say"Ora pro nobis"once in the day, is it not better to say it seven times a day; and if so, why not seventy times seven? |
39367 | If you were all- powerful, would you not give me all that I desired? |
39367 | In a low voice, so low that it was like the breathing of a sigh, I heard Edmund say,"What is truth?" |
39367 | In the cottages of Stratford, or in the purlieus of Blackfriars? |
39367 | In the first place, why go at all? |
39367 | Is everything that we have been doing so far, and our fathers have been doing before us, miserably and radically wrong?" |
39367 | Is he often in Linbeach? |
39367 | Is it by the might of his genius and the peculiarity of his chosen theme? |
39367 | Is it good faith? |
39367 | Is it love of truth? |
39367 | Is it not genius? |
39367 | Is it not good, Alexis? |
39367 | Is it not simple?" |
39367 | Is it not simply the fallacy of evasion? |
39367 | Is it not so, Conrad? |
39367 | Is it not that it is triste, Madame? |
39367 | Is it not worthy of your pupil? |
39367 | Is it worthy? |
39367 | Is not God, in his very nature, present everywhere? |
39367 | Is not life worth a leather belt?" |
39367 | Is not this the motive which led St. Paul, St. Anthony, and so many thousands of anchorets into the desert? |
39367 | Is our age, all things considered, really worse than preceding ages? |
39367 | Is that so?" |
39367 | Is that what is meant? |
39367 | Is the garden open? |
39367 | Is the present Emperor of the French aware that in publishing his_ Vie de César_, he is treading a beaten path? |
39367 | Is the relative location of the parts maintained? |
39367 | Is the universe one immense organ, that rolls From devils to angels? |
39367 | Is the world in which you live rich enough for all your necessities? |
39367 | Is there not a hint of many a Velasquez most exquisite, and of Mr. Stirling, which are worth a journey to the Escurial to worship? |
39367 | Is there not often a certain consistency in madness? |
39367 | It is Madeleine whom he will marry, her smile shall make the joy of his Christian fireside; still, how is he to see her again? |
39367 | It is good, is it not, Alexis, my fox? |
39367 | It may be asked how came these English to be there? |
39367 | It may be asked how these prejudices have been brought to coincide with a revolution founded on such different principles? |
39367 | It refers to the head of St. John the Baptist, or, shall I say, to the three heads of St. John the Baptist? |
39367 | It was a folly, but who has not been foolish? |
39367 | John?" |
39367 | John?" |
39367 | Maurice, art thou far from me? |
39367 | May I not in time get what you now have got-- learning for a scholar? |
39367 | May we be permitted to observe that this is not scientific? |
39367 | Might it not seem that in nature an economy is recognizable similar to the economy of human existence? |
39367 | Mistress Mary looked round affrighted, but little Mistress Bess said in a funny manner,"Prithee, Nan, do rods then travel?" |
39367 | Monsieur understands me?" |
39367 | Mush was here, and what his discourse did run on?" |
39367 | Mush?" |
39367 | My God, in my desert to whom shall I have recourse? |
39367 | My heart moving me to curiosity, I could not forbear to ask:"I pray you, sir, wherefore doth not her majesty like her courtiers to love their wives?" |
39367 | My son, I will not say much; what is your name?" |
39367 | Nay, is not an opposite course that which the poet himself censures as"wasteful, ridiculous excess?" |
39367 | Need I say that it was so? |
39367 | No? |
39367 | Not but Emon is a nice boy as there is to be found in this or any other parish, and you know that, Winny; do n''t you, now?" |
39367 | Now how can we then be supposed to regard such persons as no better than heathens? |
39367 | Now, I ask, could these bodies have been put there in consequence of a plague, or an earthquake, or any event of that kind? |
39367 | Now, I''m a rough fellow-- what''s happen''d to me? |
39367 | Now, can we affirm that there is but one form of nervous system? |
39367 | O Kitty, dear Kitty, what used he to be saying of me? |
39367 | O my dear sister, will you not also come soon to heaven, and love him for evermore?" |
39367 | Often I sat for hours, and did nothing, thinking with painful pertinacity of that one question,"How should I restore happiness to my little sister?" |
39367 | Oh, for opportunity? |
39367 | On the contrary, is it not overthrown? |
39367 | On which day did the birth or death take place-- yesterday or to- day? |
39367 | One of the first questions is, Why has God created us and placed us in this world? |
39367 | Or am I traversing infinity By endless subdivision, hurrying back From finite toward infinitesimal, Thus dying out of the expanded world? |
39367 | Or by his judgment of historical personages and facts? |
39367 | Or hear, at least, his awful judgment- word With personal intonation, as I now Hear thee, not see thee, angel? |
39367 | Page, be the shutters closed on those days as when the Lady Godiva rode?" |
39367 | Setting inclination aside, how dared she break the solemn compact she had made with the Duke of Austria? |
39367 | Shall I tell you how I employ my time? |
39367 | Shall my native soil restrain free will? |
39367 | Shall we leave her to a sort of spurious Catholicism, or that hybrid system which advises the establishment of a patriarch? |
39367 | Shall we not enter into a compact to defend those who can not defend themselves? |
39367 | She asked then, with more timidity than she had yet shown:"When shall we have the honor of dancing for monsieur?" |
39367 | She is n''t out yet, is she?" |
39367 | So he caught hold of Sir Harry by the coat, and stuttered out,* Oh, then, what in the world are ye going to do with me?'' |
39367 | Some one said,"Vance? |
39367 | Starting from these principles, what does M. Trémaux require in order to explain the actual state of creation? |
39367 | Tears must have followed any mention of him; and who would have caused their flow at such a happy gathering? |
39367 | Tell me, granny, when does the unlucky minute come that a body may get their wish?" |
39367 | That popular assembly would consent to weep or even to be serious morning and evening for a month? |
39367 | The count came up to me, and said, in broken English,"You are the English to go to Leghorn with me? |
39367 | The great voice, making itself preternaturally gruff, roared out--"Qui est là? |
39367 | The inquiry naturally arises: Whence come so many conversions? |
39367 | The mind bold And independent, The purpose free, So we are told, Must not think To have the ascendant, What''s a saint? |
39367 | The next question is, Were these persons all virgins? |
39367 | The only question with Ned Cavana was, Did Tom Murdock possess the attributes required for success in all or any of the above respects? |
39367 | The origin of the beautiful name in which the spot itself rejoices I believe to be this; but why do I say"believe?" |
39367 | The question may, however, well be asked, why there are no monsoons in the Atlantic Ocean? |
39367 | The question then is, Whence does this north- west wind come? |
39367 | The question, then, is, How did Christianity, as a philosophy, stand in relation to the affluent professors of Ptolemy''s university? |
39367 | The stoker must have passed over it; why not I? |
39367 | The vision is wanting, the appreciation is not there-- how, then, is the expression possible? |
39367 | The vulgar had no part in it, in fact could not come within the sphere of its influence; how could they? |
39367 | The world sometimes forgets, but never pardons; what matters, provided virtue remain unscathed, or that it be restored through repentance? |
39367 | Then he said abruptly,"Do you{ 406} ever think of getting married, Polly?" |
39367 | Then is life but a trial? |
39367 | Then, her fool of a father-- a blacksmith by trade-- Why the deuce does he tell us it hah broke his heart? |
39367 | Then, reproaching herself, she turns to her only consolation:"Do I not love thee, my God? |
39367 | They tell us that discord, though discord, alone, Can be harmony when the notes properly fit: Am I judging all things from a single false tone? |
39367 | They went up and accosted her:"Could you tell us, ould woman,"asked Diarmid,"how we can enter the Corrig? |
39367 | This drama, which has no longer a dramatic art save in its dialogue and its spectacle-- is it then absolutely without poetry? |
39367 | This theatre-- a remnant of the ancient manners-- continued until the end of the restoration, the last performance being in?? 37." |
39367 | This theatre-- a remnant of the ancient manners-- continued until the end of the restoration, the last performance being in?? 37." |
39367 | Three years?" |
39367 | To follow him, or to wait-- which? |
39367 | To make a pillow of a human breast? |
39367 | To what does Shakespeare owe this supremacy, or whence flow all the extraordinary qualities which we attribute to him? |
39367 | To- morrow? |
39367 | Ursula?" |
39367 | Walter Scott has been neglected this evening; but what book could have been worth to me what Paul''s promise is? |
39367 | Was I dreaming? |
39367 | Was he one accustomed to idle in the piazza of St. Mark, or shoot his gondola under the Rialto? |
39367 | Was it in solitude and sacred seclusion, self- imprisoned for hours beyond the reach of the turmoil of the street or the domestic sounds of home? |
39367 | Was it indeed that she aspired higher? |
39367 | Was it not the story of the virtues of St. Anthony which determined the conversion of St. Augustine? |
39367 | Was it possible to transfuse the peculiar spirit of the Irish native poetry into the English tongue? |
39367 | Was it the gold of the stranger that tempted him? |
39367 | Was it this sum that excited a poetical imagination so strong as to overstep the bounds of veracity? |
39367 | Was it, then, for this-- for home and fatherland? |
39367 | Was not that it, Tom?" |
39367 | Was the trilogy of the two Angevin poets sometimes preceded by this immense prelude? |
39367 | Was there a struggle then? |
39367 | Was there ever a more pathetic joke? |
39367 | Was there not Jerusalem, the cradle of the Church? |
39367 | Was this the second deep sorrow that clouded her nineteenth summer? |
39367 | We need not ask,"What''s o''clock at New Zealand?" |
39367 | Well, that''s not enough; they must push her downstairs, To make her go crooked: but why count the list? |
39367 | Well, what shall I say? |
39367 | Were there not the Seven Churches? |
39367 | Were they not generated by the Reformation abroad and in England? |
39367 | Were those wilds the same as now as to climate and vegetable growths? |
39367 | What I ask is, Why persecute such a poor dear, If there''s law above all? |
39367 | What are the causes which generally lead to them? |
39367 | What are they, one by one, when the divine certainty of all is destroyed? |
39367 | What can I do? |
39367 | What can one say of the Eucharist? |
39367 | What can really be a religious concordat, that most solemn of all human undertakings, if it is to be signed in five days? |
39367 | What cause produced him? |
39367 | What caused the sanguinary war which has just desolated America? |
39367 | What causes this? |
39367 | What could I do? |
39367 | What could Rome or any other church give him that he had not already at Alexandria? |
39367 | What did she want with money? |
39367 | What do I seek in creatures? |
39367 | What do I wish to draw from this account? |
39367 | What doth Master Sherwood say?" |
39367 | What for should I be decoratin''my fingers wid the red blossoms o''the Lusmore, if I was as ould as you say? |
39367 | What has become of the goodly folios which must have once existed written in his own hand? |
39367 | What has generated them? |
39367 | What idea does the word"death"bring to the mind of this child? |
39367 | What if Tom Murdock was a villain?--and she believed he was: what dared he-- what could he do? |
39367 | What in the world had I to do with a dancing- girl in my quiet bachelor rooms? |
39367 | What is her idea of{ 341} God? |
39367 | What is it doing here?" |
39367 | What is its course in history? |
39367 | What is the faculty whose office it is to light up and reduce to order and due proportion what is seen? |
39367 | What is the language of her heart when she thus places herself in solemn adoration in his presence? |
39367 | What is the reason of the circulation thus produced? |
39367 | What is the ultimate guarantee of the divine revelation but the divine authority of the Church? |
39367 | What is there left, in fact, after all this theatrical effervescence? |
39367 | What is this severance? |
39367 | What is your business with him? |
39367 | What is, in fact, her prayer? |
39367 | What kind of a theatre was required for such scenic action? |
39367 | What lets me now from going to my Lord? |
39367 | What matters it to us that he paid so many marks or{ 550} shillings to purchase a homestead in Stratford- upon- Avon? |
39367 | What on earth is the raison of it?" |
39367 | What restrains his hand? |
39367 | What shall I say more to you? |
39367 | What shall she do? |
39367 | What shall we say of Madeleine in her bridal dress? |
39367 | What should I do? |
39367 | What should be"to- night?" |
39367 | What tragic drama was it which was the most important-- the most popular-- the longest played-- of that first epoch of the modern theatre? |
39367 | What vandalism destroyed the first, or dispersed the second of these valuable treasures? |
39367 | What was this relic? |
39367 | What were all the pictures in the world compared with my little sister''s grief? |
39367 | What will you think of my letter? |
39367 | What words of ours could add to the bold significance of these? |
39367 | What would Father Armand say? |
39367 | What would Mrs. Wickham and her father wish her to do? |
39367 | What would it cost you? |
39367 | What would she do next? |
39367 | What would you do if you had to instruct and prepare for first communion a child who was at the same time deaf, dumb, and_ blind_? |
39367 | What would you have done in my place? |
39367 | What, then, our readers will ask, is the cause of the winds? |
39367 | When I read your late pamphlet I said to myself, Have I ever written such hard words as these? |
39367 | When did you learn to consider this feeling a virtue? |
39367 | When do you intend setting out?'' |
39367 | When it is Monday morning in London, is it Sunday evening or Monday evening in New Zealand? |
39367 | When shall we in general begin to live here as we are to do for ever hereafter? |
39367 | When we possess a tradition of a country and people, we ask,"What confirmation, what corroboration, have we? |
39367 | When will those who know more write? |
39367 | Whence comes this continued and increasing disparity in the development of different portions of the same people? |
39367 | Where are its cloisters? |
39367 | Where are the books annotated or even scratched by his pen, from which he drew the subjects and sometimes the substance of his dramas? |
39367 | Where did he find them? |
39367 | Where did he meet them? |
39367 | Where do we find the difference between this middle theory and the law of M. Trémaux? |
39367 | Where does M. Douhaire find these poetical beauties which he offers for our admiration? |
39367 | Where is the connecting link between the external and the internal Church? |
39367 | Where is''t? |
39367 | Where its novitiate? |
39367 | Where will you seek them? |
39367 | Wherefore these transitions? |
39367 | Whereupon he:''Wouldst thou know, son Roper, what they be?'' |
39367 | Which died first? |
39367 | Which do you choose?" |
39367 | Which of my ill- regulated affections shall I offer up to thee? |
39367 | Which of us would have had heart to argue with men who might next day deliver us to the hangman? |
39367 | Which when I did, she asked,"What is your name? |
39367 | Which? |
39367 | Whither goeth my father without his son?'' |
39367 | Who can be astonished that the Papal minister should feel but little confidence in the good faith of those he had to deal with? |
39367 | Who can entertain a doubt as to the alternative issue? |
39367 | Who can know? |
39367 | Who can prove whether the recipient of a sacrament has faith? |
39367 | Who can regret it? |
39367 | Who can tell? |
39367 | Who could tell why Avignon All its bells was ever pealing? |
39367 | Who do you intend to ask, father?" |
39367 | Who is she that in your great book says,''Where you go, I will go?'' |
39367 | Who knows but you may be allowed to bloom in the autumn, and perhaps win the prize at the last flower show? |
39367 | Who knows if it will not be my shroud, and if these stitches which I make will not be unpicked by the worms? |
39367 | Who pays for the best, and gets the second best? |
39367 | Who will sustain me in my spiritual weakness? |
39367 | Who would believe that you had sold the lives of thirty men for a few hundred roubles?" |
39367 | Who would maintain such a proposition? |
39367 | Whom have Protestants to set against Overbeck, Cornelius, Deger, Molitor, and we are proud to add our own illustrious countryman, Herbert? |
39367 | Why are you here? |
39367 | Why attribute this massacre to the Huns? |
39367 | Why could not this go on, with only the difference that Robert should never be displeased with her? |
39367 | Why did n''t you follow up your first question with that, Winny Cavana?" |
39367 | Why did you let that fellow take her out for the first dance? |
39367 | Why do n''t you look about you? |
39367 | Why do you wait? |
39367 | Why had I lost my time so miserably during the past months? |
39367 | Why is it inert? |
39367 | Why is it that the man in the moon always keeps a rapin''-hook in his hand, and never uses it?" |
39367 | Why is she alone the body of Christ, the pleroma of the God- head? |
39367 | Why not give up the rest of your walk for to- night, and return again on one the glorious nights in May or June?" |
39367 | Why not say"The Mother of God?" |
39367 | Why should emigrants on the way of civilization settle preferentially in unfertile countries? |
39367 | Why should he who had already so troubled my life enjoy success and gold which should have been mine? |
39367 | Why should her grace think a son hath less resentment of a father''s loss than a sister?" |
39367 | Why should we in England, why should they in America, be singing the praises of two Persians who lived more than fifteen hundred years ago? |
39367 | Why should you fall from a train, and make a piece of news for the papers? |
39367 | Why was there no work of mine mentioned there? |
39367 | Why, in the name of all that''s incomprehensible, should he call on me? |
39367 | Why, then, do the currents arise? |
39367 | Why? |
39367 | Why?" |
39367 | Will he ever recover his liberty, be restored to his dear master''s bosom and confidence? |
39367 | Will it be here, elsewhere; here below, or above? |
39367 | Will the present_ Vie de César_ reach a second volume? |
39367 | Will these hasty yet truthful sheets escape his jailer''s eye? |
39367 | Will you be angry with me, or will you be accomplices in my fault? |
39367 | Will you drink? |
39367 | Will you give my respects to Mrs. Wickham, and say that I will call for the child this evening?" |
39367 | Will you have your beard like a spade{ 844} or a bodkin? |
39367 | Wilt thou not, O Lord, accept a part of the sacrifice? |
39367 | Would Sir Philip vouchsafe a reply, or would he treat me with silent contempt? |
39367 | Would he not break all bounds, on finding his duplicity discovered, and himself balked by the cardinal''s firmness? |
39367 | Would it not even seem that nature could not at one and the same time develop mental and corporeal giants? |
39367 | Yet how can I? |
39367 | Yet what reader of Homer will hesitate to prefer Lord Derby''s simpler and almost strictly literal rendering? |
39367 | You are not tired, Winny, are you?" |
39367 | You dirty an''insultin''spalpeens, how daar ye again, I say call me sich names? |
39367 | You have no difficulty in speaking to M. le Curé?" |
39367 | You must turn from me and turn against me for saying it; but if I believe it, must I not say it? |
39367 | You will ask me then, perhaps, why I have never manifested this before? |
39367 | You would only be striving at what you would not be able for, nor allowed to keep up, Tom, and as for myself, I''d look well, would n''t I? |
39367 | Your love- locks wreathed like a silken twist, or shaggy, to fall on your shoulder?" |
39367 | Your mustachioes sharp at the end like shoemakers''awls, or hanging down to your mouth like goat''s flakes? |
39367 | Your name?" |
39367 | [ Footnote 106] And yet, would"Manfred"have existed if the romantic drama and the spirit- agency of Shakespeare{ 556} had not given it life and rule? |
39367 | [ Footnote 117]"What do I see?" |
39367 | [ Footnote 89] And who does not see here confirmed the history of Clematius? |
39367 | and a Leopold of Tuscany, what greater changes were to be feared on the part of the revolutionary powers, which now swayed over France? |
39367 | and had they not glimpses of something indefinitely above and yet indefinably related to their own souls, in the Logos of the divine Plato? |
39367 | and hast thou not a mind to impart to thy poor kinsman the sweet conceits I doubt not are therein contained?" |
39367 | and is he aware of the fact, that their efforts in this quarter have not unfrequently been accounted dead failures? |
39367 | and is it even so with you, my friend?" |
39367 | and is it impossible? |
39367 | and knock''hem o''te head phit te phoite stick?" |
39367 | and, Who placed us here? |
39367 | and, if it does, will it extend to a fourth? |
39367 | do you hear him, mother? |
39367 | dost thou hear? |
39367 | doth the bridegroom wait? |
39367 | every man''s turn comes; and why should you escape?" |
39367 | hearest thou me? |
39367 | how do we know they were martyrs?" |
39367 | how goes it?" |
39367 | how long? |
39367 | interrupted Tom;"wo n''t he pay the money down?" |
39367 | is he in prison?" |
39367 | is it a mile of a walk, and the road under my feet? |
39367 | is its rule not mortified? |
39367 | is n''t it? |
39367 | is this peremptory severance Wrought out in lengthy measurements of space, Which grow and multiply by speed and time? |
39367 | it was actually the truth? |
39367 | my little fox? |
39367 | of her veil, and the wreath upon her auburn tresses? |
39367 | of the sacred hour when this Christian couple unite in a common prayer? |
39367 | of the sweet face reflecting the purity of an innocent heart and a chaste love? |
39367 | of the tears which flow when the heart is too full? |
39367 | or Emon- a- knock, why did I ever see you?" |
39367 | or home- made laws alter devout resolutions? |
39367 | or who can speak of the schools of the middle ages as deserving of contempt in days which can not comprehend them? |
39367 | said both his brothers,"is it a little traneen like you to be able for him, when he bate the two of us?" |
39367 | said the lieutenant,''what need you be so careful of your health for this little time, being not much above in hour?'' |
39367 | said the little saucy one again,"when thou dost we d my Lord Surrey?" |
39367 | says Jem to himself;''is n''t this a purty thing, that I must be drowned to make a great character for a little spalpeen like Squire Kavanagh? |
39367 | shall it e''er be mine To see thy sons in battle line? |
39367 | that his predecessors on the French throne have, from a remote age, sought to unite the fame of authorship with the glory of regal position? |
39367 | the flower de luce Enters Alagna; in his Vicar Christ? |
39367 | what does history tell us?" |
39367 | what had I to do with Yorkshire? |
39367 | what is life but a continual separation? |
39367 | what resource? |
39367 | what succor? |
39367 | what will follow? |
39367 | what wouldest thou? |
39367 | when shall I rejoice To see the vengeance, which thy wrath, well pleased, In secret silence broods?" |
39367 | when? |
39367 | whence is this? |
39367 | where did they come from? |
39367 | where do ye rise from, and where do ye die? |
39367 | who turns to him for aid? |
39367 | who will lead me on to great sacrifices? |
39367 | why not spare our loved country the sight? |
39367 | why who could have guessed it? |
39367 | with a blind embrace Gulfed it in sense? |
39367 | with my coquette cap and my neat apron-- hein?" |
39367 | yea, virtue for a priest, perhaps; and so at length obtain that for which you now are ready? |
39367 | you can tell me who that is, ca n''t you?" |
39367 | { 264} She looked up sharply at this, as if to say, What business is that of yours? |
39367 | { 448} Then comes the question, Were there eleven thousand? |
39367 | { 769}"Not Mr. Hubert Rookwood?" |
40068 | ''From whence does the Son come? 40068 A friend of yours, Tom? |
40068 | A great obstacle has been removed,said the father;"do n''t you remember?" |
40068 | A sad burial you then witnessed? |
40068 | A ticket- of- leave? |
40068 | Ah, Hubert,I exclaimed when the door opened,"is it you? |
40068 | Ah, Tom avic, yon need n''t look so shy; shure I know all about it, an''why would n''t I? 40068 Ah, mine own good Sydney,"I heard her majesty exclaim;"is this the young gentlewoman your wise father did speak of at Greenwich yesterday? |
40068 | Always buying,said the antiquary;"when will you begin to buy of me? |
40068 | Am I not Hugh de Vere''s betrothed, Fast pledged to be his wife? 40068 Am I to call assistance?" |
40068 | Am I to understand that you never mean to leave them? |
40068 | An old, dear acquaintance? |
40068 | An''is that all, mavourneen? 40068 An''why not, your reverence? |
40068 | An''why not? |
40068 | An''wo n''t I give you all that as pat as A, B, C? 40068 And are cats as good?" |
40068 | And at Norwich, sir? |
40068 | And did you succeed therein? |
40068 | And hath my lord been to see you since? |
40068 | And hath this boatman promised,I inquired,"to wait for Mr. Watson and convey him away?" |
40068 | And have been a practitioner of''stump''oratory? 40068 And his wife also?" |
40068 | And how would you show such gratitude, fair Mistress Constance? |
40068 | And is it impossible for the great Catholic German nation to do what four millions of Belgians have accomplished? 40068 And not to mine own soul, Hubert?" |
40068 | And she is then condemned to death without any hope? |
40068 | And so you tell me you have no recollection of your father? |
40068 | And the day he suffered,I asked,"what was this good daughter''s behavior?" |
40068 | And the way to it direct? |
40068 | And this prisoner hath then escaped? |
40068 | And what was in those ships all three, On Christmas day? 40068 And what was that?" |
40068 | And whence,he exclaimed,"so sudden a coming, my good Basil? |
40068 | And where shall I find you again, madam, if I do not succeed? |
40068 | And wherefore not? |
40068 | And who did accuse you? |
40068 | And why not? |
40068 | And your father''s father? |
40068 | Answer me another question now, Tom; did she ever do th''other thing?'' 40068 Are you a Catholic, my child?" |
40068 | Are you much hurt, Lennon? |
40068 | Are you, really, the pastor of Loretto? |
40068 | Arra, did n''t I know they''d dance? |
40068 | Arra, what would they put it off for? |
40068 | Arrah, why would n''t he be sensible? 40068 Bedads, Tom, that i d take a power of money, would n''t it?" |
40068 | Begorra, Tom, what you say is the rale thruth; What would you think of going down to your aunt in Armagh for a start? |
40068 | Bethink thee now,the sultan said;"How knowest thou that the maid Is not now we d, since thy return Hath been so long delayed? |
40068 | But and if it be so,quoth he again,"wherefore doth this young nobleman''s imprudence displeasure you, Mistress Sherwood?" |
40068 | But are you not in danger of being called before the council? |
40068 | But by what means,I eagerly asked,''"do you forecast to procure his escape?" |
40068 | But can I hope that you will ever forgive me? |
40068 | But how then do you live, since the government has seized all your property? |
40068 | But if,I said,"it should happen by any reason that Mr. Watson changed his mind, how should you, then, inform him of it?" |
40068 | But what happened when that lord had left you? |
40068 | But what,quoth he, archly smiling,"if the faults he named are such as pleased me as well as virtues?" |
40068 | But where the sorra have you been? 40068 But will you hear,"quoth he,"your faults as Mr. Roper recited them?" |
40068 | But you will move him to it, Mistress Constance? |
40068 | But you would know it, I presume, if he was in London? |
40068 | But, grandmamma,said a member of her family,"if the guillotine were set up again as in the reign of terror, surely you would feel some uneasiness?" |
40068 | But,quoth he then,"do you wish to save him?" |
40068 | Constance,he said,"hast a mind to marry?" |
40068 | Constance,he softly said, seeing me moved,"do you weep for me?" |
40068 | Did he tell you this gentleman''s name? |
40068 | Did it not run thus? 40068 Did you not say,"I answered,"that the gentleman now in so great peril did lodge with Master Rugeley?" |
40068 | Did you see them? |
40068 | Do you love my brother? |
40068 | Do you mean to say, Winny, that you came here to- day intending to dance but once? |
40068 | Do you see this paper? |
40068 | Does he know me, is it? 40068 Does he know you?" |
40068 | Doth the queen,I asked of this gentleman,"then not mitigate her anger against these noble persons?" |
40068 | Find you, sir,I said,"much variety in the manners of French people and those you see in this country?" |
40068 | For, I pray you,said he"are not hawks to the one what his mistress is to the other? |
40068 | Frederic Schein? |
40068 | Frederic Schein? |
40068 | From my native place? |
40068 | Good morrow, father,she said;"how do you find yourself to- day? |
40068 | Had you not better give less trouble? |
40068 | Has he far to go? |
40068 | Has not my lord and father bled By Coeur de Lion''s side? 40068 Has she not been in town since?" |
40068 | Hath Master Gilbert called his friends together for to consider of it? |
40068 | Have I ever asked anything of you? |
40068 | He hath not done so? |
40068 | He is not in prison? |
40068 | How can I repay you for all your kindness to us? |
40068 | How comes it about? 40068 How could I leave you so soon, my dear ones, just as I have found you again? |
40068 | How does he look? |
40068 | How is he disposed touching religion? 40068 How is it that you are not dancing, Kate? |
40068 | How long had she been from home? |
40068 | How now, sir? |
40068 | How prove you that, sweetheart? |
40068 | How so, most dear lady? |
40068 | How so? |
40068 | How so? |
40068 | I pray you, Polly, what befel him there?'' 40068 In troth an''you did n''t, Nancy; what she said was,''to make no delay;''was n''t I as near her as I am to you this minute?" |
40068 | In what manner? |
40068 | Indeed, dear lady,I urged,"what likelihood should there be that a serving- wench in her kitchen should be acquainted with a noble lady''s thoughts?" |
40068 | Is he here? |
40068 | Is he still alive? |
40068 | Is it a woman''s calling, I pray you, to preach? 40068 Is it because wan man got a cut on the head? |
40068 | Is it my fault that your mother is poor and sick? |
40068 | Is it possible,he asked,"that some mocking demon has deluded me?" |
40068 | Is it possible? |
40068 | Is it that cottage near to the wood? |
40068 | Is it you, dear brother? |
40068 | Is not that a harsh estimate, papa,said Eva, gently and timidly,"when you can only speak by surmise?" |
40068 | Is that poor man gone from Rugeley''s house? |
40068 | Is the girl mad? 40068 Is there not danger"I asked,"in moving him so soon?" |
40068 | Is this the truth? |
40068 | Is your brain turned? |
40068 | Is your mother''s name Sophia? |
40068 | It was not, then,I asked,"on this occasion you were apprehended and taken to Wisbeach?" |
40068 | M. Ballanche,she said,"where is your hat?" |
40068 | May I go, brother? |
40068 | May I not leave this world? |
40068 | Might not that strange effect in yourself betoken the presence of a kinsman? |
40068 | Mistaking him then for Basil? |
40068 | Must you go? |
40068 | No lives were lost, I hope? |
40068 | No matter about that now, father; I suppose I can get the money tomorrow or after, and start for my aunt''s? |
40068 | No, but did not I tell you how it would be? 40068 Not here, Emon,"she said, releasing it;"are you mad? |
40068 | Not in mine,quoth Mr. Roper;"so, if your memory doth serve you, Lady Ingoldsby, will you rehearse it?" |
40068 | Now what remaineth but in a few brief sentences to relate how this loved husband spent his last hours, and the manner of his death? 40068 O Basil,"I cried, sitting down by his side, and taking hold of his chilled hand,"what hath happened? |
40068 | O Basil,I cried,"do you then know he is my father?" |
40068 | O England, mine own England, my fair native land-- am I to leave thee, never to return? |
40068 | O Muriel,I answered,"how should this be? |
40068 | O my dear lady,I exclaimed,"and is it indeed thus with you? |
40068 | O who thy ruine sees, whom wonder doth not fill With our great father''s pompe, devotion, and their skill? 40068 O, for God''s sake, what aileth you, dearest lady?" |
40068 | Ochone, does n''t every one know that, your honor? 40068 Of course; and what has followed?" |
40068 | Of what sort? |
40068 | Oh, Constance,she exclaimed,"was this poor man known to thee, that thy grief is so great, whose conscience doth not reproach thee as mine doeth?" |
40068 | Oh, doth that house and that garden no more exist? |
40068 | Oh, he is sensible, then? |
40068 | Oh, sir,he exclaimed, greatly surprised,"how have I merited such great kindness?" |
40068 | Oh, what do you say? |
40068 | Ought we not to hope and pray that he will take a more considerate view of Father John''s application to him, papa? |
40068 | Permit me, noble lady? |
40068 | Pierre,said she,"you have adopted your brother''s children, have you not?" |
40068 | Pierre,said the old lady again,"you must answer; will you remain alone with Alphonsine, or will you come here alone? |
40068 | Prince Gallitzin? |
40068 | See you what this doth mean? |
40068 | Should it be safe,I asked,"to speak thereon to Hubert Rookwood? |
40068 | Should this be prudent, my lord? |
40068 | Shure, could n''t he have his pick an''choice of any girl in that, or in any other parish; ay, or among her acquaintances in Armagh, for that matter? 40068 Sir,"I heard her say, as he approached,"what hath befallen the poor man you would not dismiss?" |
40068 | Sir,I said to Mr. Mumford,"think you her majesty hath said aught to my lord touching his lady or his lately- born little daughter?" |
40068 | Tell me, Tom, do you think that fellow Lennon is at the bottom of all this? 40068 That''s strange,"thought I to myself;"I wonder if this Pierre can be a bad father, or at any rate a bad husband?" |
40068 | The Catholics were then wholly routed? |
40068 | Then he hath not escaped this dear honor? |
40068 | Then think you, sir,I said,"he will be one day as noted for his virtues as now for his faults?" |
40068 | Then why is he not here? |
40068 | Then you are afraid, Winny? |
40068 | Then you have not been into Staffordshire? |
40068 | Then you will return to Kenninghall? |
40068 | Then,I added,"will you not join in the attempt, if so be she can convey to you a cord? |
40068 | There must needs come news of the queen of France''s lying- in; but I pray you how will it be? 40068 They are going to dance, Winny; will you allow me to lead you out?" |
40068 | They restore me my country,he said;"but who will restore me my child?" |
40068 | Think you I know this not? |
40068 | Think you so? |
40068 | Think you so? |
40068 | Three services of attackare enumerated-- on pirates, aggressors, and wolves; and"three services of defence"--to secure"promontories[ hills? |
40068 | Thrue for you, Katty avrone; but was n''t it Winny that put him up to it, an''the tears coming up in her eyes as she axed him? 40068 Was it not,"I said,"a moving one?" |
40068 | Was she not in town on Monday? |
40068 | Was there ever anything betune you an''young Lennon, Emon- a- knock, as I have heard you call him myself? |
40068 | Well, Phil, how is he? 40068 Well, boys,"said Emon,"what''s the matter now? |
40068 | Well, father,said Tom, breaking into the subject at once,"have you seen the old fogie about Winny?" |
40068 | Well, your reverence? |
40068 | Well, your reverence? |
40068 | Well,said the interlocutor,"you wo n''t let him have more goods without ready money?" |
40068 | Were you, then, present at that combat, sir? |
40068 | What ails you, sweet lady? |
40068 | What answered her grace? |
40068 | What are you dreaming of, you silly little thing? |
40068 | What be they about? |
40068 | What cappen think o''that? |
40068 | What did her grace bet? |
40068 | What do you know of all this, Master Studious? 40068 What end,"she asked,"could marriage answer? |
40068 | What fresh injury,I timidly asked,"hath driven Lady Surrey from her house?" |
40068 | What had she to him, or to be afraid of him for? 40068 What has he done?" |
40068 | What is a woman''s love to mine? 40068 What is it, my father?" |
40068 | What is it? |
40068 | What is my life? 40068 What is the matter?" |
40068 | What joy do you speak of? 40068 What meaneth this passion of grief? |
40068 | What news do you look for, good wife? |
40068 | What passed between you? |
40068 | What prisoner? |
40068 | What resolve? |
40068 | What say you? |
40068 | What sayest thou, Constance, of my lord''s intent? |
40068 | What sport are they making ready for? |
40068 | What steps,Mr. Wells asked,"hath your lordship disposed for to effect this departure?" |
40068 | What think you of the dress our ladies do wear? |
40068 | What was the horror of it? |
40068 | What''s the use? |
40068 | What, then, had happened in the interval? |
40068 | What, what is it? |
40068 | What? |
40068 | Where doth this fellow lodge? |
40068 | Where have you left my Agnes? |
40068 | Where in all the world did this come from? |
40068 | Where is Muriel? |
40068 | Wherefore impossible? |
40068 | Wherefore not? |
40068 | Which of all our duties,asked the brethren,"is the greatest labor?" |
40068 | Which of us, Kate? |
40068 | Who are you? |
40068 | Who can be ringing? |
40068 | Who hath brought these tidings? |
40068 | Who is it? |
40068 | Who knows how many a fix it may yet help me out of? |
40068 | Who the devil cares_ now_ about the countess? 40068 Who, sir?" |
40068 | Why should one meet to be trusted, and by me above all other persons in the world, be kept ignorant of what so nearly doth touch me? |
40068 | Why so, Phil? |
40068 | Why take them? 40068 Why then, aunt dear, might n''t you bring me across her in earnest?" |
40068 | Why, Basil,I said,"what, I pray you, should be the duty of a virtuous wife but to love her husband?" |
40068 | Why, what''s the matter? |
40068 | Will you not even answer me, Winny? |
40068 | Will you swear to observe these things? |
40068 | Would you compel me by a bloody threat to utter a false vow? |
40068 | Would you go there? |
40068 | Would you hear it? |
40068 | Would you, then, have a man die by your means? |
40068 | Yea,she cried,"who doth doubt it? |
40068 | You are not going to leave us, Emon? |
40068 | You are probably astonished--he continued, after I had handed him a letter from the Bishop of Philadelphia--"at the strangeness of my equipage? |
40068 | You did not see Hubert? |
40068 | You do n''t mane to say she refused you, Tom? |
40068 | You have been in America, sir, I suppose? |
40068 | You have not told him anything? |
40068 | You have quite made up your mind? |
40068 | _ Herod._ What aileth thee, Stephen? 40068 _ Is_ Basil in England?" |
40068 | ''And wishes sure he loved her?'' |
40068 | ''But tell me,''I added,''good cousin John, should you not know him if you saw him?'' |
40068 | ''Cast off,''I cried;''and has my graceless nephew, then, been so wicked?'' |
40068 | ''Is my lord taken?'' |
40068 | ''What do we now expect in history?'' |
40068 | ''What news is there?'' |
40068 | ''What times is it we do conform to, mother? |
40068 | ''Wherein, my lord?'' |
40068 | ''Why, what will you do with it?'' |
40068 | ''Would Alice blame her? |
40068 | ''Yes, with the one love given Once in a lifetime only; With one soul and one heaven?'' |
40068 | *****"''Where is the golden cradle That Christ was rocked in? |
40068 | 28)? |
40068 | ;"And who should be with those three ships? |
40068 | ? trure autentiche ed originali_.] |
40068 | A brother said to Abbot Sisoi:"What must I do to keep my heart?" |
40068 | Abbot Antony said: I saw the nets of the enemy lying spread out over the earth; and I cried out,"Alas, who shall escape these?" |
40068 | Agnes, looking at him with astonishment, asked:"Are you my uncle Frank, of whom my mother has so often told me? |
40068 | All under the leaves of life?" |
40068 | Am I a Jew or a heretic that I should endure this sight and not smite this queen of earth, which dareth{ 621} to insult the Queen of Saints? |
40068 | Am I a surgeon? |
40068 | An''how is Mick a wochal? |
40068 | An''let me see-- how long ago is that now, Tom agra? |
40068 | And Lady l''Estrange is then thy friend?" |
40068 | And did not Redman in 1822, and Robinson in 1824, just escape the gallows by a hair''s- breadth? |
40068 | And do not churls and nobles give Their lives for king and throne? |
40068 | And do we not meet with the same phenomenon in music and religions poetry? |
40068 | And for what this condescension? |
40068 | And further off? |
40068 | And has my genius, with a potent sway, Gilded the road to heaven-- that straight and narrow way? |
40068 | And how doth this surmise agree with the report of her visit to Kenninghall?" |
40068 | And now,"he added,"shall I repeat what Mr. Roper related of your virtues?" |
40068 | And now,"she said, turning to me,"is Mr. Sherwood willing for to try to escape by the same means as Mr. Watson? |
40068 | And of what good will life be to her if, like some others, she doth linger for years in prison?" |
40068 | And shall I not endure?" |
40068 | And then I asked him how long it was since this change in his thinking, albeit not yet acted upon, had come to him? |
40068 | And then, once there, how was the chyle to be got rid of? |
40068 | And then- if you are resolved to run this danger, should it not be possible to save my father also by the same means? |
40068 | And thou wilt marry who I please?" |
40068 | And were not these instances enough to scarify any man''s imagination, and shiver his every nerve? |
40068 | And what Englishman, thought he, would not readily be guilty of the same offence? |
40068 | And what authority does this dogmatic exposition appeal to as its support? |
40068 | And what were the utility of an external and nominal union which could only cover a real internal difference? |
40068 | And who shall tell me if I be doing right or wrong?" |
40068 | And why not? |
40068 | And why should she? |
40068 | And would he bid his daughter shirk Duty-- whate''er betide? |
40068 | And yonder? |
40068 | And, Constance, when a man hath once been weak, what security can there be, albeit I deny not hope, that he shall always after stand firm?" |
40068 | Answer me that, Winny?" |
40068 | Are both to receive the same advice? |
40068 | Are there no conquests but those of the sword? |
40068 | Are they bilious? |
40068 | Are we going to see our best man murdered before our eyes, an''be satisfied wid a piper an''a dance? |
40068 | Are we too bold in suspecting something more than a simple coincidence in the simultaneousness of these two events? |
40068 | Are yon Master Rugeley?" |
40068 | Are you hurt? |
40068 | Are you secretly promised, Winny, to any other young man that you''re afeard I would n''t like? |
40068 | Arra, what do ye mane? |
40068 | Arra, where is it? |
40068 | As I passed the hall I heard some one ask,''Which is the master of this huge house?'' |
40068 | As to the future, who can doubt that humanity will be positivist? |
40068 | At last I broke this silence by such words as"What should now be done?" |
40068 | At what point of his life, therefore, did he confide to paper the interior state of his mind? |
40068 | Be you not ashamed to suffer an old man to stand here so long in his shirt in the cold? |
40068 | Being in want of cash, and having only dollar notes with me, I asked my guide what I should do? |
40068 | Beside, was it not exactly what my late friend Richter had done? |
40068 | Beside, what does progress avail if society can not enjoy it in order and peace? |
40068 | Biology and sociology have, it is true, not yet the character of exact sciences; but why have they not? |
40068 | But I detected it in her hand, and cried,"''Tis from Basil; how hath it come?" |
40068 | But I pray you, what is impossible in these days? |
40068 | But I pray you, who are familiar with Sir Francis, what means should be best for to move him to compassion? |
40068 | But I warrant thee-- nay, I may not warrant,"she added, checking herself,"for who can of a surety forecast what God''s designs should be? |
40068 | But amid the founders of a new science, who shall represent our own country? |
40068 | But amn''t I tellin''you what is beyant your sight,--what he is to the backbone, for larnin'', an''everythin''that''s good, manly, an''honest? |
40068 | But are not these two papers the offspring of two authors, of two teachers? |
40068 | But are the ordinary graces of Christians distinguished from illusions by demonstration? |
40068 | But as religion can not do it, perhaps philosophy, metaphysics, can? |
40068 | But at least humanity, after so many efforts, once elevated to this glorious state, will henceforth remain in it? |
40068 | But at least they are the centuries of doubt and unbelief in which science has made her greatest progress? |
40068 | But can I help thee, sweet one? |
40068 | But for you, what would have been my children''s fate? |
40068 | But how did this mend the matter as regarded himself? |
40068 | But how find or how construct such a doctrine? |
40068 | But how much do we know as to the separate or joint action of our bodily, intellectual, and moral powers? |
40068 | But how to get bodies? |
40068 | But how, she asked, could my father be dealt with in time touching that matter? |
40068 | But how, we naturally ask, has this change of color and form been effected? |
40068 | But if he had consulted only his worldly interests, if he had not been inspired by religious motives, where would he naturally have sought for aid? |
40068 | But if not solid, are they fluid, are they a great isolated ocean poised in the Saturnian mid air? |
40068 | But if overcrowding produces typhus, why is it that the disease prevails in the epidemic form, and then in a great measure disappears? |
40068 | But is Lord Arundel then indeed in less favor with her majesty? |
40068 | But look yonder: is not that a fire? |
40068 | But makes them calm and meek; And if, when storms are raging, Thou askest, murmuring,"Why?" |
40068 | But my mother begs me to get married; and what can I do? |
40068 | But now, sir,"he continued, turning to Mr. Wells,"what think you of this? |
40068 | But now-- ay,_ now_--what was he to do? |
40068 | But of what use are these cries for help, unless we are willing to make some sacrifice? |
40068 | But prithee, my good child, whence comest thou?" |
40068 | But the muleteer answered:"Father, what remedy can I know? |
40068 | But was he her brother, or merely a brother- in- law? |
40068 | But what about the game? |
40068 | But what does it all mean? |
40068 | But what has become of Agnes?" |
40068 | But what is the soul? |
40068 | But what then? |
40068 | But what was the condition and social estimate of those who sought the favor of the nobility? |
40068 | But what was the subject of all these learned deliberations? |
40068 | But when were those stupid Lichtensteiners to be satisfied? |
40068 | But whence comes this evil, this trouble, this feverish and sterile agitation? |
40068 | But where is Madame de Staël? |
40068 | But where is this doctrine to be found? |
40068 | But who knows? |
40068 | But why not teach the_ dôbi_ to wash in another way? |
40068 | But why pursue the theme? |
40068 | But why question of that wherein my belief is unshaken? |
40068 | But, Winny, sure the ould blue teapot''s not broken, is it?" |
40068 | But, now, supposing this effort should be successful, have we Catholics any cause for alarm? |
40068 | But, prithee, dearest love, is Mrs. Ward in this house?" |
40068 | By the Roman Church? |
40068 | By what magic come you here? |
40068 | Can any justice be done where the culprits are their own judges and interpreters of the law, equally with those who are set on high to render justice? |
40068 | Can any one prove the contrary? |
40068 | Can any other principle prevail in the case of that tie which is the fountain whence the other domestic charities flow? |
40068 | Can not our antagonists"_ invint some other little bit of truth?_"We are tired of hearing this one so often. |
40068 | Can you think on it without weeping? |
40068 | Cattolica di Carlo II., Re d''Inghilterra, caveta da?? |
40068 | Cattolica di Carlo II., Re d''Inghilterra, caveta da?? |
40068 | Certainly the Church has the plenary right to be heard and obeyed when she speaks; but did she speak in the Council of Trent? |
40068 | Children united to God; who can tell what was passing that moment in their souls? |
40068 | Chinaman nasty beast, I think, cappen, eh?" |
40068 | Come, where shall we dine?" |
40068 | Constance, what think you to do?" |
40068 | Could Molière have written anything more sublimely comic?] |
40068 | Could he tell his secret with a more refreshing simplicity? |
40068 | Could it be? |
40068 | Could it have been the shadow that I recognized through the roses the evening before? |
40068 | Could you not send your men home at once?" |
40068 | Di ye mane to say you spoke to her plain, as I tould you to do, Tom avic?" |
40068 | Did Agnes see aright? |
40068 | Did he tell you how anybody else danced?" |
40068 | Did he write in a hurry, or not? |
40068 | Did her eyes deceive her? |
40068 | Did ho belong to the dangerous classes? |
40068 | Did n''t I hear Father Farrell say so, over an''over again? |
40068 | Did you put that to her?" |
40068 | Did you spake stout to her, Ned?" |
40068 | Do n''t I know the very girl that''ll answer to a T, Tom?" |
40068 | Do n''t you see we''re in sight of the houses? |
40068 | Do not I owe him fealty, Even though it cost my life? |
40068 | Do not all enjoy it equally-- rich and poor? |
40068 | Do not the Catholics outnumber the Protestants in Germany? |
40068 | Do people disguise their ideas, as they counterfeit their voices? |
40068 | Do we believe that nothing is an object of prayer, or an occasion for thanksgiving, till it is proved to be such? |
40068 | Do we know by what process even these came to exist? |
40068 | Do we not see in this a signal triumph of God over man, of truth over falsehood? |
40068 | Do you cry mercy to this accusation, Mistress Sherwood?" |
40068 | Do you mane to say they''re_ onshioughs_ or_ aumadhawns_, or-- what?" |
40068 | Do you mean did she ever refuse me?" |
40068 | Does he know who struck the blow?" |
40068 | Does it not do one good to see their easy contentment? |
40068 | Does not Pliny cite innumerable instances? |
40068 | Does not the"Newgate Calendar"teem with cases of men''s lives perjured by false witnesses, or sacrificed to a false tissue of circumstances? |
40068 | Does not this show that revelation was not intended to teach chronology? |
40068 | Does that circumstance discredit all visions that claim to be supernatural? |
40068 | Doth love consume with pensive woe Thy heart whence hope has fleeted-- As sunbeams melt away the snow They never could have heated? |
40068 | Doth my lord so forget your love and his duty as to forsake one he should cherish as his most dear treasure?" |
40068 | Each and all have their fitness; and what is the Infiorata? |
40068 | Ere I lifted it again, the hall- door opened, and who, I pray you, should I then see( with more affright, I confess, than was reasonable) but Hubert? |
40068 | Everything was in commotion; the"peelers"were out, and"a whole bunch( bench?) |
40068 | Fear you that from such a system despotism must result? |
40068 | First, does the man write often moderately, or very nicely? |
40068 | For mine own part I never read those words of Holy Writ,"Who shall find a valiant woman?" |
40068 | For they are ever asking,"Where is the judge? |
40068 | For who can give that which is the greatest pleasure in watching the clouds, the feeling of change? |
40068 | For whom? |
40068 | For, having a divine original"[ origin? |
40068 | From where and from what place? |
40068 | Full well Napoleon knew that he could with an iron hand put down clamor for the present; but would that dispel the feeling in men''s consciences? |
40068 | Genings?" |
40068 | Going into an inn to refresh ourselves, which I promise you we sorely needed, who should we meet with there but one Radcliff?" |
40068 | Had he not now, in the general of the Jesuits, a powerful advocate with the sovereign pontiff? |
40068 | Had he seriously thought of becoming a Catholic without submitting in the process to this consequence? |
40068 | Hang o''er my fancy with bewitching spell? |
40068 | Has sorrow cast thy spirit down, And crush''d thy hopes Elysian? |
40068 | Has virtue, then, nothing of the supernatural? |
40068 | Hast thou license for to see thy father?" |
40068 | Hath he told you his hap on that occasion?" |
40068 | Have the fair features and bright hues I wove''In one dark breast illumed the spark of love? |
40068 | He answered her interiorly:"Of what art thou afraid? |
40068 | He answered: I am in jeopardy myself, and what can I say to_ thee?_ 4. |
40068 | He called a muleteer and said to him:"My son, do n''t you know some remedy for the sore on my foot and leg?" |
40068 | He started, but shaking of his head said:"Nay, nay, why should it have been him rather than a thousand others I do see every day?" |
40068 | He used to make answer,"Are you sure we did not eat just now, my son?" |
40068 | He was determined to be down on Emon- a- knock''s poverty, for a penny would have done as well; and he said,"Shall I call, or will you?" |
40068 | He will be on the sand almost in a{ 112} moment We may go and meet him, may we not, mother?" |
40068 | Her little sister to her ran, And clasped her tightly round:"Sure, sister, such a wicked man Can not on earth be found?" |
40068 | Here it is; and how is the good woman?" |
40068 | Here''s first- rate shop-- number one jeweler this chap-- cappen want to buy anything? |
40068 | Hiding his face in his hands, Hubert said,"Would I had not come here to embitter your pain?" |
40068 | His brother opened to him, saying,"If you are a man, why do n''t you work? |
40068 | His retaliation, however, is not in accordance with our finer conceptions of right, but who will question the justness of_ war_-expedients? |
40068 | How are Mrs. Perkins and the chicks?" |
40068 | How are all the folks at Nottingham?" |
40068 | How could I comfort the poor fellow? |
40068 | How could he face his father, too? |
40068 | How cut asunder the religious tie that linked him to Josephine? |
40068 | How do they disappear, why do they reappear in the modern form of the word, and what is its original derivation? |
40068 | How durst you then attempt the royal presence, and to kiss her majesty''s hand? |
40068 | How had the enemy contrived to creep into the citadel? |
40068 | How has sculpture won its noblest triumphs? |
40068 | How shall I bear new frowns after recent caresses?--peradventure an eternal parting after a late reunion? |
40068 | How should it then behoove thee to run the perils of the sea, and nightly voyage, and it may be rough usage? |
40068 | How was it under Augustus? |
40068 | How will his writing show it? |
40068 | How,{ 521} it was asked, are the meetings in the evenings to be carried on? |
40068 | Höss?" |
40068 | I asked eagerly;"what may occur?" |
40068 | I ax you did you{ 207} ever see a finer head iv hair, or a finer pair iv ejes in a man''s head, or a handsomer nose, or a purtier mouth? |
40068 | I could not bear to hear her weep; but what comfort could I give? |
40068 | I cried,"and is this, then, the place where my father is confined?'' |
40068 | I cried,''or worse befallen him?'' |
40068 | I cried;"it is not done? |
40068 | I cried;"may I not also, forgetting all things else, live for God alone?" |
40068 | I exclaimed,"could you keep on looking?" |
40068 | I kept saying to myself,''Which of yon will tarnish it first?'' |
40068 | I looked thereon{ 282} with the eie of my understanding, and thought, What may this be?'' |
40068 | I presume you are an author, and mean to publish your travels in a neat volume, with wood- cut illustrations?" |
40068 | I then whispered again in his ear:"Know you that Hubert is in the queen''s retinue?" |
40068 | I whispered in Mr. Genings''s ear:"Look, Edmund; is this the youth you saw before?" |
40068 | I wonder how you would act had you been at the_ battue_ in Drogheda or Wexford?" |
40068 | I''ll cut my stick for that bit, be it long or short; so tell me, what can you do for me about money? |
40068 | I''ll keep it in memory of the day that you saved my poor dog from destruction-- there now, will that do?" |
40068 | If I could not marry Marie myself, had I any right to hinder her marriage with another? |
40068 | If Jesus Christ has left a church here on earth, and if we were all at one time in this church, how, and by what authority, are we separated from it? |
40068 | If St. Patrick were a native of the island, is it not probable that Germanus and Lupus would rather have{ 757} invited him to join their mission? |
40068 | If it had not been intended to annul the marriage by any means, why was the certificate of it wrested from Josephine? |
40068 | If so, who should have so good a right to it as my Constance and her Basil? |
40068 | If stand, why not go? |
40068 | If the consent of the Church is not recognizable by such signs, by what signs could it be recognized? |
40068 | If the power of interpreting Scripture resides in the brain of each individual, what need have you of a church or of churchmen? |
40068 | If typhus be due to any"epidemic influence,"why does this influence select large towns and spare the country districts? |
40068 | If you are an angel, what do you knock for?" |
40068 | If you love Basil-- as I misdoubt not he loves you-- where shall a more suitable match be found, or one which every one must needs so much approve? |
40068 | If you''re not able to find out all you want yourself, what good''s in you?" |
40068 | If, then, the remedy can be found neither in religion nor in metaphysics, where can it be found? |
40068 | In how many an English alley is not the convent the last hope of purity and faith? |
40068 | In troth Winny will be a comfort to you, as well as a creedit; that''s what she will, wo n''t she, Tom?" |
40068 | Indeed? |
40068 | Is it a religious doctrine-- Catholicity, for instance? |
40068 | Is it good to get drunk once a month? |
40068 | Is it his reason or intelligence elevated and illuminated? |
40068 | Is it not a proof of vital energy that the Catholics of all countries are building the grandest churches in the most correct style? |
40068 | Is it not an encouraging sign that we are completing the immense edifices of the middle ages? |
40068 | Is it not written, mine own Constance,''My strength is sufficient for thee?'' |
40068 | Is it so? |
40068 | Is n''t it well for the likes of her that has hair- matt_resses_ to spare?" |
40068 | Is not the future a domain open to all, and where each may imagine for himself the part that pleases him? |
40068 | Is penitence, or humility, or simplicity demonstrable? |
40068 | Is sneezing a natural act? |
40068 | Is the Church a citadel so poorly guarded that one can enter it by stratagem, by simply turning his cockade or dissembling his uniform? |
40068 | Is there a power in fate? |
40068 | Is there a soft corner in his heart which a woman''s tears can touch? |
40068 | Is there aught I can do to lighten thy affliction? |
40068 | Is there no virtue but that of valor? |
40068 | Is this a defect of vision, or caused by the sun''s_ changements?_ If by willow- leaves other things than these are understood, I have not seen them. |
40068 | Is this more wonderful than the words that bow the foreheads and bend the knees of the faithful,"He was made man?" |
40068 | Is woman an imperfect work of nature? |
40068 | It is impossible to enter into details concerning all, for who can be present in five places at the same time? |
40068 | It is the culminating point of their activity; for what is religion but practical love of God and our neighbor? |
40068 | It''ll be an illigant match for the pair iv ye; as good for the wan as for the other-- coming Shraft, Tom, eh? |
40068 | Know you aught of Mistress Ward?" |
40068 | Know you the sight which from that window shall be seen? |
40068 | Knows he not that to know a fact he must study it first in himself and in its essence, and then in its manifold applications? |
40068 | Lacketh thee either meat or drink in King Herod''s hall? |
40068 | Lastly, is his temperament nervous or inclined to be heavy? |
40068 | Lieutenant? |
40068 | Like fiery arrow, glideth An earthward- falling star? |
40068 | M. Littré reassures you, with his strange apothegm,"what is despotism in our days but government in the hands of the retrograde parties?" |
40068 | Makest thou vestments for holy preacher, And cloths to adorn the altar rare?" |
40068 | Master Rugeley, where can he be concealed, or whither fly, and I with him?" |
40068 | May I hope it has only been the first of a long life like it?" |
40068 | May not the devotion of a child be childlike, and of a man be manly? |
40068 | Moreover, under what form would such a concession be made? |
40068 | Must we not all die? |
40068 | My lord answered:''How can that be, seeing yourself hath told me heretofore that no fault could be laid unto him but his religion?'' |
40068 | Need I say what a miserable vista was opened up before me? |
40068 | No chimney, you will say; do you, then, eat your rice quite raw? |
40068 | No one seems to have thought of fastening the images; in fact, why should they trouble themselves about the workmanship of barbarians? |
40068 | No, she contented herself with taking a slate down from the wall, the pencil belonging to which was already in her hand:"How much?" |
40068 | Nonsense!"--"Why?" |
40068 | Now what will be its ideal? |
40068 | Now which is right, the author of the"Discourse on Method"or M. Comte? |
40068 | Now, how has man come forth from that ignorance? |
40068 | Now, what furnishes this type? |
40068 | Now, what will be his characteristic handwriting? |
40068 | O Constance, are they there to die?--that brave joyous old man, that kind pious soul his wife?" |
40068 | O Emon, in four?" |
40068 | O ye who read this, have you taken heed how, at some times in your lives, in a less space than the wink of an eye, thought has outrun sight? |
40068 | Observation is, indeed, the true method, but observation of what? |
40068 | Observation? |
40068 | Of Hubert I could hear but scanty tidings at that time-- only that he had either lost or resigned his place at court? |
40068 | Of course you did not refuse Tom''s offer?" |
40068 | Of moral phenomena, the operations of the soul? |
40068 | Of what use is this Journal? |
40068 | Of whence be ye, you kings iij? |
40068 | Oh, what avails it that my hands would mould Beautiful models from the marble cold? |
40068 | Oh, when will that be?" |
40068 | Oh, you who saw her, as I did, in her young and innocent years, can you read this without shuddering? |
40068 | On how many an Irish waste does not the last crust come from it? |
40068 | On what authority does he believe that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son? |
40068 | Or his once famous series of letters on the"Importance of being in Communion with the Catholic Church?" |
40068 | Or lured the soul from sin''s deceptious toys To pure devotion''s memorable joys? |
40068 | Or of his controversies with Dr. Delancey, the late Protestant Episcopal bishop of western New York, and Dr. Onderdonk, P. E. bishop of Pennsylvania? |
40068 | Or of his letters on"Infallibility,"written while he was in Philadelphia? |
40068 | Or was this error such that thou could''st not protect Those buildings which thy hands did with their zeal erect? |
40068 | Polly cried, when she perceived Basil;"who have we here? |
40068 | Poverty awaits me abroad; but in what have state and riches benefited us, Nan? |
40068 | Pray whither sailed those ships all three? |
40068 | Prithee, good wench, why dost thou not wish thy poor friend joy?" |
40068 | Quite different in tone, full of ringing harmony, is the little poem of"Now?" |
40068 | Say, have I used these varied talents well? |
40068 | Shall I give you some tea?" |
40068 | Shall I lead the way?" |
40068 | Shall I stand aloof when at mine own door the Blessed Mother of God is outraged? |
40068 | Shall I, whose shoulder bears the cross, Upon the cross bring scorn? |
40068 | Shall it be a prince or a princess?" |
40068 | Shall not ease of heart and freedom from haunting fears compensate for vain wealth? |
40068 | Shall she live and do well? |
40068 | She bowed her head--"Who knows the will of God better than your holiness, who have promised him by vow to return to Rome?" |
40068 | She said she was a poor weak woman; how should she{ 558} give advice to the sovereign Pontiff? |
40068 | Should I make known that my"counterfeit"was abroad"stalking the world around?" |
40068 | Shure how could you know, an''you never in Armagh afore?" |
40068 | Since it signifieth fidelity also, well should you affection it; for where shall be found one so faithful in love and friendship as you?" |
40068 | So he comes to me, half- crying, and says,''Why hath Baz that fine new suit and me not the same?'' |
40068 | Stamping his foot in a rage, he demanded what he wanted, or why he regained there? |
40068 | Sure, was n''t it Tom Murdock? |
40068 | Sweetmeats, holiday, and fun? |
40068 | Tell me now, honestly and plainly, is there any one that cum afore Tom in his request? |
40068 | That is, despotism is simply power in the hands of those whose ideas are different from ours? |
40068 | That penury and pain obscured my way? |
40068 | The brothers round him asked,"Should it be forty days?" |
40068 | The daughter of one Sherwood now in prison for popish contumacy?" |
40068 | The duties of his post obliged him to weigh the question,"what is the philosophy of history?" |
40068 | The first twenty miles, he said, is all the difficulty; and why, he asked, writing before balloons had been discovered, may we not get over that? |
40068 | The great clock in the hall then struck twelve; and soon after, starting up, I cried,"What should be that noise?" |
40068 | The inequalities of rank, which are more conspicuous in Rome than in Paris(? |
40068 | The lieutenant( she said) seemed to take exception thereat, saying,''Term you him blessed father, being as he is an enemy to his country?'' |
40068 | The man of business asks of the scholar,"Why ca n''t you sell your labor and become rich?" |
40068 | The odors which exhale from it who shall describe? |
40068 | The physician, no way disconcerted, naively said,"May one venture to inquire, sire, what your majesty gave him?" |
40068 | The reader says to himself,"Nay, is it so sad after all?" |
40068 | The scholar may ask,"Why do n''t you give your money and write a book?" |
40068 | The son he lay in bed;"Here''s a procession, Wilhelm; Wilt not look out?" |
40068 | The union between the civilized nations of Europe is becoming{ 343} closer day by day; will our scholars alone remain stationary and isolated? |
40068 | Then concealing again my face, I went on,"O Hubert, will you come here to- morrow morning? |
40068 | Then followed the murtherous question, if he was a Romish priest? |
40068 | Then he rapidly crossed over, and said, in a whisper:"Will you see me, Constance, if I come to you this evening?" |
40068 | Then he:"Wherefore, Mistress Sherwood?" |
40068 | Then how should we be always gay?" |
40068 | Then said Sir Hammond:"How did you presume, sir, to return into England contrary to the laws?" |
40068 | Then they said,"Are you not Agatho the heretic?" |
40068 | Then why, I say, this certain farewell?" |
40068 | Then, again, how is it that the immense width of the rings has been steadily increasing by the approach of their inner edge to the body of the planet? |
40068 | There is a fixed fine and"honor- price"for carrying away the remains of a bishop out of his tomb( as relics? |
40068 | They said again,"Are you not that Agatho who has such a foul tongue?" |
40068 | This leads us to our question, what, to him, is Anglicanism? |
40068 | This stranger--"Why has he come to Rome, and what is he doing there? |
40068 | Those grades, decorations, gildings, and salaries, the vulgar food of vulgar souls, were they what attracted, what inflamed, these heroic souls? |
40068 | Those who would then make up for the breeze have themselves_ ponka- ed.__ Ponka- ed?_ what is that? |
40068 | Those who would then make up for the breeze have themselves_ ponka- ed.__ Ponka- ed?_ what is that? |
40068 | Though Caesar does n''t bark at you, I hear him whinin''an''shufflin''when you''re coming to the back doore?" |
40068 | To hope that, it is necessary to believe in the justice of history, and who knows if there will be again any history worthy of the name? |
40068 | To what good to seek if it had received in its text and in every part official promulgation by the political power in each sovereign state? |
40068 | To what, then, is observation to be applied? |
40068 | To whom did''st thou commit that monument to keepe? |
40068 | To whom should she have recourse at such a moment but to the First Consul''s sister? |
40068 | To whom, then, must we look for the authorship? |
40068 | Took he Bossuet for an imbecile sentinel who could be imposed upon by passports so evidently forged? |
40068 | Under what form was such a proposition presented to Rome? |
40068 | University regulations strictly enjoined that all public lessons should be in Latin; but what was the use of talking Latin to barbers? |
40068 | Was I justified in preparing for her a life of solitude, and in depriving her of a mother''s care? |
40068 | Was Leibnitz taken by surprise? |
40068 | Was he speculating on the iniquitous force of the Austrian guild laws, or the false system of political economy in vogue in Austria? |
40068 | Was it a last return of the original indecision of character which made him linger at the roadstead to which his mother had accompanied him? |
40068 | Was it possible there should be an emperor out of China with so beautiful a palace as this? |
40068 | Was it really discussed in a Congregation of Cardinals? |
40068 | Was it really included in the list of propositions admitted to discussion by the Papal brief whose existence is enigmatically revealed to us? |
40068 | Was not Hoag tried at New York, in 1804, for bigamy, through a similar misconception? |
40068 | Was there a presentiment in that parting hour which, he could not know, was to mark an eternal farewell? |
40068 | Was there no person there who knew her, and would save him?" |
40068 | Was there really found a Catholic bishop to support it? |
40068 | Watson, be you there? |
40068 | We have heard of such names as Tingli( English), Po- ge( Pegu?) |
40068 | We made that treaty in this very hall; but what purpose has it served? |
40068 | We would like to ask him whether this is a certain, necessary, and universal truth, true for all times, and every individual? |
40068 | Well, a_ fritto?_ If the oil is good, we have nothing to say against that; we allow you excel there. |
40068 | Were they then a race of carpenters? |
40068 | What are these buttresses, how do they originate, and what is their use? |
40068 | What are we to think of that alternation, of those constant advances followed by as constant retreats? |
40068 | What bringeth you? |
40068 | What country could remain at peace if there were not a supreme judge from whom there{ 599} could be no appeal? |
40068 | What did she say, agra?" |
40068 | What does he think of either prediction now? |
40068 | What does that god do? |
40068 | What doth it avail to remonstrate against injuries done under pretence of law, or bandy words with a judge which can compel you to silence?" |
40068 | What doth the fair sex in England think on it?" |
40068 | What fear had seized his intrepid soul? |
40068 | What if the real, the true Perkins, should ever be persecuted by_ my_ friends as I have been by one of his? |
40068 | What impression did the royal letter produce upon Father Oliva? |
40068 | What impression on Rome did it make? |
40068 | What in this strange_ interim_ would have become of the dignity and stability of Catholic doctrine? |
40068 | What is the last and highest aim of architecture? |
40068 | What is the meaning of the incarnation, if God is not to be loved as man? |
40068 | What is the meaning of this curious fact? |
40068 | What is the use of this strange furniture in the House of Saturn, which is like nothing else among the known things of the universe? |
40068 | What is thee befall? |
40068 | What is this floating three paces from here? |
40068 | What is this old man to you, that his misfortune should thus disorder you?" |
40068 | What is this revelation or inspiration in the spiritual nature of an individual? |
40068 | What is your god''s name? |
40068 | What living voice may speak among Your silent and time- hallowed throng? |
40068 | What madness can have inspired such a hope, or what miracle, real or simulated, could fulfil it? |
40068 | What manner of star was it then? |
40068 | What more could I want than this? |
40068 | What more likely than that Josephine told the simple truth, and that official papers were made to meet future contingencies? |
40068 | What need to trace its successive inroads? |
40068 | What plan hath he now formed, and what shall come of it?" |
40068 | What priest, in such a conjuncture, would have consented to receive his abjuration? |
40068 | What relation does this historical passage bear to the sojourn of Father Stuart in London? |
40068 | What say you, Phil?" |
40068 | What shall be that woman''s death- bed? |
40068 | What shall guard those impious tempters if many such should one day league for to sweep them from earth''s face? |
40068 | What shall stay the{ 654} hand of such a man? |
40068 | What should we say if a quarrel between Kent and Essex, between Cork and Kerry, had kept the world at gaze ever since? |
40068 | What sort of a character was he? |
40068 | What then can they do? |
40068 | What then is it? |
40068 | What then? |
40068 | What think you the little wench said to me yesterday? |
40068 | What think you thereof, Mistress Constance? |
40068 | What think you, mine own Constance, was the answer she sent that dying man? |
40068 | What trace doth remain on her soul of what was once a share in the divine nature? |
40068 | What value is the being able to understand why men''s handwritings vary, save as interesting? |
40068 | What was she even at the lowest, and such as the uninitiated might recognize? |
40068 | What was the Spanish system as exhibited in California? |
40068 | What was the after- thought back of the exterior motives of that intermittent resistance? |
40068 | What was the cause of this serious disquietude? |
40068 | What will he say to me when he cometh? |
40068 | What wonder if new life''gan gleam, And care restored what hope gave up? |
40068 | What wonder, then, if Tom Murdock anticipated a certain, if not an easy, victory? |
40068 | What would he not have done to preserve the live[ life?] |
40068 | What, again, avails it to allege the good faith, the involuntary ignorance, of Protestants in resisting the Council of Trent? |
40068 | What, moreover, was that marshal''s baton so cruelly stolen from those who had so well earned it? |
40068 | What, then, could he mean by"seeing it out?" |
40068 | When have I been wanting to thee? |
40068 | When her mother pressed her to lie down a little, she said,"Why seek repose on the brink of eternity?" |
40068 | When we were alone,"Lady l''Estrange,"I said,"where is Master Rugeley''s house?" |
40068 | Where and what his dwelling? |
40068 | Where are the silken sheets That Jesus was wrapt in?'' |
40068 | Where can be found an ancient vestment whose texture he did not scrutinize, and a piece of which he has not begged for still closer examination? |
40068 | Where has she been chilling herself?" |
40068 | Where have you been all this time?" |
40068 | Where is your craft?" |
40068 | Where sorrow never cometh? |
40068 | Wherefore? |
40068 | While thou know''st it telling, Yonder peasant who is he? |
40068 | Whisper me this, Tom; did she ever let on to you?" |
40068 | Who are those two little personages? |
40068 | Who can prove it?" |
40068 | Who can refuse to be loyal, when the yoke is so light? |
40068 | Who dared to divide public attention with the hero of Castiglione and Rivoli? |
40068 | Who has seen it? |
40068 | Who is there that does not admire the melody of the sacred hymns, their perfect form, their solemnity, and their dignity? |
40068 | Who knows, Tom avic? |
40068 | Who shall deny that this is another and equally true description of the highest genius and the noblest art? |
40068 | Who shall deny this is_ one_ definition of genius, one way of picturing the idea of high art? |
40068 | Who will comfort and sustain that long line of penitents? |
40068 | Who will guide the feet of those converts? |
40068 | Who will now make up the loss to his brethren? |
40068 | Who will take his place in the missions? |
40068 | Who would have dreamed of coming storms? |
40068 | Why are female affections alone to strain themselves into the unnatural, instead of advancing to the supernatural? |
40068 | Why are we not always children? |
40068 | Why are you here?" |
40068 | Why did he mingle with them? |
40068 | Why did n''t she tell me you''d gone out of town? |
40068 | Why did not the illustrious theologians of Tübingen deign to come to Munich in 1863? |
40068 | Why do the Welsh say Tafyd for David? |
40068 | Why do the representatives of sciences so intimately connected remain estranged from each other? |
40068 | Why is n''t he honestly employed, like other people, instead of idling about on his five thousand a year, philandering and making mischief? |
40068 | Why is there so slim an attendance of German professors at the Catholic congresses? |
40068 | Why may not smells nourish us as we walk moonward upon space, after escape from all the friction and the sense of burden gravitation brings? |
40068 | Why should he break it? |
40068 | Why should not I, then, do like Herr Richter? |
40068 | Why should not a sodality be established in every considerable parish? |
40068 | Why was he at the opera? |
40068 | Why, Sam, think I''m''flicted with color- blindness? |
40068 | Why, therefore,{ 138} should the only weapon in the drift deposit be manufactured from flint solely? |
40068 | Why, what''s the matther with you, Winny mavrone?" |
40068 | Will Islamism give it? |
40068 | Will Protestantism supply the doctrine needed? |
40068 | Will not twenty- five million German Catholics do something for their poor forlorn brethren? |
40068 | Will the congress of 1863 remain a fragment, as the general meeting of the art unions in 1857? |
40068 | Will you allow me to lead you out?" |
40068 | Will you do me so much good as to come with her to Euston as early before dinner as you can?" |
40068 | Wilt have him, Conny?" |
40068 | Wilt thou follow me there, Constance?" |
40068 | Winny Cavana, are you ashamed of_ any_ one about Rathcash, or Rathcash_more_, seeing you walking with Emon- a- knock?" |
40068 | With what else is woman to love God? |
40068 | With whom, then, did Leibnitz imagine he had to do? |
40068 | Wo n''t you take your priest''s advice?" |
40068 | Wotsie( Bussorah? |
40068 | Would Madame Bacciocchi procure her an interview? |
40068 | Would a morganatic marriage bind his wandering heart, or could she endure the pain of being expatriated for ever? |
40068 | Yet, in the delicate situation in which Charles was placed, what was he to do? |
40068 | You find fault with my management, of course?" |
40068 | You want the medicine for your{ 400} mother? |
40068 | [ But suppose one does not love and serve humanity, will he suffer punishment or lose anything in consequence? |
40068 | [ Footnote 87:_ Istoria della conversione alla Chi?? |
40068 | [ Footnote 87:_ Istoria della conversione alla Chi?? |
40068 | _ Quid de nostra fiet medicina?_ We are condemning our past-- an argument which weighs powerfully against all conversions. |
40068 | almost roared Emon;"have you a fippenny- bit, Winny, or Kate? |
40068 | also abjure? |
40068 | an''how''s_ herself_, Tom, the''colleen dhass''you know?" |
40068 | an''is n''t his heart bruck about it?" |
40068 | an''sure is n''t your happiness mine, Winny dear? |
40068 | and suddenly turning to the little girl:"What is thy family and baptismal name?" |
40068 | and when is he coming?" |
40068 | and who saith this but the Author of all strength-- he on whom the whole world doth rest? |
40068 | and"How can we learn what hath occurred?" |
40068 | asked Sir Brian;"why does he leave his tenantry to be ground to powder or driven to desperation, if he could cure it by his presence?" |
40068 | athen shure if he is, he ought to be a friend of ours; who is he, Tom a wochal?" |
40068 | athen why would n''t he know his own father?" |
40068 | but if we give him rice, will he eat it before us? |
40068 | can it be my brother?" |
40068 | cried Basil, seizing my hand with a convulsive grasp;"what do they carry?--not Blessed Mary''s image?" |
40068 | cried a{ 702} third;"did n''t I see him aim the blow?" |
40068 | did so many Kings do honour to that place For avarice at last so vilely to deface?" |
40068 | dinner- times or bed- times?''" |
40068 | do you mean to drive me mad, man?" |
40068 | etc., And what was in, etc., On Christmas day in the morning? |
40068 | for here I am become a Catholic in faith without persuasion or conference with any one man in the world?" |
40068 | he cried, almost beside himself;"in God''s name, what do you here, and the queen coming for to sleep at your house to- morrow?" |
40068 | he cried, startled;"your thinking is not, God shield it, to be a nun abroad?" |
40068 | he exclaimed in an altered voice;"what sound is that?" |
40068 | he exclaimed,"and not as on a lover? |
40068 | he exclaimed:"a dreadful thought cometh to me; where was Hubert this morning?" |
40068 | he fiercely cried;"think you not that I suffer even now the torment you speak of, and envy the beggar in the street his stupid apathy?" |
40068 | he quickly answered;"who shall possess them?" |
40068 | he replied;"you thought such a change possible in me?" |
40068 | how are sick members to be visited? |
40068 | how doth it happen?" |
40068 | how the religious exercises on Sundays? |
40068 | in large towns, why does it indict the crowded dwellings of the poor and spare the habitations of the rich? |
40068 | is it possible? |
40068 | it is not over?" |
40068 | it is you, Master Studious,"he exclaimed, raising his cap in a stately manner,"what good thing brings you to me?" |
40068 | or by the Anglican?'' |
40068 | or by the Eastern? |
40068 | or doth it yield to time? |
40068 | or hath nothing occurred?" |
40068 | or would Dante have"seen"as much if, instead of following her voice, he had followed that of the siren? |
40068 | said Phil M''Dermott;"do n''t you see who is, I may say, alongside of you? |
40068 | said he;"why you do not mean to say you do n''t know?" |
40068 | she cried to Hubert"Think you I have indifferently well performed the task you set me?" |
40068 | sneered the miser;"why have you not made yourself rich if poverty is so disagreeable to you? |
40068 | was he a respectable member of society or an impostor? |
40068 | was he anything and everything that could lead a man into a violent scrape? |
40068 | was he cold- blooded and resolute, capable{ 710} of murder? |
40068 | was he cunning and clever, and capable of swindling? |
40068 | was he passionate and revengeful? |
40068 | well, Phil, how is he?" |
40068 | what are you about?" |
40068 | what has happened to you?" |
40068 | what kind of a destiny does this prove, if one is free only when the other is shut up, and the word''parting''is written on each page of our lives?" |
40068 | what''s the matther, I say? |
40068 | why ca n''t it be? |
40068 | why does it fall upon large towns in exact proportion to the degree of privation and overcrowding among the poor? |
40068 | why should I not take time by the forelock? |
40068 | why was he there with a fine woman? |
40068 | would that suffice to establish the legitimacy of a future heir to the throne? |
40068 | { 248}"Do n''t you know me, Walter?" |
40068 | { 30}"But did not God for ransom give His own beloved Son? |
40068 | { 314}"What, and rob him of his expectant crown-- the martyr''s palm, and all the rest of it?" |
40068 | { 31} Then Hugh de Vere, beside himself, The casket seized, and said,"O cruel monks, why told ye her? |
40068 | { 457}"Oh, Basil,"I exclaimed,"why was the cord left?" |
40068 | { 653}"What doth your brother write to you?" |
40068 | { 707} But what about the ninety men and the drummer? |
53935 | ''Miguel Tell, the Treasurer? 53935 ''Who would have suspected a lady, so young, so beautiful, so womanly, so attractive? |
53935 | Accused, hast aught to say? |
53935 | Alone? |
53935 | Am I good for nothing, captain, but to bury my comrades? |
53935 | And I? |
53935 | And Master Sebald? |
53935 | And Polidoro? |
53935 | And can I hope? |
53935 | And certes, my master, could he have made a better choice? 53935 And did the duke really interest himself on my account?" |
53935 | And have I not remained there? |
53935 | And she engaged to me by the emperor himself? |
53935 | And that other near her? |
53935 | And the more immediate trouble with the present conduct of Catholics? |
53935 | And the name of your husband? |
53935 | And was it but a dream I left fair Italy? 53935 And were they, too, but dreams---- Those lands far in the West, Where robed in sunset beams The Seven Cities rest? |
53935 | And what demands he? |
53935 | And what response made he? |
53935 | And why not, old friend? 53935 And why, father,"returned Mina gayly,"shouldst thou be sad? |
53935 | And why,asks the author, p. 98,"did he refuse his assent? |
53935 | And will you allow them to shout and applaud with all their might? |
53935 | And you are sure they fixed tonight? |
53935 | Another invitation? 53935 Are not those Catholics, then, who do not act up to their religion?" |
53935 | Are you not afraid that your absence from the senatorial party will be noticed? 53935 Are you sure it was your brother that you saw?" |
53935 | Are you sure that it is Otho of Arneck she marries? |
53935 | Are you, my ladies,the emperor turned to Priscilla and Theodora,"of a like disposition?" |
53935 | Art not too severe? |
53935 | But are you not Cyprien Hardy, ex- grenadier of the Imperial Guards? |
53935 | But fearest thou no danger, Otho? 53935 But how can you, so staunch a member of the church, resolve to marry a heretic?" |
53935 | But is there no other love to divide your heart from Him whom you propose espousing? 53935 But my Effie wo n''t reason, will she? |
53935 | But what does he do? |
53935 | But what was her other name? |
53935 | But what will you take, my dear sir? |
53935 | But whom doth the countess marry? |
53935 | But why so much mystery and solemnity? 53935 But why, my good Johann, disquiet thyself about my happiness?" |
53935 | But with what motive? |
53935 | But, Alice, where is Verheyden? |
53935 | But-- but, Otho-- why should he choose such a place of tryst? 53935 By the way, Bathus, have you heard that Epictetus and the whole host of philosophers have been exiled? |
53935 | Can this be true? 53935 Can this be true?" |
53935 | Canst imagine, Otho, who hath addressed it thee? |
53935 | Come you to examine my treasures or to ask a diamond from my shop? 53935 Dear lady, may I hope you will think this an object worthy of your ambition? |
53935 | Dear master, why so much of compliment and gratitude? 53935 Did I ever say aught to make you doubt the captain''s honor?" |
53935 | Did you act as they recommended? |
53935 | Did you not make a mistake, Zanetto? |
53935 | Did you think I had forgotten you in the midst of tiltings and passages- at- arms? |
53935 | Didst say to him that I prayed his presence, or, at least, that he should explain himself? 53935 Do you come from far? |
53935 | Do you wish to mock my misery,he bitterly asked,"now that you have blighted all on which my hopes of happiness rested? |
53935 | Does he think we are dervishes? 53935 Domine, quid me vis facere?" |
53935 | E''en so, For beams enough there be, I trow; And who will claim them, if not thou? |
53935 | Father, I am a stranger here; will you appoint some one to see to it? |
53935 | Fears and misgivings? |
53935 | Go I ever to rejoicings unless my father bears me company? 53935 Hath one of those fair ladies of whom you speak deigned to cast a glance upon me?" |
53935 | Have I been asleep? |
53935 | Have they burned the castle? |
53935 | Have you a smelling- bottle? |
53935 | Have you finished the notes I wished you to make from Jomini and Vandoncourt? |
53935 | Have you heard,said the pope,"when he is likely to be in Rome?" |
53935 | Have you withdrawn the faith you gave Aurelian by our desire, and bestowed it on another? |
53935 | His name? 53935 How can we decimate men of whom we have such immediate need before the enemy?" |
53935 | How canst thou, whose works have so long glorified our Lord, now refuse to repent? 53935 How many campaigns?" |
53935 | I am the person; do you wish to be taken there? |
53935 | I and Effie will sit together All alone in this great arm- chair: Is it silly to mind it, darling, When life is so hard to bear? 53935 I can hardly explain it, yet it seems to shape itself thus: Why, if men are so blessed with a divine religion, is the world so bad? |
53935 | I hope your mistress has recovered from her late indisposition? |
53935 | I see no one, father, what is the matter? |
53935 | I will see you after the funeral,she said;"meanwhile, may I ask you to point out some woman to go home with me, and take charge of these children? |
53935 | I, my captain? |
53935 | If a cord can thus indent marble,he said to himself,"why should not constant study and perseverance make an impression on my mind?" |
53935 | If you break your plaything yourself, dear, Do n''t you cry for it all the same? 53935 Is he any relative to the family at Estcourt?" |
53935 | Is life a boon? |
53935 | Is love ours, and do we dream we know it Bound with all our heart- strings all our own? 53935 Is she thinking of talking fishes, The blue- bird, or magical tree? |
53935 | Is that the secret of Hester''s dejection? |
53935 | Is this Cyprien one of his faithful soldiers, sir? |
53935 | Is this certain? |
53935 | Maria,exclaimed Ismena at last,"how have you been able to bear your misfortune?" |
53935 | May I embrace Zanetto,_ mon capitaine?_"Do as you will,I said;"I would rather be a hundred feet underground than here." |
53935 | Me,_ mon capitaine?_ What have I done more than my comrades? 53935 Me,_ mon capitaine?_ What have I done more than my comrades? |
53935 | Misery? 53935 My friends, am I so far behind the great?" |
53935 | My poor friend,said the father,"have you not yet forgiven God for loving you better than you can understand?" |
53935 | Need you, then, friends or aid? 53935 Nevertheless, the enterprise amuses you a little, does it not?" |
53935 | Nor marvel I at them; but if they are imprudent, demoiselle? |
53935 | Nora,she exclaimed,"are you crazy? |
53935 | Of Holy Chinch what cravest thou, On suppliant knee and with rev''rent brow? |
53935 | Of Holy Church what askest thou, Palm- branch in hand, and with flower- crowned brow? |
53935 | Of Holy Church what askest thou? |
53935 | Sayest thou so, Mina? 53935 Shall you ever forget the blue eyes of those rose- windows at Toledo?" |
53935 | Should a proud cavalier like him espouse a poor maiden like me-- one who is not even a lady? 53935 So another had to substituted; what comfort or cause of laughter would there be in witnessing the burning of the corpse? |
53935 | So you tell me, old Gaudin is living with you? |
53935 | Spokest thou with him? |
53935 | Summer? |
53935 | The dim light of my lamp falling on her dear head-- is not this worth all the world? |
53935 | Then how can aught mortal in earth or air, The might or the power of thy sceptre dare With the crown or a crucified Jew compare? 53935 Then we are going to cool their hot blood, captain?" |
53935 | These account for your changed manner this evening? |
53935 | This, then, is what prevented your acceptance of Domitian''s invitation? |
53935 | Thou hast been at Horsheim; what hast thou seen? 53935 Thou wilt go, then?" |
53935 | To whom? 53935 Truly I am very sorry,"answers Tetzel,"but why did you not tell me sooner? |
53935 | Well, Johann, what news? |
53935 | Well,said he, smiling,"why not marry her then?" |
53935 | What Brookbank? |
53935 | What are misfortunes and despair? |
53935 | What can be more beautiful,said Seneca,"than this habit of inquiring into a whole day? |
53935 | What can_ I_ do? |
53935 | What cause, then, impelled thee? |
53935 | What do you say, my son? |
53935 | What do you take me for? |
53935 | What have I done? 53935 What have the poor done?" |
53935 | What have we here? |
53935 | What have you done? 53935 What is all this noise about? |
53935 | What is the good of a set of women shutting themselves up and_ doing nothing_? |
53935 | What is the matter? 53935 What is the matter?" |
53935 | What is the name of that female yonder? 53935 What is to come next?" |
53935 | What sayest thou, Senator Aurelian? 53935 What sounds are those?" |
53935 | What stronger proof,says Dr. Gröne,"could be given him of the high veneration in which he was held by his order?" |
53935 | What will my father say, Adelaide? |
53935 | Whence came such splendid jewels, such magnificent stones? |
53935 | Whence come these tears upon thy face? 53935 Whence was Caipor purchased?" |
53935 | Where are your effects, my child? |
53935 | Where do they come from, then? |
53935 | Where do you feel pain? |
53935 | Where is your difficulty, seeing that you admit all this? |
53935 | Where is your husband, my dear lady? |
53935 | Where is your young lady? |
53935 | Which do you prefer, the cross or promotion? |
53935 | Who authorizes the use of that word? |
53935 | Who is he? |
53935 | Who is that old man with bald head and long white beard, to whom Aurelian is now speaking? |
53935 | Who says that? |
53935 | Who spoke then? |
53935 | Who were the victors? |
53935 | Who will deliver us from Greek and Roman shackles? |
53935 | Who, then, is she? |
53935 | Who, then, is your son? 53935 Who? |
53935 | Whom will he do it with? |
53935 | Why is the preposition a theme of pleasure to the elect? 53935 Why not? |
53935 | Why seest thou the mote in thy brother''s eye, but the beam that is in thine own eye thou considerest not? |
53935 | Why, Mina, why? 53935 Why,"asks Plutarch sadly,"why recall triumphs that serve only to inspire us with useless pride? |
53935 | Will it not give you more pain than pleasure? |
53935 | Will she come to me, little Effie, Will she come to my arms to rest, And nestle her head on my shoulder, While the sun goes down in the west? 53935 Will those beggarly Spaniards never appear?" |
53935 | Will you let me bring my disciples? |
53935 | Wilt thou permit me, my father? |
53935 | Would you like to have it? |
53935 | Yes, if they were consequences to myself,sighed Hester;"but my future, will it not suffer from it? |
53935 | You are too high in rank, too proud to accept the hand of one who can not bestow her heart with it? |
53935 | You come from Saint- Cyr? |
53935 | You did not let him see you? |
53935 | You do not forget your promise, then? |
53935 | You know this good old man, then? |
53935 | You long, do n''t you, dear, for the genii, Who were slaves of lamps and of rings? 53935 You see that tiger,"she pointed to a shrub shaped like that animal,"does not the young cub betray the instincts of the full grown beast? |
53935 | You too have been infected by this new plague: you have withdrawn your affections to bestow them on another? |
53935 | You were highly amused, then? |
53935 | Your son? |
53935 | Yours? |
53935 | _ Corpo di Bacco_, do you take me for a fool? |
53935 | _ Hic est calix SANGUINIS mei._Whose blood was contained in that cup? |
53935 | _ Hoc est CORPUS meum._Whose body? |
53935 | what have the slandered innocent done? |
53935 | ''And why very well?'' |
53935 | ''At least, do n''t you fear my power?'' |
53935 | ''But who are they?'' |
53935 | ''Has it come to this? |
53935 | ''How?'' |
53935 | ''Is it nothing in your eyes to see the emperor mingling with your flock and becoming one of your auditors? |
53935 | ''Pray speak out clearly and tell me what?'' |
53935 | ''Well, but wo n''t you do anything for the emperor?'' |
53935 | ''Were you frightened at the storm? |
53935 | ''What is the matter?'' |
53935 | ''What, will you forget so far the respect you owe to the emperor?'' |
53935 | ''Why not?'' |
53935 | ( Where shall we not find our ubiquitous country- men?) |
53935 | .... what has the idiot done? |
53935 | .... what have the hard- worked factory girls done?" |
53935 | ...... Are we not more? |
53935 | ...... What had I then? |
53935 | 6- 8,)"in thy heart: Who shall ascend into heaven? |
53935 | A Conversation on Union Among Christians; The Gospels Door of Mercy; What Shall I do to Become a Christian? |
53935 | A second sigh, then a horrible groan, and thinking he was not recognized, he articulated in a feeble voice,"Who are you? |
53935 | Afraid? |
53935 | After all, had these men solved the mystery of death and of the life beyond the grave? |
53935 | After they have lost the substance, why should they care for the form? |
53935 | All just things, are they not just by participation of justice? |
53935 | All spangled o''er with stars to- night, Canst say how many worlds of light Adorn thy glorious firmament? |
53935 | And all beautiful things by participation of beauty? |
53935 | And all wise things by participation of wisdom? |
53935 | And are my brother''s beams all motes, And none have beams but I?" |
53935 | And do you not intend to remain with us, my dear Robert?" |
53935 | And has not prayer the double virtue of preventing a fall and of lifting the fallen by obtaining his pardon? |
53935 | And hath my brother ne''er a beam That may be plucked from out his eye? |
53935 | And he answered and said to them: Have ye not read, that he who made man in the beginning, made them male and female? |
53935 | And how shall they hear without a preacher? |
53935 | And how, it will be asked, did the church of those ages meet this extraordinary prominence? |
53935 | And if a dog can think of them, why can not a horse? |
53935 | And if this God, reviled, dishonored, avenged not himself, was it not to set man an example of forgiveness? |
53935 | And in"Homeless,"in the expression,"Is it one of your dogs, fair lady, Who whines in the bleak, cold street?" |
53935 | And is hope''s heavenly beam For aye my soul forsaking? |
53935 | And need I fear that I should be led into error by trusting to those guides to whom Christ himself thus directed me? |
53935 | And now are the pupils all saved? |
53935 | And now we ask ourselves, what good and what evil these exercises have done? |
53935 | And now, having applied the scale, and having exercised every precaution, can we congratulate ourselves on possessing a perfect instrument? |
53935 | And of his power how can we doubt? |
53935 | And then they send for the priest, who says to him,''Dost thou wish to receive absolution from all thy sins?'' |
53935 | And there is a true and remarkable story of a greyhound( wolfhound?) |
53935 | And thou, my father, didst thou not first love him?'' |
53935 | And what cared he for the failing of an exhausted body? |
53935 | And what think you, Master Koerner, I bring to- day?" |
53935 | And where are now the crowds that hung Upon his steps when every tongue Shouted his praise? |
53935 | And whilst he smites befriends? |
53935 | And who can count on the good nature of his audience? |
53935 | And who is it who dares so soon to attempt to separate thee from thy wife?" |
53935 | And why did these dissensions lead to an entire rupture? |
53935 | And would you know by what manifestation of power he had deserved this idolatry? |
53935 | And you, my children, which one of you is it that does not feel for me the affection of a son?" |
53935 | And, indeed, how will your order be fulfilled? |
53935 | Are the souls of the mighty dead, who slumber in those tombs around,''nothing but a name''? |
53935 | Are there many books of which we could say the same? |
53935 | Are we not Kings? |
53935 | Are we not Nobles? |
53935 | Are we not Princes? |
53935 | Are we not like children walking about in their fathers''shoes?" |
53935 | Are we nothing in your eyes? |
53935 | Are we the archetypal idea, or are we its image or copy impressed on matter? |
53935 | Are you a fool, drummer?" |
53935 | Are you beside yourself?" |
53935 | Are you not making of it a narrow, contracted doctrine-- a privilege of the few-- the tardy and solitary consolation of old age or grief? |
53935 | Are you not the oldest corporal? |
53935 | Are you not well?" |
53935 | As if you had never known the case I have suggested to be put into practice; and is it not a thousand times worse when combined with infidelity?" |
53935 | At first his lordship looked wonderingly at him, and then, recognizing his features, exclaimed:"Hilloa, George, what are you doing here?" |
53935 | Aurelian, does not death make you sad to think on it?" |
53935 | Because_ Illi praeponuntur damnandis._""Why does an interjection resemble the sufferings of the damned? |
53935 | Biddy, wo n''t you spake to the priest?" |
53935 | Bologna 11- Piacenza 1248 Padua 1222 Piza 1339 Vercelli 1228 Arezzo 1356 Vicenza 1204 Rome 1250(?) |
53935 | But Aurelian, having recovered his presence of mind, said:"Was I not right, O mighty potentate? |
53935 | But do you know the way to procure it the most delicious nourishment? |
53935 | But does this imply that they answered no useful end? |
53935 | But even granting this, how from this particular act of causation conclude universal cause, or even from universal cause necessary cause? |
53935 | But for all that, did he pretend that the bishop enjoyed authority by divine right? |
53935 | But for what is mercy, if not to descend upon the brow of the sinner? |
53935 | But how can Peter represent that unity, unless he is in the visible order its real centre and source, in which it begins and from which it emanates? |
53935 | But how does this bear on miracles? |
53935 | But is this expenditure compatible with vice, that never has enough to satisfy its brutal appetites? |
53935 | But one question more: Thou hadst doubtless motives for the commission of so barbarous an act?" |
53935 | But suppose it, what follows? |
53935 | But tell me, who is this Madame Gaudin-- what in the deuce do you call her?" |
53935 | But what form of prayer is appropriate to my crime? |
53935 | But what right had he, a man of such strict principles, to deprive his heirs of their inheritance in favor of a stranger? |
53935 | But what saith the Scripture? |
53935 | But whence the primitive rock or the gas? |
53935 | But whence, on the contrary, comes that weakness of temperament so observable in women of the world? |
53935 | But where shall such an edict be posted? |
53935 | But who was the more to blame? |
53935 | But why should I attempt to tell you anything about it? |
53935 | But why this silence respecting Christopher Columbus? |
53935 | But wouldst thou truly, in the lightness of thy heart, add to the battlements of thy shield the chisel of such a father- in- law? |
53935 | But, after all, what proof is there of this? |
53935 | But, good God, what vayleth all this gere? |
53935 | But, if any music is used, why not the best? |
53935 | But,"said the count, in a suppliant tone, in terminating this long and painful confession,"thou wilt not leave me, Robert? |
53935 | By such a shallow lie? |
53935 | By whom is the one corresponding to our own inhabited? |
53935 | Can I ask and hope for forgiveness? |
53935 | Can anything be more clearly, calmly_ right_ than the thought, more easy, lucid,_ real_ than its utterance? |
53935 | Can he disprove the whole series of facts recorded? |
53935 | Can it be that you, so favored, so honored by us, have become a traitor to our throne and person?" |
53935 | Can not we have, as other countries have, voluntary choirs? |
53935 | Can the conclusion of both, contradictory as they are, be the"witness of the Spirit"? |
53935 | Can we attach any credit to one who is so lavish in the use of words and figures? |
53935 | Can you love?" |
53935 | Canst thou say by whose hand he came to his death?" |
53935 | Captain Maxwell, to whom the application came, thinking they were already provided, jestingly asked,"Was it to shoot larks?"] |
53935 | Could any mission be more noble than theirs; any devotion more self- sacrificing? |
53935 | Could he make an alien the head of his noble house? |
53935 | Could it be that the leaders were aware that the danger to be incurred did not exceed in degree the ordinary risks of warfare? |
53935 | Could it be the effect of sickness? |
53935 | Could the insinuations of Zoilus be true? |
53935 | Couldst thou withdraw thy hand one day, And answer to my claim That fate, and that to day''s mistake-- Not thou had been to blame? |
53935 | Did anyone ever imagine anything more seductive than a French confectioner''s? |
53935 | Did he by way of disport order any of those Jews or Christians to be executed?" |
53935 | Did he ever realize with the brush such verses as"Tiger, Tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night"? |
53935 | Did he expect to make converts by it? |
53935 | Did she not mark his hair- breadth escape? |
53935 | Did the church never practise it? |
53935 | Did the working- men forget their duty? |
53935 | Did worshippers so convinced of their own merit recognize and honor the gifts of others? |
53935 | Didst dream of pain or dire disgrace? |
53935 | Do men gather grapes of thorns or figs of thistles? |
53935 | Do two play-- or three? |
53935 | Do we not often say, All the world was united, all Europe is afraid, all the world listens? |
53935 | Do you ask why? |
53935 | Do you know where I met him as I came to the crossway of the Appian and Latin roads? |
53935 | Do you know who belong to the very lowest classes of men and Christians? |
53935 | Do you not believe God reigns omnipotent?" |
53935 | Do you propose to suppress nature, extinguish reason, and call it promoting science, vindicating the dignity of man? |
53935 | Do you remember how I called you up?" |
53935 | Do you remember in accounts of the tournament the disguised cavalier who enters the lists and is recognized by the weight of his blows? |
53935 | Do you remember the first time I saw you? |
53935 | Do you want him particularly, father? |
53935 | Do you want to publish me to the whole city, Zoilus?" |
53935 | Do you wish for facts? |
53935 | Does M. Cousin hold with the Arabs that the ravings of the maniac are divine inspirations? |
53935 | Does he deny that he is chief and master by divine right? |
53935 | Does he not see that if it was so, the council had no ecclesiastical authority, and therefore that its acts have no bearing on the question before us? |
53935 | Does nothing of him remain now but the ashes gathered from the pyre? |
53935 | Does she love no one? |
53935 | Does there within thy dimmest dreams A possible future shine, Wherein thy life could henceforth breathe Untouched, unshared by mine? |
53935 | Domitian, motioning Aurelian to a place near Vitus and Flavia, asked the latter:"Is this true, Flavia Domitilla, which Vitus says?" |
53935 | Doubtless between our own times and those there are many differences, but how many no less striking points of resemblance? |
53935 | Doubtless there is much illusion, delusion, cheatery, but is there not also much inexplicable without satanic influence? |
53935 | Dress your Oriental in one of Poole''s best- fitting coats and trousers, and give him a chimney- pot hat, and where would be his beauty? |
53935 | Drink to its poisoned dregs the cup Of hope deferred and trust misplaced? |
53935 | Eleven, twelve, one, two; shall we wait longer? |
53935 | Et pastores sunt omnes, et grex unus ostenditur, qui ab apostolis omnbus[ omnibus?] |
53935 | For if it were of us, what need is there of a revelation? |
53935 | For in what was this coarseness and lowness of thought more likely to appear, than in their conception of the greatest happiness of man? |
53935 | Fortune like this, what fate can mar? |
53935 | From whom did he obtain these four voyages, never before printed? |
53935 | God has given me the power to do and to endure much far beyond all I ever believed possible, for have I not seen the eyes of Albert close in death? |
53935 | Had he not seen her drugged with that unholy flesh and blood which were given her? |
53935 | Had she perchance waited too long to ask it? |
53935 | Hadst thou not a loving Father, Child, and happy home? |
53935 | Has he such reasons? |
53935 | Has he talent? |
53935 | Has it come to this?'' |
53935 | Has it not ever been its fate to struggle against evil doctrines, evil practices, and evil doers? |
53935 | Has she any original country? |
53935 | Has she paralyzed her heart? |
53935 | Has the feeling originated from the pseudo- work of Dares the Phrygian priest having arrived in the country before Homer''s"Tale of Troy Divine"? |
53935 | Hast been in the city, Johann?" |
53935 | Hast thou not an art which is better than a fortune? |
53935 | Hast thou not read a thousand times the command,''Thou shalt not kill''? |
53935 | Hath my spirit enough of inspiration, are my hands pure enough to reproduce those holy features? |
53935 | Have I done anything to lose them? |
53935 | Have I not told you fifty times I would never have those idle pestilent fellows in my house?'' |
53935 | Have we not had sweet converse with dear departed friends, and heard voices that have long been silent? |
53935 | Have we, then, succeeded and obtained your approbation? |
53935 | Have you been in the secret meeting of the Christians last night?" |
53935 | Have you heard what takes place in the private meetings of those fully initiated? |
53935 | Have you never been on the mountains in summer, at three o''clock in the morning, when the first rays of the sun appear? |
53935 | Have you not pledged your troth and allegiance to another?" |
53935 | Have you not three chevrons? |
53935 | Have you read my Tell?'' |
53935 | He has used all the plea he could find; have not your committees refused many applications to receive pupils?" |
53935 | He is an Italian--""An Italian?" |
53935 | He said to him, with some embarrassment but with a lively interest,"My son, where is thy mother? |
53935 | He seems when treating the question, What is it necessary to know in order to have real science? |
53935 | He was bound to obey the Catholic Church-- how then should I not be equally bound to return to it? |
53935 | He was ever a man of his word; how should he now be otherwise, when that word assured a pleasure to the darling of his heart? |
53935 | He went in and asked"whose was the funeral?" |
53935 | He will accept the son for the father''s sake; the question is, will you accept him?" |
53935 | He will find in it just what pleases him, and who has the right to accuse him of not following the witness of the Spirit? |
53935 | Hester, do you think you can teach Norah to call me plain''ma''am,''for a little while, till we return home? |
53935 | His body trembles with enthusiasm, his eyes moisten, his knees give way under him-- and why this emotion? |
53935 | How are these to be described? |
53935 | How can a mother''s heart feel cold or weary, Knowing her dearer self safe, happy, warm? |
53935 | How can he indeed? |
53935 | How can she feel her road too dark or dreary, Who knows her treasure sheltered from the storm? |
53935 | How can she say,"I have no heart,"When night and morn I ask in prayer That we may not be called apart, Till both breathe forth forgiveness here? |
53935 | How can she sin? |
53935 | How can we hope to remove it when these giants fail? |
53935 | How can you imagine there is any merit in this, even that of faith, when I think of the miracle that he has wrought in my soul? |
53935 | How could I think to change you for that land of snow, of black bread, of bare- walled churches, of heretics? |
53935 | How do I see the image or picture, and connect it with the external object? |
53935 | How far has he carried out his plan, how far justified his pretensions to impartiality, if we have to do with a historian? |
53935 | How is it that some men naturally rollick in print, while others, not less humorous, write nothing but the gravest stuff? |
53935 | How is it that these lovely spring afternoons do not inspire you with a desire to go out and enjoy the free, balmy air?" |
53935 | How many?" |
53935 | How natural her complaint:"What had I done to earn such fate from Heaven?" |
53935 | How place Ferdinand on the Portuguese throne then occupied by Emmanuel? |
53935 | How so early from the feast? |
53935 | How, moreover, can scepticism, which is universal nescience, be called a system of philosophy? |
53935 | How, then, can the fulfilment of your engagement make you miserable?" |
53935 | How, then, if it does not arise from one, or if it has no visible centre and beginning in the visible order, is it to be made to appear? |
53935 | How?" |
53935 | How_ can_ any man in his senses believe that the Spirit of God witnesses to two propositions, one of which gives the lie to the other? |
53935 | How_ can_ two contradictory interpretations be true? |
53935 | Hylacomylus was dead; but how could they do better than employ the maps prepared by him in his lifetime? |
53935 | I am only a poor creature, without either education or manners, so how can I live with you?" |
53935 | I break all slighter bonds, nor feel A shadow of regret: Is there one link within the past That holds thy spirit yet? |
53935 | I curse you?--for what? |
53935 | I do n''t know if the nuncio took any notice of the affair; but where could such a proceeding have taken place save in Lisbon, or perhaps in Florence? |
53935 | I have done so,"and that she herself had taken it? |
53935 | I have no parents, but had a number of friends, who shared my pleasures and excited me to do foolish things, but where are they now? |
53935 | I must go instantly Where can I procure a ticket?" |
53935 | I recognize you perfectly now:''but what can bring your grace hither, and in this guise?" |
53935 | I understand; it is a widow that wants to catch you?" |
53935 | I, the rich Gustave de Vernanges, must I die at twenty- seven, struck by the hand of a common man?" |
53935 | If I am not worthy of being heard by you, how should I be worthy of transmitting your wishes and prayers? |
53935 | If I reject the authority of the church, how shall I be content with the Bible as it is, as she has compiled it? |
53935 | If a hymn, why not a mass? |
53935 | If an organ, why not an orchestra? |
53935 | If he is right, how could the unity of the church have a visible starting- point or centre? |
53935 | If he thinks of events and places in his sleep, why should he not think of them awake? |
53935 | If such was St. Leo''s meaning, why did he not say so? |
53935 | If the case were otherwise, how could we account for finding all her eggs together? |
53935 | If the old ritual was not abolished, why do modern Christians not observe it? |
53935 | If they had believed in their jurisdiction by divine right over the whole church, would they have refused the title of universal bishop? |
53935 | If this be true, are we to encourage authors to read their unpublished works, poems, dramas, odes, romances, or what not? |
53935 | If we must pay others to sing the praises of God for us, why not also engage others to do our praying likewise? |
53935 | If, day by day, his face grew thinner, his eyes cavernous, his lips tighter, was not his model for all that the more real? |
53935 | If, thanks to the priest''s purer cross, thou findest calm and resignation, may I not seek the encouragement and strength of my sculptor''s chisel? |
53935 | In instructing and bringing man to a sense of his greatness and duty, who has raised and elevated social relations? |
53935 | In reply, they demanded what were his plans? |
53935 | In what have I failed? |
53935 | Indeed, he said to him,''Peter, lovest thou me? |
53935 | Inside the church were groups of black or veiled figures, mostly women,( were not women the first at the sepulchre?) |
53935 | Is anyone listening?" |
53935 | Is he commonplace? |
53935 | Is he not bound to resign his position, since he can not agree in full with the Establishment? |
53935 | Is it Achaia that is near thee? |
53935 | Is it a continent or an island? |
53935 | Is it not also true that one of the principal causes is the world''s manner of organizing social relations? |
53935 | Is it not beautiful to think of-- the security of the soul? |
53935 | Is it not rather possible that there may be something in all this history which we can neither understand nor explain? |
53935 | Is it not true that the health of many women of the world is weakened? |
53935 | Is it not united intercessory prayer? |
53935 | Is it nothing to us, in the whirl and turmoil of this work- a- day life, that holy hands should ever be lifted up for us to the Great Intercessor? |
53935 | Is it one of your dogs, fair lady, Who whines in the bleak, cold street? |
53935 | Is it one of your silken spaniels Shut out in the snow and the sleet? |
53935 | Is it possible not to deplore an irregularity which banishes the light of day, and passes life in darkness and shade?" |
53935 | Is it right to sing the praise of God in his temple, wrong to paint the story of the Son of God upon the consecrated walls? |
53935 | Is it the Galilean impostor?" |
53935 | Is it the divine idea, or the copy of the idea on matter? |
53935 | Is it then necessary because we are Christians, to cast down our eyes and blush, when we hear those sacred words: Reason, love, liberty? |
53935 | Is it true, Vitus, that, despite our known will, you have espoused our ward and cousin in the Christian assembly? |
53935 | Is not this sad enough? |
53935 | Is our wish to be fulfilled? |
53935 | Is she a piece of mechanism, passing from the dreary garret to the dark cellar in the poor neighborhood which surrounds her? |
53935 | Is that to concede one jot to misrule and anarchy? |
53935 | Is the liberty of God taken away by denying that he is free to act contrary to his nature? |
53935 | Is the man who gives you this piece of advice a heathen? |
53935 | Is the soul in these sublime moments deprived of liberty? |
53935 | Is there a greater suffering than that of witnessing cruelty and wrong which you are powerless to redress? |
53935 | Is there any reason why we may not have in New- York a repetition of the outrages of Birmingham or Philadelphia? |
53935 | Is there no delivery from this state of prison and anguish? |
53935 | Is there remission for him who continues in the enjoyment of the benefits of his sin-- his queen, his crown, his vain- glory? |
53935 | Is there water enough in the gentle clouds to wash the blood from the hand of the fratricide? |
53935 | Is there within thy heart a need That mine can not fulfil? |
53935 | Is this the bitter waking? |
53935 | Is, then, the genius of Titian and Raphael less holy than that of Beethoven or Mozart? |
53935 | It is my bridal dress: is it fitting for the bride to leave it aside when going to meet her spouse?" |
53935 | It is the miracle and the triumph of true piety, What is this? |
53935 | It is the voice of the storm; do n''t you hear it? |
53935 | It is wonderful?" |
53935 | It seems to say: Why do you leave me? |
53935 | Juvenal exclaims with wrathful bitterness:"Am I for ever to be a listener? |
53935 | Juvenal puts the test of a person''s fortune in the question,"_ Quot pascit servos?_""How many slaves does he support?" |
53935 | Juvenal puts the test of a person''s fortune in the question,"_ Quot pascit servos?_""How many slaves does he support?" |
53935 | Like the blast which bends the forest, and then, dispersed in air, is felt and heard no more? |
53935 | Lives there within thy nature hid The demon- spirit Change, Shedding a passing glory still On all things new and strange? |
53935 | Lucius is a big, strong man--why did he not kill Villicus? |
53935 | Man never suffices for himself, since his very being is not in himself; and how, then, shall philosophy, which is his creation, suffice for itself? |
53935 | Marble enough in Ancor- Viat to build all the cities in the world? |
53935 | Master, who is Jesus?" |
53935 | May I hope that word will be spoken? |
53935 | More than this, if music may be worthily used, why not painting? |
53935 | More?" |
53935 | Most of the saints were reformers, combating with their fellow- Catholics for virtue; and now, are all Catholics unselfish, unworldly?" |
53935 | Must I conquer all the ancients one by one?" |
53935 | My life, ended at the gibbet, may satisfy the justice of man; but what shall I do to appease the anger of my God? |
53935 | Mysteries Of The Rue D''Arbre? ec. |
53935 | Naples 1224 Fermo 1391 Perugia 1307 Pavia 1361 Siena 1420 Parma 1412 Turin 1405 Florence 1348 Verona 1339 Salerno 1250(?) |
53935 | Never was there a moment when money was so plentiful in England as now, yet where will a cathedral be found built since the fifteenth century? |
53935 | Not daring to misrepresent the facts in Andalusia, did Americus induce the editors in Lorraine to tell falsehoods at a distance, acting in his stead? |
53935 | Nothing abashed, he cries out,"What wonder if, among so many relic- boxes as I possess, I have taken the wrong one?" |
53935 | Now is not all this refreshing after the diffuse grace and dilute sweetness of female poetry in general? |
53935 | Now, to what does all this tend? |
53935 | Of course, who would not see charms in a madrigal containing these pleasant sentiments about one''s self? |
53935 | Often had his glance fallen on the entrance to the vault; but now-- what was that? |
53935 | On setting down the glass, be whispered:"Are we alone here? |
53935 | On the contrary, did not liberty surround her cradle? |
53935 | On this doctrine, what is that soul the immortality of which Plato so strenuously maintains? |
53935 | On what ground does the author seek to defend this attempt, always resisted by the Roman pontiffs and the whole West? |
53935 | Once teach opposing classes of the people to loathe each other, and how long will the public peace be safe? |
53935 | One asks one''s self very often:"How came all these treasures to escape the rapacity of the French spoilers?" |
53935 | One chord that any other hand Could better wake or still? |
53935 | One is tempted to ask:"Was it by men and women like ourselves that cathedrals such as this were planned and built and furnished?" |
53935 | Or could it be that she had transferred her affections from himself to the young officer lately returned from Judea? |
53935 | Or did the interpreter, by a familiar species of embellishment, represent his master as having seen the wandering Jew when he had only_ heard_ of him? |
53935 | Or how shall they believe him of whom they have not heard? |
53935 | Or is thy faith as clear and free As that which I can pledge to thee? |
53935 | Or that a widowed mother wound, Like NIOBE, her arms around Her last, whom death awaits? |
53935 | Or would it lift it? |
53935 | Or, in other words, are there many that would so amply repay the trouble of perusing them? |
53935 | Or, in other words, are things intelligible because we know them, or do we know them because they are intelligible? |
53935 | Or, to speak more correctly, did he get them to decree to him the honors of the discovery, and suggest to them the name of America? |
53935 | Otherwise, what sort of Christianity is yours, and what do you believe to be its fate? |
53935 | Otho, my pupil?" |
53935 | Our lectures and conferences differ in many respects from those in vogue among the ancients, but who can deny the various points of resemblance? |
53935 | Over what was his own cell is the following, in Spanish:"What is it that we mean when we speak of death? |
53935 | Paris 11- Montpelier 1286 Avignon 1809(?) |
53935 | Peter held that primacy, and yet was not universal apostle, and why not, then, the bishop of Rome, without being universal bishop or universal pope? |
53935 | Place Demosthenes or Mirabeau in a chair of rhetoric, and what would they do with their genius? |
53935 | Plait, the foreign warrior, came before his lines and shouted,"Faras(_ where is?_ an attempt at Danish) Donall?" |
53935 | Plait, the foreign warrior, came before his lines and shouted,"Faras(_ where is?_ an attempt at Danish) Donall?" |
53935 | Prague 1348 Vienna 1365 Heidelberg 1386 Cologne 1388 Erfurt 1392 Leipzig 1409 Rostock 1419 Greifswalde 1456 Freiburg 1457(?) |
53935 | Pray,_ who_ announces to the multitude, who can not enter into evidence about documents nor even read them, that Christ is their Redeemer? |
53935 | Pretty Nan to Flora said,"Prithee, why so gay?" |
53935 | Public order requires it, will you say? |
53935 | Reader, did you ever go in a Spanish diligence? |
53935 | Reader,_ do_ they"do nothing"? |
53935 | Recallest thou not, my master, her smile as she gazed upon it? |
53935 | Robert smiled, and said he had left them at home,"How at home? |
53935 | Sawest thou Otho of Arneck when thou wert at the castle of the Countess Gertrude?" |
53935 | Seeing Aurelian, thin, pale, and dull, writing on a parchment roll, he asked:"Is it making your will you are? |
53935 | Seek ye his ruined hall and bower? |
53935 | Shall I again see her?" |
53935 | Shall I never retaliate,( I who have been) so often teased with the Theseïd of husky Codrus? |
53935 | Shall we upon such titles bring The taint of sin and shame? |
53935 | Shall we, the children of the King, Who hold so grand a claim, Tarnish by any meaner thing The glory of our name? |
53935 | She rose to her full height, and, casting on the speaker a look of mingled indignation and scorn, exclaimed:"You offer me payment for my pardon? |
53935 | Should the Christians refuse to accomplish it, will you force them to it through violence? |
53935 | So far so good, for what can be pleasanter than to see one''s fellow creatures suffocated in one''s honor? |
53935 | So why should it be so difficult for Catholicism to bring about a conciliation between its sublime doctrines and the new cravings of civilized Europe? |
53935 | So, Otho, thou wilt come? |
53935 | Solitude reigned about the lecturer, but should he on that account desert his post? |
53935 | Such words may seem an exaggeration; but, if such were here the case, would not everything go better in the interior of the family? |
53935 | Surprised to hear her speak thus, I said:''If you had offered to you a long life to be spent with Albert, would you accept it?'' |
53935 | Tell me why you have not been in my studio for so long a time?" |
53935 | Tell me, by what are beautiful things beautiful? |
53935 | Tell me, why art glad?" |
53935 | That I was in deepest sorrow, and Mina sick unto death?" |
53935 | That they deserved scorn, there can be no doubt; but is it always easy to pass just and impartial judgment upon contemporaries? |
53935 | The Church Prithee, why continue eating, Child, the husks of swine? |
53935 | The Church and Children; A Voice In The Night, Or Lessons of the Sick Room; The Gospel Church; Who is Jesus Christ? |
53935 | The Protestant clergy? |
53935 | The Trinity Control Your Passions Heroism In The Sick- room Is The Sacrifice Of The Mass Of Human Or Of Divine Institution? |
53935 | The awe- struck monk then heard the following questions and answers:"What use made you of these books?" |
53935 | The bishop was wounded, but he only said:"George, how could you preach such a sermon as that? |
53935 | The comedy( for what else can we call it?) |
53935 | The emperor, remarking it, asked:"What mean these flowing robes of white? |
53935 | The high commands? |
53935 | The higher question to be addressed to the sects undoubtedly is, can men save their souls without the church? |
53935 | The music of our churches, what shall we say of it? |
53935 | The only questions are, is the event not explicable by natural causes? |
53935 | The personal is subjective, the impersonal is objective, but objective in relation to what? |
53935 | The question is, if we duly consider it, Is the light by which we see or know on the side of the subject or on that of the object? |
53935 | The question now arose for the others:"Was there no church anywhere near?" |
53935 | The question now comes up, How are we to ascertain what the law of Jesus Christ is, and what is the law itself? |
53935 | The question of questions is always, what is the religion of Jesus Christ and the meaning of his life and death upon the earth? |
53935 | The question then arises, can this be wholly and entirely false? |
53935 | The question, then, is, which party in the beginning was in the right, and which was in the wrong? |
53935 | The real question is, Is be free to create or not create at his own will and pleasure? |
53935 | The same Munster writes in his Cosmography:"What shall I say of these great islands America, of Paria, Cuba, Hispaniola, Yucatan?" |
53935 | The state with us rests on equal rights of all men; but on what do the equal rights themselves rest? |
53935 | The station high Above all Spain''s plumed chivalry? |
53935 | The thing made has no right to say to the maker,"Why hast thou made me thus?" |
53935 | Then it''s so cold out of bed: why brave the inclemency of the seasons? |
53935 | Then what will Caipor do? |
53935 | Then, turning to them, he said:"If you are not able to do even this much, what can I do for you? |
53935 | Then, turning toward the picture, he explained,"Can this be your work? |
53935 | Then, why not leave to a father''s grief the hope of glory, of triumph, and-- this little sculptor''s tool?" |
53935 | There is but one question to be asked: How shall we ascertain the true sense of the Scripture? |
53935 | They are young, they are good, they are happy-- why then, death, sickness, and the crushing sorrow of approaching separation? |
53935 | They gave him one, which he treated so skilfully that Megistias exclaimed with surprise:"But who are you?" |
53935 | They say to him: why then did Moses command to give a bill of divorce, and to put away? |
53935 | They stopped at the gate, and were about entering it when he asked,"Is this the man Joseph of whom I was told-- the guide up the mountain?" |
53935 | Think you not, Master Sebald, that it would be well to take a litter and return to your dwelling?" |
53935 | Thinkest thou the good youth would delay to bring me glad tidings? |
53935 | This angel is very beautiful, Mina, since he bears thy face, but have I not presumed too much in giving him thy features? |
53935 | This is fact, and who can gainsay it? |
53935 | This is plain enough; but who are_ we_ who study and know? |
53935 | This satirical Lucian was not sparing of compliments to his Macedonian public; what was left for the Athenians? |
53935 | This was in the sixth century; and is not the same persecution, and for the same cause, going on in Poland in the nineteenth? |
53935 | Those not content with the mere enunciation of the old rules, would moralize them something in this style:"''What is a prenomen?'' |
53935 | Those who knew her asked themselves, where was her share of the original taint,"of that trail of the serpent which is over us all"? |
53935 | Thou wilt go-- wilt thou not, my brother-- my only friend?" |
53935 | Though a saint and a statesman, he could not read the signs of the times; and if he could not, who could? |
53935 | Thy warfare was not without valor; Not numerous hast thou come to our house; Where hast thou left thy followers? |
53935 | To chase the churchyard gleam Of false expectancy-- That light which, like the swamp''s pale glare, Lures but to darkness and despair? |
53935 | To crush the visions youth built up? |
53935 | To feel heart shrink and body waste? |
53935 | To make peace with liberty, to live cheerfully in its company, to understand and bless its favors, is that the same thing as to absolve its errors? |
53935 | To try the virtue or repentance? |
53935 | Toledo certainly does not lack churches or convents; but those who served and prayed in them, where are they? |
53935 | Trier,( Treves) 1472 Ingoldstadt 1472 Basle 1460 Mayence 1482 Tübingen 1482 Würzburg 1400 Spain and Portugal Huesca(?) |
53935 | Truly,"whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved;"but,"how shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? |
53935 | Vitus, he thought, had so far succeeded; for was not he the only one present to whom she could be thus wedded? |
53935 | Was I ever seen, while he works here, to babble or even to smile without?" |
53935 | Was he justified in this theft? |
53935 | Was it a Saturday night, that there should be such noise in the streets? |
53935 | Was it a dream? |
53935 | Was it a pure invention? |
53935 | Was it indeed lost, or did he dream? |
53935 | Was it never enforced within its bosom? |
53935 | Was it not a dying Christ he was carving? |
53935 | Was it the pulpit mountebank who pelted his audience with well- nigh intolerable insults, or the uneducated laborers who resented them? |
53935 | Was it to demand my sword that you came from Mora, you and your countryman Brocard?" |
53935 | Was not Paris made for enjoyment, light- heartedness, and sunshine? |
53935 | Was she not a duchess? |
53935 | Was she not good and kind to me, Zoilus?" |
53935 | Was the talk of discoveries, properly speaking? |
53935 | Was this true glory? |
53935 | Was_ Bueves de Barbastre_ the original of that terrible and interesting narrative?] |
53935 | We are a great people, there is no doubt; but do we not, sometimes, in our great hurry to be ahead of everybody else, make little mistakes? |
53935 | We are tempted to ask, why it is that convents of this nature are so repugnant to English taste? |
53935 | We can imagine the sweet smile with which More answered,"Is that all, my lord? |
53935 | We dare say the writer of this tirade supposed he was telling the truth, but what was his purpose in telling it? |
53935 | We will not take literally Lucian''s assertion that they set themselves above Demosthenes:"Who was your orator of Paeania compared to me? |
53935 | Well, after all, what did it amount to? |
53935 | Well, if religion is right in waging war against false liberty, why should not she be entitled to speak of sound liberty? |
53935 | Well, what has become of the priest?" |
53935 | Were it but to attack the vices, the baseness, the disorders of our age, must they not know them, witness them, with their own eyes? |
53935 | Were not those vague rumors true about the murder of infants in those Christian meetings? |
53935 | What about Flavia?" |
53935 | What aileth thee?" |
53935 | What am I lounging on a seat for? |
53935 | What approbation could I look for after passing through your city without obtaining a hearing?" |
53935 | What are my faults? |
53935 | What are the guards? |
53935 | What beast of chase can escape these keen hunters? |
53935 | What bereaved mother has not often heard the cry of her lost infant, or solitary widow seen the form of a lost husband in the phantasms of the night? |
53935 | What can I say more, but what thou knowest better than I do? |
53935 | What can be found objectionable in the earthly character of these teachings? |
53935 | What can eloquence accomplish if the matter itself of eloquence be wanting? |
53935 | What can have happened him?" |
53935 | What can that man think of the church of God who holds that the dignity and authority of its prelates have only a secular origin? |
53935 | What can we do for you, captain? |
53935 | What could be a more powerful stimulant for him than the flattering encouragement he received from persons of known taste and hearty appreciation? |
53935 | What do those syllables mean? |
53935 | What do you behold in the future? |
53935 | What do you see in the past? |
53935 | What do you see in the present? |
53935 | What does it mean? |
53935 | What does she now?" |
53935 | What duty have I forgotten? |
53935 | What else to do, where else to go, than home? |
53935 | What fish so small can wriggle out of their nets?" |
53935 | What genial soil doth feed thy root? |
53935 | What giants or what machines moved these immense blocks? |
53935 | What have I done? |
53935 | What if_ they_ are infected, as you express it, with this Christian leprosy, which led to the death of my betrothed''s uncle, Clemens Domitilla?" |
53935 | What induces master to give him so much freedom? |
53935 | What is in the church?" |
53935 | What is it that is to"move mountains"? |
53935 | What is it that, over and over again in Holy Scripture, has saved individuals, and cities, and nations? |
53935 | What is the effective force of the company?" |
53935 | What is the matter with him?" |
53935 | What is the matter,_ mon capitaine?_"said he as he passed me. |
53935 | What is the name of this wonderful performer?" |
53935 | What is the origin of the red rose? |
53935 | What is the original country of the cuckoo? |
53935 | What is the use of making a fuss about shooting Indians or other inferior races? |
53935 | What is there upon earth so sweet as to love? |
53935 | What is whiteness, roundness, hardness, beauty, justice, or wisdom in the abstract, or abstracted from their respective concretes? |
53935 | What matter how unconsciously we borrow from them? |
53935 | What motive could be more natural, more just, more obvious than this? |
53935 | What new spectacle can move us? |
53935 | What news from the city?" |
53935 | What now avails it to have stood, In mind''s keen conquest of the good, Peerless among thy mates? |
53935 | What now avails the world he gave To thankless Spain? |
53935 | What objection is there, then, to believing that the incorporeal part of the brute has permanent use in this world as long as the world endures? |
53935 | What point would there have been in the sneer, or force in the irony, of calling him the sovereign pontiff, or the bishop of bishops? |
53935 | What possibility was there that a line of horsemen two or three abreast, unable to return the fire of the protected enemy, could escape destruction? |
53935 | What right, then, thought I, had Luther and his companions to set themselves against the united voice of the church? |
53935 | What roots could rend asunder these stones laid one upon the other without cement, and raise so heavy a weight? |
53935 | What sorrow craved these scalding drops of woe In peaceful sleep? |
53935 | What supports or upholds them? |
53935 | What then, will be the question naturally proposed, was the meaning, tendency, and character of academic nations? |
53935 | What time remained for meddling in public matters to any man occupied with polishing poetical phrases or rounding rhetorical periods? |
53935 | What to do? |
53935 | What tortures can you inflict upon this weak body, when the very first blow will do for it at once? |
53935 | What was needed to complete Otho''s happiness? |
53935 | What was to be done? |
53935 | What were Spaniards and Portuguese in search of? |
53935 | What will you? |
53935 | What would life be without these words? |
53935 | What wretchedness is equal to that of the last sad moment? |
53935 | What, did he too incur the imperial anger?" |
53935 | What, then, are his proofs? |
53935 | What, then, could stop me in the mad career which would soon bring me to the abyss already yawning under my feet? |
53935 | What, then, is a miracle? |
53935 | What, then, remains to us? |
53935 | What, then, will remain to us? |
53935 | When Heliodorus declaimed, the emperor, holding him in great affection( who was that emperor, by the way? |
53935 | When people were all of the same opinion, why should not they meet together to pray in the same church? |
53935 | When the first man of the enemy mounted the breach, be boldly asked him,''Do you know me?'' |
53935 | When therefore can I write? |
53935 | When thou wert alone, thou mightest laugh at prudence; but now, canst thou forget that I am here? |
53935 | When treating the question, How we know? |
53935 | When we seek to be reconciled with an enemy, do we begin by insulting him? |
53935 | When will Otho''s marriage take place?" |
53935 | Where am I?" |
53935 | Where are his proofs? |
53935 | Where are the direct results of unselfishness and of corporal sacrifice for the attainment of spiritual good, that books teach us to expect?" |
53935 | Where do these poets school their souls, that they come forth full of the experience of threescore years and ten? |
53935 | Where have you been all summer?" |
53935 | Where is he now, God of gods, as you name him? |
53935 | Where is that protest recorded? |
53935 | Where is your couch?" |
53935 | Where shall we seek the cause of the ingratitude no longer peculiar of Spain, but attributable to all Europe, that pains our hearts? |
53935 | Where was St. Ruth employed during these momentous struggles? |
53935 | Where"( these words were added in an undertone)"have you left our fair cousin and child, Flavia? |
53935 | Where, upon the banks of a single river, are to be seen such varieties of climate, scenery, and animated life? |
53935 | Wherefore must he do so? |
53935 | While so deep the shame and the emotion When to man thou must thy guilt unmask? |
53935 | Who Wrote The Chronicle? |
53935 | Who are those that drugged her?" |
53935 | Who but the fool or madman, with such daily reminders of earthly life''s vanity and shortness, can be deaf to the approaching footfalls of death?" |
53935 | Who can doubt that such petitions will be granted? |
53935 | Who can have a better right to that affection you always professed for me than I, who shall call you by a new endearing title on the next Kalends?" |
53935 | Who can read it without finding at the last line that he has been holding his breath? |
53935 | Who can say that Otho has proved false? |
53935 | Who can translate into words the profound devotion inspired by the solemn mass in the cathedral service? |
53935 | Who come to the conclusion that there is one God of the patriarchs, another God of the Jews, and a third of the Christian? |
53935 | Who comes hither, slowly sauntering, pausing oft awhile to rest; Arms across so calmly folded, head declining on his breast? |
53935 | Who finds insuperable difficulties in the sacred record? |
53935 | Who from this could conclude them to be themselves substances? |
53935 | Who has broken the chains of pagan slavery? |
53935 | Who has discovered, as they imagine, contradictory passages in it? |
53935 | Who has done all these things, if not the church, that is to say, Christianity teaching, directing, and moralizing humanity? |
53935 | Who has sown the seed of all intellectual and moral virtue in those vast regions that barbarian night had enveloped? |
53935 | Who is this admiral? |
53935 | Who is this devotee, draped in black, who ventures out in the most inclement season, laden with bundles? |
53935 | Who is your informant?" |
53935 | Who knows that old Hans is not mistaken? |
53935 | Who knows that we may not see him once more, generous, true, and loving thee, my Mina?" |
53935 | Who may say, that, without these walls, I am not destined to achieve some work that will immortalize my name and console my heart? |
53935 | Who of us is not familiar with that pretty fairy tale of the sleeping beauty? |
53935 | Who passes through the antique street Worshipped by all around? |
53935 | Who the devil raised all this? |
53935 | Who will dare to deny that such a situation is fraught with imminent peril or refuse to repeat with an ancient,"_ Corruptio optimi pessima_"? |
53935 | Who would n''t sin with his pardon drawn up in advance, and entire secrecy and perfect restoration awaiting the first active twinge of repentance? |
53935 | Who would not have loved such a gentleman? |
53935 | Who, then, are to decide upon the meaning of these texts, if the ultimate appeal is to them? |
53935 | Who, then, has given servants to weakness, to suffering, to the disinherited by fortune, to all those that grief had touched with an unpitying hand? |
53935 | Whom do the thousand voices greet That to the heavens resound? |
53935 | Whose, then, is he?" |
53935 | Why Did God Become Man? |
53935 | Why all this anguish at once-- conversion refused to the prayers of Albert-- recovery refused to the tears of Alexandrine? |
53935 | Why are dogs so often called Melampo in Spain? |
53935 | Why came I ever into this world, or why died I not in my cradle? |
53935 | Why choose me?" |
53935 | Why could I not love him? |
53935 | Why did not this open my eyes, you will say, to the truth of Catholicity? |
53935 | Why do n''t I go on my knees? |
53935 | Why do ye mock His bitter grief? |
53935 | Why does he not come forward at his beloved''s bidding to resist the power and stay the arm of Domitian?" |
53935 | Why does she hang enchanted upon the sweet accents of his voice? |
53935 | Why does the owl no longer sing? |
53935 | Why dost come so seldom to visit us? |
53935 | Why force me to tell my tidings in her presence?" |
53935 | Why have I spoken? |
53935 | Why have the generations gone before erected those vast monuments, if all that is left be the dust in the urn? |
53935 | Why not have come sooner to visit us?" |
53935 | Why should the dove imitate the boding cry of the owl? |
53935 | Why should the gentle lamb try to repeat the roar of the wounded and bloody lion?" |
53935 | Why should the state tolerate within its limits anything beyond those two grand unities? |
53935 | Why should they, indeed? |
53935 | Why should we continue after such scenes? |
53935 | Why should we wonder that an audience should most readily collect in Rome to listen to some elegant rhetorician from the East? |
53935 | Why speaks he not?" |
53935 | Why the see of Peter rather than that of Andrew, James, or John? |
53935 | Why was Mina a burgess''s daughter and not a countess? |
53935 | Why will a Spaniard never shoot a swallow? |
53935 | Why, have you not always professed the greatest confidence and love of me? |
53935 | Why, then, does the author take the title of_ Abbé_, which means father, or suffer his editor to give him the title of Doctor of Divinity? |
53935 | Why? |
53935 | Why?" |
53935 | Will not his pious invocation be carried to your throne by the angel of prayer?" |
53935 | Will not the senate wait upon Caipor during the festival?" |
53935 | Will you accept it?" |
53935 | Will you follow me to Baden? |
53935 | Will you try a glass of rum?" |
53935 | Wilt thou make restitution from thy substance for those things which thou hast obtained through fraud and deception?'' |
53935 | Wilt thou pardon me, my son, my dear child, wilt thou pardon me?" |
53935 | With an Ambrose and a Theodosius to prop the tottering edifice, what might not be expected? |
53935 | With young France it is the fashion to doubt, to scoff, or to be utterly indifferent, and who dares to disobey fashion? |
53935 | Without speaking of the jealousies and enmities inherent to the profession, can one be sure of being equal to one''s self every day and all day? |
53935 | Would I not do much more for the love of art and of you?" |
53935 | Would it burst the millstone? |
53935 | Would it not be wiser to try and pierce the mystery of that horse''s head, to draw aside the veil that shrouds that journey from our sight?" |
53935 | Would man be God, the creature the Creator? |
53935 | Would not you and I be involved in the ruin, if she and Theodora had the misfortune of leaning to Christianity?" |
53935 | Would the filbert tree die in the attempt? |
53935 | Would you know the subjects that attracted a delighted audience? |
53935 | Would you know what? |
53935 | Would you wish to see happiness realized on earth? |
53935 | Would you wish your wife to lose her hopes thereof in order to avoid a little temporal punishment? |
53935 | Would you, for the sake of our old friendship, allow me to ask you one question, and then to offer you a single counsel?" |
53935 | Wouldst be called Otho the citizen, Otho the image- maker, and have all ladies turn their backs upon thee or point thee out as some wonder?" |
53935 | You are still incredulous? |
53935 | You forgive me?" |
53935 | You hold the centre and I the right, deployed as skirmishers is that it?" |
53935 | You know the priest who gave me so sweet a welcome when I arrived in Paris, and who placed me at the house of Madame de Vernanges?" |
53935 | You perceive the mark(_ stigma_) burned into the former''s forehead? |
53935 | You remember our engagement with Zoilus?" |
53935 | You would, then, condemn_ soirées_? |
53935 | You yourself have just said Mina was wise, beautiful, and pure; that you lauded her virtues to the world: why, then, did you not we d her?" |
53935 | Your brother is not gone?" |
53935 | [ Footnote 104] What is he thinking of when he speaks of the free judgment of auditors, and yet complains of those who deny him applause? |
53935 | [ Footnote 217] But in that case, would he not have adjusted his dates more adroitly? |
53935 | [ Footnote 282: Cariglea( Gray Rock) near Killaloe, seat of_ Aoibhin_,(_ Aoine_, Venus?) |
53935 | [ Footnote 297]''What is that, O girl?'' |
53935 | _ Did_ their"intense realization"of this doctrine lead them to infer the materiality of the soul? |
53935 | a name which is known throughout Baden as well as those of our oldest barons and bravest knights? |
53935 | abandon his work, his career perhaps? |
53935 | and also for the pardon of the lawyer, who, by his instigation, led them to commit the crime?" |
53935 | and are the proofs sufficient to prove it as an historical fact? |
53935 | and recognize the jurisdiction actually exercised in all parts of the church by the bishop of Rome? |
53935 | and whither go we? |
53935 | and who has any_ right_ to announce that fact? |
53935 | and would you not deem yourself happy to be our equal, and to be associated to our dignity?'' |
53935 | are you not better here? |
53935 | by whom art thou sent? |
53935 | can I fill you with joy and courage in writing? |
53935 | canst tell to me How many grains of dust in thee? |
53935 | continued Sisinnius,"are we not returning to a worse barbarism than that of the iron age? |
53935 | cried Lady Alice;"will you sit and make goslings in the ashes? |
53935 | cried he,"must I die? |
53935 | did I wake, or did I sleep, That midnight vigil not to keep? |
53935 | do n''t you see it is too soon? |
53935 | do you hesitate before a mere woman? |
53935 | do you not feel your limbs too tired, and as yet enjoying a very incomplete repose? |
53935 | hadst ever such a friend? |
53935 | have I not felt his hand grow cold for ever? |
53935 | he asks in return,"what has the babe done that is just born to die? |
53935 | he at length said,"in what have I offended? |
53935 | how can they understand it? |
53935 | how will you ever be tamed? |
53935 | if the sinner would repent and can not? |
53935 | is full of it; why have none of them said it so broadly and well as this? |
53935 | is it not a wretched destiny that keeps us thus in the dark? |
53935 | may I hope you will regard with favor one who has loved you so long, though he dared not confess it until to- day? |
53935 | must they hear their faith laughed at? |
53935 | or Peter rather than any other apostle? |
53935 | or how could it be said to begin from Peter or the chair of Peter, as his own witness, St. Cyprian, asserts? |
53935 | or was it Rosowina indeed? |
53935 | pardon-- the name of your mother?" |
53935 | return beggared to his native western town, without the promised work which was to show that his time had not been wasted? |
53935 | said Clement, addressing Flavia,"have you duly and fully considered the step you propose taking?" |
53935 | said the priest? |
53935 | should I not be transported with joy when I think of him? |
53935 | should I not love God? |
53935 | so light thy task? |
53935 | that I love and tremble for thee?" |
53935 | that is, to bring Christ down: or who shall descend into the deep? |
53935 | that we must ape Paris quite so much? |
53935 | thou wilt live with me, my son? |
53935 | to Vitus?" |
53935 | to express the sweetness of the Christ- child, the tenderness of Christ the Mediator, or the virginal motherhood of his holy mother? |
53935 | to give to stone, or marble, or wood the charm and majesty of those divine forms which from their golden halos call and smile on me? |
53935 | undefiled? |
53935 | was he going to take a wife? |
53935 | was it an apparition? |
53935 | well, I suppose she is some particular person, is she?" |
53935 | what dire mischance is wrought? |
53935 | what has he read?" |
53935 | what shall I offer you? |
53935 | whence came his model? |
53935 | whence the fire, water, air, or earth? |
53935 | whence the original germ? |
53935 | where art thou? |
53935 | where art thou? |
53935 | where there are only the dead and their tombs?" |
53935 | where will it end? |
53935 | whether a man leaves his skin here or elsewhere, what matters it? |
53935 | who?" |
53935 | why are we, and how? |
53935 | why ask me now? |
53935 | why does Mina gaze with such simple admiration upon the noble countenance and gilt spurs of the knight? |
53935 | will she attempt to follow? |
53935 | will you let the orphan, whom you have taken under the wings of your love, perish in this mountain solitude? |
53935 | yes, I''ll go in and listen awhile; shall I?" |
53935 | you have heard me; what more do you desire?" |
53935 | { 150} You propose to discourse on beautiful things, but tell me, if you please, what are beautiful things? |
53935 | { 198} Must I give up all these things, my titles, my wealth, and all, to go-- where? |
53935 | { 244}"And who says that your lot may not be different?" |
53935 | { 245}"Sir,"said Nora,"have you not noticed for some time past her want of appetite and her general languor without apparent cause? |
53935 | { 252} Allow a foundling to usurp the rights of its lawful representatives? |
53935 | { 306} What were intellectual satisfactions in comparison to the joys of conscience? |
53935 | { 369}''What can you do to me?'' |
53935 | { 378}"Is the notion of liberty( asks M. Vitet) alien and unknown to Christianity? |
53935 | { 385} The priest asked,"What is the matter?" |
53935 | { 455} Many have asked:"Is it equal to Jerusalem or Rome?" |
53935 | { 554} Byron woke up one morning and found himself famous: some one in Elizabeth''s reign made a list( is it not D''Israeli who preserves it?) |
53935 | { 557} Every_ femme incomprise_--and what poetess does not think she is one? |
53935 | { 561} What made Hood''s pen merry on his death- bed, and took the wit so out of Sydney Smiths''s sermons? |
53935 | { 67}"Where have you been, my dear Robert?" |
53935 | { 698} Need anybody ask what was the result of all this? |
27966 | ''Ai n''t it a''eavenly night? |
27966 | ''Ask the Mother- Superior will she consent to receive me?'' 27966 ''Can be useful to her country,''"repeats Beauvayse"Question is, in what way?" |
27966 | ''Fiddle- faddle,''my dear Constantia? |
27966 | ''Is gal? |
27966 | ''Toby''? |
27966 | ''Was he----''? 27966 ''Yes''again? |
27966 | A communication-- a message-- from the Chief to me? |
27966 | A little more of the orange- flower water, dear aunt? |
27966 | Ah, and have you any more of this kind of comfort at your place of business or elsewhere? |
27966 | Ai n''t you anxious? |
27966 | Ai n''t''e all right? |
27966 | All? |
27966 | Always on the make, ai n''t you? |
27966 | Am I so formidable of aspect? 27966 Am I to go or stay? |
27966 | Am I to read''em? |
27966 | Am I to----? 27966 Am I ve Officer, weally?" |
27966 | Am I, then, nothing to you? |
27966 | An''sent the pipe and baccy for a birthday present, to make a blushin''fool o''me? |
27966 | An''who but herself did be callin''down all manner av''misfortune on ivery wan that crassed her? |
27966 | An''you''ve forgiven me-- abart them letters? |
27966 | And I may know your Christian name? |
27966 | And did she tumble out of her pram, the duck, and wicked Polly never see her? 27966 And how do you propose to drive this conviction home?" |
27966 | And how will he know that, maybe you would be telling? |
27966 | And not you? |
27966 | And now, do n''t you think you ought to go and dress? 27966 And now,"Saxham said, glancing at his watch,"may I know in what I can be of service?" |
27966 | And so you bought the cottage for Lessie? 27966 And that you did n''t care who knew it?" |
27966 | And that you two were going to be married as soon as you could pull off the event? |
27966 | And the others? |
27966 | And those others, Beatrice? |
27966 | And until that time comes? |
27966 | And varra possibly,put in Taggart,"ye could submit a culture for present inspection? |
27966 | And what the devil does Dr. Saxham want? |
27966 | And when-- oh, when Is It To Be? |
27966 | And where do you think we get the water, now? |
27966 | And wo n''t we be after taking the bundle? |
27966 | And wot are you cranin''your neck for, tryin''to look out o''winder? 27966 And your religious correspondent pried first,"says Saxham, with savage irony,"and afterwards tattled?" |
27966 | And,he begged,"you''ll let what I''ve said to you be our secret? |
27966 | Another_ rara avis_, Beau? |
27966 | Are not you my chief friend? |
27966 | Are there no women in Gueldersdorp? |
27966 | Are they not? |
27966 | Are you awake, dearie? |
27966 | Are you busy, Reverend Mother? 27966 As for the other grudge.... What, are you going to kiss me?... |
27966 | Ask her if she remembers the Free State Hotel on the veld, three days''trek from Dreipoort, and Bough, who was her friend? |
27966 | But he is there for you? |
27966 | But not immediately? |
27966 | But oo''s''i m? |
27966 | But perhaps you''re not a Londoner? 27966 But there is not always sunshine? |
27966 | But what about your own duty? |
27966 | But what could you have done without me, once the little Englishwoman smelled the porcupine in the barrel? 27966 But what had you to do with the Corporal getting chipped?" |
27966 | But what on earth has the concertina got to do with it? |
27966 | But why? |
27966 | But wot''ll be in the boxes, deer? |
27966 | But you are coming, too? |
27966 | But you''re not? |
27966 | But, on the other hand, they can make you awfully happy-- what? |
27966 | But----"Well? |
27966 | By a stray bullet? |
27966 | By the way... with reference to Miss Mildare, have you any idea whether she proposes taking the veil? |
27966 | Can it be that you mean the Dr. Saxham of the Old Bailey Case? |
27966 | Can you tell us the difference of time between South Africa and England? |
27966 | Catholics pray for the souls of dead people, do n''t they? 27966 Chin or no chin, eyebrows or not a hair, what does that count to a woman in love?" |
27966 | Come, now, what were you up to? |
27966 | Concernin''----? |
27966 | Concerns me? |
27966 | Could n''t I?--would you care to have me?--may I stay and dine at home with you? |
27966 | Did I ever give you, or any other man who ever trusted me, away? 27966 Did he not?" |
27966 | Did he? 27966 Did n''t she? |
27966 | Did n''t you regard it as essential that I should wash? |
27966 | Did n''t you tell me on Sunday that you were engaged? |
27966 | Did n''t you''ear me sing out to you just now? |
27966 | Did she git your letter wot you put in the box o''choc''s? 27966 Did ye ever know a Dutch boss av any kind clane- shaved an''not hairy- faced?" |
27966 | Did you dream I would defile her ears with it? 27966 Did you know-- among the pupils-- a young person by the name of Mildare?" |
27966 | Do I interfere with your work? 27966 Do n''t I know it?" |
27966 | Do n''t remind me of the cottage at Cookham, will you? 27966 Do n''t we all get into messes of that kind? |
27966 | Do n''t you know who edits the rag? |
27966 | Do n''t you share it? 27966 Do ye hear it?" |
27966 | Do ye see it? 27966 Do you Boer spies carry cheque- books-- upon Secret Service?" |
27966 | Do you call my good stewpan, that my mother cooked beef and succotash and pottage- herbs in before me, an unclean vessel-- you? 27966 Do you call this nothing?" |
27966 | Do you hear me? |
27966 | Do you suppose that any unauthorised announcement, or statement that has not been officially corroborated would be allowed to pass? 27966 Do you think I shall ever forget the hindrance I have been to you? |
27966 | Do you think it needed War to teach me how hideously women suffer? 27966 Do you think that Lord Beauvayse would wind up as top- dog if it came to a struggle between us?" |
27966 | Do you want to hear how I came to cut my own throat? |
27966 | Do you wish the Chaplain sent for? |
27966 | Does n''t the Bible teach us that the Deluge covered the whole earth? 27966 Does not my old man- baboon at home pouch six walnuts for every one that his wife gets to share with her youngster? |
27966 | Fatigued? 27966 First tell me, do you know that there is nothing in it?" |
27966 | Five weeks back----? |
27966 | Flyblown, do I look? |
27966 | For a bit, but does it last? 27966 For what have you before at keyholes listened, little fool?" |
27966 | From my husband? 27966 Goes with''the tented field''and_ casus belli: cherchez la femme_ and_ cui bono_?" |
27966 | Has anything happened, that you have come back? |
27966 | Have I deserved one? |
27966 | Have I ever said I was unhappy? |
27966 | Have I talked nonsense? 27966 Have Lever and Boz gone out?" |
27966 | Have n''t I told you? 27966 Have n''t you had the whole day? |
27966 | Have you any idea who she was? |
27966 | Have you been happy? |
27966 | Have you kept the letter? |
27966 | He had this upon him? 27966 He looks gassly, do n''t him?" |
27966 | Hoe? 27966 Hoe?" |
27966 | How are you getting on with your work, dearie? |
27966 | How can I call it anything else? 27966 How can you compel the man to give himself away?" |
27966 | How did ye get that''ere nasty prod under the eye? |
27966 | How did you enjoy the performance of the lady who played the part? |
27966 | How did''e take it, pore dear? |
27966 | How do you know that? |
27966 | How long has this been going on? |
27966 | How long wilt Thou delay, O Lord, righteous in judgment? 27966 How many men are you, Mr. Van Busch or Bough? |
27966 | How many times have you met? |
27966 | How much time have I left to catch the up- Express? |
27966 | How on earth did they reach you, sir? |
27966 | How should I have ideas upon the possibility? |
27966 | How will you bear parting from her? 27966 How? |
27966 | I am not ill. How is it that you are here? |
27966 | I have often wondered what it really is, and whether I should like it if I heard it? 27966 I hope,"said Saxham, with rather heavy irony,"that you acquainted them with your opinion of them while you had the opportunity?" |
27966 | I should n''t think you had any spare hours to spare? |
27966 | I suppose he takes his A.D.C.? |
27966 | I suppose she''s fond of you-- what? |
27966 | I think Lady Hannah Wrynche, who is now in Gueldersdorp, happens to be an acquaintance of theirs, if not a friend? |
27966 | I''ll forgive you if you''ll tell me how_ he_ manages-- to attain invisibility? |
27966 | If Anne does n''t kick up a wow? |
27966 | If I married you, you would take me away from this country and these people who have killed her? |
27966 | If I told you that the luck had changed, would that make you happy? |
27966 | If I were to marry you, would you leave me absolutely free? |
27966 | If you are an old friend of the young lady you mention, how is it you do n''t know her address? |
27966 | In useful time? 27966 Indeed? |
27966 | Is anyone else in possession of this information? |
27966 | Is it beyond doubt that the letter from the supposed Mrs. Casey was not a genuine communication? |
27966 | Is it good- night, or may I come in? |
27966 | Is n''t that rather a personal remark? |
27966 | Is n''t that what I''m suffering for? 27966 Is not this my home?" |
27966 | Is one mistake to ruin a man''s life? 27966 Is she not?" |
27966 | Is she short and square, with black hair and round blue eyes, and red cheeks and thick ankles? |
27966 | Is that my punishment for insubordination? |
27966 | Is that the Engelsch way of doctoring? 27966 Is that true-- about my mother?" |
27966 | Is that your pal? |
27966 | Is there another chap who wants to cut in? |
27966 | Is there any creature upon earth more cowardly than a man engaged? |
27966 | It was an incendiary shell? |
27966 | It would save such a deal of trouble to believe there was only one Noah, and only one Ark, do n''t you know? |
27966 | It''s true? 27966 Judgin''by the marginal annotations of this man Blinders-- brute I''d kick to Cape Town with pleasure-- my wife''s a prisoner in Brounckers''hands?" |
27966 | Like as if''e was tired, deer, or un''appy? 27966 Live here? |
27966 | Look here, though,came from Beauvayse,"there''s one thing you must remember-- what''s your name?" |
27966 | Lord Beauvayse..."Did you speak to me, Doctor? 27966 Lynette Mildare, have you a heart inside you?" |
27966 | Lynette Mildare, you''re never in earnest? |
27966 | May I ask how she received the information she had the bad taste to seek? |
27966 | May I not come with you upon your voyage? |
27966 | May I not know why you sent them away? |
27966 | May I take you down? |
27966 | May n''t I ask, ma''am, to be introduced to Miss Mildare? |
27966 | May we take it that you can personally testify to its presence here? |
27966 | Me? 27966 Mercy upon us, Doctor, do you want me to be definite and literal? |
27966 | Might we speak to you, ma''am? |
27966 | Mine?... |
27966 | Miss_ Mildare_? |
27966 | Mother, Mother, must I tell him? |
27966 | Mother, how did you find out? |
27966 | My father knew the Mother? |
27966 | My good fellow? |
27966 | My revolver has been stolen? |
27966 | Never had one? |
27966 | No boots? 27966 No? |
27966 | Not from the Convent? |
27966 | Now it''s out, an''I suppose you''ates me? |
27966 | Now you''ve seen her, sir, would you? |
27966 | Now, my child? |
27966 | Of course, the Sisters are aware,he said, meeting the Mother''s grave glance,"that if it is quicker to drive, it is safer to walk?" |
27966 | Of the Doctor?... 27966 Of them two...."interpolated the cook--"Her and the Captain?" |
27966 | Oh, Mother, who...? |
27966 | Oh, carn''t you guess? |
27966 | Oh, why do you talk to me like this? |
27966 | Or a boarding- school? |
27966 | Or a cheque? |
27966 | Ought n''t ve officer to have a wevolver? |
27966 | Owen, tell me where you are going? |
27966 | Perhaps you may recall an oath I swore at your instigation one day in your room at the Hospital at Gueldersdorp? |
27966 | Perhaps you would n''t mind throwin''your eye over the contents of that envelope? 27966 Perhaps you''ll manage a smile when you''ve read this?" |
27966 | Please, what are ve confequences? |
27966 | Please,you said that night when she came first-- you remember it quite well, though it is so long ago--"please, why did you never come before?" |
27966 | Port or sherry? 27966 Quite right, and who are you?" |
27966 | Really, Mother? |
27966 | Really...? 27966 S''pose John tell, can catchee more tikkie? |
27966 | Saxham, ca n''t you see? 27966 Shaky, is n''t it? |
27966 | Shall I? 27966 So you anticipated a hauling over the coals?" |
27966 | Soldiers must n''t cwy, must vey? |
27966 | Sorry to hear it; what''s your name? |
27966 | Stay.... Who are the persons who disapprove of the announcement? |
27966 | Streaky yellow in the whites of the eyes, and pouchy under''em? |
27966 | Strite, an''no kid, did n''t you know when you done--_that_--I''d never forgive you as long as I lived? |
27966 | Sure, no, brother; not so much as that? |
27966 | Surely I know you? 27966 Surely you know who the fellow is, Colonel? |
27966 | Sympathy? 27966 Take it as an instance.... Did Heaven play the matchmaker here, or has Hell had a finger in the matrimonial pie? |
27966 | Tell me again, before you shall go, about the Engelsch Commandant who came to visit at the Convent to- day? |
27966 | Tell me what this is? |
27966 | Tell me what you know of him, and of--she kissed the miniature, and held it to her cheek--"of my mother?" |
27966 | Tell me who I am, then? |
27966 | Tell me who they are? |
27966 | Tell me,he said at length,"do I inspire you with antipathy? |
27966 | That was n''t never..._''i m_? |
27966 | That was why she asked Van Busch outright whether the girl with the nuns at Gueldersdorp was-- could be-- the same child, grown up? 27966 That word you said means-- wife, do n''t it, deer?" |
27966 | That you wished to God you were a widower? |
27966 | The Colonel, did n''t you''ear me say? |
27966 | The Princess never snubbed you? |
27966 | The man who committed the murder? |
27966 | The warr''ds, said ye? |
27966 | The who? |
27966 | The young woman? |
27966 | The''Girl With the Golden Eyes''? |
27966 | Then... before the Relief? |
27966 | There are such marriages----? |
27966 | There has been another Boer cattle- raid? |
27966 | There is a Mrs. Casey, then? |
27966 | There was a boy-- who died? |
27966 | Think she''ll send an answer, eh? |
27966 | This gentleman desired to see me? |
27966 | To England? |
27966 | To find out when they was goin''to sack me, so''s to git me own notice in fust-- see? 27966 Very well, but where are you going?" |
27966 | Was anybody hurt? |
27966 | Was it necessary to have told-- anything whatever? |
27966 | Was it wise? |
27966 | Was it''i m? |
27966 | Was yours the only Convent in Gueldersdorp where young ladies were taught? |
27966 | Wat scheelt er aan, Tante? |
27966 | Weel now, and how are we the day? |
27966 | Well, Keyse, you''ve heard Meisje hiccoughing ninety- four- pound projectiles all the morning, have n''t you? |
27966 | Well, Private Brooker, what have you to say? |
27966 | Well, and what happened then? |
27966 | Well, boss, since you''re on the Temperance Walk,said the Australian, his would- be host, a little huffily,"you''ll please yourself, I suppose?" |
27966 | Well, what have you got to say? |
27966 | Well, what of her? |
27966 | Were n''t there witnesses of sorts? |
27966 | Were you looking for a friend, dear? |
27966 | Were-- weren''t they happy? |
27966 | What are you going to do? |
27966 | What calamity? |
27966 | What can it matter really?... 27966 What could he do?" |
27966 | What did you go and do to upset''i m, pore dear? |
27966 | What game is there that you do n''t play? |
27966 | What had the dirty little bounder got to say? |
27966 | What has happened to Miss Mildare----? |
27966 | What is he telling the Reverend Mother? |
27966 | What is it, Major? |
27966 | What is it? |
27966 | What is that? |
27966 | What is the reason of-- this? 27966 What is to be done, Saxham?" |
27966 | What is your secret purpose? 27966 What more have you to''confess''? |
27966 | What necktie do you want to wear to- day? |
27966 | What on earth is the veld? |
27966 | What price Sir Jedbury Fargoe the noo? 27966 What risk can there be to a man in my state? |
27966 | What says she? |
27966 | What the-- what the----? |
27966 | What utterance of Lady Hannah''s do you suppose to have led to the tragedy in the Convent Chapel? 27966 What''ll she do when she lands in''ome, wivout a woman to git a cup o''tea for''er? |
27966 | What''s come to her? 27966 What''s this? |
27966 | What''s to hinder me, I say? |
27966 | What''s up? 27966 When will the Dutchy be back, boss?" |
27966 | Where are mother and nurse? |
27966 | Where are those two boys? 27966 Where do you come from, sweet?" |
27966 | Where is she now? |
27966 | Where is the man who buried the dead woman and built the Little Kopje? |
27966 | Who are you? |
27966 | Who could help it? |
27966 | Who is it? |
27966 | Who is not a liar and a scoundrel? |
27966 | Who is the maunderer, I''d like to know? 27966 Who is the other man?" |
27966 | Who was she? |
27966 | Who was the fellow who helped you, do you know? |
27966 | Who you- e? |
27966 | Who? |
27966 | Whom do you mean by''us''? |
27966 | Whose is the other objecting voice? |
27966 | Whose were the bones, Colonel? |
27966 | Why are you so sorry? |
27966 | Why could n''t you up and speak out? |
27966 | Why did I bring a skirt, I arsk, if I''m to do the patter? |
27966 | Why did he come and look at me, and take me by the hand, and awaken my deadened senses to the sting of anguish that has no name? 27966 Why did you remain,"said Saxham, wrung by pity,"to be tortured by such prurient prattlers? |
27966 | Why do you call me Beatrice? |
27966 | Why does it? |
27966 | Why have you come back so early? 27966 Why have you done this? |
27966 | Why not? 27966 Why not?" |
27966 | Why not? |
27966 | Why on earth are women such blessed----"--Idiots? |
27966 | Why should I have pride when Our Lord is so humble that He does not disdain to take for His bride the woman Richard Mildare has rejected? |
27966 | Why should not the Future be fair? |
27966 | Why torture yourself uselessly with imaginations? |
27966 | Why were those paragraphs not shown to me? |
27966 | Why, child? |
27966 | Why... ai n''t she a Dutchy''erself? 27966 Why? |
27966 | Will you not go down? |
27966 | Will you object to telling me plainly for how much you would be content to sell your stock, with goodwill? |
27966 | Without boots or shoes? |
27966 | Wondering what the shuffling and breathing at the keyhole meant? |
27966 | Wot are you gettin''at? |
27966 | Wot d''you tyke me for? |
27966 | Wot do you mean by the third time, deer? |
27966 | Wot for? |
27966 | Wot is it, deer? |
27966 | Wot is my skater? |
27966 | Wot? 27966 Would n''t it be as well,"hints Captain Bingo,"to get used to it?" |
27966 | Would n''t what? |
27966 | Would they have stopped where they was, well widin range, av I had let on I knew they was a parcel av unwashed Dutchmen? |
27966 | Wrong, do you say? 27966 Wrynche, how much longer do you think I can go on listening to this? |
27966 | Yes; but you do n''t want me to touch the narsty, dreadful stuff, do you, Walty deer? |
27966 | Yes? |
27966 | Yes? |
27966 | Yes? |
27966 | You are an advocate of Universal Suffrage, then? 27966 You are going to him now?" |
27966 | You are sure of this? |
27966 | You ask, Have I no pride? |
27966 | You believe the girl''s slewed on you, eh, and that things are going to pan out rough? 27966 You did-- that?" |
27966 | You do n''t mean to say that you''ve been starving all the time I''ve been gorging myself like-- like a boa- constrictor? |
27966 | You do not mind at all? 27966 You go to that Engelsch doktor on Harris Street, eh?" |
27966 | You have been so very dear and kind to- night,she had answered,"how could I have helped being happy? |
27966 | You have had enough trouble to last for some time, I imagine? |
27966 | You have no idea who he was, of course? |
27966 | You have no near relative to sign the Hospital Register? |
27966 | You have not read it? |
27966 | You hear? |
27966 | You know his father, the Bishop of H----? 27966 You love children?" |
27966 | You love her very dearly? |
27966 | You mean poor Fraithorn? |
27966 | You owe me none; and even if you did, what use is gratitude to a man who asks for love? |
27966 | You remember me, Colonel? |
27966 | You suggest that Holy Mass should be offered for the repose of your friend''s soul? 27966 You there?" |
27966 | You think it pretty? |
27966 | You want to leave me? 27966 You would not call the Mother that?" |
27966 | You''ll give''er this, wo n''t you, Miss, and tell her I bin thinkin''of''er night and d''y? 27966 You''ll think me a presumptuous kind of fellow for talking like this, wo n''t you, Miss Mildare? |
27966 | You''re no''by any chance meaning the Saxham that wrote''The Diseases of Civilisation,''are ye, Colonel? 27966 You''re no''fatigued? |
27966 | You''re pullin''my leg, sir, ai n''t you? |
27966 | You''re sending the stuff up North? |
27966 | You''ve seen how my men obey me, Hammy? 27966 You-- cry?" |
27966 | You-- you wish to marry a Catholic-- you, who tell me that you were once a Christian and are now Agnostic? |
27966 | Your doing? |
27966 | Your family is not Colonial? |
27966 | Your friend is a nun? 27966 _ Billy?_""Billy Keyse?" |
27966 | _ Billy?_"Billy Keyse? |
27966 | _ Has he been told? 27966 _ Lost a friend?_"Saxham, echoing the last three words, stares at the Chaplain in a strange, dull way, and then forgets him for a minute or more. |
27966 | _ Missis now, eh!_What did those three words mean? |
27966 | _ Sans compliment?_ You really mean it? 27966 _ Sans compliment?_ You really mean it? |
27966 | _ She_ turned out to be a Hottentot lady, did n''t she? |
27966 | ''Ai n''t it, deer? |
27966 | ''Ai n''t that enough? |
27966 | ''Aven''t I told you a''ready? |
27966 | ''Consie,''she has said,''you have perception....''What my Sovereign credits may not my niece believe?" |
27966 | ''Did he hurt you, dearie?'' |
27966 | ''Is this,''he says,''the British pluck they talk about? |
27966 | ''Oo I done a good turn to-- an''this is''ow I gits it back?" |
27966 | ''Oo are you gettin''at, Myn''eer Van Dunck?" |
27966 | ''Ow do you like me dress, Walty dear? |
27966 | ''owever''ad she dared? |
27966 | ( Do you who read see W. Keyse carrying the chain and spirit- level, and sweeping out the office when the Kaffir boy forgets?). |
27966 | --a double comparison of the unfortuitous kind--"how should I alter matters in a heathen place like this?" |
27966 | ... Was n''t_ that_ one of the texts with promise?... |
27966 | ...""And he... what does...?" |
27966 | A Certain Person can come out of this vehicle, I suppose, Saxham? |
27966 | A Man Like That?" |
27966 | A shuddering sigh heaved the strong young shoulders from time to time, and his hands clenched and tore at the grasses,"Do n''t I know it? |
27966 | A silly looney or a sneakin''thief?" |
27966 | Again, have you no pride?" |
27966 | Ai n''t it, sir?" |
27966 | All I asked-- and what happens? |
27966 | All jumps this morning; would n''t take the odds you''re not as bad?" |
27966 | All well with you and yours?" |
27966 | Am I correct?" |
27966 | Am I dead an''got to''Eaven-- on somebody else''s pass?" |
27966 | Am I pale still, Watkins?" |
27966 | Am I physically repulsive to you, or disagreeable? |
27966 | Am I right or wrong?" |
27966 | An'', Mister, you''re a Fair Old Brick, an''if you''ve no objection to shykin''''ands...?" |
27966 | An''me''at? |
27966 | An''so you-- slept soundly on the strength o''many wakeful nichts to come? |
27966 | And Biddy----""Biddy?" |
27966 | And I grouse and maunder? |
27966 | And I who write, have I not seen a North Antrim Sunday- school wrecked in a faction- fight between the Orange and the Green? |
27966 | And I would lend you my beasts an''fings, because I know you would n''t bweak them?" |
27966 | And as to divorcin''your wife, how do you know she''ll ever be accommodatin''enough to give you reason? |
27966 | And do you realise that we''re here together alone, you and me, for the first time? |
27966 | And for the sake of Richard''s daughter, was it not her sacred maternal duty to shield that dearest one from shame? |
27966 | And gunpowder-- you have that seen also?" |
27966 | And how did you like''The Chiffon Girl''?" |
27966 | And how long might the nuns have had her?" |
27966 | And how will she endure parting from you?" |
27966 | And in what respect were those Society mothers less managing than the nun? |
27966 | And it was she who had asked Lynette if she was happy? |
27966 | And now the tear- blurred face was lifted from her bosom, and the voice, hoarse and weak and trembling, appealed:"Mother, you are not angry? |
27966 | And now, about the money?" |
27966 | And now-- was any other worth the taking? |
27966 | And once a shell burst close to us, and a splinter knocked off my hat and tore a corner of her veil----""Were n''t you in a petrified fright?" |
27966 | And she answers,''I do n''t know....''And''Was it anyone you knew?'' |
27966 | And suppose I have spent it, how shall I replace it? |
27966 | And that''s another link in the evidence, I take it?" |
27966 | And that''s what you may call the Clue Direct, Saxham, I rather fancy?" |
27966 | And the Reverend Julius demands, with resentful acerbity:"What are you staring at? |
27966 | And the man is in the second stage of recovery from a bout of drunkenness-- unless he drugs?" |
27966 | And then it seemed quite easy, and then she cried out in agony:"Is that''i m comin''? |
27966 | And to which side?" |
27966 | And we have never lost each other since, I think?" |
27966 | And what were his publishers doing with those accumulated royalties? |
27966 | And what''s to say now?" |
27966 | And when He pitied the Widow of Nain, do you think His eyes were dry? |
27966 | And when micht we reckon on getting notification from what I may presume to ca''your double surpreese- packet?" |
27966 | And when we met,_ he_---- Why do handkerchiefs invariably hide when people want to sneeze behind them?" |
27966 | And who shall say she is cheated? |
27966 | And why did she sign herself"Fare Air?" |
27966 | And why does she think of me as an opponent?" |
27966 | And why?" |
27966 | And with news worth having?" |
27966 | And within the little area of this beleaguered town do not men kill, and are not men killed, every day? |
27966 | And would it not be wise of you to go home and lie down?" |
27966 | And would she not meet him at the Convent on Thursday, at twilight, when the shelling stopped, and it would be safe for his beloved to venture there? |
27966 | And yet of what concealments had she not been guilty in the shielding of this dearest head? |
27966 | And yet, what are the lives of even the upright, and clean, and continent among men, compared with the life of a girl bred as she had been? |
27966 | And you ca n''t deny him, Saxham?" |
27966 | And you know her?" |
27966 | And you say a person_ then_ unknown.... Has the murderer been arrested?" |
27966 | And you think it was n''t quite fair, or quite kind, and now you''re sorry?" |
27966 | And you wo n''t miss Grindlay so frightfully, after all?" |
27966 | And you, Keyse? |
27966 | And, Colonel, it''s in my memory that ye had set your mind on beginnin''wi''the Operating Theatre?..." |
27966 | And, having seen it, dare you justify the shedding, by men who hold the Christian Faith, of these spilled- out oceans of Christian blood? |
27966 | And, talking of women, I wonder where my wife is?" |
27966 | And-- can you remember a bit o''poetry?" |
27966 | And-- have I your word of honour that this is a non- alcoholic beverage?" |
27966 | And-- suppose you stop a Boer bullet and get knocked out-- where do I come in?" |
27966 | And-- you do n''t play as badly as all that, do you?" |
27966 | And...?" |
27966 | Another nibble out of the golden cheese that the old man''s nursing up for you,--what? |
27966 | Another woman?... |
27966 | Any objection?" |
27966 | Anything I can do?" |
27966 | Are any patients waiting?" |
27966 | Are n''t you, Baby?" |
27966 | Are you at liberty to tell me, sir, the date of Captain Mildare''s death? |
27966 | Are you aware that my ward is a Catholic?" |
27966 | Are you below there?" |
27966 | Are you quite sure you have come down to earth again? |
27966 | Are you takin''those dashed morphia tabloids of Taggart''s for bad- water collywobbles again? |
27966 | Are you the Convalescent Hospital?" |
27966 | Are you to''ave a uniform, an''all like that?" |
27966 | As Berta''s little legs scampered through the door, he delayed to ask:"What are your playfings, Mister Colonel?" |
27966 | As I''aven''t, say wot you''ll drink? |
27966 | As to yourself, you will allow the inquiry.... Are you a surgeon as well as a medical practitioner?" |
27966 | As yours, what I ask you is, between man and man, how far have you gone in this fresh affair?" |
27966 | Ask her if she remembers the Free State Hotel on the veld, three days''trek from Dreipoort, and Bough, who was her friend?" |
27966 | Ask the Commandant whether Van Busch is square or not? |
27966 | At the Convent here? |
27966 | Because, you know... supposing St. Joseph had refused to credit a dream?..." |
27966 | Beloved child- Quixote, tilting at the Black Windmills, how dare I, who was once the Dop Doctor of Gueldersdorp, love you and seek you for my own? |
27966 | Beloved missives, where was the worshipped writer now? |
27966 | Besides, there was not really need for anything like an operation, was there? |
27966 | But Saxham knew that by- and- by... What did he care? |
27966 | But could one man do anything against so many? |
27966 | But did they get through in time to be of use?" |
27966 | But for what reason now, and to what end, since his virginal- pure, dew- pearled, Convent lily lay trodden in the mire? |
27966 | But he called out as he lowered his revolver- hand:"You''ve had rather an escape of getting shot, Saxham, do you know? |
27966 | But he said roughly:"The Mother.... How can she approve your joining the ranks of the Shrieking Sisterhood?" |
27966 | But if she were not in Gueldersdorp, why did the left breast- pocket of the now soiled and heavily- patched khâki tunic bulge so? |
27966 | But oh, was there ever a sweeter night, following upon a sweeter day? |
27966 | But perhaps you have n''t seen it?" |
27966 | But probably he was drunk when he rang the bell and said quietly to his man:"Tait, do you believe there is a God?" |
27966 | But the circumstances are exceptional, are n''t they? |
27966 | But they did not know, and she... What use-- what use in her knowing? |
27966 | But what brought you safely through the operation, healed your wound by the first intention, and set you on your legs again? |
27966 | But what was Trudi saying? |
27966 | But who lives in the house?" |
27966 | But who''s your prodeegy?" |
27966 | But why should there be any shootin'', lovey? |
27966 | But you do n''t suppose he goes alone, do you, old lady?" |
27966 | But you will allow me to find you a seat, if-- any of these may be moved?" |
27966 | But you will look out for the boxes with the dynamite, and send me the message when it comes?" |
27966 | But''ow am I to send the message?" |
27966 | But, of course, you do n''t remember?" |
27966 | But, of course, you have read the newspaper accounts of the Siege of Gueldersdorp? |
27966 | But-- I wonder the Convent cares to risk its ewe lamb on that infernal patch of veld?" |
27966 | But-- but surely they cost you a great deal of money?" |
27966 | But-- who can expect children to keep healthy under conditions as insanitary as these?" |
27966 | But-- who knows? |
27966 | But-- your question?" |
27966 | But... more a job for the Chaplain than the Doctor, is n''t it?" |
27966 | By whose vacant pillow has his broken heart sought vain relief in tears? |
27966 | By your leave?..." |
27966 | Ca n''t you do as I do, and use your eyes?" |
27966 | Can a man tell tales on another who is dead? |
27966 | Can he have done so, or am I hashing things? |
27966 | Can it be?... |
27966 | Can the ladies spare you for a moment? |
27966 | Can you hear that?" |
27966 | Can you spell your language?" |
27966 | Can you tell me where Miss Mildare lives?" |
27966 | Can you walk there with me now? |
27966 | Casey?" |
27966 | Casey?" |
27966 | Certainly he had saved her trouble, but what was he sayin''now, the''orrible slant- eyed''eathen? |
27966 | Coincidence, did you say, lifting your eyebrows over the book, as the blue waggon of the Sisters rolled lumberingly into the story? |
27966 | Confound it, what business had a nun to be anything like so beautiful? |
27966 | Could any of them have been more astute, more eager, more bent on hooking the desirable_ parti_ for their girls than she had shown herself just now? |
27966 | Could you not by a desperate effort break this habit that may-- that must-- inevitably bring misery to your wife? |
27966 | Dear one, is n''t there a single kiss? |
27966 | Did I tell you that_ I_ encountered an old friend-- or, at least, a friend of old-- at the Hospital yesterday?" |
27966 | Did Lady Hannah see the man and recognise him?" |
27966 | Did Owen really believe that to be happy she must forget him? |
27966 | Did Saxham wake behind them? |
27966 | Did he want every English officer to recognise him as an old deserter from the Cape Mounted Police? |
27966 | Did it occur to you that the man had come out of the Convent enclosure?" |
27966 | Did n''t I drive her and the other woman over from Haargrond, with Bough''s little beast pulling in a cart of my own? |
27966 | Did n''t I lose you your Boer spy?" |
27966 | Did n''t he know that her Commandant liked his meals on time? |
27966 | Did n''t she look up, just for the one second, as if she remembered her name?" |
27966 | Did n''t you say as I''d be talkin''to you? |
27966 | Did not our Lord weep over His dearest city, and for His beloved friend? |
27966 | Did she desire it? |
27966 | Did she''ave it?" |
27966 | Did she----""Did she wot?" |
27966 | Did she? |
27966 | Did that never strike you?" |
27966 | Did these women who are the chief victims of it and the greatest losers by it, choose that there should be War? |
27966 | Did you suppose I should be likely to swallow such a_ feuille de chou_ without even oil and vinegar? |
27966 | Did you want anything?" |
27966 | Did your people lose you, or had you run away from home?" |
27966 | Do n''t all you successful professional men know that?" |
27966 | Do n''t the Doctor make no odds to''er? |
27966 | Do n''t you agree with me-- marvellously great?" |
27966 | Do n''t you fancy me in''em? |
27966 | Do n''t you know it, Walt?" |
27966 | Do n''t you know wot''arm you''re doing? |
27966 | Do n''t you see me in my bedroom tearing''em off?" |
27966 | Do n''t you think her sweet?" |
27966 | Do n''t you think so?" |
27966 | Do not you think so too?" |
27966 | Do set my mind at rest?" |
27966 | Do we need your assistant further?" |
27966 | Do ye no''see it?" |
27966 | Do you ask me what is the matter? |
27966 | Do you ask what barrier? |
27966 | Do you care for a description of the man at his prime? |
27966 | Do you dare to dream you can hinder Me from doing what I have said?" |
27966 | Do you despise her and those others for the predominance of the primal instinct, the sacred passion for the inviolate hearth? |
27966 | Do you hear, you Kid? |
27966 | Do you imagine that the colour of my cloth debars me from-- from taking the part of a lady whose name has been dragged before the public? |
27966 | Do you know Appenbad? |
27966 | Do you know the effect of Doubt, once planted in what was a faithful soul? |
27966 | Do you live here?" |
27966 | Do you mean that you are going to die?" |
27966 | Do you suppose you are a prisoner here because I slewed on you? |
27966 | Do you suppose you young married creatures are the only wives who enjoy cosseting their husbands? |
27966 | Do you think I do n''t know what you are doing, day after day, to help and cheer those poor fellows at the Convalescent Hospital?" |
27966 | Do you think you could walk now, miss, if you tried to?" |
27966 | Do you thinks she understands we''re talking about her, poor lamb?" |
27966 | Do you understand? |
27966 | Do you want me to go away?" |
27966 | Do you want to hear about it? |
27966 | Do you wish to ruin an honest man?" |
27966 | Do you-- do you think that he will listen to a remonstrance?" |
27966 | Doctor, is it possible for a person to die of fear?" |
27966 | Does he know?_"The long, plain face was close to Lynette''s. |
27966 | Does it matter how De Boursy, much reduced in bulk by a considerable leakage of conceit, came across the Dop Doctor? |
27966 | Does n''t that fact rather appeal to the sportsman in you, Doctor?" |
27966 | Does this mean that you belong to me?" |
27966 | Engelsch mevrouws disobey their husbands, it seems?" |
27966 | For Saxham, with a madman''s face, had leapt to his feet, knocking over his chair, and stuttered with foam on his blue lips:"What wrong? |
27966 | For how much money down will you undertake to extricate me from this position, and convey me back to Gueldersdorp?" |
27966 | For if Emigration Jane were dead, what had Life left for him? |
27966 | For when have I backslidden before Thee? |
27966 | For why? |
27966 | For''ow are you to take to call a proper pride in yourself when you''aven''t got no''art for anythink any more? |
27966 | From the beginning..."Was it meant that I should die on these wild, wide, desolate plains, and leave you, Richard?" |
27966 | From under her tangled hair she peeped from side to side, wondering what it was she had left undone? |
27966 | Go out? |
27966 | Had it been treachery, after all? |
27966 | Had those lips given right counsel or wrong? |
27966 | Happy-- was he? |
27966 | Has Hammy ever tried to get his to float? |
27966 | Has anything happened?" |
27966 | Has it got anything to do with the Duchess?" |
27966 | Has she no other name?" |
27966 | Has your mother''s son no sense of honour, sir?" |
27966 | Has-- has Mrs. Saxham ever spoken to you of-- this that I have told you?" |
27966 | Have I not borne anguish enough?" |
27966 | Have n''t I, Miss Mildare?" |
27966 | Have you an extensive experience in dealing with gunshot wounds?" |
27966 | Have you any illness? |
27966 | Have you decided to undergo a cure? |
27966 | Have you ever had to deal with a woman in hysterics?" |
27966 | Have you let it?" |
27966 | Have you no pride? |
27966 | Have you seen War? |
27966 | He added in the same low tone:"She has a morbid terror of death under ordinary circumstances?" |
27966 | He added:"Were you alarmed? |
27966 | He advanced to her, without the needless ceremony of touching his hat, eagerly asking how she had acquired her new accomplishment? |
27966 | He answered promptly:"In circumstances like the present? |
27966 | He asked himself:"Can this be Love?" |
27966 | He asked:"Does anyone else live in the house?" |
27966 | He blushed at her puzzled look, and amended:"''Ave you money enough upon you to pay the railway- fare?" |
27966 | He caught me mousing round his hoofd laager at Tweipans-- and what does he do?''" |
27966 | He cried:"What is this? |
27966 | He expostulated:"Is it safe for two ladies, ma''am, so far from the town, without protection? |
27966 | He falters:"I-- I trust my purpose is pure from vulgar self- seeking? |
27966 | He gulped as he said, with a fallen jaw and a look of abject misery that pierced her to the quick:"She-- couldn''t come, then?" |
27966 | He heard her saying:"Are you at liberty to tell me the date of Captain Mildare''s death? |
27966 | He heard her voice crying to him,"How can you, can you?" |
27966 | He is very ill, or----?" |
27966 | He knew his fascination for children, and instinctively slackened his stride as they came up, abreast now, and shyly hand in hand:"Mister Colonel...?" |
27966 | He looks away and blinks before he says in a voice that wobbles:"Then my wife''s-- all right?" |
27966 | He must be quite old-- the Mother had thought him certainly thirty- five-- but possibly he had a young wife in England-- or somewhere else? |
27966 | He raised himself then, stepped back, and called out sharply in the Taal:"Wie is daar?" |
27966 | He recalled the"bit of information wormed out of the nurse,"and ended with"the presence of the bacillus?" |
27966 | He said in a horrible clicking whisper:"Van Busch and Bough are-- one?" |
27966 | He said now:"This man, this rascally Van Busch, acting as a spy for Brounckers, was disguised as the runner? |
27966 | He said, almost with a sob:"Is this your promise? |
27966 | He said, amazed:"What barrier? |
27966 | He said, in his thick, lisping way:"A beauty, eh? |
27966 | He shook the hands that belonged to them, and said in his curt way:"How are you, Mrs. Keyse? |
27966 | He snarled:"You''ll not take the girl my message, then?" |
27966 | He spat, and said in a much more docile tone:"What do you want me to do?" |
27966 | He stooped and reached for it, and asked, with his face hidden by the patriotic tablecloth:"What girl do you mean?" |
27966 | He turned his beautiful, flushed face and shining eyes upon the Mother, and asked with grave simplicity:"Ma''am, is not this mine?" |
27966 | He was conscious of an itching curiosity to find out for his friend Bough whether it really was the Kid or no? |
27966 | He was thinking, as he said:"And her name is Mildare, eh? |
27966 | He-- wore it round his neck?" |
27966 | Her eyes flashed grey fire under her stern brows as she demanded:"How, pray?" |
27966 | Her heart bounded as the Slabberts put his hand in his pocket, saying:"Wat kost het?" |
27966 | Her look of surprise... the tone in which she said,''Did he not save your life?'' |
27966 | Her voice trembled; the joyous, longed- for haven of marriage-- was it possible that it might be in sight? |
27966 | Her white hand clenched, her tone was awfully stern:"Who were''they''?" |
27966 | Hers? |
27966 | Hey, Johnny, where''s your gun?" |
27966 | His eye slewed appealingly at his companion, asking as plainly as an eye can,"What price that?" |
27966 | His furious anger and his deadly hate, where are they now? |
27966 | His voice was very quiet as he asked:"How did you come by this?" |
27966 | Hoe?" |
27966 | How came you to forget?" |
27966 | How can I help it? |
27966 | How can one rage against this shattered thing, stretched on the pallet of the low cot- bed from which the blankets have been stripped away? |
27966 | How can you endure them?" |
27966 | How could I, when there was no mare and no spider? |
27966 | How could their boy possibly do better?" |
27966 | How could you have managed----?" |
27966 | How d''you do?" |
27966 | How deal with a knave like this, who popped in and out of holes like a rabbit, and wriggled and writhed like a snake? |
27966 | How did he, Smoots Beste, know whether a minister of the Church of England, or even a Dutch predikant, was to be found at the place beyond? |
27966 | How did you come across her?" |
27966 | How did you find-- that-- out?" |
27966 | How did you get there? |
27966 | How did you know?" |
27966 | How do I know what you mean about writing letters and following? |
27966 | How else, when to live is to hold her in bondage, knowing that she longs and pines to be free? |
27966 | How if her hasty gift of herself robbed both in the long end? |
27966 | How is it begun? |
27966 | How often have I to tell you that? |
27966 | How should this little vulgar creature be expected to have more conscience than they? |
27966 | How soon can I get away from here?" |
27966 | How would he take the revelation? |
27966 | I asked her then if all they had said was true? |
27966 | I could not sleep, and the house was lonely.... Is your maid with you? |
27966 | I dare say you understand?" |
27966 | I do n''t possess a copy of the Scriptures, but I think that is a Crucifix you wear upon your watch- chain?" |
27966 | I had dozed, and you startled me coming upon me.... Why have you?..." |
27966 | I hope my attitude towards Miss Mildare is not unchivalrous-- or ungenerous?" |
27966 | I hope you do n''t mind?" |
27966 | I know that you have real affection for her... though I must own I have always wondered in what lay the secret of her popularity in the school?" |
27966 | I may call you that for the sake of old days?" |
27966 | I ought to send an escort for Miss Mildare?" |
27966 | I said, tryin''to reason with her,''what else did you expect the fellow had got in him? |
27966 | I said,''Where am I?'' |
27966 | I say, the Transvaal Dutch; they call themselves the true Children of Israel, do n''t they? |
27966 | I shall not faint-- if that is what you are afraid of?" |
27966 | I tell you again that I will div----""Do you want the man in the street and every soul in the hotel to know your private affairs?" |
27966 | I thought you told me you had lost a friend?" |
27966 | I''ll trouble you to tell me?" |
27966 | If I do not desire to be''free,''as you term it, what barrier is there between us now?" |
27966 | If freed in truth, why should the sight and smell even of Brooker''s sticky loquat- brandy have set the long- denied palate craving? |
27966 | If she had known, what would it have mattered to her? |
27966 | If the man had not been dead, I might have ended by breaking it-- who knows? |
27966 | If unutterable misery was not to result from their union, he must be told the truth before... Once he knew it, would he love her any longer? |
27966 | Ik wil het-- but where are the other hundreds you have paid Van Busch?" |
27966 | Indeed, Mrs. Saxham was a relative-- was it a cousin? |
27966 | Is anything wrong?--excuse me asking-- or is it the Funeral has given you the blue hump? |
27966 | Is he well?" |
27966 | Is it Passion? |
27966 | Is it not so?" |
27966 | Is it you?" |
27966 | Is n''t that the routine, Beauvayse? |
27966 | Is n''t there a prehistoric_ flair_ about most of us? |
27966 | Is she a dream or a mere illusion born of loneliness and starvation, physical and mental? |
27966 | Is that collared brawn on the sideboard? |
27966 | Is that evidence, Major Mole?" |
27966 | Is that lovely murrey- coloured stuff in the cut- glass jar quince marmalade? |
27966 | Is that what has been proved? |
27966 | Is that what you ask me, Miss Mildare?" |
27966 | Is that what you ask me, Miss Mildare?" |
27966 | Is that you?" |
27966 | Is the Reverend Mother on duty in the wards to- day?" |
27966 | Is the person to whom you refer a woman or a child?" |
27966 | Is there a doubt? |
27966 | Is there a woman living who can resist such sweet daughterly flatteries? |
27966 | It is not your day for the Hospital, I think?" |
27966 | It is you?..." |
27966 | It must be sometimes night?" |
27966 | It shall be a chapel again; that is"--the wild- rose colour deepens on the lovely face--"if my husband agrees? |
27966 | It was sweet, but how if he were another, and not the one? |
27966 | It was-- Walt?" |
27966 | It was-- the way in which you spoke just now that rather-- rather----""Revolted you, eh?" |
27966 | It will make no difference, in the long- run, to a Certain Person''s health?" |
27966 | It''s a compact? |
27966 | It''s one of those things a man has got to look on at, and wonder why the Almighty does n''t interfere? |
27966 | It''s part of the routine, surely?" |
27966 | It''s settled about Sheila and the orderly?" |
27966 | Kindly say who is speaking?" |
27966 | Lady Hannah, supremely disdainful, turned her back upon the liar...."So, then, you are not willing to go back in a veld waggon?" |
27966 | Let the house in Wilton Place-- we''ll live at Wrynche Rodelands, if you think you wo n''t be bored?" |
27966 | Like it?" |
27966 | Lips came close to her ear, and breathed:"Dearie, this grand young gentleman you''re engaged to be married to...""Yes?" |
27966 | Look here, what made you shove such a whacking bouncer into the_ Siege Gazette_?" |
27966 | Look you, have I shed one tear?" |
27966 | Lord Plumbanks? |
27966 | Lynette gave her cheek, asking:"Where is the Mother?" |
27966 | ME?" |
27966 | May I ask you to point out the fellow who behaved insolently?" |
27966 | May I ask, was that the conclusion arrived at by a London consulting physician, and whether your own diagnosis has confirmed the assertion?" |
27966 | May I know who I have the a-- pleasure of being indebted to for finding my daughter to- day?" |
27966 | May I, as a friend, urge on you the necessity of doing so?" |
27966 | May her nurse bring her to see me sometimes? |
27966 | May we walk back together? |
27966 | Maybe I have no business in this crib? |
27966 | Meanwhile, what of the man who lies upon the bed? |
27966 | Military Saw- boneses-- twig? |
27966 | More than possible, was it not? |
27966 | Mother, do n''t you remember the rearing horse outside the Hospital that day in October? |
27966 | Mother, do you hear?" |
27966 | My own part, I can stand any amount of dead men-- healthy dead men, do n''t you know? |
27966 | Nine pound fifteen- and- six runs me into, how much apiece?" |
27966 | No cod?" |
27966 | No doubt the young mistress would have plenty more to tell that had not got into print? |
27966 | No? |
27966 | Nobody has said to you that I have no right to love you?" |
27966 | Nobody has told you anything against me? |
27966 | Nobody listening?" |
27966 | Not ill? |
27966 | Not long after-- after my wife was exchanged for a spy of Brounckers''?" |
27966 | Nothin''like relievin''the tension, do n''t you know? |
27966 | Now tell me what are ve confequences?" |
27966 | Now, Brooker?" |
27966 | Of course you saw it done?" |
27966 | Oh, was n''t it strynge? |
27966 | Oh, what...? |
27966 | Oh, why should Love make it so easy to do unlovely things? |
27966 | On this of all nights was Lynette to be dismissed without even the Mother''s kiss? |
27966 | One had heard, had n''t one, ages ago, of the famous beauty, Lady Bridget- Mary Bawne? |
27966 | Or a glass of cham, with a lump o''ice in for a cooler? |
27966 | Or curl''er''air, or undo''er st''yl''yoes an''things?" |
27966 | Or did he sleep, not to wake again? |
27966 | Or is it a delusion born of long and painful abstinence from any form of pastry?" |
27966 | Or tired an un''appy both?" |
27966 | Or was it----? |
27966 | Or you do n''t patronise the theatre?" |
27966 | Ought he to be told? |
27966 | Owen, shall I tell you what it is?" |
27966 | Perhaps Saxham had been watching this? |
27966 | Perhaps he would oblige you with matter for a paragraph, and forward the cable by private wire?" |
27966 | Perhaps you overlooked them?" |
27966 | Perhaps you''d hand it over to-- anybody it belongs to? |
27966 | Please tell me without delay, plainly what has happened? |
27966 | Pleased and flattered, she made room for him, while Lady Hannah became the gossip- centre of a knot of Mess uniforms...."Both babies well?" |
27966 | Possibly both are right? |
27966 | Possibly you are acquainted with Donkin, if not with Judd?" |
27966 | Pretty to watch, is n''t it? |
27966 | Queer thing, Luck is-- when you come to think of it?" |
27966 | Quite too astonishingly lovely, do n''t you know? |
27966 | Ready, boys?" |
27966 | Rough on him, and rough on the Foltlebarres, and a facer for Lessie... and what price the girl?'' |
27966 | Rum that when the lightning killed the ox- team you should have been trekking north- east, is n''t it?" |
27966 | Sawdust?'' |
27966 | Saxham asked:"Is she an Englishwoman or a Colonial?" |
27966 | Saxham had murdered politeness by quitting her abruptly; but had n''t she deserved the snub? |
27966 | Saxham said gratingly, and with a hostile look:"Do you infer that Miss Mildare is vain and mercenary?" |
27966 | Saxham spoke in his curt way:"You are aware that there is risk?" |
27966 | Saxham, diagnosing the man''s fever to realise and depart, wondered what secret, desperate motive lay at the back of his hurry? |
27966 | Saxham, is it hopeless? |
27966 | Saxham, watching them, said, with dry lips and a deadly sickness at the heart:"And we can do nothing?" |
27966 | Saxham?" |
27966 | Saxham?" |
27966 | Saxham?" |
27966 | See to him, Saxham, is he no''fine to luik at? |
27966 | See?" |
27966 | See?" |
27966 | Seen a ghost?" |
27966 | Serious?" |
27966 | Shall I tell you her name? |
27966 | Shall we be mice, that sit and squeak in the dark?" |
27966 | Shall_ I_ tell you them?" |
27966 | She asked herself as she knelt with them in prayer, as she lay in bed, the Mother''s place vacant beside her-- Was she happy after all? |
27966 | She asked plump and plain:''Are you So- and- So?'' |
27966 | She could have asked if it were commonly sensible for a creature made by God, and existing but by His will, to live without Him? |
27966 | She crimsoned, gasping:"You do n''t never mean it?" |
27966 | She did not recoil violently when the strange, sorrowful face bent towards her; she only shrank back as Saxham asked:"You remember me? |
27966 | She even repeated after him, rather dully:"You came on here-- by train?" |
27966 | She expected it would''urt worse before Dr. de Boursy- Williams--"''adn''t''e got a toff''s name?" |
27966 | She faltered:"May I not know how it came into your hands?" |
27966 | She got up, saying,''I think we have had enough of this?'' |
27966 | She groaned:"Hi_ ham_ dyin'', are n''t Hi?" |
27966 | She is Lynette Mildare.... Are you surprised that in seven years a young creature so neglected should have become what you see? |
27966 | She said in a low, clear voice:"Father, you remember how my mother loved you? |
27966 | She said:"You tell me this man Bough is at Diamond Town?" |
27966 | She slipped the miniature into her bosom, where his letter had lain, and asked:"Where are you going?" |
27966 | She was thinking.... How if she might be mistaken in Beauvayse, even now? |
27966 | She was weighing the question, to tell or not to tell? |
27966 | She went on, a little nervously:"I do n''t think I ever mentioned to you before that I had met your brother and his wife? |
27966 | She will remember that day to the last breath she draws...."Did n''t you know it?" |
27966 | She winced as though he had stabbed her, and cried out:"Why do you harp continually upon your death? |
27966 | She wondered what it might be? |
27966 | She''s not bin killed?" |
27966 | She''s well, is n''t she, Miss? |
27966 | Should grouse myself if I was in his shoes-- or bed- socks would be the proper word-- what?" |
27966 | Should he make a clean breast of it, and tell her the whole wretched story now? |
27966 | Should he? |
27966 | Should there be War? |
27966 | Sneer at it, take an''spit on it-- ain''t it yours all the syme? |
27966 | So hang on to my secret by your eyelids, old fellow, and do n''t give me reason to be sorry I told----""You have my word, have n''t you? |
27966 | So the little beast showed fight, eh? |
27966 | So you_ can_ talk English a bit-- give you a charnce?" |
27966 | Straight of the fellow, but afterwards, at Gueldersdorp, did n''t he kick over the matrimonial pole? |
27966 | Superintendent?" |
27966 | Suppose another sweeter, gentler creature had found a throne in the heart that his wife had prized so lightly, would it be so very strange, after all? |
27966 | Suppose at the price of a lie from lips that had never lied yet it could be evaded? |
27966 | Suppose---- Suppose the smiling face of Love should turn out to be nothing but a mask hiding the gross and brutal leer of Lust, what then? |
27966 | Surely Mrs. Saxham has spoken to you of Greta Du Taine? |
27966 | Surely it was past the rising hour? |
27966 | Surely you are not alone?" |
27966 | Take away that gun, you silly little imitation sojer-- d''you''eer?" |
27966 | Tell me the name, or shall I tell it you?" |
27966 | Tell me what I am to say to them, Lynette?" |
27966 | Tell me who she was?" |
27966 | Tell me, do you cartridges well know when you shall see them? |
27966 | Tell''er I said so-- that''s if you can, you twig? |
27966 | That ai n''t''i m, is it?" |
27966 | That is what I am to tell Miss Mildare? |
27966 | That might never change as Time went on, and alter into the close union that physically and mentally makes happiness for men and women who love? |
27966 | That might never change as Time went on, and ripen into the close union that physically and mentally makes happiness for men and women who love? |
27966 | The Colonel said, with a dry chuckle:"No? |
27966 | The Mother- Superior hurried to her, saying with a note of anxiety in her usually calm voice:"Sister-- Sister Cleophà © e; is anything the matter?" |
27966 | The articles were intended to be the real thing-- racy of the soil, do n''t you know? |
27966 | The ball begins?" |
27966 | The detonation of a cartridge or so when a bombardment is going on, what does it count for? |
27966 | The ex- apothecary faltered:"What-- what is this you say? |
27966 | The faint, almost breathless whisper asks:"It''s night, is n''t it?" |
27966 | The frowzy woman with the bleached hair happened to come in at that moment; or had she been spying through a crack of the door? |
27966 | The haggard shadow is again upon the Colonel''s face, or is it that Bingo''s radiance dulls neighbouring surfaces by comparison? |
27966 | The large Tante snorted:"What is the matter? |
27966 | The lecturer, absorbed in his subject, lifted his hand to silence the murmur, and pursued:"From what disease, then, is this man suffering? |
27966 | The lips I have never kissed, may they not be mine, O God-- mine one day in Heaven? |
27966 | The nuns needed no light, knowing the office by heart:"_ Delicta quis intelligit? |
27966 | The subject has at one time or other-- probably the critical period of girlhood-- sustained a severe physical and mental shock?" |
27966 | The thick voice of the Boer woman broke out again:"Did ever I miss of the Nachtmaal? |
27966 | The voice was lifted again, speaking this time in English:"Is anyone hiding here?" |
27966 | The''Peg Doctor,''was it?--or the''Lush Doctor?'' |
27966 | Then I am told an English officer interposed?" |
27966 | Then a voice, which she could hardly believe her own, said, with a pitiable effort to be gay and natural:"Were n''t they? |
27966 | Then he went in, and Bough buried him in regular fancy style----""And sent the girl to the nuns at Gueldersdorp, or was she there already?" |
27966 | Then the stranger parried with a question:"You write them weekly screeds in the_ Siege Gazette_?" |
27966 | Then you came, and-- and----"The quavering, pitiful voice rose to a cry:"Mother, must I tell him everything?" |
27966 | There are a few of us who would benefit by a gallop without the halter, eh, Taggart?" |
27966 | There is a gap of silence only broken when Captain Bingo says heavily:"Then you did marry the Lavigne after all? |
27966 | There is wage owing me still, for the matter of that-- and where am I to get it now that the heathen has gone to the burning?" |
27966 | There were intervals of consciousness, and though he seemed at death''s door, who knew? |
27966 | They may have been carried away by mistake, like----"She wondered afresh what could have become of that transformation coiffure? |
27966 | They often ask me now, How is Miss Mildare?" |
27966 | They wanted to know what the Officer in Command was going to do? |
27966 | They wondered''why the Lavigne did not star on the programme as a Viscountess?'' |
27966 | This clergyman-- happening to visit a Registrar''s office---- Where was the office?" |
27966 | Though, perhaps if she had got fixed up with a new friend, some flash young fellow with pots of money, she would not be wanting old faces around? |
27966 | Thy Kingdom come...."_ And if it came, should those have any part in it who had lived together unwed in open sin? |
27966 | To be held and taken and made his completely, what must it be like? |
27966 | To marry a man, letting him think you... something you were not... did not that amount to deceiving by a false oath? |
27966 | To put another belly- grief on the top of the one you have got, what sense is in that?" |
27966 | Topaz- coloured, are n''t they? |
27966 | Try and tell me who lies here, under these grasses and flowers that you water every day?" |
27966 | Twig?" |
27966 | Twiggy?" |
27966 | Underneath is the sarcastic comment:"_ December 27th._"_ Nice if you had got this in time, eh? |
27966 | Unless the Colonel would prefer to begin wi''them?" |
27966 | Unless, indeed"--his tone warmed to interest--"unless you are not feeling well?" |
27966 | Useful Gueldersdorp time or useful Tweipans time? |
27966 | Was Dr. Owen Saxham innocent or guilty? |
27966 | Was I not right, Reverend Mozer, to say it is time zat somesing should be done?" |
27966 | Was Owen not worthy of love? |
27966 | Was Sister Tobias lying awake and remembering too? |
27966 | Was he not fighting for what was more than life to him? |
27966 | Was he quite well when you left?" |
27966 | Was it dishonest, was it traitorous, to hide the truth? |
27966 | Was it fair to yourself and me?" |
27966 | Was it kind? |
27966 | Was it not more than possible that he had been the dead woman''s lover? |
27966 | Was it not the Holy Will? |
27966 | Was it wise that another should be made to share that vision? |
27966 | Was it you?" |
27966 | Was not here a Heaven- sent answer to all her prayers for her beloved? |
27966 | Was that deeper flush born of the remembrance of a secret unshared? |
27966 | Was there no baser conquest within reach that this white, virginal, slender saint should become_ his_ prey? |
27966 | Was this something the reason why he had not yet kissed her? |
27966 | Waxworks only fit for the Chamber of''Orrors, ai n''t''em?" |
27966 | Well, and why not, if I choose to be one or the other, or both? |
27966 | Well, no one but Our Lord knows when that''s to be.... And so you''re very happy, are you, dearie?" |
27966 | Were her ears so unworldly? |
27966 | Were hers? |
27966 | Were not things going better than he had hoped? |
27966 | Were the fierce, bloodshot grey eyes really capable of a twinkle? |
27966 | Were those dear eyes to see me as I am to- day, I wonder whether they would know me? |
27966 | Were you ever-- I suppose you must have been sometimes-- shot at with a gun?" |
27966 | What are you hiding from me in that closed hand?" |
27966 | What could possibly lead her to infer such a relationship?" |
27966 | What did that matter? |
27966 | What do you mean by coming here? |
27966 | What do you say, my man?" |
27966 | What does it matter?" |
27966 | What good could I have gained by telling you?" |
27966 | What had she given him? |
27966 | What had she suppressed? |
27966 | What has He done for me?" |
27966 | What has passed between you to account for it? |
27966 | What have I said that hurt?" |
27966 | What have you here, Beau? |
27966 | What in them? |
27966 | What in''Eaven''s name are they goin''to do to you? |
27966 | What injury? |
27966 | What interlude of folly are you playing? |
27966 | What is it, Sergeant? |
27966 | What is the thing we are agreed to call coincidence? |
27966 | What is this I hear?" |
27966 | What is_ he_ saying in that weak voice with the rattling breaths between? |
27966 | What like is this one?" |
27966 | What more?" |
27966 | What of this unpleasant incident that took place during the afternoon walk yesterday? |
27966 | What other causes have operated to bring it about but British greed, and the British lust for paramountcy and suzerainty and possession? |
27966 | What other woman would jabber French through a telephone?" |
27966 | What right had a nun to be so bound by an earthly tie? |
27966 | What shall I say of the Sisters of the Convent of the Holy Way at Gueldersdorp, I who know but little of any Order of Religious? |
27966 | What sudden madness had possessed him, akin to that unaccountable, overmastering surge of emotion that he had known just now when he saw her tears? |
27966 | What the devil was inside it, Brooker, when the shell- splinter hit you in the tummy and it saved your life? |
27966 | What then? |
27966 | What threshold has he crossed when the world was sleeping round him? |
27966 | What use can a man like me be to you, or men like you? |
27966 | What was Beauvayse whispering, so close to the delicate little ear that nestled under the red- brown hair- waves? |
27966 | What was he saying, in the Cockney that cut like a knife through the thick gutturals of the Taal? |
27966 | What was he saying? |
27966 | What was he, the unworthy servant of Heaven, that he should dare to oppose the Holy Will? |
27966 | What was it the Mahometan_ syce_ the_ musth_ elephant killed at Bhurtpore said about his wife? |
27966 | What was that lazy bedelaar of a Secretary about, and it nearly eleven of the clock? |
27966 | What was the little fool of a woman saying in her shrill voice? |
27966 | What was to be done? |
27966 | What was to be done? |
27966 | What was to happen in the future? |
27966 | What was your reply to Greta''s obliging proposition?" |
27966 | What were his livid, parched lips muttering? |
27966 | What wicked shadow''s black on all of us? |
27966 | What will you think of next?" |
27966 | What would he say and do when they let him out? |
27966 | What would the Slabberts think of his little Boer- wife that was to have been? |
27966 | What''s to hinder me making a clean breast to that swell toff she''s wheedled into asking her to marry him? |
27966 | What, then, was to be the Verdict of the Jury? |
27966 | When can I see the letter at your hotel? |
27966 | When did you leave London?" |
27966 | When will she come again?" |
27966 | When will you kiss me back again?" |
27966 | Where are you?" |
27966 | Where d''you think I''d give a cool fifty to be this minute? |
27966 | Where did she come from, d''ye know?" |
27966 | Where has he gone night after night? |
27966 | Where is Van Busch?" |
27966 | Where is he?" |
27966 | Where is----? |
27966 | Where might she find him? |
27966 | Where seek him? |
27966 | Where wert Thou, O God of Israel, when they killed my little Dierck?" |
27966 | Where''s''e''i d''isself? |
27966 | Where?" |
27966 | Which is''i m? |
27966 | Which of the theatres have you decided to patronise?" |
27966 | Which would they have? |
27966 | White teeth flashed in tanned faces, chaff began:"In love again, for the first and only time, Toby?" |
27966 | Who are you?" |
27966 | Who can tell? |
27966 | Who first solicited your confidence in this matter?" |
27966 | Who has seen me doing it? |
27966 | Who is he, and of what were you talking?" |
27966 | Who is my''crony,''and who was your friend?" |
27966 | Who is the Lady, tall, and strong, and tender? |
27966 | Who knew what might happen next? |
27966 | Who may the Lady be? |
27966 | Who put away my Walt?" |
27966 | Who shall dare say that he was not then a sincere lover? |
27966 | Who shall forget? |
27966 | Who should presume to doubt its administration by the Prisoner, when the label bore directions in his own characteristic handwriting? |
27966 | Who was your correspondent?" |
27966 | Who would expect a modern woman to practise the obsolete virtue of Fidelity? |
27966 | Who would have dreamed a meek, sober nun could be transformed like that? |
27966 | Who''d want a woman who loved him to remember him like this? |
27966 | Who''s there?" |
27966 | Whoever told you? |
27966 | Why am I here?" |
27966 | Why could n''t a man put them out of mind and out of sight? |
27966 | Why could she not let well alone? |
27966 | Why did you do it if you hate me so?" |
27966 | Why did you not get up and leave the place?" |
27966 | Why do you look at me like that? |
27966 | Why do you look so glad?" |
27966 | Why had Chance and Luck and Fate forced him to play a part like this? |
27966 | Why had she been so bent upon hiding the trail? |
27966 | Why had she behaved so badly? |
27966 | Why had she come here? |
27966 | Why had she distrusted him? |
27966 | Why had she felt, even with the glamour of_ his_ presence about her, and the music of his voice in her ears, that all was not well? |
27966 | Why had the Mother shunned her? |
27966 | Why is it that Failure is the inevitable fate of some men and women? |
27966 | Why not a paper nose and a Pierrot''s cap?" |
27966 | Why not? |
27966 | Why on earth have you given us away in that beastly paper?" |
27966 | Why on earth should you be?" |
27966 | Why should it be inevitable? |
27966 | Why should n''t she if she chose? |
27966 | Why should not the Future be fair?" |
27966 | Why should strangers interfere with his sole privilege of working for her? |
27966 | Why should the humble property of the Sisters be broken because this kind, fussy woman chose to upbraid? |
27966 | Why were not the last three paragraphs of the weekly''Social Jottings''column submitted to me yesterday with the rest?" |
27966 | Why, for what else under the sky did I come out here but the glorious chance of War?" |
27966 | Why, why am I not a man? |
27966 | Why, why had he sent her away, bidding her be happy and forget him?... |
27966 | Why?" |
27966 | Will you allow me, Miss?" |
27966 | Will you come into the shade and rest? |
27966 | Will you not sit down? |
27966 | Will you smoke?" |
27966 | Will you... shake hands?... |
27966 | Williams?" |
27966 | With regard to this woman-- actress, or whatever she may be----?" |
27966 | Wo n''t you please order the Mother to sit down and rest? |
27966 | Woddyou pipe''s the matter wiv''i m? |
27966 | Wonder wot''Er an''''I m''ll s''y to one another fust thing they meet?" |
27966 | Wot do I care about the perisher along of you?" |
27966 | Wot do you tyke me for? |
27966 | Wot for? |
27966 | Wot for?" |
27966 | Wot''ll I git?" |
27966 | Would he desire to make her his wife? |
27966 | Would he have mercy and not sacrifice? |
27966 | Would not the God Who had been justly offended in her, His vowed servant, that day, exact to the last tittle the penalty? |
27966 | Would she pale, would she tremble, when he told her the last truth of all? |
27966 | Would the Dop Doctor turn up to appointment, or had the battle with habit and the deadly craving born of indulgence ended in defeat? |
27966 | Would the big blue waggon with the new white tilt roll by? |
27966 | Would the ox- team veer in another direction? |
27966 | Would you be willing to ask nothing of me that a friend or a sister might not give? |
27966 | Would you like to wait now and tell me another day?" |
27966 | Would you like us to send you some wedding- cake?_"_ P. |
27966 | Yes? |
27966 | Yes?" |
27966 | You Churchmen believe in the power of choice, do n''t you? |
27966 | You are Bough----?" |
27966 | You are not alone here?" |
27966 | You ask chaps''oo know me if Billy Keyse ever went back on a pal?" |
27966 | You do n''t absolutely yearn to be killed or taken prisoner, I suppose?" |
27966 | You do n''t never mean...?" |
27966 | You do not think it is the kind of play the Mother would not have liked me to see?" |
27966 | You have lost a friend?" |
27966 | You have met his brother, Captain Saxham, of the--th Dragoons? |
27966 | You have n''t...?" |
27966 | You kid, go to the drift for water, or take the besom and sweep the stoep, or scrub out the room there-- do you hear, you kid?" |
27966 | You know Marie? |
27966 | You know my name?" |
27966 | You know the Bishop of H...?" |
27966 | You know the old adage about two being company?" |
27966 | You really mean it? |
27966 | You remember the runner who came in from Diamond Town with a letter for a man called Casey? |
27966 | You remember those cigars of Kreil''s and the thunderin''price me and Beauvayse paid for''em, biddin''against each other for fun?" |
27966 | You say you found out?" |
27966 | You see them three large winders covered wiv lovely lace?" |
27966 | You understand me, Brooker? |
27966 | You understand what that nickname implies?" |
27966 | You will be so kind as to return them----?" |
27966 | You will let her travel with you?" |
27966 | You will take a glass of wine while I step into the next room? |
27966 | You would no''like a steemulant?" |
27966 | You would punish me like that-- just for a kissed hand?" |
27966 | You''ve not the money here?" |
27966 | You-- you mean to remonstrate with him? |
27966 | Your Body, is it not your own, to do with as you choose? |
27966 | Your Soul, is it not your helpless prisoner, while you keep it in its cage of clay? |
27966 | ab occultis meis munda me, et ab alienis parce servo tuo_"--"Who can comprehend what sin is? |
27966 | asked Beauvayse, stiffening in disgust,"about a man he is n''t fit to black the boots of?" |
27966 | but of British parents, surely? |
27966 | but where''ll you be? |
27966 | but''ave you the spondulics?" |
27966 | ca n''t you see me sitting and listening, and every word vitriol, burning to the bone?" |
27966 | cried Lady Hannah, and Beauvayse heard himself answering:"If Lynette agrees?" |
27966 | do they take me for a traitor? |
27966 | do you reckon Gawd gave you the man to torture an''break an''spoil?" |
27966 | have I not earned deliverance? |
27966 | have you seen a baby? |
27966 | he cried despairingly,"You on the other side, ca n''t you hear?" |
27966 | how can you, can you?" |
27966 | how could you be so cruel as to let me go on loving him? |
27966 | how do I know?" |
27966 | if she had known?... |
27966 | is n''t it enough to make you die? |
27966 | only to find, too late, the deceptive nature of his specious promises? |
27966 | said Bough, coming forward threateningly,"what you rowing about, eh?" |
27966 | she corrected herself;"I mean why are you so glad?" |
27966 | should she, too, be doomed to stake all upon a wavering, unstable, headlong Richard, what will happen then? |
27966 | suppose they knew already? |
27966 | the voice would say.."You are Bough?" |
27966 | to be unworthy, to break promises, and to be false to vows? |
27966 | what could it mean? |
27966 | what is the matter? |
27966 | what is the matter? |
27966 | what is this?" |
27966 | what was it? |
27966 | what was that?" |
27966 | what''s the matter?" |
27966 | where are they? |
27966 | where?... |
27966 | who can err about the look of Love? |
27966 | who can mistake it? |
27966 | who that met their look could ever forget those eyes? |
27966 | why was he not free? |
27966 | why would you march wid the Green?" |
27966 | you do n''t mean to say you made up that by yourself?" |
43524 | ''Do you still speak,''said I reproachfully,''as if you would never recover?'' 43524 ''How should I forget Him from whom I have received every thing?'' |
43524 | ''Lady, dost thou not fear to stray, So lone and lovely, through this bleak way? 43524 ''Whence comes the sunshine?'' |
43524 | A lacerated back? |
43524 | A savings- box? 43524 Am I ready?" |
43524 | And Angela? 43524 And I ask,"said Hamm,"why give the pope alms when the powers are ready to give him millions?" |
43524 | And convinced you? |
43524 | And did you observe,said Richard,"how modestly she veiled the splendor of her brave action? |
43524 | And does he intend to live here indefinitely? |
43524 | And he accepted it? |
43524 | And if she were not already engaged, you would like to marry her yourself, would you not? |
43524 | And in what manner did he demand her? |
43524 | And know you not,asked his father,"that only the base and evil array themselves against the good? |
43524 | And love you in secret? |
43524 | And marry that girl? |
43524 | And the encounter with the steer? |
43524 | And the mistress of a poor man''s household ought to call all the members of the family, ought she not? |
43524 | And the whole army of misfortunes that daily overtake the human family? 43524 And what claim has the young lady on your time and affections?" |
43524 | And what does young Haydn now? |
43524 | And what is the most pleasant recreation for you? |
43524 | And what is your name? |
43524 | And what of that, if I hear them? |
43524 | And what then? |
43524 | And when, my dear Porpora, did you return to Vienna? |
43524 | And where do you want to go? |
43524 | And who is John? |
43524 | And why to Frankenhöhe? 43524 And will the moon retire behind a cloud, if I should insist on catching cold, aunty? |
43524 | And would he come to Hurston if I should die? |
43524 | And you approved of this narrow- mindedness of the ultramontane? |
43524 | And you really believe that I am sometimes mad? 43524 And you visit the young countess?" |
43524 | Are they not endeavoring with all their strength to deprive the Bible of its divine character? 43524 Are you a coward?" |
43524 | Are you determined, then, to do me the honor of dressing my hair, Master von Puderlein? |
43524 | Are you mad? |
43524 | Are you so resolved? |
43524 | Are you there again, my little ones? 43524 Believe? |
43524 | Besides,as Margaret said,"what could be more natural than that she should go to stay with old Aunt Selina? |
43524 | But if he loves her so deeply, sir? |
43524 | But then what does he live on? |
43524 | But where is Friedemann? |
43524 | But where now? |
43524 | But why did he go away? 43524 But why does he choose to live in a little place like this? |
43524 | But why does he not come to England? 43524 But why drain the money out of the country for an object that can not be accomplished? |
43524 | But why not take Lady Jane? 43524 But will you please to define what you call_ the best_?" |
43524 | But you do not mean to tell me,I exclaimed in dismay,"that these are the ordinary costumes for full dress at parties?" |
43524 | But you will come back after the wedding, dear? 43524 But, my child, can you tell me how many superfluous yards of silk are required to make skirts in this way, and to furnish these festoons?" |
43524 | But, my dear neighbor, how did this singular affair happen? |
43524 | But_ why_, Aunt Caddy? |
43524 | By whom, Friedemann? |
43524 | Can you forgive me, father? |
43524 | Could a father repel his unhappy child? 43524 Dear aunty, I ca n''t manage what I''ve got now; why should I want any more? |
43524 | Did I ever see him? |
43524 | Did the piano disturb you? |
43524 | Did you love me, then? |
43524 | Did you never hear the story? 43524 Did_ you_ ever see him, Aunt Caddy?" |
43524 | Do n''t you remember what you told me once about the spiritual relationship between sponsors and their god- children, and what it precludes? |
43524 | Do n''t you think his wishes ought to be hers? |
43524 | Do you affect Catholic ceremonies generally, Miss Foster? |
43524 | Do you always adorn the statue of the Virgin on the mountain? |
43524 | Do you consider knitting unlawful after one has fulfilled one''s religious duties? |
43524 | Do you consider the possible consequences of your opposition? |
43524 | Do you expect, Miss Angela, by such attention as you show the statue to obtain protection of the saint? |
43524 | Do you find many occasions for practising it? |
43524 | Do you forget the position of the pope? 43524 Do you have this edifying reading every Sunday?" |
43524 | Do you know the cause of this? |
43524 | Do you know,he said to Paganina,"that these slight accidents might have had a tragical ending? |
43524 | Do you mean Miss Lester? |
43524 | Do you not know me? |
43524 | Do you not think that experiences of this kind must repel a noble- minded young man? |
43524 | Do you not think the custom is in contradiction to the sentiments of nature-- to the sorrowful feelings of those who remain? |
43524 | Do you not think the vines degenerate with us? |
43524 | Do you not wish to have the''murder- chamber''appear in Sybel''s periodical? |
43524 | Do you remain long at Frankenhöhe? |
43524 | Do you remember your words,''For the direction of practical, systematic good works, I advise you to go to the Catholic priest''? 43524 Do you say so?" |
43524 | Do you see what a lovely green that water is, just below us? |
43524 | Do you think so? 43524 Do you work every day regularly in the counting- room?" |
43524 | Does M. Friedemann Bach live here yet? |
43524 | Does Sybel''s periodical say all this? |
43524 | Does he want to be suited? |
43524 | Does nine seem late to you? |
43524 | Does not Miss Edgar care for dress? |
43524 | Does the doctor like to use_ striking_ arguments? |
43524 | Dr. James, do you suppose I am not interested? 43524 Even when you accused me most bitterly?" |
43524 | Exactly answering to your definition? |
43524 | Falk, what are you about? |
43524 | For what offence? |
43524 | From Helen, is it not? |
43524 | Has Herr von Hamm departed? |
43524 | Has Klingenberg not gone out yet to- day? |
43524 | Has he? 43524 Has it been all you thought it would be?" |
43524 | Has it come to you? 43524 Has it gone so far? |
43524 | Has she bought her house? |
43524 | Has there been no one here to- day, Helen? |
43524 | Have you considered that with this admission the whole world becomes a fabulous structure, without any higher object? 43524 Have you heard nothing of him?" |
43524 | Have you read what is written on the bottom of this silver plate? |
43524 | Have you secrets that I, your old friend and well- meaning adviser, should not know? |
43524 | Have you spoken to your son? |
43524 | He always,the letter concluded,"inquires after my esteemed father; and often says,''Will not your papa come once more to Berlin?'' |
43524 | Henry, why in the world do you not marry? |
43524 | Here, what is this-- a symphony? 43524 Herr Frank, will you allow your coachman to drive me to the university? |
43524 | How are you to get along in those strange countries without experience? |
43524 | How are you, Richard? |
43524 | How can I win him back? |
43524 | How can you ask? 43524 How could I forget him?" |
43524 | How could this be possible? |
43524 | How did the man ever come to ask my daughter? 43524 How did you come to take that singular obligation upon yourself?" |
43524 | How do you know she has any cats? |
43524 | How is your father? |
43524 | How much did this dress cost you? |
43524 | How much was there? |
43524 | How old is my uncle, Aunt Caddy? |
43524 | How shall we breathe in other air Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits? |
43524 | How so, how so? |
43524 | How will you explain it? |
43524 | How, then, came such an institution into existence? 43524 How? |
43524 | Hughes,said they,"will you come with us to play at chess? |
43524 | I do n''t want to grieve you, Aunt Caddy; but why should we fear to talk of what must be? 43524 I have undertaken the task of putting Angela to the test, and what do I find? |
43524 | I must not be selfish; but when do you think of leaving me? |
43524 | I remember in the course of my practice a suicide who wrote on a slip of paper,''What do I here? 43524 I wonder if it is a pretty church inside? |
43524 | I would like to know the reason that prevented you from thanking your preserver for your life? |
43524 | If I admire the splendor of heathenism, must I not also admire the fascinating, still depth of Christian childhood? 43524 If to- day I ask_ what is truth?_ and if I allow every church or sect to answer, I am stunned by a confused and unintelligible noise. |
43524 | Ill? 43524 In the garden,"said the boy;"shall I call him?" |
43524 | Is he so very bad, so wicked, that you never speak? 43524 Is it all arranged about the concert, my dear niece?" |
43524 | Is it not a hard life for her? |
43524 | Is it not too late to plant them? |
43524 | Is it on account of his wife? |
43524 | Is my presence at the table necessary? |
43524 | Is n''t it heavenly sweet to have a child? |
43524 | Is recovery not possible? |
43524 | Is she in New York now? |
43524 | Is that your boy, fiddler? |
43524 | Is the boy mad? |
43524 | Is there no new music to interest you? |
43524 | Make your son unhappy? |
43524 | Margaret, of course you are in fun? 43524 Marry her? |
43524 | Marry her? |
43524 | May I ask how you satisfied yourself? |
43524 | May I ask the reason of your refusal, father? |
43524 | May I come in? |
43524 | Misfortune? 43524 Miss Edgar wears such shades, does she not? |
43524 | Miss Lester, do you feel in the mood for a sleigh- ride? 43524 Nicholas, did you ever tell your wife of your engagement to Amelia Grant?" |
43524 | No word of reproach? |
43524 | No? |
43524 | Not I,I replied laughingly;"but you have, I presume?" |
43524 | Now guess what the assessor wanted? |
43524 | Now, that''s just what I say, Dr. James; why does she marry him if it does n''t make her happy? 43524 Of course she makes you her confidant?" |
43524 | Off so soon? 43524 On what conditions, Herr Assessor?" |
43524 | Perhaps your father took offence at your visits to us? |
43524 | Pleased? |
43524 | Richard,said the other friend,"shall we meet at the opera to- night?" |
43524 | Señor,said Hear- all,"if you meet somebody that asks,''Where is this ball rolling to?'' |
43524 | Shall I join in the course of my wife? 43524 Shall I pay him my respects immediately?" |
43524 | Shall I send my servant for him? |
43524 | Shall I tell her what she has done for me? |
43524 | She''s rather pretty, is she not? |
43524 | So this is my answer, is it? |
43524 | Still in your working- clothes, Emil? 43524 Tell me, Natalie-- did you love me?" |
43524 | That is the usual arrangement, is it not? |
43524 | The farewell? |
43524 | The other day? |
43524 | Then he may come to you? |
43524 | Then you do not keep late hours in the morning? |
43524 | Then you will go to Berlin? |
43524 | Then you would stay, dear auntie? |
43524 | There is a lovely moon, Miss Lester; can you not wrap yourself up and take a short drive with me? |
43524 | There is coasting about here, I hope? |
43524 | These for the children? 43524 This conviction once reached, have you considered the consequences that follow?" |
43524 | To every one, Fräulein? |
43524 | To go whither? |
43524 | Very wisely guessed; but where have I been this morning? |
43524 | Was he agreeable, my dear? 43524 Was the marriage a happy one?" |
43524 | We may be pardoned, then, if we ask what then is our Lord to us personally? |
43524 | Well, I ca n''t say you were always of my opinion,said Siegwart smiling;"have we not just been sharply disputing about the Peter- pence?" |
43524 | Well, will you not come? 43524 Were you in earnest when you said getting up early was heroism?" |
43524 | What are you doing here? |
43524 | What are you doing here? |
43524 | What are your conditions, low- born, ill- bred, and worse- thriven? |
43524 | What can I do for you? |
43524 | What can I do? |
43524 | What can I do? |
43524 | What can I say? |
43524 | What can he want? |
43524 | What did you ask, my dear Siegwart? 43524 What do I want with poor Farmer Cropper''s few guineas? |
43524 | What do you mean by the''Angel of Salingen''? |
43524 | What do you mean? 43524 What do you mean?" |
43524 | What do you mean? |
43524 | What do you mean? |
43524 | What do you think it is? |
43524 | What do you think of the child? |
43524 | What do you understand by possible consequences? |
43524 | What does he there? |
43524 | What does this mean, Emil? |
43524 | What does this mean? |
43524 | What gives these people this strength, this calm, this resignation? 43524 What good can it do? |
43524 | What have the wretched to do in the home of the happy? 43524 What have you done with his fellow- rioters?" |
43524 | What have you done, signora? |
43524 | What hour struck? |
43524 | What is his name? |
43524 | What is it, impudent upstart? |
43524 | What is it? |
43524 | What is the cause of this antipathy of your son to women? |
43524 | What is the matter, Angela? |
43524 | What is the matter, dear? |
43524 | What is the matter? |
43524 | What is the virtue which you particularly ask of our Lord in your devotions, and by the actions of each day? |
43524 | What is your name? |
43524 | What kind of a God, what kind of a Father would he be who would let every thing go as it might? 43524 What makes you such an idiot, man? |
43524 | What sort of a girl was the sister? |
43524 | What sort of man was Lord Sackvil? |
43524 | What trouble have you? |
43524 | What was its style and character? |
43524 | What were you thinking of, dear? |
43524 | What will you do? |
43524 | What_ do_ you mean, Johnson? 43524 When can you finish this? |
43524 | When did the child die? |
43524 | Where have you kept yourself this last week? 43524 Where is Friedemann Bach?" |
43524 | Where is Friedemann Bach? |
43524 | Where is my dream, Philip? 43524 Where is the splendor and greatness of heathenism? |
43524 | Where is your foster- father? |
43524 | Where? |
43524 | Where_ can_ Johnson be? |
43524 | Who else? 43524 Who is it?" |
43524 | Who is she, aunt? 43524 Who is the Old Musician?" |
43524 | Who is this Angela? |
43524 | Who''s afraid? |
43524 | Why Jessie, what is the matter with you? 43524 Why are you surprised? |
43524 | Why did you not tell me beforehand that this was your birthday, that I might have given you a present? |
43524 | Why do you draw this conclusion? |
43524 | Why do you take the Marchioness? |
43524 | Why in the world do you not marry? 43524 Why must he come here? |
43524 | Why not the minister here, or at Sealing? |
43524 | Why not? 43524 Why not? |
43524 | Why not? 43524 Why not?" |
43524 | Why not? |
43524 | Why should she have to be consoled? |
43524 | Why was it foolish? |
43524 | Why, then, should you obey it? 43524 Will his highness be there?" |
43524 | Will you be warm enough? |
43524 | Will you come with me? |
43524 | Will you come with me? |
43524 | With what intention, then, do you offer them? |
43524 | Wo n''t nurse be here in a minute? |
43524 | Would it not be well, father, to send and inquire after his health? |
43524 | Would you like to come with me? |
43524 | Would you not like,he writes to the same friend,"to spend six months among the Munich disciples of Möhler, Döllinger, etc., etc.? |
43524 | You are Doctor James? |
43524 | You are going? |
43524 | You are not hurt? |
43524 | You are right; and what decided you to take this step? |
43524 | You are surprised at a visit so late in the evening, signora? |
43524 | You believe in Christmas, then, as an institution? |
43524 | You believe then, Herr Siegwart, that divine providence, or rather God, has aimed that blow at you? |
43524 | You believe, then, in the future destruction of the earth? |
43524 | You brought your maid, did you not, dear Margaret? 43524 You certainly do not believe such absurdities?" |
43524 | You find mind in the animals? |
43524 | You found Angela what I told you? 43524 You know his excellency, my son?" |
43524 | You know, I suppose, that the doctor saved my father when his life was despaired of? |
43524 | You no doubt have heard this honorable title applied to me, Herr Frank? |
43524 | You read Sybel''s periodical? |
43524 | You saved my life; but what is it worth? 43524 You say he is handsome?" |
43524 | You think, then, Miss Angela, that there is something else about me they dislike? |
43524 | You were at the church, were you not? |
43524 | You will not? 43524 Your good father is strict, perhaps;_ pourquoi_? |
43524 | Your name is familiar to me, if I am not mistaken; are you not a collaborator on Sybel''s historical publication? |
43524 | [ 150]Well, my child?" |
43524 | [ 26] How, then, are we to remedy so great an evil? 43524 _ Ach, mein Herr!_ and hast never heard the legend of the Christ of Ausfeldt?" |
43524 | ''The strength of the Christian religion lies,''he said-- in what do you suppose? |
43524 | ''What eternity of woe canst thou suffer more terrible than this? |
43524 | ''What is life to thee now?'' |
43524 | ''Why was not I fortunate enough to have you myself?'' |
43524 | ***** And the sequel to this little Christmas romance? |
43524 | A HERO, OR A HEROINE? |
43524 | A HERO, OR A HEROINE? |
43524 | A friend at our side urges one, doubtless in the mind of many of our readers: Then you would banish all female voices from our choirs? |
43524 | Again, who has not felt the happy influence a forest has upon the mind? |
43524 | And again, assuming him to concede a concurrent cause, the question then recurs, Are variations attributable to reversion or to evolution? |
43524 | And again, he urges that,"It should also be remembered that many characters lie latent in organisms ready to be evolved(?) |
43524 | And can you imagine what was her life,_ tête- à- tête_ with an idiot? |
43524 | And do you see the dust?" |
43524 | And how are you and your poor old father? |
43524 | And how did she know it? |
43524 | And is it not your desire that things should remain just as they are-- you with your liberty and your husband with his? |
43524 | And is not insanity a stranger to wisdom? |
43524 | And now do you understand this apparently strange custom? |
43524 | And our husbands-- do we devote our time to them any more than to our children? |
43524 | And shall I set up for being wise? |
43524 | And should I sacrifice all for you, would not my incensed uncle pursue us with his vengeance? |
43524 | And the faces mirrors now show us-- are they the same that rose radiant from that bath? |
43524 | And we might add,"My life and my intelligence;"for are not many among us what Tertullian would style"gilded nullities"? |
43524 | And what have you got in those plates?'' |
43524 | And what is the case of the bishops in Spain? |
43524 | And what is this last condition?" |
43524 | And what is unity but Catholicity drawn to its centre? |
43524 | And what would we find if we could examine all the other sanctuaries of Rome and its immense cemeteries? |
43524 | And when do you go?" |
43524 | And who can have a conception of good, of eternity, of justice, of virtue? |
43524 | And why should any be left to pick up crumbs, when a full table invites them? |
43524 | And yet ought not our constant aim be to secure the happiness of our husband, and the salvation of his soul as well as of our own? |
43524 | And you write such music? |
43524 | And-- do you play from note, dear Margaret?" |
43524 | Arch- misanthrope, what is this he tells As whistle and chime go down the dells? |
43524 | Are Erin''s sons so good or so cold As not to be tempted by woman or gold?'' |
43524 | Are the times propitious, and do surrounding circumstances demand missionary attention to this matter? |
43524 | Are there only mere symbols there? |
43524 | Are they not carried away by the age, and is it not from the very madness of the age that they need to be saved? |
43524 | Are we not parted for ever?" |
43524 | Are we not, after this, justified in ascribing to reversion every favorable modification which has arisen or may arise? |
43524 | Are we still trying to make some chimerical mixture, some impossible union of freedom and slavery? |
43524 | Are you ashamed to confess that you love a beautiful young lady? |
43524 | Are you aware that, by the canonical law, bishops who are dice- players are ordered to be deposed?'' |
43524 | Are you faint? |
43524 | Are you worthy to succeed, O man of little faith?" |
43524 | As he has found so many things which are substantially untrue, why did he not find this decree before he ventured to publish his letter? |
43524 | As to standard literary works, and historical studies, how can we think of them? |
43524 | At last she broke the silence by saying abruptly,"Does not extreme hunger add to one''s capacity for being cold?" |
43524 | At parting he said in a low voice to Margaret,"I am to receive communion in Father Barry''s church a week from Sunday; you will pray for me?" |
43524 | At the rate it is now being built upon, it will soon be completed to this point, and then in what direction will this current turn? |
43524 | Barbarous and artificial strophes, perhaps you think? |
43524 | Be it so; but have you ever tried the experiment? |
43524 | Because they were criminals? |
43524 | Besides, are not these two prerogatives one and the same thing under two different aspects? |
43524 | Besides, do we sing merely to satisfy the ears of an audience? |
43524 | But I have a few things at the different shops; will you stop for them?" |
43524 | But a book, a true book, can one be seen on the table of our boudoirs? |
43524 | But are our carriages, are the streets of our large cities? |
43524 | But can the fact be gainsaid? |
43524 | But have you ever heard such music?" |
43524 | But how can we forget the last festival, so sweetly and deliciously touching, which has just been celebrated in this grand basilica? |
43524 | But how did Photius repay his kindness? |
43524 | But how is this? |
43524 | But how remove the earth? |
43524 | But how shall we get it? |
43524 | But is Eliza really so sick, or does your apprehension increase your anxiety?" |
43524 | But look down; how would you like to fall among those rocks?" |
43524 | But suppose it, what then? |
43524 | But this little stocking does not fit your feet?" |
43524 | But what could I do? |
43524 | But what could have brought you to face the fatigue of this rough journey?'' |
43524 | But what do you find to do with yourself?" |
43524 | But what does all this amount to? |
43524 | But what is concerted harmony, as a rule,"sacred"or"consecrated"to? |
43524 | But what promises could and should be made by the members of this sacred league? |
43524 | But what were the means used to bring about the assembly of 1682, in which the four articles of which so much has been said were framed? |
43524 | But when they get down, down to the lowest deep, will they find them? |
43524 | But whence come the three thousand one hundred and sixty foundlings of"Mittermaier"annually received in Rome? |
43524 | But wherefore a queen? |
43524 | But while they are lost for ever, why, why am I reclaimed? |
43524 | But who could be found capable of executing such a mission? |
43524 | But why not tell me your name?" |
43524 | But why should you think that I admire her?" |
43524 | But your other name?" |
43524 | By the way, I am due at Helen''s to- night; wo n''t you come? |
43524 | By the way, how is Miss Foster?--or is she Miss Foster yet?--and her grandmother?" |
43524 | Ca n''t you tell me of another case of distress among your patients?" |
43524 | Can I ride out for an hour?" |
43524 | Can any thing be plainer than this? |
43524 | Can it be-- dare I hope that-- that--?" |
43524 | Can not we go to- night and pay the rent, and take them what they need?" |
43524 | Can the Peter- pence change the programme of the powers? |
43524 | Can these gentlemen teach me how we can cease to have admiration for the noble and exalted? |
43524 | Can they be traced or even guessed at? |
43524 | Can you blame him for the difference? |
43524 | Can you come up- stairs with me now?" |
43524 | Can you conceive of two beings in the universe more distinct? |
43524 | Can you conceive of two beings in the universe more distinct?" |
43524 | Can you not be as liberal?" |
43524 | Can you wonder that applause and flattery have turned his head a little? |
43524 | Come, shall I go first?" |
43524 | Coming close to that domestic life of nations of which chess made one pleasure, what has not changed? |
43524 | Could I get a good one here?" |
43524 | Could I not see this wonderful lady?" |
43524 | Could I sit there much longer? |
43524 | Could a reason be more obvious? |
43524 | Could not agenesis have resulted from the concurrence of this tendency with mechanical causes? |
43524 | Could the two not act concurrently? |
43524 | Could we not possibly go three in the buggy? |
43524 | Could we sleep soundly in a garret, and wake delighted to see snow sifting through the roof? |
43524 | Could you not also make some sacrifice to the whims of your wife?" |
43524 | Dear, dear Aunt Caddy, wo n''t you write for me?" |
43524 | Did I say that crowd and shows were unheeded? |
43524 | Did Padre Giulio think her lovely? |
43524 | Did he tell you about himself?" |
43524 | Did n''t she cry the least bit while he was pouring the water?" |
43524 | Did not my father, a hair- dresser, give you shelter when you had only your garret and skylight, and had to lie in bed and write for want of coals? |
43524 | Did not they too, in youth, scent from afar the battle they knew better than to enter without the certainty of winning? |
43524 | Did the pontiff go beyond his authority in allowing its introduction into the creed? |
43524 | Did the sight of these at last turn inward? |
43524 | Do n''t you know''tis customary?" |
43524 | Do not all her thoughts and acts look to the pleasures of the toilette, the opera, balls, and concerts? |
43524 | Do not some Catholic professors even begin to dogmatize and dispute the authority of the holy see?" |
43524 | Do our dresses cover us? |
43524 | Do they reject Protestantism, or simply follow out its spirit to its last logical consequences? |
43524 | Do you consider my honor a worthy prey for your vanity? |
43524 | Do you hear, Jessie? |
43524 | Do you not know that all the presumptions are against you? |
43524 | Do you not know that you do_ not_ know it? |
43524 | Do you not think that a few days of pleasure might be too well paid for by my past and my future? |
43524 | Do you not think that this view of our misfortunes reconciles us with the conceptions we have of God''s goodness?" |
43524 | Do you not think, then, that the majority of husbands would prefer a different kind of life? |
43524 | Do you openly take part with the ultramontane against your father?" |
43524 | Do you remember it?" |
43524 | Do you see, Herr Frank has come to see you?" |
43524 | Do you suppose I shall disappoint Aunt Selina for such rudeness as this? |
43524 | Do you think he would come to England if you wrote him? |
43524 | Do you wish to be martyrs to fashion? |
43524 | Do you wonder that I chose the anniversary of that day? |
43524 | Do you_ know_ it? |
43524 | Does any one suppose his smile to be the emanation from some reminiscence of"taking the horses to water"in boyhood? |
43524 | Does it belong to the man inside there?" |
43524 | Does it harmonize with those other parts of the office performed in the sanctuary? |
43524 | Does not Mr. Spencer''s assumption of a tendency as a concurrent cause with the conditions, imply such a failure? |
43524 | Does not one Schenkel in Heidelberg deny the divinity of Christ? |
43524 | Does not their present position argue a total want of consistency? |
43524 | Does religion mean unity? |
43524 | Does the Church judge them to be suitable for her divine offices? |
43524 | Does the association propose to get rid of diversity by indifference, and of divisions simply by bringing all men to agree to differ? |
43524 | Does the beautiful past overthrow the accomplished facts of the present? |
43524 | Does the hypothesis of evolution fulfil this requirement? |
43524 | Does this army await the command of God?" |
43524 | Does this consist with his theory? |
43524 | Doubts? |
43524 | Else why did Photius so persistently endeavor to obtain the confirmation of his election from the pope? |
43524 | Even the unbeliever at such a moment, forced to reflect on the destiny of the soul, exclaims,"Soul, what art thou? |
43524 | Even to the man of the world, not to say to the Christian, can any thing be nobler or more worthy of respect than such a meeting? |
43524 | Flame that devourest me, wilt thou live after me? |
43524 | Flora knows all about this, of course?" |
43524 | For did they not know how it would be? |
43524 | For what is Catholicity but a unity which expands and is diffusive? |
43524 | Frank continued,"Have you considered the consequences that follow from the dreams of the dog? |
43524 | From intuition? |
43524 | From whence did the people draw this strong and healthy nourishment of the spiritual life? |
43524 | Get into trouble? |
43524 | Give me your hand; we are friends, are we not?" |
43524 | God born of God, and who dost share His reign supreme, how didst thou bear The vesture of our dust to wear? |
43524 | God saith; and who shall gainsay? |
43524 | Grandfather,"and his voice grew lower and more musical,"is it the thought of my uncle that disturbs your rest? |
43524 | Had he not heard that"any man can have any woman"? |
43524 | Had he the right thus to act in controversies of faith? |
43524 | Had she not often sung them herself in days long past? |
43524 | Had she the remotest idea of writing to him? |
43524 | Had you forgotten it, or did n''t you care for my rudeness?" |
43524 | Has Mr. Ffoulkes done this in the letter before us, and what answer shall Catholics make to his attack? |
43524 | Has all sense of right and justice faded from the minds of men? |
43524 | Has he lain down?" |
43524 | Has he"--and the boy''s cheek flushed with the pride of his noble race--"has he disgraced us in any way?" |
43524 | Has it never occurred to it that one and the same law for all would operate unequally, for all have not the same internal constitution? |
43524 | Has it not been confessed that"spontaneous variability,"or evolution, stands in the place of ignorance? |
43524 | Has my wife a single characteristic of this noble woman?" |
43524 | Has our worldly life, with its numerous preoccupations, left us time to be true wives and true mothers? |
43524 | Has she a look-- I will not say of love-- but even of respect for me? |
43524 | Has the author ever read their glowing words respecting this same theme? |
43524 | Has the war taught us nothing? |
43524 | Hast thou indeed Sacred ambition, In word and deed Based on contrition? |
43524 | Have I not worked till my health has given way? |
43524 | Have these duties, these obligations which our Lord has imposed upon us, been hitherto our principal concern? |
43524 | Have they no meaning, no purpose in the Creator''s plan? |
43524 | Have we any objections to urge against coming into harmony with ecclesiastical tradition and practice in this matter? |
43524 | Have we forgotten that it is the end of our life, the reason of our creation? |
43524 | Have we not a purely material effect? |
43524 | Have we not learned yet to give up these combinations of opposites, contraries, and incompatibles? |
43524 | Have we strength or inclination for harvest work? |
43524 | Have you ever reserved time to be devoted to your husband? |
43524 | Have you forgotten Handel, whom you welcomed here three years since?" |
43524 | Have you had a pleasant evening?" |
43524 | Have you made an avowal?" |
43524 | Have you never remarked a very curious circumstance, and one which deserves to be related in the history of the costumes of the nineteenth century? |
43524 | Have you no Christmas gift for the penitent wanderer? |
43524 | Have you no sonnet for such a scene, my gentle troubadour?" |
43524 | Have you not told her she was handsome? |
43524 | Have you not yourselves created a necessity for this life of continual agitation and excitement? |
43524 | Have you read it?" |
43524 | Have you seen her since that encounter with the steer?" |
43524 | Having arranged that matter, she asked,"Ca n''t I have that buggy to drive up in? |
43524 | Having returned to your homes, what occupation precedes your sleep? |
43524 | Having seen and humbly acknowledged your fault, will you not now confer a favor on the whole party by forgetting what is past?" |
43524 | Haydn-- I recollect the name; and I remember hearing, too, that you were not well paid for your labors, eh?" |
43524 | He added,''How can it be that God should show such compassion to a man who has so miserably served him? |
43524 | He had written in his diary:"Of what value is corporal beauty that fades when it is disfigured by bad customs and caprices? |
43524 | He has changed, Nellie, do n''t you think?" |
43524 | He then asked himself what she did deserve? |
43524 | He was smiling in a friendly way; but she looked at him reproachfully, and said,"How can you call it a trifle? |
43524 | Her dress? |
43524 | Her name, my dear? |
43524 | Here, then, is the pith of this question; it may be summed up in a single word: are we wives and mothers, or are we merely women of the world? |
43524 | Hero, or a Heroine? |
43524 | How can I teach others who know so little myself, and am so miserable and imperfect?'' |
43524 | How can he maintain both propositions? |
43524 | How can the pope acknowledge as accomplished facts, results which have sprung from injustice, robbery, and violence? |
43524 | How can this duality, so marked and so distinct, the terms of which are so infinitely apart, be harmonized and brought together into unity? |
43524 | How can you look so sober? |
43524 | How comes it, then, that we are content with those frivolous occupations in which most of us squander our time? |
43524 | How could I bear that? |
43524 | How could I hope to be the favored knight, when her smiles were bestowed on all so generously? |
43524 | How could it be otherwise, with my training? |
43524 | How did he know that I might n''t have caught a severe cold in that horrid waiting- room at the station, or driving with him in his freezing chaise? |
43524 | How do I look, Cécile? |
43524 | How do you know? |
43524 | How does the house stand this cold winter, and how are you getting along altogether?" |
43524 | How does this presence derogate from the fact that he died for each of us on the cross, and is ever living in heaven to make intercession for us? |
43524 | How have Anglican orders been passed over in silence, or even delicately handled? |
43524 | How is Richard?" |
43524 | How is any concession possible here? |
43524 | How is it possible for you to satisfy the claims of such exalted, old- fashioned virtue? |
43524 | How is the Angel of Salingen? |
43524 | How is this, Fräulein Angela; is that the custom here?" |
43524 | How long is it since you breakfasted?" |
43524 | How long would I have resisted light, conviction? |
43524 | How long, then, wilt thou wait Till_ all_ thy children sing"IMMACULATE"? |
43524 | How many of those who had until then worked for the overthrow of church and state were not converted when they saw whither their principles led them? |
43524 | How many priests, do you think, would do that?" |
43524 | How many prisons in the United States have Catholic chaplains? |
43524 | How much thought had she ever given to the sufferings of the poor? |
43524 | How oppose a barrier to this ever- increasing tide of luxury and of prodigality? |
43524 | How otherwise could she be Catholic? |
43524 | How perform all the necessary work under the fire whose balls rained among us and whistled unpleasantly in our ears? |
43524 | How shall I begin?" |
43524 | How shall I hope that thou wilt pardon, that thou wilt hear my prayer?'' |
43524 | How shall I know that thou hast not deserted me? |
43524 | How soon do you intend to be off again?" |
43524 | How were these articles received? |
43524 | How will you reconcile all these with the fatherly goodness of God?" |
43524 | How, then, reason with them or expect them to listen to the voice of reason? |
43524 | I approached the one that was partly open, and stood on the threshold of-- what do you suppose? |
43524 | I asked myself;"shall I open the old wound and let it bleed afresh? |
43524 | I asked, somewhat more quietly than before,"you are not in love, or engaged, or any thing of that kind?" |
43524 | I asked;"or rather do you admire Catholicism in the abstract? |
43524 | I desire death alone; what can a man be thinking of, not always to desire it? |
43524 | I envied her, and yet what should I do with calmness and strength if I had them? |
43524 | I have another saying of yours in my mind; was it not this? |
43524 | I have yet another part of this important subject to treat: the impropriety, the indecency, why not say the word, of certain fashions? |
43524 | I hear the Jew,"How can this man Give us his flesh to eat?" |
43524 | I must have exercise; and who knows but I may make myself useful by visiting the distant patients when the doctor''s horse is tired?" |
43524 | I wonder if I will ever be well enough to hunt squirrels again?" |
43524 | I wonder what sin is? |
43524 | I wonder what would make a Christian of me? |
43524 | I-- your daughter?" |
43524 | If alien hands had not cut down the maple and the elm, and strange faces and the burr of unknown voices had not scared the wrens from their nest? |
43524 | If he had lived until 1789, would it have been a pretender to the crown, or simply a suspected prisoner, that the people would have delivered? |
43524 | If he had not shut his eyes, if he could have had the least suspicion of this, what a difference might it not have made? |
43524 | If our mother''s face had not gone from the window? |
43524 | If so, why? |
43524 | If the farm had not been sold? |
43524 | If the monks knew, thought I, how to captivate and charm by their architecture, why could they not do the same with music?" |
43524 | If this explanation is, as they claim, unphilosophical, are they not bound to withdraw their support from such a theory? |
43524 | If we found shelter in solitude, how long would you or I bear this concealment?" |
43524 | If we had money or time for the journey? |
43524 | If we have, or seem to have won it, is there not something in ourselves that holds us back? |
43524 | If you love me, how can you bear to think of becoming the wife of another?" |
43524 | In doing so, are they illogical? |
43524 | In how many is a priest invited to minister at stated times to the spiritual wants of this great number of inmates? |
43524 | In the absence, then, of any other rational explanation, are we not necessitated to accept the theory of reversion? |
43524 | In the interests of art, it is asked, ought not the composition, and by consequence the reproduction of sacred music be encouraged? |
43524 | In what does it consist? |
43524 | In whatever way obtained, it must have been to them particularly attractive; for what was it but that for which they lived-- battle and victory? |
43524 | Is England beneath an interdict?''" |
43524 | Is a cure to be desired? |
43524 | Is figured music in conformity as to its style with the spirit of the other portions of the divine office? |
43524 | Is he familiar with the doctrinal books of his own church? |
43524 | Is he in your service, count?" |
43524 | Is her pure feeling offended by Richard''s faults? |
43524 | Is it a dream? |
43524 | Is it because he has but one thought, but one ambition-- to augment, to increase his collection at any price? |
43524 | Is it for such fugitive pleasure, whose bitterness I have known before even I have tasted it? |
43524 | Is it for this, great God, that I have deserted thy ways? |
43524 | Is it my fault if you do not understand these things, Adrian? |
43524 | Is it my fault that Vane is morally weak, as the term goes? |
43524 | Is it my fault that young men are all alike, and inexpressibly wearisome? |
43524 | Is it not better than the bustle and vanity of the world, which almost efface the thought of God? |
43524 | Is it not said that you can lead to death?" |
43524 | Is it not so, friend Richard?" |
43524 | Is it not"a name for a hypothetical property which as much needs explanation as that which it is used to explain"? |
43524 | Is it not, then, the strangest falsification of history to attribute to Protestantism the initiation of modern liberty?" |
43524 | Is it reasonable to sacrifice the wife to a rigorous moral law which the husband does not consider binding? |
43524 | Is my uncle a bad man, Aunt Caddy? |
43524 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
43524 | Is n''t it so, grandmamma?" |
43524 | Is not the ascription of characters to evolution a"shaping of ignorance into the semblance of knowledge"? |
43524 | Is not the fashion of our garments imitated, often invented by women to whom we would not speak? |
43524 | Is not the impersonality of God, that is, of nature, a primary article of their creed? |
43524 | Is not this Schenkel the director of a theological faculty? |
43524 | Is not this admirable? |
43524 | Is not this conduct worthy of the best days of Christianity? |
43524 | Is she not looking well? |
43524 | Is she not quick- tempered, bitter, loveless, extravagant, and stiff- necked? |
43524 | Is that for her own sorrows, or those of her Saviour?" |
43524 | Is that my fault? |
43524 | Is the doctrine of the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Son a true doctrine? |
43524 | Is the sacrifice of a wish wanted? |
43524 | Is there a more certain proof of elevated worth than the impotent rage and opposition of the vicious? |
43524 | Is there no spot, dear friend, that you and I would revisit? |
43524 | Is there no voice to be raised, no authority to come forth to meet this emergency of the world? |
43524 | Is there place in the economy of the church militant for the operation of communities of families having property in common? |
43524 | Is this a fair supposition? |
43524 | Is this not your opinion, Herr Assessor?" |
43524 | It may be asked whether this can be the people whose miseries excite to such a degree the commiseration of Europe? |
43524 | James?" |
43524 | Joseph Haydn? |
43524 | Leonard W. Bacon, who sometimes writes for_ Putnam_, and who has such delicate scruples about Protestants using forged documents against Catholics? |
43524 | Let Catholicism pursue its propagandism(?) |
43524 | Let me see; what is this? |
43524 | Looking up most wistfully in my face, she asked,"''Where?'' |
43524 | May I hope that she will do so?" |
43524 | May not the cause be found in that old state of things, which, though recently abolished, has left but too many traces of its existence? |
43524 | Meanwhile, as soon as they had stepped out of the window, Margaret began,"Well, Doctor James, where do you suppose I have been to- day?" |
43524 | Messrs. Hughes and Breckinridge on the subject,"Is the Protestant Religion the Religion of Christ?" |
43524 | Might he not, if he had gone to work differently, won her heart? |
43524 | Miss Spelman shook her head, and Margaret continued,"But where does Lucy live, and where does the family come from originally?" |
43524 | Miss Spelman shook her head,"I do n''t approve of that intercourse; these priests are very sly, and who knows that he may not be a Jesuit in disguise? |
43524 | Moray?" |
43524 | Moray?" |
43524 | Moray?" |
43524 | Must not every honest heart rejoice in the effort they will make, and wish them success? |
43524 | Must not my position, my self- respect, the last remnant of manly dignity go to the wall?" |
43524 | Must thou suffer still? |
43524 | My curiosity was roused, and I stopped her by asking,''God bless whom? |
43524 | My wife-- is she not just the opposite in every thing? |
43524 | Mysterious guest, what wilt thou become? |
43524 | Need we tell of the wild joy and amazement that reëchoed through the hoary old hall? |
43524 | No more? |
43524 | None for the faithful heart that has ever been yours alone?" |
43524 | Not a Roman Catholic, Miss Foster? |
43524 | Now came the question, Why this happiness, why this misery? |
43524 | Now tell me, what will you have? |
43524 | Now, do not the alleged cases of evolution, equally with those of spontaneous generation, fail to fulfil this requirement? |
43524 | Now, how are we to discriminate between those arising by reversion and those arising by evolution? |
43524 | Now, how many children could be expected to be born annually from that number? |
43524 | Now, must you admit that the fibres possess as keen an understanding and as deep a knowledge of chemistry as the man who is versed in chemistry?" |
43524 | Now, this is the answer which Catholicity affords to the problem, What is the union by which the finite attains its highest possible perfection? |
43524 | Now, we ask, how much is done to bring to bear on these unfortunates the salutary influences of their own religion? |
43524 | Now, what are these? |
43524 | Of what validity, then, can an hypothesis be, when the assumption upon which it is grounded is, confessedly, wholly gratuitous? |
43524 | On their drive homeward, Margaret said,"Why did you punch me, Aunt Selina? |
43524 | Or is it only late for_ me_, Late for earth''s fleeting day, Because the best of life is gone-- My youth has passed away? |
43524 | Or is it the incense and music and wax tapers that possess charms for you?" |
43524 | Otherwise, how are we to account for the due tempering and modification of the forces implied in the deposition of each of the atoms of the accretion? |
43524 | Paganina, surprised, replied,"I love but you, my father; must you leave me?" |
43524 | Pass over this; whence and by what means is the unity, whatever it consists in, to be obtained? |
43524 | Perhaps Erasmus would not have acquiesced with good- will in_ all_ the decrees of the council; but was Erasmus deemed orthodox?... |
43524 | Puderlein continued,"And I-- have I deserved such black ingratitude from you, eh? |
43524 | Rather late for a lady to go shopping, is it not? |
43524 | Rather, is not this the true principle--_In conspectu Angelorum psallam tibi, Domine_?" |
43524 | Reaching out my eager hand--"Have you in all fairy- land Such a boon at my command?" |
43524 | Reason? |
43524 | Reject the Scriptures and the whole system of positive Christianity as inconsistent and self- contradictory? |
43524 | Seekest thou to reunite thyself to the great flame of day? |
43524 | Shall I be afraid lest the world should not have an opinion high enough of my capacity? |
43524 | Shall I call her?" |
43524 | Shall I exhibit your noble qualities, and convince you why you are worth more than any young man that I know? |
43524 | Shall I praise you? |
43524 | Shall I send them over?" |
43524 | Shall I take a complacency in my own schemes and systems? |
43524 | Shall I tell you what I did with my_ soupe au thé_? |
43524 | Shall it be a story of enchantment? |
43524 | Shall we be silent when our voice might bring aid to a noble but unfortunate people, who generously assisted us in the hour of need? |
43524 | Shall we not, Doctor James?" |
43524 | Shall we take the sacred Scripture fashioned by Italian workmen? |
43524 | She looked at him bewildered-- for she had forgotten all about him-- as he said, in a whisper,"Have you lost your senses? |
43524 | She looked at the stranger a moment and said with childish simplicity,"Can you pray too?" |
43524 | She loves you; and now will you desert her and leave her to grief and shame?" |
43524 | She replied,"Have I any thing of my own in this world? |
43524 | She then arose, and, going to him, said with unspeakable affection,''Father, may I play and sing for you the"Lied der Kapelle?"'' |
43524 | She was still silent, motionless, and he said in a hoarse voice, that trembled in spite of his efforts to control it,"Are you coming with me?" |
43524 | Should they be in accordance with the conscience of the criminal or not? |
43524 | Show me that you love me; Am I not here to be your little servant, Follow your steps and wait upon your wishes?" |
43524 | So I said to my cook, whom I found to be a good Catholic, going to her confessions and communions regularly,''Where does your priest live? |
43524 | So she requested this promise from you? |
43524 | Stood ever Holy Church, do records tell, More one, more conscious, more herself than now? |
43524 | Tell me a woman, or even a man, who could be capable of such modesty? |
43524 | Tell me, old friend, what to call you?" |
43524 | That is to say, that his personal wishes weigh more heavily upon him than the force of tradition? |
43524 | That it would be more agreeable to them to enjoy oftener the pleasures of home, in your company, surrounded by their children? |
43524 | That this_ prestige_ attaches to Protestant nations is a fact not to be disputed; but is it well founded? |
43524 | That was funny, was it not? |
43524 | That"every sentiment[ doctrine?] |
43524 | That''s how you account for the change, is n''t it, coz?" |
43524 | The abbé writes,"When it was resolved to oblige the ecclesiastics to profess the maxims of France, what difficulties stood in the way? |
43524 | The cough, the appetite, the sneezing, the aversion-- what have all these to do with mind or thought? |
43524 | The doctor''s face flushed, and he said very slowly,"Did Miss Edgar show you that letter?" |
43524 | The father abbot asked,''Is it with joy that you depart?'' |
43524 | The intelligence of the age? |
43524 | The question is, Is the organism capable of coördinating any number of characters? |
43524 | The question now arises, if the Roman pontiff exceeded his authority in this action? |
43524 | The question then recurs, Are the favorable modifications which have arisen, or which may arise, due to evolution or to reversion? |
43524 | The question to be considered was how best to do it? |
43524 | The question which is so frequently and anxiously asked, What, then, will the council do? |
43524 | The rhetoric is not bad; but in what does the unity aimed at consist, and how is it to be obtained? |
43524 | The strong arm of power? |
43524 | Then came the thought,"How dare I ask for help, when I myself have sought temptation? |
43524 | Then is it late,"too late,"O Lord? |
43524 | Then, Margaret, though I am not worthy of you, will you be my wife?" |
43524 | Then, had she tried to ensnare him? |
43524 | Then, my dear, what do you think? |
43524 | Then, noticing the pallid and sunken cheek of his young companion, he said,"Has the new year brought you nothing, Theodore?" |
43524 | There was a moment''s deep silence, and then an officer asked:"Does the signora go with you?" |
43524 | There were tears in her eyes as they met mine; but what woman with a woman''s heart could be unmoved at such a moment? |
43524 | Think you a virtuous damsel of Vienna lets every callow bird tell her she is handsome and agreeable? |
43524 | This difficulty amounted almost to an impossibility; for of what avail was it to vote emoluments to those who would not accept them? |
43524 | Those innocent voices still prolonged the hymn, though what was their need of mercy compared with hers? |
43524 | Thus hast thou prayed? |
43524 | To the question,"How is the church catholic?" |
43524 | To the words of the offices of the church? |
43524 | To what lucky chance am I indebted for this visit to my quiet home?" |
43524 | To whom does our time belong, if not to these little ones who call upon us by the sweet name of mother? |
43524 | Toward whom?" |
43524 | UNCLE R. But, Señor Don Fernan, if they are not worth the telling? |
43524 | Uncertain as you are and must be if you ever think, why attempt to teach at all? |
43524 | WAS IT PROFITABLE? |
43524 | Was I misbehaving?" |
43524 | Was he not taking her words too literally? |
43524 | Was it not his duty to remain rector of Elton until the debt was paid? |
43524 | Was it the effect of the softening light or of the approaching triumph? |
43524 | Was she not kind?" |
43524 | Was she very good? |
43524 | Was that my fault? |
43524 | Was that my fault? |
43524 | Was that my fault? |
43524 | Was the evolution of these modifications less inconceivable then than now? |
43524 | Was there ever a woman like this? |
43524 | We sat for some time in silence after she closed, and I then asked,"Did you ever see or hear from them after your departure?" |
43524 | Well, was it more favorable to political liberty? |
43524 | Well, what says he?" |
43524 | Were you aware that she teaches in the public school?" |
43524 | Were you waiting for any one? |
43524 | What alternative have we, then, but to conclude that this occult potent factor is reversion? |
43524 | What are the distinctive motives and grounds of an apostolic reduction to the rule of community? |
43524 | What are the points to be attacked? |
43524 | What book is this?" |
43524 | What can be more laborious, more self- sacrificing, more ill- paid, thankless and disheartening? |
43524 | What can make me more miserable than I am?" |
43524 | What can reason do with madmen, or against the multitude blinded by false lights and moved onward by an unreasoning passion? |
43524 | What can she have to say to me?" |
43524 | What can you know of the worth of such a man? |
43524 | What can you, by reason, know of that purpose or meaning, if you know not that plan? |
43524 | What care we for the rest? |
43524 | What causes the difference? |
43524 | What color, what taste, what form has it? |
43524 | What comes next? |
43524 | What could be more seductive? |
43524 | What could come of it, except trouble for the poor man? |
43524 | What did prosperity bring me? |
43524 | What did she say once about the inefficacy of vicarious goodness?" |
43524 | What did you wish to forget?" |
43524 | What difficulty is there here in obeying this decree both in its letter and spirit? |
43524 | What do they mean by liberty? |
43524 | What do they mean by progress and civilization? |
43524 | What do you wish with me?" |
43524 | What does Dr. Channing mean by_ being_? |
43524 | What does he do? |
43524 | What does it mean?" |
43524 | What else did the Council of Trent do but condemn the peculiar tenets of Augsburg, and the doctrines contained in the Thirty- nine Articles? |
43524 | What essential Catholic conditions should the organic rule of such an establishment embody? |
43524 | What evidence is there to induce the belief that there exists such a limit?" |
43524 | What faith or unity will they find in the lowest depths of humanity in addition to what all men have always had? |
43524 | What had he thrown away? |
43524 | What had she ever done to relieve them? |
43524 | What happened? |
43524 | What has Protestantism done but to rend the"rags"into tatters? |
43524 | What has become of that pious custom of tithes for the poor formerly found in rich families? |
43524 | What has terrified you?" |
43524 | What have you been doing?" |
43524 | What if little Barefoot beg below? |
43524 | What if the demands of the laborers were just, and that, notwithstanding this, we should oppose them? |
43524 | What interrupts, what destroys it? |
43524 | What is Christendom but an army divided against itself? |
43524 | What is evolution? |
43524 | What is he to do now? |
43524 | What is it that has moved the heart of our God to bring about this merciful conversion? |
43524 | What is it that you wish of me? |
43524 | What is it, then?" |
43524 | What is that church to me more than another? |
43524 | What is the authority on which this assertion is made? |
43524 | What is the distinguishing characteristic of the latter? |
43524 | What is the meaning of this grain of sand on the sea- shore, or this mosquito, this gnat, these animalculæ invisible to the naked eye? |
43524 | What is the true meaning of the Ephesine canon to which Mr. Ffoulkes so often refers? |
43524 | What is this so- called"sacred"music? |
43524 | What is to restrain them? |
43524 | What is your code, and who the lawgiver? |
43524 | What is your name?" |
43524 | What lock can stay Him who the key Of heaven doth hold? |
43524 | What more could the greatest admirer say? |
43524 | What now is the individual to do? |
43524 | What occasioned your dispute?" |
43524 | What of that? |
43524 | What portion is Catholic, either in its tone or in its teaching? |
43524 | What possible objection can be urged against it? |
43524 | What precludes the advocates of"spontaneous generation"from assuming"a liability"in inorganic matter"to unfold"into microscopic organisms? |
43524 | What religious feelings might one reasonably expect to have pervaded( may we not say the audience?) |
43524 | What shall we say to this? |
43524 | What should I say next? |
43524 | What surrender is there of one''s reason, judgment, free- will, manhood, in believing the testimony of a competent and credible witness? |
43524 | What takes place, then, when the soul of the believer finds himself clinging to an erroneous opinion? |
43524 | What then is this vivifying force? |
43524 | What then? |
43524 | What was he waiting for? |
43524 | What was it? |
43524 | What was it? |
43524 | What was it?" |
43524 | What was she about? |
43524 | What was the first thing to be done? |
43524 | What were you doing here?" |
43524 | What woman in a hundred would have done this? |
43524 | What woman, travelling alone, has not encountered the embarrassment of entering a car already nearly filled with passengers? |
43524 | What year has just begun?" |
43524 | What, then, are the five thousand Presbyterian pastors but so many usurpers of the titles and offices of Jesus Christ? |
43524 | What, then, do you wish? |
43524 | What, then, is the subsistence of a being? |
43524 | What, then, it may be asked, is there no other music for the Almighty than that of the theatre?... |
43524 | When was the chair of Peter loved so well? |
43524 | When we were again seated in the car, I repeated my question,"Did you ever see or hear from them again?" |
43524 | When we were alone, she asked,"Did you ever notice how beautifully Nicholas Vane''s hair grows on his forehead? |
43524 | Whence results this belief in evolution? |
43524 | Whence, then, the dissoluteness of her desires, the bitterness of her humor, the heartlessness of the wife, the callousness of the mother? |
43524 | Where are your spirits?" |
43524 | Where could be found more intelligence, greater learning, or more ample guarantees for the preservation of truth? |
43524 | Where is Mrs. Edgar? |
43524 | Where is he now? |
43524 | Where is the harm in this?" |
43524 | Where is there thought? |
43524 | Where lies her power? |
43524 | Where would you obtain the spirit of prayer if not at its natural source? |
43524 | Whether I am of your opinion? |
43524 | Whether he was weak or wicked, who can tell? |
43524 | Which would be the nobler monument? |
43524 | Whither does this course lead? |
43524 | Who after this can doubt the inventive powers of Palamedes or his historian, and who can say that either might not have invented chess? |
43524 | Who compels you? |
43524 | Who compose a council? |
43524 | Who could hunger after earthly aliment when that Living Bread was replenishing the hungry soul? |
43524 | Who could tear himself away from that altar? |
43524 | Who ever heard of an ancient maiden living alone without cats? |
43524 | Who gave the permission?" |
43524 | Who has made that unwise law? |
43524 | Who is the composer?" |
43524 | Who should be living in the same house and on terms of closest intimacy with my sister''s family but Captain Vane? |
43524 | Who was it that waited day and night upon that holy altar? |
43524 | Who was it that waited long, long hours in that holy tribunal of penance for the straying, lost sheep to come back to the fold? |
43524 | Who was that Friend? |
43524 | Who would risk life to rescue a stranger from the horns of a ferocious steer without hesitation, and not desire an acknowledgment of the heroic deed? |
43524 | Who, then, but a woman could have routed the grand- vizier from the chess- board and taken his place? |
43524 | Whom had she denied and despised? |
43524 | Whose presence did the light reveal? |
43524 | Why are you laughing?" |
43524 | Why could n''t she be satisfied with pleasing him? |
43524 | Why did I play so well? |
43524 | Why did he have them executed? |
43524 | Why did he not speak at once, and be sympathetic and kind? |
43524 | Why did not grandpapa hear from him?" |
43524 | Why did you leave him the miserable trash?" |
43524 | Why did you not come to me before? |
43524 | Why do we not hear from him?" |
43524 | Why do you look at me in that peculiar manner?" |
43524 | Why do you make me wait?" |
43524 | Why do you no longer visit us? |
43524 | Why do you stand there shaking in the cold?" |
43524 | Why does he happen to appear so unfavorably in your eyes?" |
43524 | Why does he not do so?" |
43524 | Why does she do it? |
43524 | Why does the state make laws?" |
43524 | Why had they thus been singled out as marks for such a shower of fatal arrows? |
43524 | Why impatiently brush something from her eyes? |
43524 | Why is that?" |
43524 | Why not?" |
43524 | Why not?" |
43524 | Why push the question further back in time? |
43524 | Why should Agnes see them indistinctly? |
43524 | Why should I despair? |
43524 | Why should he be owner of Hurston?" |
43524 | Why should he bury himself at Shellbeach? |
43524 | Why should not Catholics give their father assistance?" |
43524 | Why should we marvel that it makes great progress in a short time?" |
43524 | Why support an untenable dominion?" |
43524 | Why the first six and not the last twelve? |
43524 | Why then deny to animals those powers which operate with intelligence and reflection?" |
43524 | Why then should not Protestants, Jews, infidels, or merely nominal Catholics, fill the public offices, and take the management of public affairs? |
43524 | Why was that scherzo on the music- desk, and why do its leaves turn so inconveniently? |
43524 | Why, then? |
43524 | Why? |
43524 | Will Spain pursue the parallel to this point? |
43524 | Will he come and save me?" |
43524 | Will it be any sacrifice of my manliness if I tell her what a few moments ago I held it my duty and purpose to conceal?" |
43524 | Will it be believed? |
43524 | Will its most strenuous adherents claim for it the title of being a fair and true expression of the Church''s prayer? |
43524 | Will not its banishment from our churches be a species of vandalism in art greatly to be deplored? |
43524 | Will not that content you?" |
43524 | Will she be able to return to her home despite the cruel vexations to which she has been exposed? |
43524 | Will they not give me a little earth here?" |
43524 | Will this not again be the case at the next revolution? |
43524 | Will this refutation overtake it? |
43524 | Will you never tell me who you are?" |
43524 | Will you not be so good as to tell me how you have so suddenly changed your views?" |
43524 | Will you not go on?" |
43524 | Will you not say good- day to Miss Angela? |
43524 | Will you take it? |
43524 | With a violent effort he mastered his feelings, and said,"You will be silent, will you not?" |
43524 | With all my gifts, I must ask myself, at five and twenty, Wherefore have I lived?" |
43524 | Wore ever pontiff a serener brow? |
43524 | Would he ever have such another? |
43524 | Would he not call me weak?" |
43524 | Would it be too much for the horse?" |
43524 | Would not your gentle Jessie more nearly fulfil it? |
43524 | Would such establishments tend to disseminate the faith and strengthen the church? |
43524 | Would we feel honored if the madam were now to visit us in the modest dress that we once thought the perfection of taste? |
43524 | Would we, if cares did not bind us, go back to the scenes of those pictures? |
43524 | Would you believe it, my dear? |
43524 | Would you know to what period I can look back with self- approbation, with thankfulness? |
43524 | Wrong, may be, to leave you in the lurch? |
43524 | Yet what amelioration is possible except personal? |
43524 | Yet what can I do? |
43524 | Yet why should I care? |
43524 | Yet why should my reason be for me or any one else better authority for believing than yours? |
43524 | You are Joseph Haydn, are you not?" |
43524 | You do not believe it? |
43524 | You feel this is your home, do you not?" |
43524 | You look so pleased; what have you there?" |
43524 | You mean that you are one in the true sense of the term?" |
43524 | You smile? |
43524 | You will come, will you not? |
43524 | You will marry the creature of your uncle, whom you regard with aversion?" |
43524 | You will not deny that the tendency of Sybel''s school is to war against the church?" |
43524 | You would be just as proud of him if he had not his handsome face, of course?" |
43524 | Your second letter came, and seemed as an answer from heaven,''Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?'' |
43524 | Z---- for the Countess de----? |
43524 | [ 182] Is it any wonder that, ten years after, the Turks were masters of the city of Constantine? |
43524 | [ 42] St. Gilbert, when he was more than a century old, used to exclaim,"How long, O Lord, wilt thou forget me for ever? |
43524 | _ Is Romanism the best Religion for the Republic?_ Pamphlet. |
43524 | and did lips that were so ready with the Pharisee''s prayer close with the cry of the publican? |
43524 | and why? |
43524 | asked Amelia;"to hold that creature close to you, and feel that it is your own as your heart is your own?" |
43524 | began Margaret at once;"and was she not a lovely bride? |
43524 | cried I, and extended both hands toward him,''do you recognize me?'' |
43524 | cried Sebastian joyfully;"has the scapegrace at last found time to write to his old father? |
43524 | do you not hear me?" |
43524 | exclaims the friend at our elbow;"bring our present choir down into the sanctuary? |
43524 | had she really endeavored to please him? |
43524 | have I?" |
43524 | have you no monishing fear-- Chiding a monarch as you do here? |
43524 | he exclaimed in surprise;"is that you, Old Musician? |
43524 | how did we once exist without thee? |
43524 | how did you all get here?" |
43524 | how many ages is it, I wonder, since I did that?" |
43524 | if the sea is a hundred leagues off?" |
43524 | in its truth, its holiness, or its peace? |
43524 | in love?" |
43524 | in this respect, of how much use is it to us at the present day? |
43524 | is one division of the question; by what road, with what weapons are these points to be attacked? |
43524 | mark you not where_ madness_ lurks yonder behind the door, making ready to spring upon my neck as I go out? |
43524 | mon ami!_ what is the matter?" |
43524 | or by Greek, or by Anglican, or by German, or by American workmen? |
43524 | or could proof of a view be more conclusive? |
43524 | or rather, the question was, Could Catholics in the State of New York be compelled to support the Protestant church and aid in its extension? |
43524 | or would it not end in his making an utter fool of himself? |
43524 | or, are all the characters of the species alone susceptible of coördination? |
43524 | said the father, astonished,"you certainly would not encourage my son in his perverted opinion?" |
43524 | she moaned,''why hast thou forsaken me? |
43524 | that you liked her?" |
43524 | the church aggressive, her attitude dangerous? |
43524 | these are Irishmen; of what use is it to trouble yourselves about their savage cries?" |
43524 | thought he; and asked himself, sobbing aloud,"Where shall I go, without money?" |
43524 | to bring up our children in a Christian manner, and to edify the world by our example? |
43524 | to that fat man with the red face, who laughs so loud?" |
43524 | too late, To thee who count''st not time As we thy finite creatures do, By cycles as they chime? |
43524 | was it so hard for you? |
43524 | what is that?" |
43524 | what is the matter, my boy?" |
43524 | what might I have been to- day, if heaven had not arrested me-- and what am I now? |
43524 | where have you fled? |
43524 | who would have imagined it? |
43524 | why are you not sharing all these impressions? |
43524 | why hast thou not, in human balances, the immense weight which celestial pity accords thee?" |
43524 | why wad ye not live for your poor Donald? |
43524 | worthy Master Puderlein,"cried Haydn, surprised,"you would not receive me when I know not where to go nor what to do?" |
43524 | wrong to go by the shiny birch That shades the lane to the village church? |
43524 | yes, you are old acquaintances, are you not? |
43524 | you have two irons in the fire, you artful little creature?" |
43524 | you know; my station, the will of my uncle--""_ My_ happiness,_ my_ peace is nothing to you?" |
43524 | you want it, do you? |
43524 | you will always stay at Hurston, even when I am gone, wo n''t you?" |
43524 | you will say, has a ribbon, a flower, a piece of velvet or satin so great an influence with us? |
57439 | ''Do you not think this change in the monotony of the race quite magnificent?'' 57439 ''Do you wish to see striking examples of this? |
57439 | ''How can you, who are the children of peace, bear to come among us who are the sons of strife?'' 57439 ''Ow d''you know that?" |
57439 | ''Where can the children of peace more fitly go than among the sons of strife?'' 57439 ''Who''s talking with pa?'' |
57439 | A pastor? 57439 After I have spent all my life in forgetfulness of him, when I turn to him only on my death- bed, will he come to me now, and give me all himself?" |
57439 | After all,he thought,"why should I wait for her to begin? |
57439 | Am I to understand that your remembrance of Mr. Granger is a bar to your union with me? |
57439 | And I would ask, with the canny Scotchman,''what good does the moss do the stone?'' |
57439 | And if I have nothing to eat, señor? |
57439 | And is n''t he? |
57439 | And pray what were you laughing at, my little fellow? |
57439 | And that? |
57439 | And the Virgin, why is she there? |
57439 | And the feather, and the sash, and the sword, and the spurs, do you forget them? |
57439 | And then? |
57439 | And what do you say to this flora? |
57439 | And what has he promised you? |
57439 | And what is that? |
57439 | And whom have we the honor to thank? |
57439 | And why do I select words of parting exhortation rather than words of greeting? 57439 And yet you have written the opera?" |
57439 | Are n''t you sorry now that you came? |
57439 | Are the skies falling? |
57439 | Are there people of rank in Salingen? |
57439 | Are they crooked? |
57439 | Are they to go about without any costume, like Eve before the fall? 57439 Are you acquainted in Salingen, John?" |
57439 | Are you acquainted with the Siegwart family? |
57439 | Are you hurt? |
57439 | Are you ill? |
57439 | Are you quite sure? |
57439 | Are you sure they will understand what those mean? |
57439 | Aura,said Margaret when they reached the veranda,"will you come down to the beach with us?" |
57439 | Be you the new lady nurse? |
57439 | Because Emil''s wife and Isabella are good- for- nothings, must the whole sex be repudiated? 57439 Because I told him that I believed all the sacred truths; and how can I believe when I do n''t know''em? |
57439 | But faith,exclaimed the other,"is there no faith?" |
57439 | But if-- just as I got used to loving you, there should be another Somebody Else besides Dick''s? 57439 But tell me, Beethoven, why did you not bring Louis with you?" |
57439 | But was not your first wife''s name Heremore? 57439 But what does''full authority''mean?" |
57439 | But what if your hope in another world deceive you? |
57439 | But what will people say? |
57439 | But what would this reviling priest have? 57439 But you would not wish me to be a hypocrite? |
57439 | But, Richard,began Herr Frank again,"how did you come to this singular conclusion?" |
57439 | Ca n''t you see, Mr. Southard, that you ought to have begun by saying that our family were all well? 57439 Can I talk to you a little, Mr. Granger, without disturbing you?" |
57439 | Can I, your father, ask a clearer explanation? |
57439 | Can it be,he asked,"that a lack of affection on your part is the cause of this reluctance?" |
57439 | Can you see no nobler destiny for a man,he asked,"than to eat three meals a day, make money, and keep a whole skin?" |
57439 | Can you tell me where Miss Blank is to be found? |
57439 | Come from Boston or York, I suppose? |
57439 | Comment endura Dieu, comment Que femme ribaulde et prestresse Eut l''Eglise en gouvernement? |
57439 | Could n''t you like''em well enough at a distance, as I do? 57439 Crown''st thou but the daughters Of our tearful race? |
57439 | Did he ever give you one unkind look, even? 57439 Did he? |
57439 | Did you ever hear of a man having presentiments? 57439 Did you ever see her portrait, or any of her writing, or hear her maiden name?" |
57439 | Did you hear Jennie smile? |
57439 | Do I intrude? |
57439 | Do n''t mention to any one about my going, will you? |
57439 | Do n''t you want to come out on to the veranda? |
57439 | Do strangers sometimes come there to stop and enjoy the beautiful neighborhood? |
57439 | Do you ask whither I am going? 57439 Do you know all the people here?" |
57439 | Do you know anything about nursing? |
57439 | Do you know if a Dr. Heremore lived here once, twenty- five years or so ago? |
57439 | Do you know, Mr. Granger,she said slowly,"those men seem to me very much like the apostles; in their devotion, I mean? |
57439 | Do you object to fire- arms, ma''am? |
57439 | Do you observe Angela''s fine taste in the arrangement of the colors? |
57439 | Do you remember the last time I led the orchestra at Von----''s? 57439 Do you think so?" |
57439 | Do you truly think that he likes me? |
57439 | Do you want them, little dear? |
57439 | Do you want to take my place? |
57439 | Does that mean I have staid too long? |
57439 | Engaged? 57439 Even than stripes on my pantaloons?" |
57439 | For me? |
57439 | Forced? 57439 From New York,"answered Dick;"can you tell us who is likely to give us information?" |
57439 | General? |
57439 | God himself has said so; and who shall dispute his word? |
57439 | Has Siegwart many children? |
57439 | Has any one seen it besides you, madam? |
57439 | Has any one spoken to you? |
57439 | Has it terrified you so much that you dare not? 57439 Have I not trusted you?" |
57439 | Have you any friend so dear and trusty, that his frown would make your heart ache yet more? 57439 Have you not also begun it? |
57439 | Have you not your pension secure? |
57439 | Have you seen the chaplain? |
57439 | Have you? 57439 How can I be deceived? |
57439 | How can it come true? 57439 How can that be possible?" |
57439 | How did you dare to do it? 57439 How does it happen that a people so weak, feeble, and base could overthrow the power of the French in the world?" |
57439 | How is that young and green- eyed Gaditana? |
57439 | How know you that? |
57439 | How know you that? |
57439 | How shall we prove them? |
57439 | How then shall I learn? |
57439 | I am afraid it is,answered Dick;"but, after all, what can happen that we need mind? |
57439 | I believe you were married twice, Mr. Brandon, and that your first wife''s maiden name was Heremore? |
57439 | I have come to offer peace and comfort, my darling, and-- dare I whisper the story which you used to listen to, under the elms at home? |
57439 | I know I can get permission to stay away for a few days longer; there''s nothing doing at this season, Would it take long? |
57439 | I suppose you are relations o''his? |
57439 | I suppose you have come to see him? |
57439 | I tell you I wish to hear not another word of this matter; do you hear me? 57439 I want to ask you a question,"Dick answered to the storekleeper''s look;"I suppose you know this town pretty well?" |
57439 | I want to get the first volume of-- But what''s the matter with you? 57439 If I promise you not to laugh, will you tell me the story?" |
57439 | If it seems best that I should stay a little while, you will explain to papa? 57439 Is Arthur Graham at home?" |
57439 | Is Siegwart a noble? |
57439 | Is all a delusion? 57439 Is everything right?" |
57439 | Is he your only brother? 57439 Is it necessary that you should begin?" |
57439 | Is it possible? 57439 Is it so indeed?" |
57439 | Is it true,he began at once,"that you have sympathized with me more than I knew? |
57439 | Is n''t it delightful to get rid of men a little while, when you know that they are soon to come again? |
57439 | Is she going to die? |
57439 | Is that Miss Dix? |
57439 | Is that so? 57439 Is the box of books taken out?" |
57439 | Is the pope in good health? |
57439 | Jesus, King and Lord of my heart and soul, what crown shall I give thee to acknowledge thee as such? 57439 Margaret,"she said,"why will you be so terribly proud? |
57439 | May I see you in the library now, or at your convenience? 57439 May I send for a priest right away? |
57439 | My father,said Paganina in a low voice, and without opening her eyes,"what do those bells say? |
57439 | On to Richmond, eh? |
57439 | Perhaps you are too tired to go around the garden? |
57439 | Smilest thou, gorgeous flower? 57439 So you have lost patience, again?" |
57439 | So you, too, are a composer? |
57439 | Suppose we all write just as freely as we do to Mr. Granger? 57439 Tender wife,"I cry with a tearful voice,"where art thou, where art thou?" |
57439 | Thank you; and the name? |
57439 | The flowers are quite fresh; does she come here every day? |
57439 | The proper bounds? 57439 Then you believe our women to be vain, pleasure- seeking, and destitute of true womanhood, because they wear crinoline?" |
57439 | Then you did n''t know him? |
57439 | Then you will send for more things, and how about the children? |
57439 | There is nothing the matter, I hope? |
57439 | This is all? |
57439 | This way, dear; have you forgotten? |
57439 | To what purpose do you offer me the multitude of your victims, saith the Lord? 57439 Wait, sir?" |
57439 | Was he not always stout, and held his ground in the battle- field? 57439 Was he not filled with the fear of God, with gentleness and wisdom? |
57439 | Was he not the only one that with his science cleared up all doubts? 57439 Was not poetry one of his attributes, and did he not deck his throne with verses like strings of pearl? |
57439 | Well, Charles,answered the old gentleman, sadly but composedly, turning at this name,"can you explain it?" |
57439 | Well, Margaret,Mr. Lewis said at length,"what are you thinking of? |
57439 | Well-- and then? |
57439 | What ails you? |
57439 | What are you doing, man? |
57439 | What are you going to do, Christian? |
57439 | What books have you read? |
57439 | What could he be thinking of, to rush headlong into this misfortune? |
57439 | What do you hope for? |
57439 | What do you mean? |
57439 | What do you say, Maggie? |
57439 | What do you see? |
57439 | What does that cross indicate? |
57439 | What does this reproach amount to? 57439 What good are your fine friends to you? |
57439 | What grander spectacle can there be than to see a whole people united in the duties imposed by its religion in celebrating great anniversaries? 57439 What has my little girl been learning to- day?" |
57439 | What have I to gain, if not heaven? 57439 What have you experienced and observed?" |
57439 | What have you there? |
57439 | What in the world did you want to go and turn Catholic for? |
57439 | What is a boy like you in the army for? |
57439 | What is the cause of his influence? |
57439 | What is the matter with you? |
57439 | What is the matter? |
57439 | What is the meaning of this nonsense of Mr. Granger''s volunteering? |
57439 | What is this? |
57439 | What is your pleasure, madam? |
57439 | What power is that which, being nought, Can unmake stateliest works of God? 57439 What right or reason have you to think so when he never says that he is?" |
57439 | What shall we do to amuse ourselves? |
57439 | What should I do if I had no church to go to? |
57439 | What was Mr. Sinclair saying to you up there? |
57439 | What will Miss Hamilton think of your constancy? |
57439 | What_ did_ God do before Massachusetts was discovered? |
57439 | Where is Aurelia? |
57439 | Where is he? 57439 Where is she?" |
57439 | Where is the brightness now that long Brimmed saddest hearts with happy tears? 57439 Where''s your sign?" |
57439 | Which every one ought not to know? |
57439 | Who are you? |
57439 | Who are you? |
57439 | Who do you know in the army? |
57439 | Who is his guarantee here, do you know? |
57439 | Who is it that loves us best? |
57439 | Who knoweth if the spirit of the children of Adam ascend upward, and if the spirit of the beasts descend downward? |
57439 | Who mourns? 57439 Who was that last surgeon in the line?" |
57439 | Who was the little girl in the picture? |
57439 | Who was the little girl? |
57439 | Who, then, has dared to insinuate a doubt of your success? |
57439 | Who? |
57439 | Why are ye afraid, O ye of little faith? |
57439 | Why can not truth inspire as much ardor as error awakens? |
57439 | Why do I choose for my text words which recall the sufferings of our divine Lord? |
57439 | Why do you weep, my daughter? |
57439 | Why does Angela decorate this statue? |
57439 | Why does n''t he marry one of those girls like a sensible man? 57439 Why is she dismissed?" |
57439 | Why must the flowers die? 57439 Why no longer?" |
57439 | Why not a bottle? 57439 Why should I not pray God that the rain should moisten his tomb with its abundant dew? |
57439 | Why should he say that? |
57439 | Why should we not have sentiments with so wonderful a draught? |
57439 | Why so? 57439 Why wo n''t you own that my legend is beautiful and sublime, whether true or not? |
57439 | Why, if he loves you, lady, doth he hide His love? 57439 Why? |
57439 | Will Sir Ralph Mohun welcome the son of an old friend? |
57439 | Will he like a stranger''s calling? |
57439 | Will that clime enfold thee With immortal air? 57439 Will they have wine?" |
57439 | Will you be spokesman this time? |
57439 | Will you excuse me? 57439 Will you get out now?" |
57439 | Will you give me a theme? |
57439 | Will you give me an opportunity to explain? |
57439 | Will you go on, sir? 57439 Will you go to a disagreeable place?" |
57439 | Will you not bid me also Godspeed? |
57439 | Will you really go, then, with me? 57439 Will you sit, sir?" |
57439 | Will you stand here, or take that seat Mr. Sinclair is offering you? |
57439 | Will you tell me what she means? 57439 Would you be much displeased, Mr. Granger, if I should be a Catholic?" |
57439 | Yes, it hangs in the red drawing- room, does it not? |
57439 | You are afraid? |
57439 | You are not a nun? |
57439 | You are not favorable to him? |
57439 | You are surprised at this appellation; is it not well- merited? |
57439 | You did not talk to papa about my mother? |
57439 | You do not remember her? |
57439 | You do not think this a foolish curiosity? |
57439 | You have n''t forgotten the old ways-- eh, Mary? |
57439 | You have, of course, discovered some new points that afford fine views? |
57439 | You here? |
57439 | You like these people? 57439 You love me?" |
57439 | You see no harm in my wishing to know something more about them? |
57439 | You think that you will feel at home when you have become better acquainted with them? |
57439 | You wish me to go away? |
57439 | You wished to see me? |
57439 | You would recognize her portrait? |
57439 | You, perhaps, despise the opera? |
57439 | You- leave Vienna? |
57439 | You? |
57439 | Your father? |
57439 | _ Deny it was hers!_ What in the world do you mean, Mr. Heremore? 57439 _ My people, what have I done to thee?_"What evil! |
57439 | ''What kind of people are those you have named?'' |
57439 | ----------{ 72} When? |
57439 | A better name than pride, do you say? |
57439 | A fawning courtier throng? |
57439 | A stick of wood which just now rolled down with a great noise awoke M. Reville, who, after rubbing his eyes, asked his daughter,"Where is Maurice?" |
57439 | Ames?" |
57439 | Amongst his qualities, were not virtue, liberality, and magnificence one part? |
57439 | An old man, touched my blue veil, yesterday, asking,"Queste paese?" |
57439 | And after all, why should not religion have her fairyland, as well as material life? |
57439 | And does he look as if Niagara Falls had disappeared down his throat, and as if he were just chewing up a little trip to the mountains?" |
57439 | And how could she do otherwise, Protestant though she was? |
57439 | And how does the will naturally act, except by a free determination, and in the manner according to which it determines itself? |
57439 | And how is any school compendium of such history to be devised for the use of the Catholic and Protestant child alike?" |
57439 | And how much easier is it for the man who is reduced from affluence to poverty, a widower with three or four motherless children to provide for? |
57439 | And in joyous youth who has not dreamed of that"bower of roses by Bendemeer''s stream,"so sweetly sung by the Irish bard? |
57439 | And in order to have all these things, my pet is willing that I should go away awhile?" |
57439 | And is it not enough to make every Christian shed tears? |
57439 | And may I intensify his shoulder- straps?" |
57439 | And merciless in malice, spare That mask, a face without a soul?_"Ah! |
57439 | And mother, will you tell me Why did my father frown, When to make hay in summer- time I climbed to take it down? |
57439 | And now if I no longer mingle among them, is it not because my cruel infirmity unfits me for their companionship? |
57439 | And now my heavenly love comes like a bride in all her beauty to me-- what mortal after this can I envy? |
57439 | And now, what is the ultimate fate, and what the origin, of the matter of life? |
57439 | And our Saviour replied,"Why do you trample under foot the commandments of God, to keep the commandments of men?" |
57439 | And over his own cell is inscribed,"What is it we mean when we speak of death? |
57439 | And were not prophets and saints; necessary to the Jewish Church, as they are necessary to the Catholic Church? |
57439 | And what did St. Vincent de Paul do? |
57439 | And what is inclination? |
57439 | And when I looked at her, what did I see? |
57439 | And when I read the bull carefully, what do I see on every page and in each line? |
57439 | And where is she, so lately the mistress of all this grandeur? |
57439 | And who can say what the Christian people of Europe would be today, were it not for Lutheranism, Calvinism, and so many other divisions? |
57439 | And who can tell us how much they have retarded the diffusion of the gospel in heathen countries? |
57439 | And who is he that leadeth the flocks of the Lord? |
57439 | And who will deny the social and refining influence of the church? |
57439 | And whose fault is it? |
57439 | And why not? |
57439 | And why should we not be the ones destined to see the days predicted and hailed with joy by Bossuet? |
57439 | And why, brother, have I lived, to drag out so wretched an existence? |
57439 | And will he ever be? |
57439 | And will you be baptized?" |
57439 | And woman? |
57439 | And you, Eastern churches, whether you are united or not, have you not also your dangers? |
57439 | And, finally, was the original version written in glagolitic or cyrillic characters? |
57439 | Are divisions necessary? |
57439 | Are not all political changes and social transformations providential facts? |
57439 | Are our children to learn this lesson at the schools? |
57439 | Are they to exist like the women of the sultan, shut up in a harem? |
57439 | Are they to know the trials of life, and not its joys? |
57439 | Are we going home to dinner? |
57439 | Are we never to see you again?" |
57439 | Are we really advanced by it, or made the happier? |
57439 | Are we yet in the time of the metaphysical subtleties and cavils of the Lower Empire? |
57439 | Are you a good sailor?" |
57439 | Are you harder? |
57439 | Are you satisfied with the development, and the principles that made it possible?" |
57439 | Are you willing?" |
57439 | As if one should say,"What has the soul to do with the soul?" |
57439 | As regards the first, why should God choose the best? |
57439 | As they passed through the yard, Frank observed the long row of stalls, and said,"You must have considerable stock?" |
57439 | Ask you who constitute political society? |
57439 | Aura, will you go look in that Audubon, and see how this creature is put together? |
57439 | Be it so, what advance in knowledge, since we are ignorant of what protein is? |
57439 | Besides--""Besides-- well, what besides?" |
57439 | But animals have sensibility and intelligence; have they immaterial souls? |
57439 | But are n''t you afraid of being stopped on the way? |
57439 | But are not the boundaries of civilization to be extended, may be asked? |
57439 | But can not I go now, by myself?" |
57439 | But could I have dreamed that Maurice Sinclair would be the one to reprove my weakness at such a time?". |
57439 | But even were it otherwise, what then? |
57439 | But for those who reject the pope and that certitude of conviction which he offers, what solid ground is there on which to stand secure?" |
57439 | But how? |
57439 | But if Angela yet realizes this ideal? |
57439 | But is creation of finite substances possible? |
57439 | But is it true that Christ''s doctrine can not be realized? |
57439 | But is not everything which exists an incomprehensible manifestation of the supernatural? |
57439 | But is this certain? |
57439 | But let us not allow an ambiguous expression to become the pretext for our opponent''s attacks; how then does the church attempt to reform society? |
57439 | But may it not be possible to make others, and even elsewhere than among the stars? |
57439 | But now that I have rendered every tribute to M. Claudius Saurrier that his special science can demand, may I not be equally frank with him? |
57439 | But the Catholic Church does hold property, and she will continue to hold it to the end of the chapter, and''What do you propose to do about it?'' |
57439 | But then God acts outside himself without any reason? |
57439 | But then what becomes of the bishop''s argument? |
57439 | But then what will become of society? |
57439 | But to whom shall I offer winter clothing? |
57439 | But was his condition in his primitive state that of the lowest form of barbarism? |
57439 | But what can we preachers do when the ladies decide to canonize a man? |
57439 | But what do I say? |
57439 | But what gathering can present such a collection of the intelligent and the independent, such diversity in such unity? |
57439 | But what in the world are you going there now for? |
57439 | But what is the moral exhibit? |
57439 | But what is to be done for the boys? |
57439 | But what voice strikes my ear? |
57439 | But where are you going, dear? |
57439 | But where is my wife? |
57439 | But who sends them? |
57439 | But why do I entertain you with such trivialities? |
57439 | But why does he command such and such things, or prescribe such and such duties? |
57439 | But why, supposing the internal or subjective authority to be all that is here alleged, is the pope an impossibility or an insult? |
57439 | But will our brethren of the East and West respond to this thought, this wish? |
57439 | But will what is still undetermined in it enable it to be accommodated to the numerous facts already observed, and hereafter to be so? |
57439 | But you ask me whose is this voice preaching a spiritual kingdom to priests, a divine royalty to kings and nations? |
57439 | But you grieve at the choice which has kept you the slave of an old man''s caprice?" |
57439 | But, if we consider the women of our day, we might well ask, for what are they here?" |
57439 | But, is it true that the Catholic people have no substantial claim as tax- payers? |
57439 | By whom were they brought? |
57439 | By whom?" |
57439 | Can Catholicism do what Protestantism did on Sunday week? |
57439 | Can I do anything for you?" |
57439 | Can a falsehood be, in the nature of things, any medium at all? |
57439 | Can he choose any of them? |
57439 | Can it therefore be said that chemical analysis teaches nothing about the chemical composition of calc- spar? |
57439 | Can not you understand, Mr. Lewis, that there are times when trivial objections and opposition may be very irritating? |
57439 | Can sensation draw anything out of a word but a material sound? |
57439 | Can the growth and the building up of"a new country"compensate for it? |
57439 | Can the relation of necessary succession be confounded with the relation of causality? |
57439 | Can there be any good gained in keeping the robe of Christ torn asunder? |
57439 | Can there be any personal considerations, any human motives whatsoever, superior to these great interests and these grave obligations? |
57439 | Can there be on earth a man more unhappy than I? |
57439 | Can we give him another?" |
57439 | Can you by a chemical process reconvert them into protoplasm? |
57439 | Can you expect to find this wife, this mother among those given to fashions-- among women filled with modern notions?" |
57439 | Can you find it in your heart to separate us? |
57439 | Can you show me to my room at once? |
57439 | Canst quench these passions evermore the stronger? |
57439 | Charity, so- called, has increased; has virtue increased?" |
57439 | Charles,"raising her voice,"does your substitute look as if he had swallowed a new black silk dress with little ruffles all over it?" |
57439 | Could I ask him to tell me the truth? |
57439 | Could anything be more hurtful or injurious to the human spirit? |
57439 | Could it be that he was ill? |
57439 | Could she disappoint his expectation? |
57439 | Could the friend who still lived on in her heart forget her in that heaven to which her love had led him? |
57439 | Did he ever allow any one to speak against you in his presence? |
57439 | Did he ever prefer any one else before you? |
57439 | Did he recognize it?" |
57439 | Did he?" |
57439 | Did not the great Haydn-- bless him for it!--undertake a noble symphony expressly with reference to the kettle- drum? |
57439 | Did papa see it? |
57439 | Do not ethics depend on dogma? |
57439 | Do not facts tell you plainly that the living element of complete Christianity is wanting in you? |
57439 | Do not these sage reflections disclose the true plan for renewing ecclesiastical studies? |
57439 | Do these governments want to form national churches? |
57439 | Do these men who are so bitter against him, and gnash their teeth at him, know what they do? |
57439 | Do they come around with''_ How are you, Brandon?_''and invitations to_ their_ dinners? |
57439 | Do they come around with''_ How are you, Brandon?_''and invitations to_ their_ dinners? |
57439 | Do they listen to us when they are gone? |
57439 | Do we not wish to work for this kingdom? |
57439 | Do you answer that it will be without money, without dwelling, without power? |
57439 | Do you imagine that you discover different opinions in the church, and make this an obstacle? |
57439 | Do you intend to become openly a Catholic, and leave your own church for that?" |
57439 | Do you know much about your own mother? |
57439 | Do you know that Baron Linden is engaged?" |
57439 | Do you look forward to marriage? |
57439 | Do you remember reading, in the_ Chronicles_ of Sir John Froissart, of the Armagnacs, so long at enmity with the house of Foix? |
57439 | Do you see that fine building there next to the road? |
57439 | Do you see? |
57439 | Do you think there is any impropriety in my going? |
57439 | Do you think your father would listen to the idea?" |
57439 | Do you understand me? |
57439 | Do you want to take wine with a drunkard? |
57439 | Do you wish me to take his place, and do anything to amuse you?" |
57439 | Doctor Hamilton?" |
57439 | Does he succeed? |
57439 | Does it depend upon the church to destroy every human vice? |
57439 | Does n''t he keep his promises? |
57439 | Does not everything happen by the will or permission of God? |
57439 | Does one last thread hold captive this celestial bird? |
57439 | Does papa know you are here, this morning?" |
57439 | Does she regret anything which she has renounced for her God? |
57439 | Does that surprise you? |
57439 | Does the Holy See decide that we can do more, or go further? |
57439 | Does the metaphysical conception of cause remain indistinct from the conditions of existence? |
57439 | Does the spirituality of the soul, as provable by reason, mean any thing more? |
57439 | Does this inconsiderate writer see to what a dilemma he has reduced himself? |
57439 | Does this priest suppose that our people will swallow such stuff as was offered them at the Music Hall? |
57439 | Does this suit you?" |
57439 | Dream, say they, for poet''s eye? |
57439 | Duty is debt, is an obligation; but whence the debt? |
57439 | England, who has made thee, and why wert thou once called the isle of saints? |
57439 | Erin machree, must our children be exiled all over the earth? |
57439 | Every question concerning the church is reduced finally to this question,_ Where is unity?_]{ 25} Oh! |
57439 | Fair realms by cruel triumphs we d Unto his rightful land? |
57439 | For what antiquated or chimerical fears? |
57439 | For what are all the gifts of earth, The charms of form and face, If the immortal soul hath lost Its bright, baptismal grace? |
57439 | For what are they here? |
57439 | For what end? |
57439 | Francis?'' |
57439 | From Fields, Osgood& Co., Boston: The Danish Islands: Are we bound in honor to pay for them? |
57439 | God is spirit, and the angels are spirits; are the angels therefore identical in substance with God? |
57439 | Granger?" |
57439 | Had it come to this? |
57439 | Had she not constantly said to herself, It is too bright to last? |
57439 | Has Edinburgh so many public schools for the instruction of those classes? |
57439 | Has Schenck placed them there too?" |
57439 | Has not my life been theirs? |
57439 | Has not such been the teaching of our holy church? |
57439 | Have I ever given you reason to be?" |
57439 | Have I lived till now in a false dream?" |
57439 | Have I not struggled with temptation, trial, and suffering from my boyhood till now, for their sakes? |
57439 | Have I not troubles enough now without your coming to bring up the hateful past? |
57439 | Have not these three centuries taught you a new and solemn lesson? |
57439 | Have these, thy bounties, drawn to thee man''s race That stood so far aloof? |
57439 | Have they not rather His soul subjected? |
57439 | Have we received more than our proportion? |
57439 | Have you any regrets for the past, my darling?" |
57439 | Have you brought him along with you?" |
57439 | Have you meditated upon them sufficiently, and upon many others which are not less decisive? |
57439 | Have you promised to marry him?" |
57439 | Have you time?" |
57439 | He alone will have the glory, but will man have the merit of it? |
57439 | He put his hand into the purse and drew it out empty; put it in again; but what was there to take out? |
57439 | He replied immediately:"Dear madam, shall I tell you why? |
57439 | He replied in a half- whisper,"And you, Mdlle., have you no shame?" |
57439 | He replied, coolly enough, as he hung up his hat and sat down, wiping his face with his handkerchief:"Heremore? |
57439 | He sat stiff and silent until the unlucky girl ventured to ask,"M. de Ravignan, have you no appetite?" |
57439 | He should be called after something boreal, Does not he make you shiver? |
57439 | Here we and the journalist are at odds; we can not both be right: who shall decide between us? |
57439 | Heremore?" |
57439 | Heremore?" |
57439 | How about this out of civilization place, then?" |
57439 | How am I to go with you? |
57439 | How can any thinking Protestant, who knows this, not be perplexed and uncertain as to what he should believe? |
57439 | How can nations be menaced or betrayed by men who represent every nation of the civilized globe? |
57439 | How can one be a favorite of fortune and a prey to spleen without going to visit these places, which exhale a sovereign balm? |
57439 | How can this have come about? |
57439 | How can you who have learned the watchwords of"Progress,"and"Go- ahead,"expect hasty"progress"at Rome, so slow in her motions? |
57439 | How could she go on with this deception, as innocent as any deception can be, and yet how break down his joy in its very midst? |
57439 | How could she send him from her? |
57439 | How could the pope have maintained order and discipline in the church, and protected the interests of religion? |
57439 | How could you, uncle?" |
57439 | How did you send it?" |
57439 | How does Dr. Browne trace_ his_ succession in the office of bishop from the apostles? |
57439 | How does Mr. Bacon meet it? |
57439 | How is it that all the human races-- Iranic, Semitic, Gallic, or Black-- speak, and only men speak? |
57439 | How is it that although there is a common element in all languages, yet such diversity exists among certain groups? |
57439 | How is this result to be explained? |
57439 | How long is it to last? |
57439 | How many may have to follow in his martyr footsteps? |
57439 | How much more, then, will human beings, who are more subject to influences, suffer by a corresponding change? |
57439 | How must it, then, be with those who are a part of the household and the inheritance of human affections? |
57439 | How then conclude that their combination produces the matter of life, or gives rise to the living organism? |
57439 | How was this? |
57439 | How will that read to his congregation, I wonder?" |
57439 | How, then, pretend to deny that barbarians and savages can become civilized by their own spontaneous efforts and natural forces alone? |
57439 | How,''midst grief and fear, Canst thou thus disclose That fervid hue of love which to thy heart- leaf glows? |
57439 | I and my pet are going to see the heavens open, and the Lord descend; are we not, Dorothea, gift of God?" |
57439 | I ask myself every day, Why then, I? |
57439 | I ask, Are you in favor of restricted or unrestricted enjoyment?" |
57439 | I care for you, you think? |
57439 | I firmly believe''? |
57439 | I have indeed a faithful heart, but a woefully skeptical head; shall we go now?" |
57439 | I said to myself, To what purpose all this? |
57439 | I think he would be pleased, do n''t you, Aura?" |
57439 | I want--""Well, what_ do_ you want?" |
57439 | I wish to read these books; what enrages him with innocent paper?" |
57439 | If God made us as second causes capable of creating language, why can we not do it now, and master it without a long and painful study? |
57439 | If a Catholic kneels before a saint to ask his prayers, what is there offensive in that? |
57439 | If all that constituted the living subject is present in the dead body, why is the body dead, or why has it ceased to perform its vital functions? |
57439 | If he found homes for the homeless and food for the hungry? |
57439 | If in every time the church of Christ has had to struggle, is she not now more than ever before resisted and fought against? |
57439 | If it is the basis of life, why is the organism no longer living? |
57439 | If it were a natural sentiment or emotion, why was it to be found among Christians alone? |
57439 | If just those few words and that one smile did so much for me, what is there your influence may not do?" |
57439 | If past centuries have committed faults, do you wish to make them eternal? |
57439 | If the wolf devoured the lamb, was it not the lamb''s fault? |
57439 | If there is no heaven, if gold and pleasure are the only aspirations, why not enjoy them? |
57439 | If you preach resignation to the poor without giving them hope, will not hope arise without resignation? |
57439 | If you should be taken ill now, what would become of you?" |
57439 | If you were changed, why come to see me? |
57439 | In London? |
57439 | In a certain sense, what matters even religion, if we would love a man? |
57439 | In all London is there no place where lodging and fire and food are provided for the decent poor? |
57439 | In all those happy months, had she not drunk every sweet moment with eager lips that had felt, and must again feel, the bitterness of thirst? |
57439 | In such a state of affairs, what ought a priest or Christian to do who reserves to himself the right of not calling evil things good? |
57439 | In the Catholic Church? |
57439 | In the Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493( Astor Library copy) Joan is put down as Joannes Septimus, and the page ornamented(?) |
57439 | In the second place, what would be the cosmos without unity but a numberless and confused assemblage of beings? |
57439 | In this case, supposing the story true, who was elected pope? |
57439 | In this labor, can reason ask the aid of revelation? |
57439 | In this letter we recognize his playful, working humor-- and does he not term these periods of creative activity his wedding time? |
57439 | Indeed, what Spanish town has not its tale of heroism and brave defence during the French invasion of 1809- 11? |
57439 | Into what is matter resolvable in the last analysis? |
57439 | Is a criminal to be executed? |
57439 | Is creation of finite substances possible? |
57439 | Is he bound to choose the best? |
57439 | Is it Jesus Christ? |
57439 | Is it a wonder then that the city pleased her daily better, and imperceptibly gained a home- like power over her? |
57439 | Is it built up of ordinary matter, and again resolved into ordinary matter when its work is done? |
57439 | Is it enduring? |
57439 | Is it from St. Paul? |
57439 | Is it from St. Peter? |
57439 | Is it from any other apostle? |
57439 | Is it not the chafing of the unchained spirit that pants to be free, and to wander through God''s limitless universe? |
57439 | Is it not true in a deeper and other sense, that whom the gods love die young? |
57439 | Is it only a wicked pride, I wonder, that rises up in revolt when I remember it? |
57439 | Is it possible you have never heard of it? |
57439 | Is not Christianity with you surrounded by determined enemies-- at your right, at your left, on every side? |
57439 | Is not his immeasurable influence over the human race divine? |
57439 | Is not our century especially vain of its investigations in matter? |
57439 | Is not the aspiration of the age after physical comfort? |
57439 | Is not the free- will of man an incomprehensible mystery? |
57439 | Is not the spirit of revolution-- and, unfortunately, it is an impious one-- rising against her on every side? |
57439 | Is not this, I ask you, a dreadful misfortune for the poor infidels? |
57439 | Is not your spiritual liberty unceasingly threatened? |
57439 | Is pharisaism hypocrisy? |
57439 | Is that dress quite plain?" |
57439 | Is that nothing?" |
57439 | Is the revelation of God less credible because confirmed by two witnesses, each worthy of credit? |
57439 | Is the savage the primitive man, or the degenerate man? |
57439 | Is there a connectedness in all this? |
57439 | Is there no such thing as absolute truth? |
57439 | Is there one?" |
57439 | Is this a noble and exalted way of thinking? |
57439 | Is this not stingingly true? |
57439 | Is this really my mamma? |
57439 | Is this thy triumph, vanity? |
57439 | It begins:"That rake up near the rafters, Why leave it there so long? |
57439 | Lewis?" |
57439 | Lewis?" |
57439 | Looking calmly, she forgave herself much, for had not God forgiven her? |
57439 | Margaret heard him repeating lowly,"''Canst thou send lightnings, and will they go, and will they return and say to thee, Here we are?''" |
57439 | May I trouble you for your tickets?" |
57439 | Morning, was it? |
57439 | Mr. Lewis, can you shut your mouth sufficiently to give an opinion?" |
57439 | Must I apply the thumbscrew?" |
57439 | Must all women, then, be Ida Schagbeins?" |
57439 | Must the Irish yield to the beasts of the field? |
57439 | My brave boy, what is the matter with you?" |
57439 | My brother-- would he come home with me? |
57439 | Nay, have we received anything like our proportion? |
57439 | Nay, what is body? |
57439 | Not a response to the question, for the most part an idle question, How do we know, or how do we know that we know? |
57439 | Not above a mile ahead, is it?" |
57439 | Now as to the smaller cities of Austria, which, according to Seymour, beat the world for corruption, what is to be said? |
57439 | Now, Master Yunker,"turning to the gentleman on his right hand,"what say you?" |
57439 | Now, is it not always as unwise as it is unjust to make a minority taste the bitterness of oppression? |
57439 | Now, what is this superhuman intelligence and force revealed by these spirit- phenomena? |
57439 | Of course I thought of dishonesty; what else could have driven him from a situation where he was so honored and trusted? |
57439 | Of her past without remorse; of her future without terror? |
57439 | On the 27th of December, 1844, she thus writes again to the same friend:"Shall I attempt to depict to you the experience of my inner life? |
57439 | Once more, then, why? |
57439 | One day Camille spoke of Sister Aloyse, and added,{ 494}"Was she not related to us, father?" |
57439 | Only once, when he opened his eyes, she said,"You wish Dora to be a Catholic?" |
57439 | Or is the word only the means of expressing our thoughts, or the essential form of them, the indispensable condition necessary to our having them? |
57439 | Or minstrels''ringing lays, to pour The flatteries of song? |
57439 | Or, rather, why will not the state do us the justice to reimburse the actual expenses which we make in doing it? |
57439 | Our arrangements will be as formerly-- not so, my dear friend?" |
57439 | Over to the hospital? |
57439 | Permit me to ask if, in that case, I am to own a relation in you? |
57439 | Permit me to ask what you mean to do about it?" |
57439 | Rich trappings? |
57439 | Russia, where wouldst thou now be, were it not for my Cyril and my Methodius? |
57439 | Second question: Is there a supreme act of intelligence, in which reside all possible finite substances in their objective and intelligible state? |
57439 | Shall I begin? |
57439 | Shall I deepen this background a little to throw the figure out? |
57439 | Shall we ever see its return?" |
57439 | Shall we excuse him on the plea of ignorance? |
57439 | Shall we hope and pray always in vain? |
57439 | Shall we live to see the victory? |
57439 | Shall we not behold thee Bright and deathless there? |
57439 | Shall we not, Rose?" |
57439 | Shall you start up from sleep to- night fancying that a great black Jesuit has come to carry you off?" |
57439 | She died in great poverty, did she not?" |
57439 | She hesitated, but finally said,"You have never heard any one of your family speak of me?" |
57439 | Should he, the Gospel watchman, sleep while the foe was awake and at work? |
57439 | Should not there be a better name? |
57439 | Since the faculty must be the same in all men, why do not all men speak one and the same dialect? |
57439 | So far everything is evident; but a very difficult question here arises: What can the end of the exterior action be? |
57439 | So humble is he that his heart Exults not in some sense of new desert With all thy grace and goodness at his side? |
57439 | Some do not approve of indiscriminate charity; but if God were to bestow his bounties only on the deserving, where should we all be? |
57439 | Southard?" |
57439 | Southard?" |
57439 | Such was progress to the prophets; such the future universal Sion they hailed in the future? |
57439 | Suppose it proved, should we not then have an infallible authority for faith other than that which is inside the soul? |
57439 | Take, instead of matter, an organic body; who can tell us what it is? |
57439 | That''s philosophy, is n''t it? |
57439 | The Catholic has the truth to start from, and why should he not surpass all others? |
57439 | The album contains places for photographs, and by the side of each a series of forty questions, such as"What is your favorite book? |
57439 | The chromosphere is, as we know, the scene of very rapid movements; and may not these be visible by the displacement of the spectral lines? |
57439 | The day of those powerful, guileful men was passed, surely; and yet, what if, in the strange vicissitudes of life, they should revive again? |
57439 | The dreaded question_ How old are you?_ could be answered in all sincerity,_ I do not know_. |
57439 | The fact is, he has the greatest respect for our church-- may I say_ militant_?" |
57439 | The first question naturally asked is, Whence comes this enormous flood of ballads? |
57439 | The gentlemen passengers all come to ask,"Will the ladies have fruit?" |
57439 | The human soul is spiritual; is there no difference in substance between human souls and angels? |
57439 | The only question is-- Could Papias have known for certain whether St. Peter was at Rome or not? |
57439 | The pharisees said to Jesus Christ,"Why do thy disciples transgress the traditions of the ancients? |
57439 | The poor gardener was disconsolate, but what could be done? |
57439 | The prodigious changes which took place in the world during the fourth period of her life, what heart would not have been profoundly stirred by them? |
57439 | The question is, whether you consider it praiseworthy to erect monuments to deserving and exalted genius?" |
57439 | The writer admits the difficulty, and asks:"Are we to understand, then, that Christ is divided? |
57439 | Then a break, and an exclamation of dismay,"What has become of my wings?" |
57439 | Then the governor asked her,"Whom meanest thou?" |
57439 | Then what does the analysis show of the nature of your physical basis of life? |
57439 | There are those old nabobs who were hand and glove with me, mighty glad of a dinner with me, and where are they now? |
57439 | These are the gigantic evils of the day with which we now have to battle, and the important question of the hour is, How are they to be met? |
57439 | These results must undoubtedly be considered as strange; but what, after all, do we know of the connection of the elements of matter? |
57439 | These vapors produce the dark lines; but where are they? |
57439 | They have humanity, natural benevolence, learning, ability, and ample wealth-- why do they not succeed? |
57439 | This may be so; but when I enquire, Whence this to me? |
57439 | Thus, to the question,"Why did God make you?" |
57439 | To return to the chromosphere: of what gases is it formed? |
57439 | To whom?" |
57439 | True philosophy joined with theology is the response to the question, What is, or exists? |
57439 | Was ever froward wind That could be so unkind, Or wave so proud? |
57439 | Was everything possessed to torment her? |
57439 | Was he not very angry? |
57439 | Was it new conquests? |
57439 | Was it not better to tell him the real truth at once? |
57439 | Was it of herself she thought? |
57439 | Was my brother a murderer? |
57439 | Was my brother an object of pity, even to her? |
57439 | Was n''t I cruel to put her away? |
57439 | Was n''t the lady glad then?" |
57439 | Was the translation made from the Latin, the Greek, or the Hebrew? |
57439 | We come now to the last question: What is the whole plan of the exterior action of God? |
57439 | We do not ask why the duty obliges, for the assertion of an act as duty is its assertion as obligatory; but why does the right oblige? |
57439 | We go on to this question-- since Mr. De Vere did not aim to please us all, what was his aim? |
57439 | We heard a waggish minister say of one of them,"Call you this the Lord''s house? |
57439 | We pass to the next question: What is the end of the exterior action of God? |
57439 | We shall not dwell on such nonsense: we merely inquire, must I ask its advice in reference to my private actions? |
57439 | We wonder if Thomas Hood was much better than other people? |
57439 | We would not have their generous instincts repressed, their quick sensibilities blunted? |
57439 | Well, Mary, are you not my daughter? |
57439 | Well, suppose it is; how can we interrogate it? |
57439 | What advantage is it to a people to be clothed in costly stuffs when they are enervated, demoralized, and perishing? |
57439 | What am I bound to do, or to avoid? |
57439 | What am I but a part outworn Of earth''s great whole that lifts more high A tempest- freshened brow each morn To meet pure beams and azure sky? |
57439 | What are ideas? |
57439 | What are our feelings connected with our return to the earth but a confirmation of this doctrine? |
57439 | What are our relations to those principles and causes? |
57439 | What are the principles and causes of things? |
57439 | What are those elements? |
57439 | What are we to do if not that? |
57439 | What becomes of the children who ought to be born? |
57439 | What bishop, what true Christian, will meditate upon these things, and then say,"No, division is a good; union would be an evil"? |
57439 | What brainless thing can vanquish thought? |
57439 | What can you conclude? |
57439 | What class of manuscripts were used by these apostles? |
57439 | What constitutes marriage now, according to the laws of the land? |
57439 | What could it mean? |
57439 | What could you do with''_ Dies irae, dies illa_,''without the kettle- drum? |
57439 | What day have I forgotten to think of my tender wife-- what night have I not wept till morning? |
57439 | What did Gregory do, but his best to enforce the law which the emperors had suffered to fall into desuetude? |
57439 | What did he want to kill my friendship so for? |
57439 | What do the facts here prove? |
57439 | What does chill me so?" |
57439 | What does he establish, then, but what Catholics have always told him, that there is no alternative but pope or no infallibility? |
57439 | What does it mean? |
57439 | What follows from this? |
57439 | What have I not to lose? |
57439 | What have rigorous truths to do with good sentiments? |
57439 | What have you in part with this mortal frame-- you who are about to be clothed with glorious immortality?" |
57439 | What heartless, leave the heart a clod? |
57439 | What hour is it?" |
57439 | What infallibility is here to oppose to the infallibility of the church? |
57439 | What is cause? |
57439 | What is conscience? |
57439 | What is matter? |
57439 | What is now left of that school of sacred art, once blossoming out with such inspiriting vigor? |
57439 | What is she thinking of? |
57439 | What is substance? |
57439 | What is that?" |
57439 | What is the end of the exterior action of God? |
57439 | What is the law under which we are placed? |
57439 | What is the meaning of those impressions that are often false, but sometimes true, and that come to us so suddenly, uninvited and unexpected?" |
57439 | What is the moral sense, but an intimate apprehension of the relation of the voluntary acts of an intelligent and free agent to a final cause? |
57439 | What is the reason that we must frequently make use of a variety of words to express one idea? |
57439 | What is the whole plan of the exterior action of God? |
57439 | What is this but saying that infallibility is both impossible and unnecessary? |
57439 | What is this cosmos? |
57439 | What is this primary motion? |
57439 | What kind of writings are these, doctor?" |
57439 | What makes her worthy of veneration? |
57439 | What makes the difference now? |
57439 | What marvel, then, that, instead of encouragement, nothing but censures awaited him? |
57439 | What matters condition? |
57439 | What matters country? |
57439 | What means, then, have we, or can we have, of identifying the individuals personated by the pretended spirits? |
57439 | What occupies their minds? |
57439 | What right then has any one to say that it does? |
57439 | What song of seraphim shall tell My joy to- day, my blissful queen? |
57439 | What then do timid Catholics and distrustful politicians fear? |
57439 | What then do you fear? |
57439 | What then does it tell us? |
57439 | What vitalizes it and gives it the power of assimilating the protoplasm as its food, without which the organism dies and disappears? |
57439 | What was it that Beethoven wrote to his friend? |
57439 | What was she saying? |
57439 | What will not people do through ambition? |
57439 | What will the council do? |
57439 | What will you do when there are tremblings in regard to the truth like the trembling of the earth? |
57439 | What wonder if at last it proved that pain was stronger than she? |
57439 | What would he have us do? |
57439 | What would he say if he knew in what way she was trying? |
57439 | What would support us poor people, what would keep us from despair, if religion did not?" |
57439 | What, indeed, has he been laboring to prove through his whole discourse, but that the phenomena of life are the product of ordinary matter? |
57439 | What, replied the emperor, am I to answer fathers and mothers when they ask their sons of me? |
57439 | What, then, are mysteries but our ignorance, and the insufficiency of our reason? |
57439 | What, then, is Christ, as St. Paul asked of the dissidents of the first century, divided? |
57439 | What? |
57439 | When Mary came to the part which said,"_ Will you love your sister always, let what may be her fate? |
57439 | When chemically resolved into these four elements, is it protoplasm still? |
57439 | When do you start?" |
57439 | When shall peace and happiness blossom among us? |
57439 | When so many live merely for the body, why should not some live for the imagination and fancy? |
57439 | When we can not precede your most adventurous travellers, we tread eagerly in their footsteps; and why? |
57439 | When will dandelions blow, And meadow- sweet, And cowslips, dipping their cool feet In little rills Gushing from the mossy hills? |
57439 | When will it be granted to the bishops to found a grand Catholic university, which will complete all the good accomplished by these institutions? |
57439 | Whence came, let me ask, this power of hers and these excessive riches, except from the enchantment into which she threw all the world? |
57439 | Whence then the obligation? |
57439 | Whence this difference between the pagan and the Christian, we might say, between the Catholic and non- Catholic? |
57439 | Whence this disgusting sight? |
57439 | Where are men deified? |
57439 | Where are those who can disengage themselves from matter to arrive at an idea? |
57439 | Where are those who know that the beauty of the body is the shadow of the beauty of the soul? |
57439 | Where are we? |
57439 | Where but with Him, the centre of all being, could we look for those who are lost to us on earth? |
57439 | Where can it be found? |
57439 | Where can one better be than in the bosom of his family? |
57439 | Where did our pious philosopher, of all men, learn to discourse thus sagely and plainly of the uncertainty of all things amorous? |
57439 | Where did you get it?" |
57439 | Where is Miss Hamilton?" |
57439 | Where is it? |
57439 | Where is its decision? |
57439 | Where is the mover? |
57439 | Where is your gratitude, girl, toward the man who never had any but a kind word and thought for you? |
57439 | Where its organ? |
57439 | Where now are the once renowned nations of antiquity whose ships ploughed every sea, and whose armies made the earth tremble with their tread? |
57439 | Where to go? |
57439 | Where was the help that religion was to give her? |
57439 | Where was the joyful hymn of praise? |
57439 | Where was the prayer of thanksgiving that he had been brought safely back to his people, after such an absence, and through so many dangers? |
57439 | Where was the smiling glance that might, surely, have made one swift scrutiny of their familiar faces, unseen so long? |
57439 | Where will we find on earth a more perfect expression, a more certain guarantee of wisdom, of wisdom even as men understand it? |
57439 | Which is his room?" |
57439 | Which is one to believe? |
57439 | Which of the Slavonian dialects was the vehicle of the translation? |
57439 | Which of us has the true version of the words of the apostle? |
57439 | Which of us is right? |
57439 | While we thus differ, supposing us equally able, learned, and honest, how can either find his cravings for certainty satisfied? |
57439 | Whither is this invisible power impelling us? |
57439 | Who are the poets who produce them on every imaginable subject, even the most verse- defying public meeting, or in praise of humblest of politicians? |
57439 | Who are these bishops? |
57439 | Who but He who had set the tangles of this great labyrinth could lead the way out of it? |
57439 | Who but He whose hand had strung the chords of every human heart could ease their straining, and bring back harmony to discord? |
57439 | Who can answer? |
57439 | Who can tell? |
57439 | Who could write a political history of Christendom for the last three hundred years and omit all mention of Luther and the pope? |
57439 | Who does not admit this? |
57439 | Who expelled pagan corruption from the world, who civilized barbarians by converting them? |
57439 | Who has not recognized and been deeply touched by the goodness of the pontiff? |
57439 | Who is not moved before this cradle of the ancient faith, from whence the light has come to us? |
57439 | Who is that?" |
57439 | Who knows how much Dick owes to her pious prayers?" |
57439 | Who knows not the power that perfumes have over the memory? |
57439 | Who lives there?" |
57439 | Who mourns, though youth and strength go by? |
57439 | Who of the dissenting sects has not admired their zeal, charity, and patience in the hospitals, and may not say,"the finger of God is here"? |
57439 | Who prevents them? |
57439 | Who speaks in this way? |
57439 | Who will censure him, since our Holy Father, in a brief of September 20th, 1867, approves his labor? |
57439 | Who will venture to take this formidable responsibility upon himself? |
57439 | Whom have we been working for to- day but the gentlemen, pray?" |
57439 | Why am I bound to do one thing rather than another? |
57439 | Why are the coquettish, vitiated, hollow inclinations of a great part of the female sex so distasteful to you? |
57439 | Why did he not go back to Protestantism? |
57439 | Why did not you tell me that you saw him Monday?" |
57439 | Why do I find you in such a bad humor, as if you had a hole in your skin, or the drums were broken-- out with it? |
57439 | Why do not your coquettes strive for this approval? |
57439 | Why do you avoid the resorts of refined pleasures? |
57439 | Why do you object to such a council when you entitle yourselves, with such proud confidence, the men of progress and the heralds of the future? |
57439 | Why does he not come home? |
57439 | Why have I got to go?'' |
57439 | Why have I not succumbed ere now? |
57439 | Why have you preserved fresh your youthful vigor, and not dissipated it at the market of sensual pleasures? |
57439 | Why is your mode of life so often a reproach to your dissolute friends? |
57439 | Why just to myself has this grace been vouchsafed, in preference to others so much worthier of it? |
57439 | Why may there not be two witnesses, the one internal, the other external? |
57439 | Why not be married at Christmas, and start so as to reach Rome before Easter? |
57439 | Why not? |
57439 | Why should it? |
57439 | Why should n''t you grieve over the absence of your friend? |
57439 | Why should not error have the same rights as truth? |
57439 | Why should she? |
57439 | Why then is he a villain for denying a moral code that is founded on revelation? |
57439 | Why these inequalities? |
57439 | Why this ceremony? |
57439 | Why tire ourselves with the science of ultimate reasons? |
57439 | Why will not the state permit us to do it? |
57439 | Why will people so misuse the sunbeams? |
57439 | Why, also, do the dark rays, preceding the red and following the violet, fail to act on the retina? |
57439 | Why, then, this outcry against Gregory VII.? |
57439 | Why, then, try to restrict religion to the spiritual, to prevent the erection of temples which would please the senses of that double being-- man? |
57439 | Why, then, was either necessary to the life and activity of the other? |
57439 | Will a false medium be as effectual in relation to the end as a true medium? |
57439 | Will it be nations who are disturbed by the council? |
57439 | Will it make the drunken husband temperate, the lazy and idle industrious and diligent? |
57439 | Will it prevent the ups and downs of life, the fall from affluence to poverty, keep death out of the house, and prevent widowhood and orphanage? |
57439 | Will not this be the object of the approaching Council? |
57439 | Will such a golden age ever come?" |
57439 | Will such a kingdom ever be, I wonder? |
57439 | Will the bishops from the East unite with the bishops of France, and so may other European countries, in sounding the praises of despotism? |
57439 | Will the bishops of America join those from Belgium and Holland in a conspiracy against liberty? |
57439 | Will the bishops of Poland meet the bishops of Ireland to plan the ruin of nations and the oppression of a fatherland? |
57439 | Will the husband like to see his wife enter the lists against him, and triumph over him? |
57439 | Will the work of returning be as difficult as many think it? |
57439 | Will they evermore think of you,_ astore_, as the land that gave them birth? |
57439 | Will they go back to Puritanism? |
57439 | Will this day never come? |
57439 | Will you be so good as to tell Aurelia that I wish to see her in the library?" |
57439 | Will you give me a letter to some one who will get me permission? |
57439 | Will you really be my brother-- all wearied, sick, and worn- out as I am? |
57439 | Wilt thou accept it? |
57439 | With one exception, we might, then, concede all the magazine alleges, and ask, What then? |
57439 | Without that, temporal prosperity is a curse, and not a blessing; for what will it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
57439 | Would Liutprand have missed such a scandal?" |
57439 | Would Photius have spared such a reproach? |
57439 | Would an activity anterior to existence have ever created itself imperfect and subject to evil? |
57439 | Would he make of New England another Ireland or Spain, another infidel France or Italy? |
57439 | Would n''t you rather we should look up when we want you, though it were seldom, than look down, though it were often?" |
57439 | Would not Angela make an amiable, modest, dutiful wife and devoted mother? |
57439 | Would they not, at times, give worlds to be again that little child at its mother''s knee? |
57439 | You are contented?" |
57439 | You are willing, Louis, to come and live with this gentleman?" |
57439 | You came up by the boat, I presume?" |
57439 | You do not approve my present undertaking?" |
57439 | You love your father, do n''t you?" |
57439 | You will be good, and take my part, wo n''t you? |
57439 | You will not drive me away?" |
57439 | You would never ask them to help you, I know; but if you could bring yourself to that, would you not feel a bitter difference? |
57439 | Your baggage should be here by this time, should it not? |
57439 | Your hair-- are those waves natural?" |
57439 | [ Footnote 10] And why should they be deaf to this appeal? |
57439 | [ Footnote 14] But, On your Side, will you refuse to take a single step toward us, and allow this most favorable opportunity to escape? |
57439 | [ Footnote 31] Why did not Mr. Seymour cite Stockholm, which is notorious? |
57439 | [ Footnote 62] La Bruyère says,"Do our_ esprits forts_ know that they are called thus in irony?" |
57439 | [ Footnote 72] Is this a mystery? |
57439 | [ sic] And Napoleon says,"Do you want something sublime? |
57439 | _ Ought Women to learn the Alphabet?_ By Thomas Wentworth Higginson.] |
57439 | _ Quare fremuerunt gentes!_ Why, indeed, shall they rage and devise vain things? |
57439 | _ Que faire?_ I should have said, being in France. |
57439 | _ They did not become Protestants!_ How has it been with the descendants of the godly men of Plymouth Rock? |
57439 | and he gave them his hand, and said,''How do you do?"'' |
57439 | and to fatherless orphans? |
57439 | and to so many disconsolate families? |
57439 | and to the widow who mourns her husband? |
57439 | and what are the means and conditions within our reach, natural or gracious, of fulfilling our destiny, or of attaining to our supreme good? |
57439 | angel is Angela, is it not?" |
57439 | are you a man?" |
57439 | be candid and tell me what would have become of the idea of a personal God among the nations, had it not been for her influence? |
57439 | blood- bought gems To deck his kingly hand? |
57439 | can there be any princes who would oppose such a just and holy desire? |
57439 | color? |
57439 | do not our actions follow from metaphysical conditions? |
57439 | does it not seem indeed as if the gates of heaven were opening yonder?" |
57439 | fair maiden, goest thou to join thy bridegroom? |
57439 | granted these hypotheses, we still ask, What is this force? |
57439 | has he not yet written? |
57439 | have you sisters?" |
57439 | he exclaimed,"whither have you wandered?" |
57439 | he said,"is not even Sunday for them?" |
57439 | how could I ever dream of forgetting you?" |
57439 | is this fair wreck thy boast? |
57439 | it is really and indeed the body and blood of Jesus Christ that is offered me as a viaticum?" |
57439 | it was manly, and tender, and generous of you, was it not? |
57439 | may I go home?" |
57439 | me? |
57439 | name? |
57439 | never again? |
57439 | never again?" |
57439 | not even answered that charming letter from Salzburg? |
57439 | occupation?" |
57439 | or am I in less need of charity?" |
57439 | or any one thing rather than another? |
57439 | or the weeping testimony of the other,"There stopped the noblest, kindest heart that ever beat"? |
57439 | or, in other words, why am I bound to do right? |
57439 | or, what is it that transforms the right into duty? |
57439 | robes of royal state? |
57439 | she sobbed,"what makes you laugh at me when I''m most dead?" |
57439 | that is, why am I bound at all? |
57439 | that those who would have power in heavenly things care not for that which is carnal and earthly? |
57439 | the aspirations of the heart with the deductions of cold reason?" |
57439 | was no courtesy, no kindness shown you?" |
57439 | what avails the wealth of worlds, If, lured by syren vice, God''s heir hath sold his birthright fair, His only"pearl of price"? |
57439 | what do I see at this moment? |
57439 | what dost thou here? |
57439 | what instructors hoary For such a world of thought could furnish scope? |
57439 | what next?" |
57439 | what the mischief has got into your head, that you would not hear me?" |
57439 | what would you do without her for the family and the sanctity of marriage? |
57439 | what would you do?" |
57439 | whence the obligation? |
57439 | where are the neighbors, kind and true, that were once my country''s pride? |
57439 | where is the mother of my children? |
57439 | where were they found? |
57439 | who else is going?" |
57439 | who hung them here? |
57439 | why should I remember those who do me good for God''s sake?" |
57439 | with a blind embrace Gulfed it in sense? |
57439 | with my own living ears, slanderously assert, that the kettle- drum was a superfluous instrument? |
57439 | you desert your seat too?" |
57439 | you wish me to read this?" |
57439 | { 189}"About the old doctor?" |
57439 | { 19} Is our liberty placed in jeopardy? |
57439 | { 262} Now, what is the cause of creation but the will of God? |
57439 | { 272} The radiance quench, yet add the glare? |
57439 | { 278} Who is to blame for this career of vice and crime? |
57439 | { 29} Why, then, reproach the church for being immovable, and why is not this immobility salutary for you? |
57439 | { 321}"Your critic- folk may cock their nose And say, How can_ you_ e''er propose,_ You_ who ken hardly verse frae prose, To mak a sang? |
57439 | { 469} Whence, then, the animal germ, organite, or ovule? |
57439 | { 4} But where did the monk of Fulda get the story? |
57439 | { 540} Know they not that this is precisely what the sensists themselves do? |
57439 | { 62} How is it with Protestant England? |
57439 | { 637}"For what are women here, foolish man?" |
57439 | { 645}"Why do you think I would laugh at the story?" |
57439 | { 758} And again, why should Angela wish to gain the admiration of the peasants? |
57439 | { 788}"A storm? |
14554 | Ashamedof a religion so glorious as the Catholic religion? |
14554 | Now I have lived twelve, fifteen, twenty, or more years; if that judgment came today, on which side should I be? 14554 Now,"said Our Lord,"which of these three was neighbor to the wounded man?" |
14554 | * 85 Q. Whither did Christ''s soul go after His death? |
14554 | 10. Who do God''s will in Heaven? |
14554 | 138 Q. Whence have the Sacraments the power of giving grace? |
14554 | 156. Who gave the angels their names? |
14554 | 219. Who are slaves? |
14554 | 227. Who was Our Lord''s foster- father? |
14554 | 233. Who were saved from the Deluge? |
14554 | 239. Who was the oldest man? |
14554 | 252. Who were the Magi? |
14554 | 272. Who went into it with Our Lord? |
14554 | 278. Who betrayed Our Lord? |
14554 | 30. Who was St. Elizabeth''s son? |
14554 | 306. Who were present at it? |
14554 | 339. Who went with Moses to deliver the Israelites? |
14554 | 365. Who is our neighbor? |
14554 | 371. Who were the prophets? |
14554 | 381. Who are"lawful pastors"? |
14554 | 418. Who are heathens? |
14554 | 419. Who were the"publicans"mentioned by Our Lord? |
14554 | 43. Who were the Apostles? |
14554 | 455. Who are catechumens? |
14554 | 46. Who were the disciples of Our Lord? |
14554 | 466. Who made the Beatitudes? |
14554 | 506. Who are religious? |
14554 | 510. Who are scrupulous persons? |
14554 | 55. Who were in Limbo at the time Our Lord was crucified? |
14554 | 564. Who offered the first Sacrifice of the Holy Mass? |
14554 | 568. Who are pagans, idolaters, heathens? |
14554 | 589. Who are the"other ministers of the Church,"besides bishops and priests? |
14554 | 595. Who is meant by the"celebrant"of the Mass? |
14554 | 602. Who are cardinals? |
14554 | 604. Who is a monsignor? |
14554 | 605. Who is a vicar general? |
14554 | 611. Who can wear it? |
14554 | 62. Who are"the living"? |
14554 | 63. Who are"the dead"mentioned here? |
14554 | 653. Who baptized Our Lord? |
14554 | 661. Who was St. John the Evangelist? |
14554 | 67. Who are its members? |
14554 | 68. Who are the enemies of our salvation? |
14554 | 6:16)--refrain from eating him, even when they were starving with hunger? |
14554 | 703. Who are atheists, deists, infidels, heretics, apostates, and schismatics? |
14554 | 72. Who are in Heaven in their bodies at present? |
14554 | 77. Who are its members? |
14554 | 771. Who are excused from fasting? |
14554 | 772. Who are obliged to abstain from flesh- meat on fast- days and days of abstinence? |
14554 | 777. Who were the"Levites"in the Old Law? |
14554 | 786. Who are excluded from Christian burial? |
14554 | 795. Who will be judged at the general judgment? |
14554 | 80. Who are its members? |
14554 | 82. Who are saints? |
14554 | About how long did the Blessed Virgin live on earth after the Ascension of Our Lord? |
14554 | About how many times and to whom did He appear during the forty days? |
14554 | After Christ had remained forty days on earth, whither did He go? |
14554 | After telling the time of our last confession and Communion, what should we do? |
14554 | Again if you can offer a person insult by dishonoring his image, may we not honor him by treating it with respect? |
14554 | Again, one mortal sin is sufficient to keep our souls in Hell for all eternity; what then will be our punishment for many mortal sins? |
14554 | Again, what would we remember about George Washington if we did not celebrate his birthday? |
14554 | And how could this be when Our Lord was not yet born? |
14554 | And then the wicked shall ask, when did we see You in want and not relieve You? |
14554 | And what shall we say when we think that He loves us with a greater love than we could ever love Him, even with our most earnest efforts? |
14554 | And where was He going? |
14554 | Are actual sins ever remitted by Baptism? |
14554 | Are all bound to belong to the Church? |
14554 | Are all in Heaven saints? |
14554 | Are all religions equally good? |
14554 | Are all religions equally true? |
14554 | Are heretics Christians? |
14554 | Are impure thoughts and desires always sins? |
14554 | Are indulgences attached to anything but prayers? |
14554 | Are medals, scapulars, etc., worn about us charms? |
14554 | Are prayers said with distractions of any avail? |
14554 | Are servile works on Sunday ever lawful? |
14554 | Are sins against faith, hope, and charity also sins against the First Commandment? |
14554 | Are the Sabbath day and the Sunday the same? |
14554 | Are the angels all equal in dignity? |
14554 | Are the three Divine Persons equal in all things? |
14554 | Are the three Divine Persons one and the same God? |
14554 | Are there any holy days not of obligation? |
14554 | Are there any other sacramentals besides the Sign of the Cross and holy water? |
14554 | Are there any saints in Heaven whose names we do not know? |
14554 | Are there any tempters besides the devil? |
14554 | Are there any? |
14554 | Are there other guardian angels besides the guardian angels of persons? |
14554 | Are there other litanies besides the Litany of the Blessed Virgin? |
14554 | Are they not extremely foolish? |
14554 | Are they to be despised, disregarded, and neglected entirely, without any fear of punishment? |
14554 | Are we bound to honor and obey others than our parents? |
14554 | Are we bound to keep an unlawful oath? |
14554 | Are we bound to restore ill- gotten goods? |
14554 | Are we obliged to contribute to the support of our pastors? |
14554 | Are we obliged to make open profession of our faith? |
14554 | Are we obliged to repair the damage we have unjustly caused? |
14554 | Are we proud of our wealth, money or property? |
14554 | Are women ever allowed in the Church with their heads uncovered? |
14554 | Are you bound to do so? |
14554 | As it is, two or three might cause you considerable annoyance, and pain: what then if there were millions doubly venomous, because sent to punish you? |
14554 | At what part of the Mass are the words of consecration pronounced? |
14554 | At what part of the Mass are the words of consecration said? |
14554 | At what particular times should we pray? |
14554 | At what time of the year is the Epiphany? |
14554 | Because we clearly see and know the truth of what is revealed? |
14554 | Besides sanctifying grace, do the Sacraments give any other grace? |
14554 | But God and the angels ask, What merits has he sent before him? |
14554 | But do we not show some ingratitude when we murmur, complain, and are dissatisfied with our food, clothing, or homes? |
14554 | But has the Holy Father need of his temporal power? |
14554 | But how about God''s laws and commands? |
14554 | But how did he get the people to follow him? |
14554 | But how is the Mass a sacrifice? |
14554 | But how shall you make reparation for injuring the character of another? |
14554 | But how will we know when the Pope speaks ex cathedra, when he is speaking daily to people from all parts of the world? |
14554 | But if God left you free, should you therefore be stingy with Him? |
14554 | But if the person should not die after being anointed would it still be called Extreme Unction? |
14554 | But if what you said of him was true, how are you to act? |
14554 | But might not the Church be deceived like ourselves? |
14554 | But of what use is it to save a worthless piece of rag, if the kite-- the valuable thing-- is lost? |
14554 | But suppose you bought it not knowing that it was stolen, would you still have to restore it? |
14554 | But what are they compared to Our Lord Himself? |
14554 | But what do we mean by the Sacred Heart? |
14554 | But what shall I say of neglecting to learn your holy religion? |
14554 | But where does the priest get Holy Communion for them if he himself took all he consecrated? |
14554 | But why do we adore this real, natural heart of Our Lord? |
14554 | But why do we believe? |
14554 | But why does God punish those He loves? |
14554 | But why does He not always grant our request? |
14554 | But why, you may wonder, did the early Christians do such penances? |
14554 | But why, you will ask, are there different religious orders? |
14554 | But you may ask, Are not these medals, scapulars, etc., that we wear, also charms? |
14554 | But you will ask, how could these soldiers be so cruel? |
14554 | But you will ask: Was the desert so large that it took forty years to cross it? |
14554 | But you will say, why did they not do it on Friday evening or night? |
14554 | By cutting off the branches? |
14554 | By what names is Our Lord called? |
14554 | By whom is the Church made and kept One, Holy, and Catholic? |
14554 | Can God do all things? |
14554 | Can Holy Communion be given in the afternoon? |
14554 | Can a Christian man and woman be united in lawful marriage in any other way than by the Sacrament of Matrimony? |
14554 | Can a bishop give all the Sacraments? |
14554 | Can a person receive all the Sacraments? |
14554 | Can a priest bless it in case of necessity? |
14554 | Can a priest? |
14554 | Can all the Sacraments be given conditionally? |
14554 | Can any of the Sacraments be given to the dead? |
14554 | Can our accusers not see that they and every citizen do the very thing for which they reproach us? |
14554 | Can persons marry invalidly without knowing it? |
14554 | Can persons receive the Sacrament of Matrimony more than once? |
14554 | Can the Church change the number of sacramentals? |
14554 | Can the Pope commit sin? |
14554 | Can the bond of Christian marriage be dissolved by any human power? |
14554 | Can the faithful on earth help the souls in Purgatory? |
14554 | Can the priest say Mass in the evening? |
14554 | Can the priest say a"nuptial Mass"for a husband or wife after their death? |
14554 | Can they who fail to profess their faith in the true Church in which they believe expect to be saved while in that state? |
14554 | Can we always make restitution by giving to the poor? |
14554 | Can we always overcome temptation if we wish? |
14554 | Can we blaspheme by action? |
14554 | Can we fully understand how the three Divine Persons are one and the same God? |
14554 | Can we learn all truths by our reason alone? |
14554 | Can we merit the grace of perseverance? |
14554 | Can we receive the Sacraments more than once? |
14554 | Can we resist the grace of God? |
14554 | Can you baptize an infant when its parents are unwilling? |
14554 | Can you have half your sins forgiven? |
14554 | Could a person be a Catholic and not believe all the Church teaches? |
14554 | Could a person gain an indulgence immediately after Baptism? |
14554 | Could anyone be Pope without being Bishop of Rome? |
14554 | Could he not be very angry, entirely neglect prayer, or pray with willful distraction; could he not be proud, covetous, etc.? |
14554 | Could it do so? |
14554 | Could you blame the grandfather for leaving the estate? |
14554 | Did Adam and Eve remain faithful to God? |
14554 | Did Christ always live at Bethlehem? |
14554 | Did Christ''s soul descend into the hell of the damned? |
14554 | Did God abandon man after he fell into sin? |
14554 | Did God ever use them to make known His will? |
14554 | Did God give any command to Adam and Eve? |
14554 | Did I go to Holy Communion between the first Sunday of Lent and Trinity Sunday? |
14554 | Did John the Baptist institute the Sacrament of Baptism? |
14554 | Did Our Lord claim to be king of the Jews? |
14554 | Did Our Lord leave us any means of being redeemed more than once? |
14554 | Did Our Lord''s body descend into Limbo? |
14554 | Did all the angels remain good and happy? |
14554 | Did anyone ever have it? |
14554 | Did anything remain of the bread and wine after their substance had been changed into the substance of the body and blood of Our Lord? |
14554 | Did it ever do it? |
14554 | Did the Holy Ghost ever appear? |
14554 | Did the Son of God become man immediately after the sin of our first parents? |
14554 | Did you ever reflect upon just how much time and trouble it costs to produce for you even one potato, of which you think so little? |
14554 | Did you ever think how you would have acted if you lived at that time and were present when Our Lord preached? |
14554 | Do I owe money and not pay it when I can? |
14554 | Do an"act of love"and an"act of charity"mean the same? |
14554 | Do first, second, and third in the Blessed Trinity mean that one person was before the other? |
14554 | Do not people in the world often give presents to those who have done them a favor, that they may thus show their gratitude? |
14554 | Do the Sacraments always give grace? |
14554 | Do they differ in value, one being better than another? |
14554 | Do they not suffer for the sins of their father, though they had nothing to do with them? |
14554 | Do we not also at times honor Our Lord, call Him our king, and shortly afterwards insult and, as far as we can, injure Him by sin? |
14554 | Do we not say in the Our Father,"Hallowed, or praised, be His name,"and blaspheme it ourselves? |
14554 | Do we not sometimes imitate Eve''s conduct? |
14554 | Do we tempt God and do to Him what we dare not to do to our fellowman because He is so merciful? |
14554 | Do we try to keep away from persons we love? |
14554 | Do you believe the father would give it if he loved the child? |
14554 | Do you know what a promissory note is? |
14554 | Do you not suppose Our Lord knew, when He instituted the Sacrament of Penance, that people would be ashamed to confess? |
14554 | Do you not think you would love such a person very much indeed? |
14554 | Do you think the thief would be sorry for his past thefts if he had his mind made up to steal again as soon as he had the chance? |
14554 | Do you think they would refuse to use it? |
14554 | Does God know all things? |
14554 | Does God see us? |
14554 | Does God tempt us to sin? |
14554 | Does anyone believe that they are trying to honor the piece of metal or stone, or that the metal or stone statue knows that it is being honored? |
14554 | Does canonization make the person a saint? |
14554 | Does habit excuse us for the sins committed through it? |
14554 | Does he know that without confession it requires an act of perfect contrition to blot out mortal sin, and can he easily make such an act? |
14554 | Does he who receives Communion in mortal sin receive the body and blood of Christ? |
14554 | Does it mean that a person who said that prayer would get out of Purgatory forty days sooner than he would have if he had not said it? |
14554 | Does it not seem strange that we should suffer for the sin of our first parents, when we had nothing to do with it? |
14554 | Does not the Sacrament of Penance remit all punishment due to sin? |
14554 | Does the Apostles''Creed contain all the truths we must believe? |
14554 | Does the Bible contain all the truths of our religion? |
14554 | Does the Church by defining truths make new doctrines? |
14554 | Does the Church change its doctrines? |
14554 | Does the Church forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a different religion or no religion at all? |
14554 | Does the First Commandment forbid the honoring of the saints? |
14554 | Does the First Commandment forbid the making of images? |
14554 | Does the First Commandment forbid us to honor relics? |
14554 | Does the First Commandment forbid us to pray to the saints? |
14554 | Does the Sixth Commandment forbid the reading of bad and immodest books and newspapers? |
14554 | Does this change of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ continue to be made in the Church? |
14554 | Does this character remain in the soul even after death? |
14554 | Does this corruption of our nature remain in us after Original Sin is forgiven? |
14554 | Does"mankind"mean men or women? |
14554 | Does"rector"and"pastor"mean the same? |
14554 | For example, might we not write a book on each of the first three questions-- the World, God, and Man? |
14554 | For example, what was the end for which Penance was instituted? |
14554 | For if He did not, how could we and all others who, after Baptism, have fallen into sin be cleansed from it? |
14554 | For what are they used? |
14554 | For what end was man created? |
14554 | From the black seed, or the brown soil, or the pure water, air and sunlight? |
14554 | From whom does authority come? |
14554 | From whom does the Church derive its undying life and infallible authority? |
14554 | From whom does the Holy Ghost proceed? |
14554 | Had God a beginning? |
14554 | Had Our Lord any brothers or sisters? |
14554 | Has Heaven really gates? |
14554 | Has the Church any marks by which it may be known? |
14554 | Have I anything to tell on this Commandment? |
14554 | Have I been angry or have I tried to take revenge? |
14554 | Have I been disobedient to parents or others who have authority over me-- to spiritual or temporal superiors, teachers, etc.? |
14554 | Have I been impudent and stubborn, vain about my dress, and the like? |
14554 | Have I been late, and at what part of the Mass did I come in? |
14554 | Have I been more anxious to please others than to please God, or offended Him for the sake of others? |
14554 | Have I been willfully distracted at Mass or have I distracted others? |
14554 | Have I borne hatred or tried to injure others? |
14554 | Have I bought anything with the intention of never paying for it or at least knowing I never could pay for it? |
14554 | Have I cheated in business or at games? |
14554 | Have I cursed? |
14554 | Have I despised others simply on account of poverty or something they could not help? |
14554 | Have I done any bad actions or desired to do any while alone or with others? |
14554 | Have I done anything that might lead to killing? |
14554 | Have I done servile work without necessity? |
14554 | Have I ever taken intoxicating drink to excess or broken a promise not to take it? |
14554 | Have I failed to give back what belonged to another? |
14554 | Have I found anything and not tried to discover its owner, or have I kept it in my possession after I knew to whom it belonged? |
14554 | Have I given scandal? |
14554 | Have I honored God? |
14554 | Have I kept others from Mass? |
14554 | Have I knowingly caused others to be intoxicated? |
14554 | Have I made restitution when told to do so by my confessor; or have I put it off from time to time? |
14554 | Have I neglected to give them what help I could when they were in need of it? |
14554 | Have I neglected to hear Mass through my own fault on Sundays and holy days of obligation? |
14554 | Have I received anything or part of anything that I knew to be stolen? |
14554 | Have I said my prayers morning and night; have I said them with attention and devotion? |
14554 | Have I slighted or been ashamed of parents because they were poor or uneducated? |
14554 | Have I spoken of them with disrespect or called them names that were not proper? |
14554 | Have I stolen anything myself or helped or advised others to steal? |
14554 | Have I taken God''s name in vain or spoken without reverence of holy things? |
14554 | Have I thanked God for all His blessings? |
14554 | Have I told lies or injured anyone by my talk? |
14554 | Have I told the faults of others without any necessity? |
14554 | Have I wasted my time willfully and neglected to do my duty at school or elsewhere? |
14554 | Have all the saints their bodies in Heaven? |
14554 | Have any brute animals reason? |
14554 | Have brute animals"free will"? |
14554 | Have parents and superiors any duties towards those who are under their charge? |
14554 | Have we any relics of Our Lord''s body? |
14554 | Have you ever noticed a little child begging favors from its mother? |
14554 | Have you ever observed a mother teaching her child to walk? |
14554 | How and where was St. Peter put to death? |
14554 | How anxious you would have been to get near to Him? |
14554 | How are parents sometimes guilty of injustice to their children in case of marriage? |
14554 | How are the fruits of the Mass divided? |
14554 | How are the saints and we members of the same Church? |
14554 | How are they divided? |
14554 | How are we frequently presumptuous? |
14554 | How are we to know our vocation? |
14554 | How are we to know our vocation? |
14554 | How are we to worship God on Sundays and holy days of obligation? |
14554 | How are we united to Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist? |
14554 | How can a dumb man make his confession? |
14554 | How can one be a good Christian who does not understand the laws of the Church and the teachings of Christ? |
14554 | How can one be a good soldier who does not know the rules and regulations of the army nor understand the commands of his general? |
14554 | How can persons whose language the priest can not understand confess if they are in danger of death? |
14554 | How can the rich be"poor in spirit"? |
14554 | How can we be sorry for the past if we are going to do the same in the future? |
14554 | How can we best destroy sin in our souls? |
14554 | How can we commit gluttony by drinking? |
14554 | How can we commit gluttony by eating? |
14554 | How can we daily prepare for judgment? |
14554 | How can we distinguish between spiritual and corporal works of mercy? |
14554 | How can we gain them? |
14554 | How can we have the intention of gaining an indulgence? |
14554 | How can we judge whether a thing is sinful or not? |
14554 | How can we make a good examination of conscience? |
14554 | How can we merit it? |
14554 | How can you know when you have injured the character of another? |
14554 | How can you make reparation for injuring another''s character? |
14554 | How can you prove they could not put Our Lord to death unless He permitted it? |
14554 | How can you say to God,"O my God, I am heartily sorry,"etc., if you are waiting only for the next opportunity to sin? |
14554 | How can you show that the Church is one in government and doctrine? |
14554 | How could a Protestant be saved? |
14554 | How could he remember all the confessions he hears-- often hundreds in a single month? |
14554 | How could man ever know about the Trinity through his reason alone, when, after God has made known to him that It exists, he can not understand it? |
14554 | How could the Church fall into error when Our Lord promised to remain always with it, and to send the Holy Ghost to guide and teach it forever? |
14554 | How could the good people of the Old Law be saved by the merits of Christ, when Christ was not yet born? |
14554 | How could they be saved who lived before the Son of God became man? |
14554 | How did Adam commit his first sin? |
14554 | How did Christ die? |
14554 | How did God create Eve? |
14554 | How did God create Heaven and earth? |
14554 | How did God honor the relics of saints? |
14554 | How did Mary know what the angel''s words meant? |
14554 | How did Noe learn that the waters were going down? |
14554 | How did Our Lord institute the Holy Eucharist? |
14554 | How did he acquire it, and how did he lose it? |
14554 | How did he lose these possessions? |
14554 | How did the Deluge come upon the earth? |
14554 | How did the Holy Ghost come down upon the Apostles? |
14554 | How did the Israelites come to be in Egypt? |
14554 | How did the Israelites come to worship false gods? |
14554 | How did the Jews act unjustly in the trial of Our Lord? |
14554 | How did the early Christians do penance? |
14554 | How did the first Protestants act towards the Church? |
14554 | How did the other Apostles die? |
14554 | How did the synagogues differ from the temple? |
14554 | How did their marriage differ from Christian marriage? |
14554 | How do bad Catholics do injury to the Church? |
14554 | How do the priests exercise this power of changing bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ? |
14554 | How do the priests of the Church exercise the power of forgiving sins? |
14554 | How do we adore God? |
14554 | How do we commit the sin of sloth? |
14554 | How do we fail to try to know what God has taught? |
14554 | How do we honor God by praying to the saints? |
14554 | How do we know that the saints hear us? |
14554 | How do we know when the Pope speaks"ex cathedra"? |
14554 | How do we know when we love God above all? |
14554 | How do we love our neighbor as ourselves? |
14554 | How do we make the Sign of the Cross? |
14554 | How do we prepare for confession? |
14554 | How do we say the beads? |
14554 | How do we sin against the love of God? |
14554 | How do we sometimes worship false or strange gods? |
14554 | How do we sometimes worship strange gods? |
14554 | How do you know Our Lord could forgive sins? |
14554 | How do you know brute animals have not reason? |
14554 | How do you know that the angels offer our prayers and good works to God? |
14554 | How do you know that the priest has the power of absolving from the sins committed after Baptism? |
14554 | How do you know you receive both the body and the blood of Our Lord under the appearance of bread alone? |
14554 | How do you know? |
14554 | How do you show that they are the same? |
14554 | How do you suppose all the thieves now spending their miserable lives in prison began? |
14554 | How does God reward us for good works done in a state of mortal sin? |
14554 | How does a person sin against faith? |
14554 | How does suffering make us more like to Our Lord and His Blessed Mother? |
14554 | How does the Church by means of indulgences remit the temporal punishment due to sins? |
14554 | How does the Church canonize a saint? |
14554 | How does the Church canonize a saint? |
14554 | How does the Church show its displeasure when Catholics marry persons not Catholics? |
14554 | How does the First Commandment help us to keep the great Commandment of the love of God? |
14554 | How does the Sacrament of Penance remit sin, and restore the soul to the friendship of God? |
14554 | How does the Sign of the Cross express the mystery of the Incarnation and death of Our Lord? |
14554 | How does the Sign of the Cross express the mystery of the Unity and Trinity of God? |
14554 | How does the bishop give Confirmation? |
14554 | How does the fire of Hell differ from our fire? |
14554 | How does the institution of Penance show the goodness of Our Lord? |
14554 | How does the power to forgive sins imply the obligation of going to confession? |
14554 | How have we been relieved from doing many of the works of mercy ourselves? |
14554 | How is Baptism given? |
14554 | How is Heaven a reward? |
14554 | How is a person"poor in spirit"? |
14554 | How is it divided? |
14554 | How is it given? |
14554 | How is it made? |
14554 | How is sickness a benefit to some? |
14554 | How is sin divided? |
14554 | How is the Blessed Sacrament carried to the sick in Catholic countries? |
14554 | How is the Church apostolic? |
14554 | How is the Church catholic or universal? |
14554 | How is the Church holy? |
14554 | How is the Church one? |
14554 | How is the Mass a sacrifice? |
14554 | How is the Mass the same sacrifice as that of the Cross? |
14554 | How is the Sign of the Cross a profession of faith in the chief mysteries of our religion? |
14554 | How is the Sunday well kept? |
14554 | How is the resurrection of the body possible? |
14554 | How is the soul like to God? |
14554 | How is the"temporal power"useful to the Church? |
14554 | How long did Christ live on earth? |
14554 | How long did Christ stay on earth after His resurrection? |
14554 | How long did Noe spend in making the Ark? |
14554 | How long did the Ark float upon the waters? |
14554 | How long did they last? |
14554 | How long does Our Lord remain in the Holy Communion? |
14554 | How long were the Israelites in the desert? |
14554 | How long will Purgatory last? |
14554 | How many Crusades were there? |
14554 | How many Mysteries of the Rosary are there? |
14554 | How many Popes from St. Peter to Pius XI? |
14554 | How many Sacraments are there? |
14554 | How many articles or parts in the Apostles''Creed? |
14554 | How many classes of angels are there? |
14554 | How many fathers had Our Lord? |
14554 | How many general persecutions of the Church were there? |
14554 | How many kinds of Baptism are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of Masses are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of actual sin are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of contrition are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of grace are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of holy oil are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of indulgences are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of laws had the Israelites? |
14554 | How many kinds of occasions of sin are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of prayer are there? |
14554 | How many kinds of sacrifice had the Israelites? |
14554 | How many kinds of scapular are there? |
14554 | How many mothers had He? |
14554 | How many natures are there in Jesus Christ? |
14554 | How many pagans do you think would be converted nowadays by the lives of some who call themselves Catholics? |
14554 | How many parts in the Hail Mary? |
14554 | How many persons are there in God? |
14554 | How many sons had God the Father? |
14554 | How many temples had the Jews? |
14554 | How many things are necessary to make a sin mortal? |
14554 | How many years from the time Adam sinned till the Redeemer came? |
14554 | How may the First Commandment be broken? |
14554 | How may the things God created be classed? |
14554 | How may we be charitable to our neighbor? |
14554 | How often in their lives are Catholics anointed? |
14554 | How old was Adam when he died? |
14554 | How old was Our Lord when He began His public life? |
14554 | How shall we know the things which we are to believe? |
14554 | How shall you know when you have injured the character of another? |
14554 | How should Christians look upon the priests of the Church? |
14554 | How should Christians prepare for a holy and happy marriage? |
14554 | How should parents act with regard to their children''s vocation? |
14554 | How should persons make a choice for marriage? |
14554 | How should persons prepare for marriage? |
14554 | How should we assist at Mass? |
14554 | How should we end our confession? |
14554 | How should we keep the holy days of obligation? |
14554 | How should we pray? |
14554 | How should we receive the Sacrament of Extreme Unction? |
14554 | How then can the priest know the number by that expression? |
14554 | How then? |
14554 | How was Eve tempted to disobey God? |
14554 | How was His grace to be given to them? |
14554 | How was Moses saved on the bank of the Nile? |
14554 | How was Our Lord buried? |
14554 | How was the Holy Land divided? |
14554 | How was the Son of God made man? |
14554 | How was the substance of the bread and wine changed into the substance of the body and blood of Christ? |
14554 | How was the temple of Jerusalem divided? |
14554 | How were the Commandments given to Moses? |
14554 | How were the ancient Christian churches divided? |
14554 | How were they delivered or liberated? |
14554 | How were they to know of Him, or of what He taught? |
14554 | How were we in slavery by the sin of Adam? |
14554 | How will it take place? |
14554 | How will the general judgment take place? |
14554 | How you would have pushed your way through the crowd and listened to every word? |
14554 | How, then, could we be saved? |
14554 | How, then, shall we best destroy sin in our souls? |
14554 | How? |
14554 | If God Himself watches over us and sees all things, why should the angels guard us? |
14554 | If God is everywhere, why do we not see Him? |
14554 | If God loves those in Purgatory, why does He punish them? |
14554 | If God watches over us, why should angels guard us? |
14554 | If a great and highly- esteemed friend was coming to visit your house, would you not take care to have everything clean and neat, and pleasing to him? |
14554 | If a person receives-- as many do-- the Sacrament of Penance while his soul is not in a state of mortal sin, what then? |
14554 | If a poor person wanted to obtain a favor from the President of the United States, would he go directly to the President himself? |
14554 | If a strong oak tree is deeply rooted in the ground, how will you best destroy its life? |
14554 | If angels have no bodies, how can they appear? |
14554 | If everyone is judged immediately after death, what need is there of a general judgment? |
14554 | If my good deeds and bad deeds were counted today, which would be more numerous? |
14554 | If one religion is as good as another, why did not Our Lord allow the old religions-- false or true-- to remain? |
14554 | If prayer is necessary for salvation, how can infants be saved who die without having prayed? |
14554 | If the Bible alone were the rule of our faith, what would become of all those who could not read the Bible? |
14554 | If we are in doubt whether anything is sinful or not, we must ask ourselves: is it forbidden by God or His Church? |
14554 | If we did not have these outward signs how could anyone know just at what time the graces are given? |
14554 | If we would make such preparations for the coming of a friend to our house, why should we be so careless when Our Lord comes? |
14554 | If you are at school, how have you studied? |
14554 | If you are at work, have you been faithful to your employer, and done your work well and honestly? |
14554 | If you bought an article not knowing that it was stolen, would you be obliged to give it up to its owner? |
14554 | If you should be asked, for instance: Why do you not eat flesh- meat on Friday? |
14554 | In giving Baptism, can one pour the water and another say the words? |
14554 | In how many ways can we sin? |
14554 | In how many ways may we share in the sin of another? |
14554 | In how many ways may we violate the Seventh Commandment? |
14554 | In the administration of what Sacraments is oil used? |
14554 | In the first question, what does"world"mean? |
14554 | In what kind of a stable was Our Lord born? |
14554 | In what respect are all men equal? |
14554 | In what state will the bodies of the just rise? |
14554 | In what way do we sometimes imitate Eve''s conduct? |
14554 | In what ways can we commit actual sin? |
14554 | In what ways can we commit sacrilege? |
14554 | In what ways does the life of the soul resemble the life of the body? |
14554 | In which church are these attributes and marks found? |
14554 | In whom are these attributes found in their fullness? |
14554 | Is Baptism necessary to salvation? |
14554 | Is Baptism of desire or blood sufficient to produce the effects of Baptism of water? |
14554 | Is God just, holy, and merciful? |
14554 | Is Jesus Christ more than one person? |
14554 | Is Jesus Christ whole and entire both under the form of bread and under the form of wine? |
14554 | Is Limbo the same as Purgatory? |
14554 | Is Original Sin the only kind of sin? |
14554 | Is Our Lord now in Heaven as God or as man? |
14554 | Is Our Lord''s body in the Holy Eucharist living or dead? |
14554 | Is a tree a creature? |
14554 | Is an indulgence a pardon of sin, or a license to commit sin? |
14554 | Is anyone ever allowed to receive Holy Communion when not fasting? |
14554 | Is every fast- day a day of abstinence? |
14554 | Is every invisible thing a spirit? |
14554 | Is grace necessary for salvation? |
14554 | Is he doing nothing therefore? |
14554 | Is hope good? |
14554 | Is imperfect contrition sufficient for a worthy confession? |
14554 | Is it a grievous offense willfully to conceal a mortal sin in confession? |
14554 | Is it a mortal sin not to hear Mass on a Sunday or a holy day of obligation? |
14554 | Is it a mortal sin to be willingly absent from Vespers? |
14554 | Is it a sin not to fulfill our vows? |
14554 | Is it a sin to be tempted? |
14554 | Is it a sin to delay making restitution? |
14554 | Is it a sin to neglect Confirmation? |
14554 | Is it a sin to use the words of Scripture in a bad sense? |
14554 | Is it allowed to pray to the crucifix or to the images and relics of the saints? |
14554 | Is it called Extreme Unction even when the person recovers after receiving it? |
14554 | Is it easy to gain a plenary indulgence? |
14554 | Is it enough to be free from mortal sin, to receive plentifully the graces of Holy Communion? |
14554 | Is it enough to belong to God''s Church in order to be saved? |
14554 | Is it not a great benefit to have a friend to whom you can go with the trials of your mind and soul, your troubles, temptations, sins, and secrets? |
14554 | Is it over a year, and how much over it, since I have been to confession? |
14554 | Is it right to show respect to the pictures and images of Christ and His saints? |
14554 | Is it sinful to listen to backbiting, slander, etc? |
14554 | Is it well to receive Holy Communion often? |
14554 | Is it wrong to accuse ourselves of sins we have not committed? |
14554 | Is light good? |
14554 | Is our confession worthy if, without our fault, we forget to confess a mortal sin? |
14554 | Is prayer necessary to salvation? |
14554 | Is that likely? |
14554 | Is the Apostles''Creed an act of faith? |
14554 | Is the Blessed Virgin Mary truly the Mother of God? |
14554 | Is the Blessed Virgin only a creature? |
14554 | Is the Father God? |
14554 | Is the Holy Ghost God? |
14554 | Is the Holy Ghost equal to the Father and the Son? |
14554 | Is the Mass the same sacrifice as that of the Cross? |
14554 | Is the Pope infallible in everything he says? |
14554 | Is the Son God? |
14554 | Is the receiver of stolen goods as bad as the thief? |
14554 | Is there a minister of Christ there who has power to pardon my sins? |
14554 | Is there any difference between the sacrifice of the Cross and the sacrifice of the Mass? |
14554 | Is there any difference in the ages of God the Father and God the Son? |
14554 | Is there any other means of obtaining God''s grace than the Sacraments? |
14554 | Is there anything on earth that they would not give to be released? |
14554 | Is there but one God? |
14554 | Is this likeness in the body or in the soul? |
14554 | Is true friendship good? |
14554 | Is your confession worthless if you forget to say your penance? |
14554 | It seems very strange, does it not, that Thomas would not believe what the other Apostles told him? |
14554 | Just in the same way, of what use is our body if our soul is lost? |
14554 | Lesson 19 485. Who is a"duly authorized"priest? |
14554 | Moreover, all that we have comes from God, and should we return Him the least and the worst? |
14554 | Moreover, suppose you knew that person loved you intensely, would it not be your greatest delight to be ever with such a friend? |
14554 | Must we understand everything we believe? |
14554 | Now for what purpose was man made? |
14554 | Now how did he get those states and how did he lose them? |
14554 | Now the question asks, Are all his sins, those he committed himself as well as the Original Sin, forgiven by Baptism? |
14554 | Now what inward grace is given in Confirmation? |
14554 | Now what kind of sorrow must we have? |
14554 | Now, God is always doing us favors, and why should we not show our gratitude to Him by giving generously in His honor? |
14554 | Now, has any other Church claiming to be Christ''s Church that mark? |
14554 | Now, how could his mortal sin be forgiven? |
14554 | Now, how do we know that the angels offer our prayers and good works to God? |
14554 | Now, how is that? |
14554 | Now, if it was not superstition to keep these relics, why should it be superstition to keep the relics of the saints? |
14554 | Now, what does praying for the intention of the Pope or bishop or anyone else mean? |
14554 | Of St. Augustine? |
14554 | Of course he did not and should do no harm; but is his employer to pay him wages for that? |
14554 | Of our clothing? |
14554 | Of our personal appearance? |
14554 | Of what do candles on the altar remind us? |
14554 | Of what do the palms remind us? |
14554 | Of what do they remind us? |
14554 | Of what does our happiness in Heaven consist? |
14554 | Of what does the tonsure remind the priest? |
14554 | Of what have we to be proud? |
14554 | Of what religion was Pontius Pilate? |
14554 | Of what use is reason to us? |
14554 | Of what was it a figure? |
14554 | Of what were the ark and its contents figures? |
14554 | Of which must we take more care, our soul or our body? |
14554 | On the other hand, if our neighbor is to be in Hell on account of his bad life, why should we hate him? |
14554 | On what day did Christ die? |
14554 | On what day did Christ rise from the dead? |
14554 | On what day did the Holy Ghost come down upon the Apostles? |
14554 | On what day do we keep a saint''s feast? |
14554 | On what day is a saint''s feast kept by the Church? |
14554 | On what day was Christ born? |
14554 | On what day was the Son of God conceived and made man? |
14554 | On what days are the different Mysteries of the Rosary said? |
14554 | On what feast do we commemorate the adoration of the Magi? |
14554 | Over to our Blessed Mother to try and console her, or over to the enemies to help them to mock? |
14554 | QUESTIONS ON THE EXPLANATIONS The Lord''s Prayer 1. Who made the Lord''s Prayer? |
14554 | Should Catholics be married at a nuptial Mass? |
14554 | Should children go to confession? |
14554 | Should we cease striving to be good, if we seem to be making no improvement? |
14554 | Should we confess only once a year? |
14554 | Should we not be very anxious, therefore, to go to Benediction? |
14554 | Should we seek temptation? |
14554 | Should we wait until we are in extreme danger before we receive Extreme Unction? |
14554 | Since this is true for one year, what will it be for all the years of your life? |
14554 | Since we depend so much upon Him, is it not great folly to sin against Him, to offend, and tempt Him as it were? |
14554 | Someone might say:"Why did God not try their obedience by one of the Ten Commandments?" |
14554 | St. Aloysius when about to perform any action used to ask himself, it is said, What has this action to do with my eternal salvation? |
14554 | St. Paul? |
14554 | Suppose you find a thing, what must you do? |
14554 | The catechism says angels have no bodies-- how, then, could they appear? |
14554 | Then Moses said to God, the king of Egypt will not let the people go, and what can I do? |
14554 | Then if we really love Our Lord should we not desire to receive Him? |
14554 | Thus we have discovered the answer to the great question, What is the end of man; for what was he made? |
14554 | To receive Confirmation worthily is it necessary to be in the state of grace? |
14554 | To receive the Sacrament of Matrimony worthily, is it necessary to be in the state of grace? |
14554 | To which side will you be sent? |
14554 | To whom did Our Lord give an example by His hidden or private life? |
14554 | Underneath what? |
14554 | Was God called"Father"before the time of Our Lord? |
14554 | Was Jesus Christ always God? |
14554 | Was Jesus Christ always man? |
14554 | Was Our Lord three full days in the holy sepulchre? |
14554 | Was Our Lord visible to everyone during the forty days after His resurrection? |
14554 | Was anyone ever preserved from Original Sin? |
14554 | Was it for anything in the world? |
14554 | Was our Blessed Lord not tired when He carried His Cross? |
14554 | Was the Jewish religion ever the true religion? |
14554 | Was the baptism of John the Baptist a Sacrament? |
14554 | Was there any Sacrament of Matrimony before the time of Our Lord? |
14554 | Was there ever a time when we could say there was no God? |
14554 | We say when meeting anyone we know,"Good day,"or"How do you do?" |
14554 | Well, is there any law of God or of His Church saying it is sinful to fly a kite? |
14554 | Were Adam and Eve created at the same time? |
14554 | Were Adam and Eve innocent and holy when they came from the hand of God? |
14554 | Were angels ever sent to punish men? |
14554 | Were people obliged to keep the Commandments before the time of Moses? |
14554 | Were the Apostles bishops or priests? |
14554 | Were the angels created for any other purpose? |
14554 | Were the angels, as God created them, good and happy? |
14554 | Were the people of the Old Law validly married? |
14554 | What Sacraments are never given in the Church? |
14554 | What am I to do, therefore? |
14554 | What animals did Noe have in the Ark? |
14554 | What answer will they make on the day of judgment when they stand side by side with those who died for the faith? |
14554 | What are altar stones? |
14554 | What are angels? |
14554 | What are dreams? |
14554 | What are ghosts? |
14554 | What are mediums and spiritists? |
14554 | What are servile works? |
14554 | What are spells, charms? |
14554 | What are the catacombs, and why were they made? |
14554 | What are the chief evils of"mixed marriage"? |
14554 | What are the chief qualities of a good confession? |
14554 | What are the chief works of the Church? |
14554 | What are the different vestments used at Mass called? |
14554 | What are the duties and privileges of these other ministers of the Church? |
14554 | What are the duties of the angels? |
14554 | What are the effects of Confirmation? |
14554 | What are the ends for which the sacrifice of the Cross was offered? |
14554 | What are the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
14554 | What are the parts of the Mass? |
14554 | What are the qualities of a glorified body? |
14554 | What are the rewards or punishments appointed for men''s souls after the Particular Judgment? |
14554 | What are the seven dolor beads? |
14554 | What are the"gates of Heaven"? |
14554 | What are the"right dispositions"for Penance, for Holy Eucharist? |
14554 | What are the"seven dolors"of the Blessed Virgin? |
14554 | What are their duties? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Eighth Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Fifth Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Fourth Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Ninth Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Second Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Seventh Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Sixth Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Tenth Commandment? |
14554 | What are we commanded by the Third Commandment? |
14554 | What are"fortune tellers"? |
14554 | What are"impediments to marriage"? |
14554 | What are"religious orders"? |
14554 | What befell Adam and Eve on account of their sin? |
14554 | What benefit is derived from Thomas the Apostle doubting the resurrection of Our Lord? |
14554 | What benefits are derived from the communion of saints? |
14554 | What books should be found in every Catholic family? |
14554 | What brought them to Bethlehem? |
14554 | What by the New? |
14554 | What by the"pain of sense"that the damned suffer? |
14554 | What can one do who can not remember his sins in confession? |
14554 | What caused Our Lord''s sufferings in the garden? |
14554 | What ceremonies are used in solemn Baptism? |
14554 | What day of the year is Annunciation Day? |
14554 | What did Adam lose by his sin? |
14554 | What did Jesus Christ suffer? |
14554 | What did Our Lord do at the marriage in Cana? |
14554 | What did Our Lord do in this garden? |
14554 | What did his dream mean? |
14554 | What did the Angel Gabriel say at the Annunciation? |
14554 | What did the Apostles prove by suffering death for their faith? |
14554 | What did the Archangel Gabriel do? |
14554 | What did the Archangel Michael do? |
14554 | What did the Church do for slaves? |
14554 | What did the Jews count the beginning and the end of their day? |
14554 | What did the King of Egypt dream? |
14554 | What did the feast of the Pasch or Passover commemorate? |
14554 | What did the king''s magicians do? |
14554 | What did the prophets foretell about Christ? |
14554 | What did they do to hide their crime? |
14554 | What do all these ceremonies mean? |
14554 | What do the Beatitudes teach? |
14554 | What do their colors signify? |
14554 | What do they signify? |
14554 | What do they signify? |
14554 | What do we ask for by"Thy kingdom come"? |
14554 | What do we ask for by"our daily bread"? |
14554 | What do we know of Our Lord''s hidden life? |
14554 | What do we learn from the life of Joseph in Egypt? |
14554 | What do we mean by His"hidden life"? |
14554 | What do we mean by His"public life"? |
14554 | What do we mean by an effect? |
14554 | What do we mean by praying to the saints? |
14554 | What do we mean by the"agony in the garden"? |
14554 | What do we mean by the"end of man"? |
14554 | What do we mean by the"pain of loss"? |
14554 | What do we mean by the"pomps"of the devil? |
14554 | What do we mean by the"temporal power"of the Pope? |
14554 | What do we mean by"Jacob''s ladder"? |
14554 | What do we mean by"Suffragan Bishops"? |
14554 | What do we mean by"as we forgive those who trespass against us"? |
14554 | What do we mean by"magistrates"? |
14554 | What do we mean by"the Church Suffering"? |
14554 | What do we mean by"the ordinary minister"of a Sacrament? |
14554 | What do we mean when we say"the world"is one of our spiritual enemies? |
14554 | What do we promise in Baptism? |
14554 | What do we see there? |
14554 | What do you believe of Jesus Christ? |
14554 | What do you call those graces or gifts of God by which we believe in Him, hope in Him, and love Him? |
14554 | What do you know of St. Monica? |
14554 | What do you mean by Our Lord''s"Passion"? |
14554 | What do you mean by a firm purpose of sinning no more? |
14554 | What do you mean by a person''s"vocation"? |
14554 | What do you mean by days of abstinence? |
14554 | What do you mean by fast- days? |
14554 | What do you mean by grace? |
14554 | What do you mean by saying that Christ sits at the right hand of God? |
14554 | What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be interior? |
14554 | What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be supernatural? |
14554 | What do you mean by saying that our sorrow should be universal? |
14554 | What do you mean by the Blessed Trinity? |
14554 | What do you mean by the Incarnation? |
14554 | What do you mean by the appearances of bread and wine? |
14554 | What do you mean by the authority of the Church? |
14554 | What do you mean by the indefectibility of the Church? |
14554 | What do you mean by the infallibility of the Church? |
14554 | What do you mean by the near occasions of sin? |
14554 | What do you mean by the remains of sin? |
14554 | What do you mean by the"Church Militant"? |
14554 | What do you mean by the"gift of tongues"? |
14554 | What do you mean by"faith and morals"? |
14554 | What do you mean by"judge the living and the dead"? |
14554 | What do you mean by"the Church Triumphant"? |
14554 | What do you mean when you say Adam''s will was weakened by sin? |
14554 | What do you mean when you say that our sorrow should be sovereign? |
14554 | What do"trespasses"mean? |
14554 | What does Calvary mean? |
14554 | What does Pentecost mean? |
14554 | What does Whitsunday mean? |
14554 | What does a father do for his children? |
14554 | What does a good father generally do with an unruly child? |
14554 | What does a miracle prove? |
14554 | What does a"Sacrament of the dead"mean? |
14554 | What does balm in the chrism signify? |
14554 | What does it benefit the poor creatures in Hell to have been rich, or beautiful, or learned, or powerful? |
14554 | What does our Catechism contain? |
14554 | What does our angel guardian do for us? |
14554 | What does praying for a"person''s intention"mean? |
14554 | What does she do? |
14554 | What does that mean? |
14554 | What does the New Testament show? |
14554 | What does the Old Testament contain? |
14554 | What does the bishop say in anointing the person he confirms? |
14554 | What does the communion of saints mean? |
14554 | What does the priest prepare for Mass? |
14554 | What does the"master of ceremonies"do? |
14554 | What does the"stigmata of Our Lord"mean? |
14554 | What does the"temporal punishment"for sin mean? |
14554 | What does"Amen"mean? |
14554 | What does"Christian"mean? |
14554 | What does"Creator"mean? |
14554 | What does"Eucharist"mean? |
14554 | What does"Thy kingdom"mean here? |
14554 | What does"abandon"mean? |
14554 | What does"an indulgence of 40 days,"etc., mean? |
14554 | What does"cathedra"mean? |
14554 | What does"covet"mean? |
14554 | What does"doctrine"mean? |
14554 | What does"faithful departed"mean? |
14554 | What does"grace"at meals mean? |
14554 | What does"hail"mean? |
14554 | What does"hallowed"mean? |
14554 | What does"incarnation"mean? |
14554 | What does"infinite"mean? |
14554 | What does"life everlasting"mean? |
14554 | What does"love thy neighbor as thyself"mean? |
14554 | What does"made flesh"mean in the third part of the Angelus? |
14554 | What does"redemption"mean? |
14554 | What does"rest in peace"mean? |
14554 | What does"seeing God face to face"mean, if God has no face? |
14554 | What does"sponsors"mean? |
14554 | What does"supernatural"mean? |
14554 | What does"supreme"mean? |
14554 | What does"the Word"mean? |
14554 | What does"unction"mean? |
14554 | What does"vicar"mean? |
14554 | What does"worship"mean? |
14554 | What duties does the priest perform in the confessional? |
14554 | What effect did the coming of the Holy Ghost have upon the Apostles? |
14554 | What effect has it? |
14554 | What else happened there? |
14554 | What evil befell us on account of the disobedience of our first parents? |
14554 | What evils follow divorce? |
14554 | What example did Our Lord give to explain this? |
14554 | What example did Our Lord give? |
14554 | What excuse do some give for not hearing Mass? |
14554 | What foolish excuses do some give for not becoming Catholics? |
14554 | What grace do the Sacraments give? |
14554 | What happened at the death of Our Lord? |
14554 | What happened on the way to Emmaus? |
14554 | What happened to the Israelites and Egyptians at the Red Sea? |
14554 | What happened when Our Lord said,"This is My body, this is My blood"? |
14554 | What help does God give us to save our souls? |
14554 | What is Baptism of blood? |
14554 | What is Baptism of desire? |
14554 | What is Baptism of water? |
14554 | What is Baptism? |
14554 | What is Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament? |
14554 | What is Confession? |
14554 | What is Confirmation? |
14554 | What is God? |
14554 | What is Heaven? |
14554 | What is Hell? |
14554 | What is Holy Communion? |
14554 | What is Lent? |
14554 | What is Purgatory? |
14554 | What is Vespers? |
14554 | What is a Requiem Mass? |
14554 | What is a Sacrament? |
14554 | What is a catechism? |
14554 | What is a creature? |
14554 | What is a creed? |
14554 | What is a diocese? |
14554 | What is a foster- father? |
14554 | What is a general confession? |
14554 | What is a general confession? |
14554 | What is a hermit? |
14554 | What is a material sin? |
14554 | What is a miracle? |
14554 | What is a mystery? |
14554 | What is a parish? |
14554 | What is a partial indulgence? |
14554 | What is a perjurer? |
14554 | What is a pilgrim? |
14554 | What is a plenary indulgence? |
14554 | What is a real Catholic newspaper? |
14554 | What is a relic? |
14554 | What is a sacramental? |
14554 | What is a sacrifice? |
14554 | What is a sepulchre? |
14554 | What is a sin of omission? |
14554 | What is a spirit? |
14554 | What is a spiritual Communion? |
14554 | What is a spiritual Communion? |
14554 | What is a vice? |
14554 | What is a virtue? |
14554 | What is a vow? |
14554 | What is a"dispensation"granted by the Church? |
14554 | What is a"mixed marriage"? |
14554 | What is absolution? |
14554 | What is actual grace? |
14554 | What is actual sin? |
14554 | What is almsgiving? |
14554 | What is an attribute? |
14554 | What is an heir? |
14554 | What is an indulgence? |
14554 | What is an oath? |
14554 | What is attrition? |
14554 | What is authority? |
14554 | What is backbiting? |
14554 | What is balm? |
14554 | What is calumny? |
14554 | What is charity? |
14554 | What is conditional Baptism, and when is it given? |
14554 | What is contempt? |
14554 | What is contrition or sorrow for sin? |
14554 | What is covetousness? |
14554 | What is death? |
14554 | What is despair? |
14554 | What is detraction? |
14554 | What is envy? |
14554 | What is faith? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Eighth Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Fifth Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Fourth Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Ninth Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Second Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Seventh Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Sixth Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Tenth Commandment? |
14554 | What is forbidden by the Third Commandment? |
14554 | What is gluttony? |
14554 | What is holy chrism? |
14554 | What is holy oil? |
14554 | What is hope? |
14554 | What is imperfect contrition? |
14554 | What is lust? |
14554 | What is man? |
14554 | What is martyrdom? |
14554 | What is meant by a"serious reason"for missing Mass? |
14554 | What is meant by anointing the forehead with chrism in the form of a cross? |
14554 | What is meant by our"concupiscence"? |
14554 | What is meant by our"predominant"or"ruling"sin? |
14554 | What is meant by the Old Law? |
14554 | What is meant by the command of confessing at least once a year? |
14554 | What is meant by the"Assumption"of the Blessed Virgin? |
14554 | What is meant by the"civil effects of marriage"? |
14554 | What is meant by the"natural law"? |
14554 | What is meant by"Mysteries of the Rosary"? |
14554 | What is meant by"patron saint"? |
14554 | What is merit? |
14554 | What is mortal sin? |
14554 | What is necessary that persons may be really martyrs? |
14554 | What is necessary to make a good Communion? |
14554 | What is necessary to make an oath lawful? |
14554 | What is necessary to receive Holy Orders worthily? |
14554 | What is perfect contrition? |
14554 | What is prayer? |
14554 | What is presumption? |
14554 | What is pride? |
14554 | What is private Baptism? |
14554 | What is required that the Pope may so speak? |
14554 | What is revelation? |
14554 | What is revenge? |
14554 | What is sacramental grace? |
14554 | What is sanctifying grace? |
14554 | What is slander? |
14554 | What is stubbornness? |
14554 | What is temptation? |
14554 | What is the Angelus? |
14554 | What is the Apocalypse? |
14554 | What is the Church? |
14554 | What is the Easter time? |
14554 | What is the Eighth Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Fifth Commandment? |
14554 | What is the First Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Fourth Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Holy Eucharist called when received by a person who is not fasting? |
14554 | What is the Holy Eucharist? |
14554 | What is the Litany of the Blessed Virgin? |
14554 | What is the Magnificat? |
14554 | What is the Mass? |
14554 | What is the Ninth Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Rosary? |
14554 | What is the Sacrament of Extreme Unction? |
14554 | What is the Sacrament of Holy Orders? |
14554 | What is the Sacrament of Matrimony? |
14554 | What is the Sacrament of Penance? |
14554 | What is the Second Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Seventh Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Sixth Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Tenth Commandment? |
14554 | What is the Third Commandment? |
14554 | What is the baptistery? |
14554 | What is the beatific vision? |
14554 | What is the best method of examining our conscience? |
14554 | What is the brown scapular called? |
14554 | What is the chalice? |
14554 | What is the character which these Sacraments imprint in the soul? |
14554 | What is the ciborium? |
14554 | What is the communion of the members of the Church called? |
14554 | What is the cope? |
14554 | What is the difference between Baptism and Penance in the remission of the guilt and punishment? |
14554 | What is the difference between Holy Eucharist and Holy Communion? |
14554 | What is the difference between a cross and a crucifix? |
14554 | What is the difference between a saint and an angel? |
14554 | What is the difference between beatification and canonization? |
14554 | What is the difference between blasphemy and cursing? |
14554 | What is the difference between the Commandments of God and the commandments of the Church? |
14554 | What is the difference between the Sacraments and the sacramentals? |
14554 | What is the examination of conscience? |
14554 | What is the fast necessary for Holy Communion? |
14554 | What is the feast of"Holy Innocents"? |
14554 | What is the first thing your father would do in that case? |
14554 | What is the grace of perseverance? |
14554 | What is the hierarchy of the Church? |
14554 | What is the host? |
14554 | What is the humeral, or Benediction veil? |
14554 | What is the judgment called which all men have to undergo on the last day? |
14554 | What is the judgment called which we have to undergo immediately after death? |
14554 | What is the league of the Sacred Heart? |
14554 | What is the meaning of the command not to marry privately? |
14554 | What is the meaning of the commandment not to marry within the third degree of kindred? |
14554 | What is the meaning of the precept not to solemnize marriage at forbidden times? |
14554 | What is the monstrance used at Benediction? |
14554 | What is the most important part of the Sacrament of Penance? |
14554 | What is the nuptial Mass? |
14554 | What is the obligation of a godfather and a godmother? |
14554 | What is the outward sign in Baptism? |
14554 | What is the outward sign in Confirmation? |
14554 | What is the outward sign in Matrimony? |
14554 | What is the pall? |
14554 | What is the pallium? |
14554 | What is the paten? |
14554 | What is the purificator? |
14554 | What is the sacramental grace given in Penance? |
14554 | What is the sacristy? |
14554 | What is the scapular, and why do we wear it? |
14554 | What is the sin called which we inherit from our first parents? |
14554 | What is the sin of simony? |
14554 | What is the substance of the"act of contrition"? |
14554 | What is the substance of the"act of faith"? |
14554 | What is the substance of the"act of hope"? |
14554 | What is the substance of the"act of love"? |
14554 | What is the tabernacle? |
14554 | What is the tonsure? |
14554 | What is the use of the outward sign in the Sacraments? |
14554 | What is the use, he might say, of your trying to be good? |
14554 | What is the"Elevation"in the Mass? |
14554 | What is the"Offertory"in the Mass? |
14554 | What is the"divine office"? |
14554 | What is this change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Our Lord called? |
14554 | What is venial sin? |
14554 | What is"Peter''s pence"? |
14554 | What is"excommunication"? |
14554 | What is"free will"in man? |
14554 | What is"meditation"? |
14554 | What is"rash judgment"? |
14554 | What is"woman"? |
14554 | What is, holy water? |
14554 | What kind of sin is drunkenness? |
14554 | What kind of sorrow should we have for our sins? |
14554 | What kind of sorrow should we have for our sins? |
14554 | What lessons do we learn from the sufferings and death of Christ? |
14554 | What lessons do we learn from the sufferings of the early Christians? |
14554 | What makes man different from all other animals? |
14554 | What makes us Christian? |
14554 | What makes us help others? |
14554 | What matters it what people think we are if God knows all our doings and is pleased with them? |
14554 | What miracles did Our Lord perform? |
14554 | What must a person do who can not restore? |
14554 | What must be done in such cases? |
14554 | What must he do who has willfully concealed a mortal sin in confession? |
14554 | What must he do? |
14554 | What must they do who have lied about their neighbor and seriously injured his character? |
14554 | What must we do to gain an indulgence? |
14554 | What must we do to receive the Sacrament of Penance worthily? |
14554 | What must we do to save our souls? |
14554 | What must we do when the confessor asks us questions? |
14554 | What must you do if you have lost or destroyed the article you stole? |
14554 | What must you do with anything you find? |
14554 | What names should be given in Baptism? |
14554 | What other effects followed from the sin of our first parents? |
14554 | What other sacramental is in very frequent use? |
14554 | What part did the Angel Gabriel make? |
14554 | What part of the Hail Mary did St. Elizabeth make? |
14554 | What part of the Hail Mary did the Church make? |
14554 | What parts of the body are anointed in Extreme Unction? |
14554 | What person of the Blessed Trinity is meant by"Father"in the Lord''s Prayer? |
14554 | What price did Our Lord pay to redeem us? |
14554 | What proof have we of it? |
14554 | What relation was Eve to Adam? |
14554 | What relations are within the third degree of kindred? |
14554 | What relatives are in the third degree? |
14554 | What shall I do? |
14554 | What should we do after Holy Communion? |
14554 | What should we do after telling our sins? |
14554 | What should we do before beginning the examination of conscience? |
14554 | What should we do before praying? |
14554 | What should we do if we break our fast before Holy Communion? |
14554 | What should we do if we can not remember the number of our sins? |
14554 | What should we do on entering the confessional? |
14554 | What should we do while the priest is giving us absolution? |
14554 | What should we remember when we are unjustly punished? |
14554 | What should we think of when we say the Confiteor? |
14554 | What should you do if the sick Catholic does not wish or refuses to see the priest? |
14554 | What signs did God give to Moses to show King Pharao? |
14554 | What sin does he commit who neglects to receive Communion during the Easter time? |
14554 | What sin does he commit who receives the Sacraments of the living in mortal sin? |
14554 | What sin is it to marry unlawfully? |
14554 | What sins are we bound to confess? |
14554 | What sins does the drunkard commit? |
14554 | What sins follow covetousness? |
14554 | What sins follow lust? |
14554 | What sins follow pride? |
14554 | What special preparation should be made to receive Confirmation? |
14554 | What then was man made for? |
14554 | What things should persons tell the priest when they are making arrangements for marriage? |
14554 | What things should you prepare when the priest is coming to give the Viaticum or Extreme Unction in your house? |
14554 | What three great sins should you always guard against? |
14554 | What three things are necessary to make a Sacrament? |
14554 | What vows do the members of religious orders take? |
14554 | What was His greatest? |
14554 | What was a"synagogue"? |
14554 | What was done in the synagogues? |
14554 | What was his age? |
14554 | What was manna? |
14554 | What was the Deluge? |
14554 | What was the condition of men before the coming of Our Lord? |
14554 | What was the devil''s name before he was cast out of Heaven? |
14554 | What was the origin of offering the priest money for celebrating Mass for your intention? |
14554 | What was the temple of the Pantheon in Rome? |
14554 | What was the veil of the temple? |
14554 | What was the"Ark of the Covenant,"and what did it contain? |
14554 | What was the"Garden of Paradise"? |
14554 | What was the"Holy of Holies"? |
14554 | What was the"Paschal Lamb"? |
14554 | What was the"Transfiguration of Our Lord"? |
14554 | What was the"burning bush"that Moses saw? |
14554 | What was the"crowning with thorns"? |
14554 | What was the"manna"? |
14554 | What was the"scourging at the pillar"? |
14554 | What were the Crusades? |
14554 | What were the effects of Adam''s sin? |
14554 | What were the"clean animals"? |
14554 | What were they to do? |
14554 | What were"first fruits"and tithes in the Old Law? |
14554 | What were"the ten plagues of Egypt"? |
14554 | What will excuse us for telling another''s faults? |
14554 | What words should we bear always in mind? |
14554 | What works are generally enjoined for indulgences? |
14554 | What would become of those who lived before the Apostles wrote the New Testament? |
14554 | What would you do? |
14554 | What would you think of a beggar of this kind? |
14554 | What, then, are you to do, if, without thinking, you break your fast? |
14554 | What, then, must I do? |
14554 | When a Sacrament? |
14554 | When a man invents anything to be sold, what does he do that people may know the true article-- say a pen? |
14554 | When a person dies men ask: What wealth has he left behind? |
14554 | When and to whom did God promise the Redeemer? |
14554 | When and under what forms? |
14554 | When and where are the bread and wine changed into the body and blood of Christ? |
14554 | When and why did God send it? |
14554 | When and why should we make it? |
14554 | When are ashes blessed in the Church? |
14554 | When are candles blessed in the Church? |
14554 | When are motives for marriage"worthy"? |
14554 | When are persons lawfully married? |
14554 | When are two persons said to be equal? |
14554 | When are we bound to receive Holy Communion? |
14554 | When are we obliged to admonish the sinner? |
14554 | When are we required to profess our religion? |
14554 | When can we obey the laws that the State makes with regard to marriage? |
14554 | When did Christ give His priests the power to change bread and wine into His body and blood? |
14554 | When did Christ institute the Holy Eucharist? |
14554 | When did he make it? |
14554 | When did it begin and when did it end? |
14554 | When did men begin to speak different languages? |
14554 | When did the Jewish religion cease to be the true religion? |
14554 | When does it come? |
14554 | When does the Church teach infallibly? |
14554 | When does the"Canon"of the Mass begin? |
14554 | When is Holy Communion called the"Viaticum"? |
14554 | When is Trinity Sunday? |
14554 | When is a soul said to be dead? |
14554 | When is an oath rash? |
14554 | When is it blessed? |
14554 | When is it well to add to our confession a sin of our past life? |
14554 | When is our confession entire? |
14554 | When is our confession humble? |
14554 | When is our confession sincere? |
14554 | When is our contrition perfect? |
14554 | When is the Holy Eucharist a sacrifice? |
14554 | When may we take an oath? |
14554 | When should the priest be sent for in cases of sickness? |
14554 | When should we receive Extreme Unction? |
14554 | When should you say the penance given in confession? |
14554 | When was marriage first instituted? |
14554 | When were these laws abolished? |
14554 | When will Christ judge us? |
14554 | When will habit excuse us for the sin? |
14554 | When will perfect contrition blot out mortal sin? |
14554 | Where and at what time of the day should Catholics be married? |
14554 | Where could they go? |
14554 | Where did Christ die? |
14554 | Where did Our Lord generally preach? |
14554 | Where did the red and where did the blue come from? |
14554 | Where does the priest get the Blessed Sacrament he gives to the people? |
14554 | Where does the priest get the host? |
14554 | Where is Christ in Heaven? |
14554 | Where is God? |
14554 | Where shall we find the chief truths which the Catholic Church teaches? |
14554 | Where was Calvary? |
14554 | Where was Christ''s body while His soul was in Limbo? |
14554 | Where was Gethsemani or the Garden of Olives? |
14554 | Where will persons go who have never sinned and who die without Baptism? |
14554 | Where will the particular judgment be held? |
14554 | Where, then, will they go? |
14554 | Wherever you are, ask yourselves now and then, Why am I in this particular place; what good am I doing here? |
14554 | Which are the Commandments of God? |
14554 | Which are the Commandments that contain the whole law of God? |
14554 | Which are the Sacraments that give sanctifying grace? |
14554 | Which are the Sacraments that increase sanctifying grace in the soul? |
14554 | Which are the attributes of the Church? |
14554 | Which are the beatitudes? |
14554 | Which are the chief commandments of the Church? |
14554 | Which are the chief corporal works of mercy? |
14554 | Which are the chief creatures of God? |
14554 | Which are the chief effects of the redemption? |
14554 | Which are the chief means by which we satisfy God for the temporal punishment due to sin? |
14554 | Which are the chief sources of sin? |
14554 | Which are the chief spiritual works of mercy? |
14554 | Which are the effects of the Sacrament of Extreme Unction? |
14554 | Which are the effects of the Sacrament of Matrimony? |
14554 | Which are the effects of venial sin? |
14554 | Which are the first things we should tell the priest in confession? |
14554 | Which are the means instituted by Our Lord to enable men at all times to share in the fruits of the Redemption? |
14554 | Which are the prayers most recommended to us? |
14554 | Which are the sins against hope? |
14554 | Which are the twelve fruits of the Holy Ghost? |
14554 | Which is the best manner of hearing Mass? |
14554 | Which is the chief sacramental used in the Church? |
14554 | Which tempts us most to sin, our soul or our body? |
14554 | Which were the chief blessings intended for Adam and Eve, had they remained faithful to God? |
14554 | Who are sponsors by proxy? |
14554 | Who are the successors of the other Apostles? |
14554 | Who are they who do not believe all that God has taught? |
14554 | Who are they who neglect to profess their belief in what God has taught? |
14554 | Who can administer Baptism? |
14554 | Who can administer Confirmation? |
14554 | Who can confer the Sacrament of Holy Orders? |
14554 | Who created Heaven and earth, and all things? |
14554 | Who gave the Ten Commandments? |
14554 | Who has the right to make laws concerning the Sacrament of marriage? |
14554 | Who is God? |
14554 | Who is not glad to hear his parents praised or see them respected? |
14554 | Who is the Holy Ghost? |
14554 | Who is the Redeemer? |
14554 | Who is the invisible head of the Church? |
14554 | Who is the minister of the Sacrament of Extreme Unction? |
14554 | Who is the visible head of the Church? |
14554 | Who made the world? |
14554 | Who sent the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles? |
14554 | Who were present when Our Lord instituted the Holy Eucharist? |
14554 | Who were the first man and woman? |
14554 | Who were they? |
14554 | Why are Baptism and Penance called Sacraments of the dead? |
14554 | Why are Catholics called Roman? |
14554 | Why are Confirmation, Holy Eucharist, Extreme Unction, Holy Orders, and Matrimony called Sacraments of the living? |
14554 | Why are Protestants so called? |
14554 | Why are drunkenness, dishonesty, and impurity so dangerous? |
14554 | Why are godfathers and godmothers given in Baptism? |
14554 | Why are our churches holy? |
14554 | Why are pride, covetousness, etc., called"capital sins"? |
14554 | Why are relics placed in them? |
14554 | Why are souls in Purgatory? |
14554 | Why are there different kinds of religious orders? |
14554 | Why are there so many kinds of Protestants? |
14554 | Why can there be but one God? |
14554 | Why can we not imagine the sufferings of Hell? |
14554 | Why can we not receive Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Orders more than once? |
14554 | Why could Christ''s body suffer greater pain than ours? |
14554 | Why did Christ descend into Limbo? |
14554 | Why did Christ found the Church? |
14554 | Why did Christ institute the Holy Eucharist? |
14554 | Why did Christ live so long on earth? |
14554 | Why did Christ send the Holy Ghost? |
14554 | Why did Christ suffer and die? |
14554 | Why did Christ suffer more than was necessary? |
14554 | Why did God allow so long a time to pass before redeeming us? |
14554 | Why did God command Moses to remove his shoes before coming to the"burning bush"? |
14554 | Why did God create angels? |
14554 | Why did God leave concupiscence in us? |
14554 | Why did God leave this concupiscence in us? |
14554 | Why did God make you? |
14554 | Why did God perform more miracles in the first ages of the Church than now? |
14554 | Why did God send them? |
14554 | Why did He have seven clean animals? |
14554 | Why did He lead a hidden life for so many years? |
14554 | Why did Joseph''s brothers wish to put him to death? |
14554 | Why did King Herod wish to find the Infant Jesus? |
14554 | Why did he have more"clean"than"unclean"animals? |
14554 | Why did many follow him? |
14554 | Why did the Apostles make the creed? |
14554 | Why did the Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph go to Bethlehem before the birth of Our Lord? |
14554 | Why did the Blessed Virgin suffer so many trials upon earth? |
14554 | Why did the Christian religion spread so rapidly? |
14554 | Why did the early Christians do more severe penance than we do? |
14554 | Why do many marriages prove unhappy? |
14554 | Why do these two Commandments of the love of God and of our neighbor contain the whole law of God? |
14554 | Why do we believe revealed truths? |
14554 | Why do we believe that the saints will help us? |
14554 | Why do we call God"Father"? |
14554 | Why do we call one of these the"penitent thief"? |
14554 | Why do we find different acts of faith? |
14554 | Why do we make the Sign of the Cross? |
14554 | Why do we need Mary''s prayer at the hour of death? |
14554 | Why do we pray before the crucifix and the images and relics of the saints? |
14554 | Why do we receive the gift of counsel? |
14554 | Why do we receive the gift of fear of the Lord? |
14554 | Why do we receive the gift of fortitude? |
14554 | Why do we receive the gift of knowledge? |
14554 | Why do we receive the gift of piety? |
14554 | Why do we receive the gift of understanding? |
14554 | Why do we receive the gift of wisdom? |
14554 | Why do we say"He was buried"? |
14554 | Why do we say"Who art in Heaven,"if God is everywhere? |
14554 | Why do we say"daily"? |
14554 | Why do we say"died"instead of"was killed"? |
14554 | Why do we say"full of grace"? |
14554 | Why do we say"our"and not"my"Father? |
14554 | Why do we say"right hand of God"when God has no hands? |
14554 | Why do we show respect to the bodies of the dead? |
14554 | Why do we suffer for the sin of our first parents? |
14554 | Why do you call that day"good"on which Christ suffered so sorrowful a death? |
14554 | Why does Christ judge men immediately after death? |
14554 | Why does God not always grant our prayers? |
14554 | Why does God require a temporal punishment as a satisfaction for sin? |
14554 | Why does God watch over us? |
14554 | Why does He not forgive everything? |
14554 | Why does He not use them now? |
14554 | Why does the Catholic religion suit all classes of persons? |
14554 | Why does the Church canonize holy persons? |
14554 | Why does the Church command us to fast and abstain? |
14554 | Why does the Church command us to keep the Sunday holy instead of the Sabbath? |
14554 | Why does the Church define some truths? |
14554 | Why does the Church forbid the marriage of Catholics with persons who have a different religion or no religion at all? |
14554 | Why does the Church not give the Holy Eucharist to the people under the appearance of wine also? |
14554 | Why does the Church use Latin as its language? |
14554 | Why does the bishop give the person he confirms a slight blow on the cheek? |
14554 | Why does the devil tempt us? |
14554 | Why does the devil wish to keep us out of Heaven? |
14554 | Why does the priest genuflect, etc., during Mass? |
14554 | Why does the priest give us a penance after confession? |
14554 | Why does the priest wear vestments? |
14554 | Why does venial sin lessen the love of God in our hearts? |
14554 | Why has he need of it? |
14554 | Why is Jesus Christ true God? |
14554 | Why is Jesus Christ true man? |
14554 | Why is Mary called"blessed amongst women"? |
14554 | Why is Mary called"holy"? |
14554 | Why is going to fortune tellers a sin? |
14554 | Why is it foolish to conceal sins in confession? |
14554 | Why is it necessary for God to watch over us? |
14554 | Why is it necessary for us to know God? |
14554 | Why is it necessary to bless yourself properly? |
14554 | Why is it sinful to be a member of a secret society? |
14554 | Why is it sinful to resist lawful authority? |
14554 | Why is it so called? |
14554 | Why is it so called? |
14554 | Why is it unkind and ungrateful not to pay our debts? |
14554 | Why is it well to confess always to the same priest? |
14554 | Why is it wrong to come late for Mass? |
14554 | Why is it wrong to judge others guilty of sin? |
14554 | Why is it wrong to tell another''s secrets or read another''s letters? |
14554 | Why is oil used in Confirmation? |
14554 | Why is presumption a great sin? |
14554 | Why is suicide a mortal sin? |
14554 | Why is the Bible called the Old and New Testament? |
14554 | Why is the Pope, the Bishop of Rome, the visible head of the Church? |
14554 | Why is the bishop''s church called cathedral? |
14554 | Why is the devil wiser than we are? |
14554 | Why is the name of a saint given in Baptism? |
14554 | Why is this sin called mortal? |
14554 | Why is this sin called original? |
14554 | Why is water used in Baptism? |
14554 | Why must God be"just"as well as"merciful"? |
14554 | Why must the Pope sometimes speak on political matters? |
14554 | Why must the true Church be visible? |
14554 | Why must there be a Purgatory now? |
14554 | Why must we avoid occasions of sin? |
14554 | Why must we believe mysteries? |
14554 | Why must we take more care of our soul than of our body? |
14554 | Why should children study? |
14554 | Why should not the heavenly Father punish us for treating His beloved Son with such shameful disrespect and contempt? |
14554 | Why should the devil tempt us? |
14554 | Why should we be anxious to attend Benediction? |
14554 | Why should we be content with our food? |
14554 | Why should we be most careful about the Sixth Commandment? |
14554 | Why should we be proud of the Catholic religion? |
14554 | Why should we be sorry for our sins? |
14554 | Why should we go to confession even when we have not committed sin since our last confession? |
14554 | Why should we guard against bad reading? |
14554 | Why should we have the greatest respect for the opinions of the Holy Father on any subject? |
14554 | Why should we learn the Catechism? |
14554 | Why should we love our neighbor? |
14554 | Why should we say grace at meals? |
14554 | Why should we seek advice? |
14554 | Why should we take care of our bodies? |
14554 | Why then do we say right hand? |
14554 | Why then do we say,"Who art in Heaven,"as if He were no place else? |
14554 | Why then should I feel ashamed to let God see and know of this wicked thought or action? |
14554 | Why was Cain''s sacrifice displeasing to God? |
14554 | Why was John the Baptist put to death? |
14554 | Why was Our Lord crucified between thieves? |
14554 | Why was Our Lord put to death? |
14554 | Why was he cast out? |
14554 | Why was he cut off from the true Church? |
14554 | Why was it established? |
14554 | Why was the Blessed Virgin preserved from Original Sin? |
14554 | Why was the Redeemer not welcomed by all when He came? |
14554 | Why was this veil rent asunder at the death of Our Lord? |
14554 | Why were holy days instituted by the Church? |
14554 | Why were no criminals put to death in Jerusalem? |
14554 | Why were religious orders founded? |
14554 | Why were the Israelites so long in the desert? |
14554 | Why were they commenced? |
14554 | Why were those who took part in these expeditions called Crusaders? |
14554 | Why, then, could He not change in the same way and by the same power the substance of bread and wine into the substance of His own body and blood? |
14554 | Why, then, did they sell their souls for so little while on earth? |
14554 | Why, then, do you sometimes pay so little attention in church or at instructions when the words of Our Lord are repeated to you? |
14554 | Why, then, should we be so proud of this body, and commit so much sin for it, pamper it with every delicacy, only to be the food of worms? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Why? |
14554 | Will God pardon all these offenses if I alone ask Him, seeing that all the angels and saints know that I have thus offended Him? |
14554 | Will He deny them now, when they are always present with Him in Heaven-- where they could not possibly sin? |
14554 | Will Vespers take the place of Mass on Sundays for those who do not attend Mass? |
14554 | Will all who rise on the last day have glorified bodies? |
14554 | Will our bodies share in the reward or punishment of our souls? |
14554 | Will the Holy Ghost abide with the Church forever? |
14554 | Will the bodies of the damned also rise? |
14554 | Will the sentence given at the particular judgment be changed at the general judgment? |
14554 | Will there be a Purgatory after the general judgment? |
14554 | Will you plead fatigue as an excuse when you come to be judged by Him? |
14554 | With whom did the Blessed Virgin live after the death of Our Lord? |
14554 | With whom do godparents contract relationship? |
14554 | Would I do what I am going to do now if I knew my parents, relatives, and friends were watching me? |
14554 | Would I like them to know that I am thinking about things sinful, and preparing to do shameful acts? |
14554 | Would it not be foolish to engage a plasterer to repair the ceiling while the pipe was still leaking? |
14554 | Would we not be proud to belong to a society of which kings and princes were members? |
14554 | Would you not ridicule the boy who refuses to believe that the earth is round and moving because he can not understand it? |
14554 | You know we can pray to the saints and ask their help and prayers; but how could we know that certain men or women are really in Heaven? |
14554 | You should be anxious concerning only this fact: Is there a priest there who was sent by Our Lord? |
14554 | over the Cross mean? |
14554 | with a cross over it mean? |
56631 | ''But how to explain this miracle?'' 56631 ''Do you not, then, think on the grief of those who are left?'' |
56631 | ''Explain yourself; why do you leave us?'' 56631 ''What is the matter with you?'' |
56631 | ''You frighten me,''answered Antonia;''what then is going to happen?'' 56631 A bag of what? |
56631 | A wife? |
56631 | Advancing? |
56631 | Ah master, you who are so far above me? |
56631 | Am I deaf? 56631 Am I sure? |
56631 | Am I to forego this tribute to my dear Padrona because it shocks the sensibilities of a speculative tourist? 56631 An Episcopal prayer- book?" |
56631 | An''t he funny? |
56631 | An''t this bully, now? |
56631 | An''t you glad it''s Christmas? |
56631 | And Charlie? |
56631 | And I,cried Marc- Dives,"am I to have nothing to do? |
56631 | And Kasper? |
56631 | And Lucy and Jane? |
56631 | And Miss Brandon? |
56631 | And did you make known the result of your investigations to Mrs. Dewey, or did you leave her in ignorance of what you had found? |
56631 | And did you suffer all you expected,he asked,"in the way of loss of friends?" |
56631 | And how did my little Trot get along? |
56631 | And how do we stand now, sergeant? |
56631 | And how is this dear little Christmas present? |
56631 | And my father? |
56631 | And no matter what happens, Rose,said Dick, as they lingered a moment outside the house,"you will trust me just the same?" |
56631 | And our munitions? |
56631 | And pray, may I ask where you find yourself religiously? |
56631 | And the Knight of Malta? 56631 And the pretty ladies, eh? |
56631 | And the worst? |
56631 | And the wounded were in the street all night? |
56631 | And then you will not be here for so long? |
56631 | And thou too, what hast thou, O Reynard sly? |
56631 | And what art_ thou_ doing? |
56631 | And what did he say? |
56631 | And what is to be done? |
56631 | And what makes you care? |
56631 | And what of that? |
56631 | And what on earth are we to do with him? |
56631 | And where do you come from,_ vaurien?_asked she as he came in. |
56631 | And who dare hinder my doing as I wish? 56631 And why not?" |
56631 | And you, Hullins? |
56631 | And, pray, what am I spoiling of thine? |
56631 | Anxious? 56631 Any news?" |
56631 | Are they well fastened? |
56631 | Are you bent on ruining me? |
56631 | Are you ready? |
56631 | Are you satisfied, Mother Lefevre? 56631 Are you sure they have?" |
56631 | Are you very sure of it? |
56631 | Art thou yet far- sighted enough to accept the proposals I deigned to make thee? 56631 Barest thou boast of thy victory?" |
56631 | Besides, if we got through, how could we return with provisions? 56631 Bonjour, la mère,"said Polycarpe, as he entered with the ease and swagger of a well- known and favored guest;"how goes it with you?" |
56631 | Bonjour, mauvais sujet,returned the hostess;"what brings you here, to- day?" |
56631 | But if they love each other? |
56631 | But is there not always a chaplain? 56631 But tell me one thing candidly, have neither of you regretted the step; never wished yourselves back again?" |
56631 | But tell us, Gaspard,said Hullin,"without interrupting your breakfast, how comes it that you are here? |
56631 | But what are you going to do with the wagon? |
56631 | But what then? |
56631 | But where shall I put them? |
56631 | But you have met him-- would he not have noticed your name? |
56631 | But, sergeant, can you tell me why he has not written home these two months back? |
56631 | By whose fault? |
56631 | Can it be that they will take another route through the mountains? |
56631 | Can we fancy,asked the Copernicans,"that God has not acted on a scheme so impressive and so beautiful as ours?" |
56631 | Can we fancy,replied their opponents,"that this earth is constantly in motion, which we feel to be the stablest of all things? |
56631 | Christ on earth? |
56631 | Could you not tell me of this before? |
56631 | Dick,said Carl Stoffs, that true and faithful friend--"Dick, would you like to go to the country?" |
56631 | Did he leave New- York? |
56631 | Did n''t you hang up your stocking last night? |
56631 | Did you ever hear or read of anything so opportune as the death of the little king? |
56631 | Did you find this? 56631 Did you have many presents?" |
56631 | Do be quiet, Robert,said his father,"what difference does it make whom you go to church with?" |
56631 | Do n''t you get tired? |
56631 | Do they live here? |
56631 | Do yer think I''d have him for my brother? 56631 Do you hear?" |
56631 | Do you intend to start at once, Jean- Claude? |
56631 | Do you know one Gaspard Lefevre? |
56631 | Do you know who he was, Monsieur Polycarpe, or is that one of the gaps you mentioned? |
56631 | Do you know, Mother Lefevre, for how long we are supplied? |
56631 | Do you know? 56631 Do you mean that you believe this nonsense of Yegof?" |
56631 | Do you mean to be drowned? |
56631 | Do you put your money in a savings bank? 56631 Do you really know nothing of them?" |
56631 | Do you sell papers every day? |
56631 | Do you think that Yankees are the only ones that grind the poor? 56631 Do you think this is your mother?" |
56631 | Do you think, my friend, that a man has nothing to do on the march but write? |
56631 | Do you think,he cried, in a burst of wild grief,"that the fate of those brave sons, those white- haired fathers, moved not my heart? |
56631 | Do you want some fire, Frantz? 56631 Do you want t''other? |
56631 | Doctor Lorquin, now that you have us at the bottom of Blanru, will you explain why we have thus been carried off? 56631 Dost refuse me thy daughter?" |
56631 | Eh? 56631 Eight dollars a month?" |
56631 | Exactly so, mademoiselle, and can you guess? 56631 Food is also necessary,"answered the count,"and does man find it ready for him, unless he works? |
56631 | From whence cometh this happiness that the mother of my Lord should come to me? |
56631 | Gaspard Lefevre? 56631 God is good,"said Frantz,"and why should we let sights even like these affright us from our duty? |
56631 | Good; and your tobacco? |
56631 | Have you ever asked him for it? |
56631 | Have you not heard the proclamation of the Russians and Austrians? |
56631 | Have you not heard? 56631 Have you not, on the contrary, repulsed by a determined obstinacy the solicitations of divine Providence? |
56631 | Have you warned Materne, Jerome, Labarbe? |
56631 | He was right,replied Jean- Claude,"but what does that prove? |
56631 | Her on the steps; did n''t you see her? |
56631 | His name? |
56631 | How are the wounded, doctor? |
56631 | How are you, Dick? |
56631 | How could he be with your father, if Mr. Brandon is that, and he not know any thing about you? |
56631 | How in the world was this discovered? |
56631 | How is it possible you have your catechism at your tongue''s end even at this date? |
56631 | How is my mother? 56631 How much?" |
56631 | How old, then, is this soul according to the calendar of eternal life? |
56631 | How,said that prelate,"do you receive the Thirty- nine Articles?" |
56631 | I do n''t keep you waiting for your tools, you see; there''s not a citizen of Paris that has a better help- mate than you, Auguste; is there, now? 56631 I do n''t think we can get along without Mr. Dick any more, can we?" |
56631 | I fear not, for it is already quite late; but you will tell mamma and Aunt Clara about it, and Uncle Carl? |
56631 | I only did my duty; would you have me leave my comrades to perish? 56631 I say, Jim,"said the big boy, who was about twelve or thirteen years old,"did you ever see the beat of that young''un there? |
56631 | I say, old fellow,cried Bob,"had n''t you a terrible time? |
56631 | I should think I''d had time enough to grow; how long have you been gone? |
56631 | I wonder if mother ever thought of it? |
56631 | If I thought that, Mrs. Stoffs, I should seek them with a heavy heart; but nothing can make that so but death, can it? |
56631 | Is he your brother? |
56631 | Is it any difficulty made them leave their old house? |
56631 | Is it indeed true that Mother Lefevre consents? |
56631 | Is it not our only chance? |
56631 | Is my father well? |
56631 | Is n''t this a reward of merit? |
56631 | Is that so? |
56631 | Is that you, Hullin? |
56631 | Is that you, Jean- Claude? |
56631 | Is there any change? |
56631 | Is there no way of helping that poor fellow there-- the one looking up at us with his large blue eyes? 56631 Is there no way of preserving it, Monsieur Lorquin-- for my poor children''s sake? |
56631 | Is this a time to explain? |
56631 | Is this your counsel, Catherine? |
56631 | Leave me? 56631 Let it be so,"continues M. Caro;"yet which of the materialists has ever pretended to explain why the nervous substance thinks? |
56631 | Let us go to her-- can I go up? |
56631 | Marc may be captured or killed; and even should he succeed in making his way through their lines, how could he enter Phalsbourg? 56631 Marc,"said Hullin, after a moment''s silence,"can I speak before your wife?" |
56631 | Materne,cried Jean- Claude, is there no means of sending a bullet after yonder fool?" |
56631 | Me? 56631 Miss Brandon-- what for should he care if Miss Brandon was hurt, more than for any other lady?" |
56631 | Mother,said Fanny,"may I go to church with brother George tomorrow?" |
56631 | My friend, do you call this waiting? |
56631 | My soul has thirsted for the strong and living God; when shall I come, and appear before his face? |
56631 | Of course I will; why should you ask, Dick? |
56631 | Of gold? 56631 Pleased? |
56631 | Previous to these discoveries, and that of universal gravitation, were not the most decided Copernicans reduced to mere probabilities? 56631 Prithee, my mother, what do you?" |
56631 | Sergeant,said he huskily,"you are of the Sixth?" |
56631 | Shall I go away? |
56631 | Shot? |
56631 | Suppose he do n''t know how,answered one of the bystanders;"and if he did, do you think he could stem that torrent?" |
56631 | The usurper? 56631 Then the allies are in France; the war is to be brought home to us?" |
56631 | Then the best thing is to do it at once, is it not? 56631 Then the minister Challoner, furious at the cries of pity raised by the people, said to the bishop:''Why delude ye the ignorant people? |
56631 | Then why do you come to our country? |
56631 | Then you are for defence, Catherine? |
56631 | Then you are satisfied with them? |
56631 | Then you came through the gate of ritualism? |
56631 | Then you have escaped? |
56631 | There, mother, I do feel tired and hungry,she said; then, catching a glimpse of her mother''s face, started up, exclaiming,"What is the matter?" |
56631 | They are to say? |
56631 | Think you we have lost the courage of our fathers? 56631 Thou here, Hullin?" |
56631 | To lose our lives trying to escape, and leave the others in the toils? 56631 Try what?" |
56631 | Wanted? |
56631 | Was it for this I ordered you to watch the ravine? 56631 Was it not strange, Jean- Claude?" |
56631 | We will die? |
56631 | Weep? 56631 Well then, what?" |
56631 | Well, George,said Robert on Saturday night,"I suppose you are not going to church to- morrow with us?" |
56631 | Well, I dunno; what yer got there? |
56631 | Well, Louise,said he,"you were frightened during the battle, were you?" |
56631 | Well, what have you got for supper, then? |
56631 | Well, what have you got for supper? |
56631 | Well, where is Marc? |
56631 | Well,cried Jean- Claude,"what has happened?" |
56631 | What ails you, Mother Lefevre? |
56631 | What am I doing, my son, would you ken? 56631 What art thou seeking, pious traveller? |
56631 | What book is that, dear? |
56631 | What business? |
56631 | What can all this be? |
56631 | What can five or six hundred men do against four thousand in line of battle? 56631 What can it mean?" |
56631 | What could you do? |
56631 | What did he say, Catherine? |
56631 | What do you have that for? |
56631 | What do you mean, Belle dear? |
56631 | What do you mean, youngster? |
56631 | What do you mean? |
56631 | What do you want it for? |
56631 | What do you want, Trot? |
56631 | What dost thou by the corner of his mouth, O toad? |
56631 | What else wilt thou have? |
56631 | What happiness can it take from you? 56631 What has happened?" |
56631 | What has happened? |
56631 | What hurry is there? 56631 What in the name of sense is she coming at?" |
56631 | What is the good of my asking? |
56631 | What is the matter, my child? |
56631 | What is unity,says Cousin,"taken by itself? |
56631 | What mean,said she,"these emblems by the side of Eve?" |
56631 | What right have the poor to feelings, to thoughts? 56631 What sentence?" |
56631 | What the mischief are you about? |
56631 | What will your new father and your grand sister think of me? |
56631 | What would I do in the country? 56631 What would become of us if we meditated days and weeks about putting a little seasoning in a sauce? |
56631 | What would you do? |
56631 | What would you have me do? |
56631 | What yer want''long o''me? 56631 What''oo bing Trot from the''tore?" |
56631 | What''s brought you back so soon, you little_ vaurien_? |
56631 | What, dear? |
56631 | Where are you going so fast? |
56631 | Where did you get that? |
56631 | Where do you come from? 56631 Where is he?" |
56631 | Where is the apostles''doctrine and fellowship? |
56631 | Where is your pipe? |
56631 | Where was she? 56631 Where was that little Mary with her fair hair and gentle smile this cold Christmas night?" |
56631 | Where? 56631 Whether he was baptized or not?" |
56631 | Who goes there? |
56631 | Who in the fiend''s name could have climbed Falkenstein in the snow? |
56631 | Who is your landlord? |
56631 | Who knows? |
56631 | Who wants the poor drunkard Mara? |
56631 | Who''s that? |
56631 | Who? 56631 Why disturb heaven with our groans? |
56631 | Why do n''t the miller throw himself into the water and swim? 56631 Why do n''t you bring me that paper?" |
56631 | Why is it,asks Mrs. Jameson,"that we see so many women, carefully educated, going over to the Catholic Church? |
56631 | Why not quietly wait,says the_ Churchman_,"and let us be snubbed?" |
56631 | Why, Bella dear, do n''t you love her? |
56631 | Why, Rose? |
56631 | Why,resumed the soliloquist--"why was I not invited to make one among the company assembled here to welcome the great chapel- master? |
56631 | Will you not have some breakfast before starting? |
56631 | Will you not take your soup, then, Yegof? |
56631 | Would I be a woman if I lacked curiosity? 56631 Would I like to go to the country?" |
56631 | Would n''t you be glad to know him? 56631 Yes, but let her see it first; is n''t it odd?" |
56631 | Yes, she is, though,retorted Robert wisely,"what is she made of, from top to toe, but foreign importations?" |
56631 | Yes; but who guided the Germans? 56631 You are not talking foolishly, dear Dick; and if you were, there is only Rose to hear you, and shall you not talk as you please to her?" |
56631 | You can not think of Bonn for a residence? |
56631 | You cause me constant distraction; and when you think seriously, would it not be far better to take the head of the first dog you meet? |
56631 | You come from Donon? |
56631 | You do not understand these matters,said the old woman in a calm and grave tone;"but were you never troubled by things of like nature?" |
56631 | You here, Catherine? |
56631 | You never did really think it, did you, Rose? |
56631 | You return to Falkenstein to- night; why can you not take them with you? |
56631 | You think he really means it, mother? |
56631 | You were pleased with it? |
56631 | You were, then, a rationalist? |
56631 | You? |
56631 | ''Are you not ashamed to mind his words?'' |
56631 | ''But why do we not need it as well as they?'' |
56631 | ''Come, come,''said the Prince Balbo, after a few minutes of discussion on the subject,''what is the use of these fears? |
56631 | ''Do you think so?'' |
56631 | ''Do you think this is your mother?" |
56631 | ''Had I not told you that she would come?'' |
56631 | ''That''s all I have,''said I, putting the money back again into my pocket;''will you give them to me for nine francs, if they fit me?'' |
56631 | ''What are you doing?'' |
56631 | ''What does this mean?'' |
56631 | ''What is the matter, Cuny?'' |
56631 | ---------- Who Shall Take Care Of Our Poor? |
56631 | ----------{ 224} Shall we have a Catholic Congress? |
56631 | ----------{ 42} Who shall take care of our Sick? |
56631 | ----------{ 703} Who Shall Take Care Of The Poor? |
56631 | ... And the pious widow?".... |
56631 | ... Are not those species as distinct to- day as they have always been? |
56631 | 42. Who shall take care of the Poor? |
56631 | A few moments after, the sledge reached a corner of the woods, and Doctor Lorquin, turning in his saddle, cried:"Now, Frantz, what are we to do? |
56631 | A raindrop placed In an o''erteeming cloud? |
56631 | A snowflake drifting o''er the northern waste When winds are loud? |
56631 | A stranger present-- companion of the curé-- asked the question:"Is it a Catholic edition?" |
56631 | About what? |
56631 | Admitting that there is the Catholic Church, the only question to be settled is, Which is that See? |
56631 | After what fashion shall our churches be built? |
56631 | All have parishes, dioceses, and provinces, All(?) |
56631 | Alluding to the custom, Hamlet asks,"Is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring?" |
56631 | Am I a slave to that? |
56631 | Am I not right?" |
56631 | Am I not to fire a shot?" |
56631 | Am I to sit with folded arms while all the rest are fighting?" |
56631 | An atom or a nothing where sublime Worlds, planets piled, thy praise unceasing chime? |
56631 | An pariter recognoscat omnia et singula in dicto libro contenta tanquam sua? |
56631 | An si ostenderet sibi dictus liber paratus sit illum recognoscere tanquam suum? |
56631 | An''t I asleep?" |
56631 | And I''m as ready with my knife as-- but what have you there?" |
56631 | And I, how have I responded to that voice? |
56631 | And again, where would be the danger of merging an individual in an invisible body? |
56631 | And does he hold the concept to be always individual, never general? |
56631 | And first, madam, what were these mercies of your past life? |
56631 | And first, what was the Inquisition? |
56631 | And for what purpose? |
56631 | And how did the church bestow it? |
56631 | And how is any school compendium of such history to be devised for the use of the Catholic and Protestant child alike? |
56631 | And if Condé and Coligny merely sought to banish the Guises, how was that to be effected by pillaging Catholic churches? |
56631 | And if history be philosophy teaching by example, shall we expel it from our educational plan altogether? |
56631 | And if they do not, what is the reason? |
56631 | And in the darkness, we asked ourselves,"Will they venture farther? |
56631 | And in the last act of_ The Merchant of Venice_, when Portia exclaims:"A quarrel, ho, already? |
56631 | And old Duchene, twirling his cotton cap in his hand, muttered:"Great heaven Is that my poor child in such a plight?" |
56631 | And ought I to repulse that thought through the childish fear of abandoning myself to a false hope? |
56631 | And seeing them approach in the half- darkness, he asked:"Are you hurt?" |
56631 | And should the reverse be more logical? |
56631 | And such a queer old hat; do n''t it make you laugh, Josie?" |
56631 | And surely they will do well; for, who can disguise it? |
56631 | And then, my baby''s soul, which I cared so little about-- dear George, do you really think it makes any difference?" |
56631 | And what am I to thee? |
56631 | And what concord is there between Christ and Belial? |
56631 | And what ferocious spirit urges them to such deeds, if not the spirit of evil, the archdemon himself?" |
56631 | And what is the state, to- day, of France? |
56631 | And when will it be held? |
56631 | And why have they made these wonderful efforts, these unprecedented sacrifices? |
56631 | And why not reject as non- catholic everything which all these do not agree in holding? |
56631 | And why shall we pass by the individual altogether, and generalize our observations, when we undertake the study of moral phenomena? |
56631 | And why, Father Jean- Claude? |
56631 | And why? |
56631 | And why?" |
56631 | And will not that teaching be antichristian which denies what Christianity, in this respect, declares to be true? |
56631 | And, by the by, where are my pistols?" |
56631 | And, nevertheless, has there been a transformation? |
56631 | Any news from Jean- Claude?" |
56631 | Are Mary and Fanny well?" |
56631 | Are bare walls and brick floors all that is needed? |
56631 | Are shoes considered essential? |
56631 | Are the morals of our people better? |
56631 | Are the patients not cared for? |
56631 | Are the truths written in the Bible intelligible or superintelligible; that is, endowed with evidence immediate or mediate, or are they mysteries? |
56631 | Are there no able medical men, no remedies, no order, no cleanliness, no wholesome and abundant nourishment? |
56631 | Are these things attributes, faculties, or acts? |
56631 | Are they only passing and transient acts or modifications, or are they faculties and attributes? |
56631 | Are we doing a fair proportion of the work of taking care of our poor? |
56631 | Are we not ourselves witnesses of and actors in a struggle like or analogous to that which, before our day, divided our fathers? |
56631 | Are we not?" |
56631 | Are we to believe on the vaguest of grounds that such a man suddenly became a monster of intolerance? |
56631 | Are we to have a school of CATHOLIC ARTISTS in this country? |
56631 | Are we to suppose hence that women are so much better than men? |
56631 | Are you dead? |
56631 | Are you or your sons hurt?" |
56631 | Away with a miscalled_ real!_ If it, too, is a cheat, may it not be counterfeited with impunity? |
56631 | Bless you, who''d give''em to me, miss?" |
56631 | But after these emblems of defects, which perhaps women have not, what do you intend to bestow upon your own sex?" |
56631 | But ascended to such a summit, all multiplicity eliminated, and pure unalloyed unity once found, how is multiplicity to be reconstructed? |
56631 | But can not the writer understand our zeal for the salvation of souls and our honest desire to help those whose religion is only a logical farce? |
56631 | But can the church which does this be the Episcopal Church? |
56631 | But can the method of selection as Darwin explains it be the foundation of such a hypothesis? |
56631 | But can"vital concurrence, the battle of life,"be the means of creation; can they engender directly organic modifications, varieties, animal species? |
56631 | But do you know what took place in the thirteenth century at the course of Albertus Magnus? |
56631 | But do you know, Hullin,"asked the hunter with a low chuckle,"what I saw a while ago in Grandfontaine? |
56631 | But does it follow that because we can modify certain animal and vegetable species, we can therefore create their species? |
56631 | But does not this second condition also destroy the former, which requires that the object of the intelligence should be one? |
56631 | But does that undivided church, the trunk church, still exist in its integrity? |
56631 | But how am I to believe? |
56631 | But how came you to be a Catholic, and what put it into your head to change your religion?" |
56631 | But how can he call them catholic, since they have no common organic centre, and have no intercommunion? |
56631 | But how can he reside in material space, space properly so called? |
56631 | But how did Galileo act after leaving Rome in 1616, and why was he, of all the well- known Copernicans, singled out for prosecution? |
56631 | But how did the noble wanderers find life in the Vosges? |
56631 | But how do they coexist? |
56631 | But if final triumph is certain, when will it take place? |
56631 | But if this be so, in what are conceptions, abstractions, etc., known? |
56631 | But in the poor country districts, how is it? |
56631 | But in the supposition that there is a kind of multiplicity in the infinite, how would multiplicity be reconciled with unity? |
56631 | But in what, pray, are these two propositions contradictory? |
56631 | But is not the teaching of doubt formally antichristian? |
56631 | But may we not suppose the Catholic party sincere in their wish for peace? |
56631 | But of what sort? |
56631 | But on the whole, had his life been a blessing or otherwise to mankind? |
56631 | But shall we embrace the mean because sooner or later we must relinquish the great? |
56631 | But the child dared not spend the money on himself-- had not Pelagie told him to bring her back everything he got? |
56631 | But then comes the great question, Where is the body of Christ, with which membership is necessary? |
56631 | But to be certain of divine truth, must not reason be willing to obey the voice of God? |
56631 | But was it elementary knowledge alone? |
56631 | But we would know who creates these particular conditions-- who brings them about-- and who changes them? |
56631 | But what English word will convey the idea? |
56631 | But what being does it affirm? |
56631 | But what do I say? |
56631 | But what do we attain? |
56631 | But what has His Holiness done that his epistle should reach his erring people? |
56631 | But what is that yonder, between the two firs? |
56631 | But what is the cause, in our day and at this hour, of the retreat of the entire catholic episcopate into the breast of a new cenacle? |
56631 | But what is this necessity and this habit which are appealed to so complacently, and who proves their strange power? |
56631 | But what shall we say of the following language taken from the_ Churchman_? |
56631 | But where is Louise?" |
56631 | But where is she?" |
56631 | But where is your general? |
56631 | But where shall I put the powder?" |
56631 | But where was Marc- Dives? |
56631 | But where? |
56631 | But while Hullin and his mountaineers were thus preparing for battle, where was the tin- crowned King of Diamonds-- Yegof the Fool? |
56631 | But who has authority to summon them, and why summon these and no others? |
56631 | But who would have thought that the Germans would have entered it? |
56631 | But why are those unfortunates there? |
56631 | But will science be free, some one asks, if it is bound by revelation? |
56631 | But your leave, Gaspard,"she asked;"how long does it last?" |
56631 | But, behind the scenes, what is the practical difference between the Catholic doctrine condemned, and the belief symbolized by the Ritualists? |
56631 | But_ what_ knowledge? |
56631 | By a General Council? |
56631 | By separating the material from the spiritual elements of charity, Christendom retrogrades into paganism; less brutal, less ferocious, the economic(?) |
56631 | By the way, what think you of Bonn?" |
56631 | By what right did we place masters over those nations? |
56631 | Can I pray? |
56631 | Can any among you name a better? |
56631 | Can any translation be more literal? |
56631 | Can anything of this kind be invoked in the natural selection of Darwin? |
56631 | Can it be more faithful? |
56631 | Can there in this world be a greater one? |
56631 | Can we Catholic mothers think of this and sit quietly in our homes with our little ones around us? |
56631 | Can you fail to become an actor in this impassioned scene? |
56631 | Can you fix a single unorthodox or unscriptural significance upon these time- honored obsequies? |
56631 | Canst spin winding- sheets? |
56631 | Carest thou for nothing but eating and drinking?" |
56631 | Catherine walked toward them, and soon she heard:"Then you do not think it possible to reach the foot of the mountain?" |
56631 | Catholic Congress? |
56631 | Cimabue, who revived the art of painting, was he not reared among the Dominicans of Florence? |
56631 | Come, tell me; when we parted, you for Paris, and I for the army, how did you get on?" |
56631 | Conceding that the movement is eternal, we ask, is the action only one, or is it multiple? |
56631 | Could I retreat-- abandon a position which had cost us so much blood-- the Donon road, the way to Paris? |
56631 | Could Jean- Claude hold his own until the arrival of Pivrette? |
56631 | Could n''t we do with two rooms? |
56631 | Could not the Godhead understand and love itself without supposing three personalities? |
56631 | Did n''t I hear some strains of Mozart''s''Twelfth''as I came into the gate?" |
56631 | Did not King David dance when he had smitten the Philistines hip and thigh?" |
56631 | Did not the blood of their men, women, and children flow like water, and no one think of yielding?" |
56631 | Did they record of him that he had"kept the feast,"and worthily remembered one who came that day"to fill the hungry with good things"? |
56631 | Did you ever hear of a newsboy called Big Dick? |
56631 | Did you ever see an old woman so nicely done? |
56631 | Did you know you had a little sister up- stairs?" |
56631 | Did you tell him, mother?" |
56631 | Dives was silent, and Hullin asked:"You like this den, then?" |
56631 | Do n''t you know that every one gets to prison at last? |
56631 | Do not all philosophers admit the existence of acts which are continually changing? |
56631 | Do the acts of men enter into the economy of nature like ebb and flow of tide, day and night, summer and winter? |
56631 | Do the bishops mean to say it is the Episcopal Church, and that it is necessary to belong to their communion in order to be saved? |
56631 | Do the deed and the volition always correspond so perfectly that we may, under all circumstances, infer from the former to the latter? |
56631 | Do they believe themselves to be a portion of the Catholic episcopate? |
56631 | Do they not say every day that faith is incompatible with progress, because revelation is immutable? |
56631 | Do you ask, what new heresy has arisen? |
56631 | Do you fear nothing?" |
56631 | Do you find it, then, surprising that the faith should be hereditary in a family where such facts happen? |
56631 | Do you hear, Louise, how he remembers you?" |
56631 | Do you know that he has demanded the hand of Louise, that he might make her Queen of Austrasia?" |
56631 | Do you know, I would like to excommunicate you?" |
56631 | Do you not see all it supposes-- the comprehension of the authors, schools, and men capable of applying the plan? |
56631 | Do you not see yonder fire on the side of Blanru? |
56631 | Do you think he is?" |
56631 | Do you think they will follow us further? |
56631 | Do you understand, Hullin?" |
56631 | Do you understand?" |
56631 | Does he expect that the whole human race is bound to read the Government journal of Rome? |
56631 | Does he forget that Copernicus was a Catholic priest? |
56631 | Does he mean this as a true description of the facts of memory? |
56631 | Does it cease to be free because it is bound by nature? |
56631 | Does it really conciliate unity with multiplicity in the Infinite? |
56631 | Does it really maintain intact the two terms of the problem? |
56631 | Does not my cathedral enshrine the very girdle of the Assumption that fell to the kneeling Thomas? |
56631 | Does the Greek Church, then, commune with this central see? |
56631 | Does the idea which pantheism gives of the infinite really resolve the problem? |
56631 | Durham and Ely, and Winchester and Salisbury, what needs the soul of man more impressive, glorious, transcendent, than these?" |
56631 | Each one murmured to himself,"Why must men thus torture, tear, ruin one another? |
56631 | Elizabeth?" |
56631 | Even if we think we are punished, his chastisements are always gifts, if we know how to receive them; my dear sister, is n''t it so?" |
56631 | Every one that I know has been there, and why should I escape, I should like to know? |
56631 | False and hideous as it was, who will not say that it was far preferable to atheism? |
56631 | Father, what''s the matter, what?'' |
56631 | Fear seized him, and he muttered:"Am I going mad? |
56631 | Fearest thou nothing? |
56631 | For the shine Of worldly pomp and pageantry and power? |
56631 | For what is a being without the knowledge of himself and without love? |
56631 | For what is a person? |
56631 | For what is reason? |
56631 | For what is to supply the spiritual needs of this young, and energetic, and glorious people? |
56631 | For what shall I exchange thee? |
56631 | Fortune smiles; but what is the matter?" |
56631 | From time to time the old man would say to his sons:"What are they shivering for yonder? |
56631 | Habit can develop and fortify existing organs by an appropriate and sustained exercise; but how does that prove that want can create them? |
56631 | Had he left any other works? |
56631 | Had he not brown hair and blue eyes? |
56631 | Had he or the preceding government of the Convention in the Reign of Terror promoted the welfare of France? |
56631 | Had it been beneficial or injurious to progress? |
56631 | Has Philip come?" |
56631 | Has his intelligence lost its object? |
56631 | Has man been placed upon the earth only that he may be thrown into a grave? |
56631 | Has not he himself said that she is one, and does he need to be told that one is indivisible, or that its division would be its death? |
56631 | Has she that"pure and uncorrupted faith,"that"word of the gospel,"which is"always, and everywhere, and by all"invariably taught and held? |
56631 | Has the nature of man changed? |
56631 | Has war disappeared? |
56631 | Has your vanity brought us to this? |
56631 | Hast thou more still to ask? |
56631 | Hast thou not some wish? |
56631 | Hast thou seen it pass Along this valley green?" |
56631 | Have I not the most absolute right on myself, since all ends but in a dreamless sleep? |
56631 | Have I, then, committed so shocking a crime?" |
56631 | Have we time to read it over once more?" |
56631 | Have you never met with one of these slaves? |
56631 | Have you remarked, with him, that the church has put poetry into the choir, while she has banished reasoning into the pulpit-- into the grand nave? |
56631 | He arose as if angry, untied his apron, shrugged his shoulders, and then suddenly, again seating himself, exclaimed:"Do you know who this fool is? |
56631 | He came home very late last night, and he must not be disturbed; do you understand?" |
56631 | He says, though not truly, we apprehend the soul in consciousness as a spiritual being, but is the soul the only non- sensible he means to assert? |
56631 | Hearest thou? |
56631 | Here is a leathern bag to put them in; do you see? |
56631 | His soul happy, his heart pure, dazzled by the celestial gleams which irradiated him, how could he see where all this was conducting him? |
56631 | How are those problems capable of being solved by the experimental method? |
56631 | How by means of the picture apprehend the external object? |
56631 | How came it about? |
56631 | How came it about? |
56631 | How can an animal deprived of every organ of seeing or hearing experience the want of sight or hearing, or acquire the habit of either? |
56631 | How can habit develop an organ which does not exist? |
56631 | How can the abyss which separates those two extremities of living creation be bridged? |
56631 | How can the development of an organ be compared to the creation of this organ, or make us realize the mode of creation of the organ? |
56631 | How can we conceive that these two means should be able to produce so complicated and so suitable organizations? |
56631 | How can we then attain to its solution? |
56631 | How dare they denounce wrong, even when they die by it? |
56631 | How do we see the picture? |
56631 | How else shall we know whether enough has been awarded, or whether too much? |
56631 | How has it proved at Valle Cruce? |
56631 | How has materialism tried to solve the questions it proposes? |
56631 | How have statisticians discovered this regularity? |
56631 | How is it with the Anglican Church? |
56631 | How is this to be explained? |
56631 | How is this to be understood? |
56631 | How many are at open warfare with that party, within their communion, from whom these rash and groundless allegations come? |
56631 | How many men do you think they have?" |
56631 | How many were smiling at the prospect of doing unto the French emperor that which he did unto the duke? |
56631 | How much longer must these sectarian misapprehensions continue? |
56631 | How otherwise explain all this? |
56631 | How prove that in any fact of knowledge there is cognition of an object that exists distinct from and independent of the subject? |
56631 | How shall they be brought into organic unity? |
56631 | How shall we greet these servants of God? |
56631 | How then must we bring them together? |
56631 | How were the funeral expenses to be met? |
56631 | How will materialists account for this fact? |
56631 | How would these two terms agree? |
56631 | How, then, are we to explain the prevalence of so mighty an error? |
56631 | How, then, can it be an object of the mind? |
56631 | How, then, my brethren, can I avoid speaking of her, and of that unity which men now strive to banish from the schools of learning? |
56631 | How, then, prove that there is anything to correspond to the mental object, idea, or conception? |
56631 | Hullin, behind, his musket strapped upon his back, was crossing the field of Eichmath, grasping hands and saluting his friends:"Is it you, Daniel? |
56631 | Hullin, what think you of it? |
56631 | Humanity with its reason, its conscience, its sublime inclinations, its immortal yearnings-- is not humanity a grand fact? |
56631 | I believe you, but who will pay for it?" |
56631 | I came here for that purpose; and what have you to say against it, Friedrich?" |
56631 | I did not expect to see him again this winter, it is contrary to his habit; and what can he mean by returning in such weather as this?" |
56631 | I go to Marc- Dives''s to- morrow?" |
56631 | I shall always remember it; sha''n''t you, Touton?" |
56631 | I thought-- I thought,''Why does he not come?''" |
56631 | I understand you,"replied Gaspard, with a knowing wink of the eye;"you mean that there are a good many deserters running about, do n''t you?" |
56631 | I wonder when Philip will come, and what will he say to see the baby so sick?" |
56631 | I wonder when she will be able to go out? |
56631 | I''ve slept with Robert ever since you went away, and I like it very well with Robert, but I''d rather come back to you, may n''t I?" |
56631 | If I may presume to put it thus, what does this vigil of arms mean? |
56631 | If he should be living, that would be something grand, would n''t it? |
56631 | If it gives you possession of half of New York, do n''t forget your friends, will you, Dick?" |
56631 | If it pleased me to descend from this sledge, am I not free to do so? |
56631 | If it were not for the best, we would not wish it, would we, dear? |
56631 | If not, of what quality must the broadcloth be? |
56631 | If she should be long ill, how were the doctor''s bills to be paid? |
56631 | If such admonitions cheer them, what kind of admonition would dishearten them? |
56631 | If the Eastern branch has jurisdiction in Alaska, has not the Roman branch some jurisdiction in Italy? |
56631 | If the cheap will look as well or nearly as well as the dear, why not use it? |
56631 | If the order of facts to which positivism would limit us were the only order, do you know what humanity would be? |
56631 | If the soul can elicit the cognitive act with these ideas, which it is not pretended are things, how prove that there is any real world beyond them? |
56631 | If they are known at all, they must be objects of knowledge; if not known at all, how can we think or speak of them? |
56631 | If they be mysteries, how can reason, unaided by any higher power, find them out? |
56631 | If this be so, why is it that later discoveries have not equalled those which we have just specified? |
56631 | If thou weep not, a savage thou must be: Nay, if thou weep not, thinking of the fear My heart foreboded, canst thou weep at aught? |
56631 | If we glance at ages which are no more, shall we find many centuries which did not have their troubles and their dangers? |
56631 | If we had a hundred thousand of his stamp--""Then he is alive and well?" |
56631 | If we let this continue, will not God have a terrible account to exact of us some day? |
56631 | If we only get a uniform, we are saved-- do you see, Jean- Claude? |
56631 | If you only knew--""Knew what? |
56631 | Immediately, or only after a passing victory of the great philosophical error of the day? |
56631 | In good faith we ask, If the author of nature willed that birds should fly, what could he do better than give them wings for that object? |
56631 | In other words, is the full intensity of its energy concentrated in one movement, or is it divided? |
56631 | In such a state of uncertainty, would it not be well to have a"Bureau of Safety"established? |
56631 | In the final throes of crucifixion, was not the last thought of the dying Son, the last concern of the expiring Redeemer, for his Mother? |
56631 | In the first chapter, on"What is Teaching?" |
56631 | In the first place, on behalf of whom?" |
56631 | In the same manner, what is variety without unity? |
56631 | In what respect is liberty everywhere distinguished from license? |
56631 | In what, then, were you wanting? |
56631 | In which camp will rest the victory? |
56631 | Intelligence must have an object; and what can this object be but truth? |
56631 | Is Catherine at home?" |
56631 | Is Hexe- Baizel above?" |
56631 | Is Louise at home?" |
56631 | Is it asked, How is this known or proved, if not by psychological observation and analysis? |
56631 | Is it because they are poor? |
56631 | Is it fear that hinders me? |
56631 | Is it in the Episcopal Church alone, and if not, where is it? |
56631 | Is it not you, madam, who have come to us first, surmounting obstacles which I can not recount? |
56631 | Is it only to go to the cemetery? |
56631 | Is it possible that Dr. Channing should call a hair- breadth distinction, that which lies between essence and nature, and personality? |
56631 | Is it really a sleep? |
56631 | Is it the Anglican? |
56631 | Is it the English language which here we read, and is it our mother- tongue which thus is made to confuse our minds? |
56631 | Is it the Greek or Oriental Church? |
56631 | Is it the Roman Church? |
56631 | Is it wonderful that for the love of Christ we beg them to be truthful to their convictions, and manly in their profession? |
56631 | Is it, say you, potatoes and salt, with rags and a mud cabin? |
56631 | Is n''t the baby enough?" |
56631 | Is not he who reclaims the wilderness, cultivates it, and fills it with inhabitants, worthy of preserving large possessions there? |
56631 | Is not nature also immutable? |
56631 | Is not the case of the statistician the same? |
56631 | Is that which is excusable in an Italian and honorable in a Danish astronomer, ignorant, bigoted, and vile in a cardinal? |
56631 | Is that you, Catherine?" |
56631 | Is the civil authority respected? |
56631 | Is the existence of God the point where reason is outraged? |
56631 | Is the immutability of nature an obstacle to the progress of natural science? |
56631 | Is the professor prepared to maintain that the soul is the first principle of all the sciences? |
56631 | Is there a doubt on which side health, contentment, and true enjoyment of life will be found? |
56631 | Is there a single fact among all those proved by science which could justify so great an extension of the action of means? |
56631 | Is this all, however? |
56631 | Is this your rejoicing over victory?" |
56631 | It is needless to say that their attempts have failed, and that the problem,"Who shall take care of the poor?" |
56631 | It is, for itself, as if it were not; for what is a being which can not know itself? |
56631 | It''s better than out there, is n''t it?" |
56631 | Its problem is not what is or what exists; but what is knowing, how do I know, and how do I know that I know? |
56631 | Judged by this standard, what prospect has the Protestant Episcopal Church of becoming the"church of the future"in our country? |
56631 | King of glory, can it be Thou art thus for love of me? |
56631 | Knowest thou that the alliance I offered is the only means of saving thyself from the destruction that broods upon thy race?" |
56631 | Might you, perchance, be Gaspard''s father?" |
56631 | Minan, Rochart, are ye here?" |
56631 | Mother Lefevre says I may go; and will you whom I love so much be more cruel than she?" |
56631 | Muskets we have; every mountaineer''s cottage has one hanging over the door; but where is our powder? |
56631 | Natural selection has artificial selection for its ideal godfather, but what has the latter produced? |
56631 | Need we say that our poor orphan was one of those who were instantly, and without hesitation, pointed out by their comrades? |
56631 | No, we can not, and we would not; for is it not most especially our right, our duty, and our privilege to do for them? |
56631 | Now his dream had come to pass-- she was a damsel in sore distress; but where was his prancing steed, his burnished armor, his ready lance? |
56631 | Now that the dog''s dead, you can give him the bones and lickings, ca n''t you? |
56631 | Now the question arises, Is this ontologically possible? |
56631 | Now wherein lies the reason of this fact? |
56631 | Now, by whom, think you, had the bold discoverer the intention of proclaiming and making known the name of Jesus Christ in the New World? |
56631 | Now, does the answer resolve the problem? |
56631 | Now, is it not always as unwise, as it is unjust, to make a minority taste the bitterness of oppression? |
56631 | Now, may I go to- morrow?" |
56631 | Now, the question arises, What is the best method of refuting Pantheism? |
56631 | Now, we beg the Unitarians to tell us what this intelligence and love are? |
56631 | Now, what do you think I''m thinking of, eh?" |
56631 | Now, who will make it? |
56631 | Now, you must know that this was the Devil, who came to make his complaint:"What dost thou there, thou idler? |
56631 | Of course, nobody laughed at this sally, though Isabel bit her lip to keep from smiling, and George said,"Why not call her Annie, after Aunt Ann?" |
56631 | Of the one hundred and sixty- one thousand two hundred Episcopalians, how many dare maintain them? |
56631 | One day she said to him,"What are you doing? |
56631 | Or did they write against him the fearful judgment which had once already sounded in his ears,"Let mercy forget him: Let him be remembered no more"? |
56631 | Or ignorance? |
56631 | Or is there any good reason why that which in Denmark is a"triumph of religion"should in Rome become a"victory of ignorance"? |
56631 | Or misery? |
56631 | Or that tall, brown- haired one binding his arm with his handkerchief?" |
56631 | Or why, indeed, exclude any one who professes to hold the Christian church and the Apostles''and Nicene creeds? |
56631 | Or, on the contrary, is not the idea of a"constitution"essentially repugnant to the idea of the Christian church?] |
56631 | Or, to be better understood, what were you? |
56631 | Ought I to cede to or resist the voice which now speaks to me? |
56631 | Ought not the five millions of Catholics of the United States to give THE CATHOLIC WORLD a subscription list of at least fifty thousand? |
56631 | Our friends, the High- Churchmen, are zealous upholders of church authority; but where is the authority to which they submit? |
56631 | Our_ savants_ employ themselves in seeking the types of domestic animals in the wild races; why not seek the type of the wild races in the domestic? |
56631 | Pardon me, my friend, if I awaken a painful recollection for you, but have you not even resisted the awful voice of Death?" |
56631 | Part of the island belonged to the French, and Father John Destriche( Stritch?) |
56631 | Peter''s?" |
56631 | Ready for merry Christmas, eh? |
56631 | Reason? |
56631 | Reilly?" |
56631 | Rome has a pope and a cultus of St. Mary the ever- Virgin; these are not parts of the Greek(?) |
56631 | See you not who are coming, cleaving the skies like eagles? |
56631 | Shake hands, will you?" |
56631 | Shall I yet remain deaf? |
56631 | Shall it be said that the manner of purifying these two souls is the same, and that their purgatory only differs in point of duration? |
56631 | Shall it be the eloquence of the orator or the wisdom of the legislator? |
56631 | Shall the clothing be of fustian? |
56631 | Shall the"_ majority_"control this? |
56631 | Shall we cultivate the taste of our clergy in these matters? |
56631 | Shall we do anything to promote the Catholic arts of painting, sculpture, and architecture? |
56631 | Shall we forsake the permanent for the transient because the enduring falls short of the everlasting? |
56631 | Shall we have a Catholic Congress? |
56631 | Shall we have fellowship with Antichrist? |
56631 | Shall we inaugurate a reign of sham because the real is not always the perpetual? |
56631 | Shall we say, knowledge of the arts? |
56631 | Shall we say, polite literature? |
56631 | Shall we take refuge in human philosophy? |
56631 | She threw the reins to Duchene and alighted, saying:"Those fires yonder are a pretty sight, but where is Louise?" |
56631 | So long as he has his bottle of wine and his dinner, and his pipe after, what does he care? |
56631 | Some inquiry was made into the general character of hospital nurses, and the qualifications desired, and what were these qualifications? |
56631 | Stretching his arm, after a moment''s pause, over the moonlit valley, he continued:"Remember ye not the great battle?" |
56631 | Suppose a dispute should arise as to the right meaning of the Bible; who is to decide the dispute? |
56631 | Supposing that the bird has wings to fly, must not its flight be the result of the structure of its wings? |
56631 | Surveying the people with his look of inspiration, he asked,"Who is my mother, and who are my brethren?" |
56631 | That is my idea; what do you think of it?" |
56631 | That terrific phase of blasphemous infidelity has passed from our immediate view; but has it left nothing more dangerous behind? |
56631 | That the rule of study drawn up for John, son of Philip of Valois, included Latin and several languages? |
56631 | The Iliad of Homer, 740. Who shall take care of our Sick? |
56631 | The Poor? |
56631 | The apostles saw none of these things, and how could they believe in such apparently incredible promises? |
56631 | The belief in the freedom of the will is an effect-- the effect of what?--of real necessity? |
56631 | The birds are out; the redbreasts are out all winter; and did I not know what hunger was when a child? |
56631 | The cause of the commotion was Nickel Bentz, the old forester of La Houpe, and Hullin at once saluted him with--"Well, Nickel, what tidings?" |
56631 | The daughter of the sea, Combing her golden hair at noon, Where sparkling breakers be?" |
56631 | The definite question, then, is, What were those principles, and whence were they derived? |
56631 | The earnest reader will say: If so much depends on skilful questioning, why does he not tell us how to do it? |
56631 | The evidence adduced in support of the author''s assertions is so conclusive that the question suggests itself, Whither are we drifting? |
56631 | The logical Canadian might well ask:"Why do n''t you agree among yourselves before you come to teach us? |
56631 | The officer began, in good French:"Is it the Commandant Hullin that I have the honor of addressing?" |
56631 | The old question again: How pass from the subjective to the objective?--from the scientific to the real? |
56631 | The only question is, Does the Eastern branch receive it? |
56631 | The question arises, Had Catharine any ground for charging the Huguenots with a plot against the king? |
56631 | The shrieks they heard and the glittering knives they saw were enough to strike a chill to their hearts; but what could be done? |
56631 | The thought came to him suddenly that he would not return again to that wicked woman; but then, where should he go? |
56631 | Then Robin and Dubourg, posted as sentries, cried:"Who goes there?" |
56631 | Then, seeing him tremble, he asked:"But what is the matter? |
56631 | Then, why can they not be permitted to organize separate schools, as in the countries referred to? |
56631 | There is something too demoralizing in the means by which they generally get their places; and, after they have got them, how many are fit for them? |
56631 | Therefore to morals belong these absorbing questions: Why have the passions revolted against reason? |
56631 | They are Kaiserliks, are they not? |
56631 | They began to cross the abatis--""Then you think Hullin will be forced to abandon the road?" |
56631 | They did, indeed, raise the cry of religious freedom-- freedom of worship-- freedom of conscience; but what did these words really mean? |
56631 | They reached the door, and Hullin, seeing Materne, cried joyously:"You here, old friend? |
56631 | They strike at the experimental foundation of Darwin''s theory; if this experimental basis is wanting, what becomes of those theories? |
56631 | They were passing carefully through the corpse- piled trench, when a feeble voice exclaimed:"Is that you, Materne?" |
56631 | They will make a little fire, and gazing on each other as we now gaze, will ask, Who suffered here before us, and why did they suffer? |
56631 | Think you there is no pleasure in mocking and outwitting the police-- in defying the shrewd officials of the custom- house? |
56631 | This experiment has been tried for three quarters of a century in France; what is the result? |
56631 | This pulpit--"Here I interrupted him with questions as to Verbruggen-- what was known of him? |
56631 | Thou art all glory, power, infinity-- Thou_ art_; what can I want, possessing thee? |
56631 | Tixier?" |
56631 | To be certain of eternal truth, must we not accept the testimony of eternity? |
56631 | To this it was objected-- and the point was well taken--"Why, then, did not you publish the whole?" |
56631 | To this truth we give infinite importance, and we feel ourselves bound to take heed lest any man spoil us of it by vain(?) |
56631 | Too soon for all the last"good- nights"were said, and Dick knew he had spent out his last evening in Carlton for who could tell how long? |
56631 | Touton? |
56631 | Toward six o''clock they heard the first challenge of their sentinels:"Who goes there?" |
56631 | Treating these principles, for the present, as self- evident, we now inquire: Who are_ our_ poor, and how shall they be cared for? |
56631 | Tribune!--How d''ye s''pose a feller''d feel to wake up some of these yere mornin''s in one o''them big houses?" |
56631 | Two days after, in the street, where he now worked from choice, the curé again addressed him:"Have you, then, nothing to do at home?" |
56631 | Unity is anterior to multiplicity; how then has unity been able to admit multiplicity?" |
56631 | WHENCE THE CHANGE? |
56631 | WHENCE THE CHANGE? |
56631 | Was he a palmer from the Holy Land, come to rekindle the ardor of noble and valiant men of arms with tales of the woes of the Christians in Palestine? |
56631 | Was it by the Methodist and Quaker missionaries? |
56631 | Was it hope? |
56631 | Was it morning smiling beneath the woods? |
56631 | Was it the moon glancing through the leaves? |
56631 | Was not the first press in Paris set up at the Sorbonne? |
56631 | Was this possible? |
56631 | We answer, What is meant by a transitory act? |
56631 | We are quite willing to wait; but in this day of telegraph and steam improvements, may we not beg the committee to move a little faster? |
56631 | We may now ask, Does the Greek schismatic church, as we call it, contain this central organic see? |
56631 | We obey the_ Ecce Homo_ of Pilate: dare we disobey the_ Ecce Mater_ of Jesus?" |
56631 | We shall fight, but how? |
56631 | Well, and what further do you intend?" |
56631 | Well, in how many of the great countries of the world, besides our own, is such a system known? |
56631 | Well, mamma, and why should n''t he?" |
56631 | Well, then, does the Anglican Church commune with the central or organic see, or Chair of Peter? |
56631 | Well, what are they going to do, Jean- Claude?" |
56631 | Well, what would you have Pivrette do with his three hundred men against that mass of vagabonds? |
56631 | Well, why not choose Hullin? |
56631 | Were intellectual pursuits suspended during that time? |
56631 | Were there elements in the controversy other than scientific? |
56631 | Were there elements in the controversy other than scientific? |
56631 | Were they pursued, hunted as we have been, that they would fain hide themselves in such a miserable den? |
56631 | Were you out, last night?" |
56631 | What a time? |
56631 | What are they? |
56631 | What are we doing for them? |
56631 | What are we to say in reply to these attacks? |
56631 | What are ye but the Master''s tools Forming a work divine? |
56631 | What are ye but the clogs that bind My spirit from the skies? |
56631 | What becomes of the_ law_ of_ nature_ in presence of such evidences? |
56631 | What brings you all to the farm?" |
56631 | What can one over- worked clergyman do toward performing a task which is the duty of the entire Catholic community? |
56631 | What can the cause be? |
56631 | What can you reply to this history?" |
56631 | What consolation have I ever found in the reason of which I am so proud? |
56631 | What could be more entirely Catholic than the inspirations and great works of these men of genius? |
56631 | What could comfort me, as I looked at my beautiful boy cold and lifeless, and my wife at that point where earthly help is unavailing? |
56631 | What criterion of unity and catholicity has he or can he have? |
56631 | What crushing burden, beside the sorrow, was she going to lay upon the already burdened shoulders of her poor little girl? |
56631 | What did it all avail? |
56631 | What did it avail? |
56631 | What did she see then? |
56631 | What did you bring me?" |
56631 | What do we need? |
56631 | What does experience show-- in trials, for example? |
56631 | What does he mean? |
56631 | What does he say in a discourse recently delivered at Zurich? |
56631 | What does he want here?" |
56631 | What does it teach us? |
56631 | What does this supreme principle of Protestantism mean, that every individual must, by reading the Bible, find for himself what he has to believe? |
56631 | What has England gained by this conflict of centuries with Ireland? |
56631 | What has come from the prodigious efforts of talent and erudition? |
56631 | What have we been doing on the other side of the Rhine for the last ten years? |
56631 | What have you been until now? |
56631 | What is going on yonder?" |
56631 | What is going on? |
56631 | What is he saying?" |
56631 | What is it that he does"which is the bar to the restoration of the unity of Christendom?" |
56631 | What is life but action? |
56631 | What is morality? |
56631 | What is now this marvel? |
56631 | What is really this pretended scientific position? |
56631 | What is the cause of such a change? |
56631 | What is the cause of this deep- seated evil, which is only too well known to us all? |
56631 | What is the cold to me? |
56631 | What is the condition, then, to- day, of the souls and the state of the races which are spread over the surface of the earth? |
56631 | What is the price of this pair?'' |
56631 | What is the remedy for it? |
56631 | What is the true solution of the problem? |
56631 | What is this but a very material and vulgar idea of the infinite? |
56631 | What is this but the credulity of incredulity? |
56631 | What is this crisis of the church and the world? |
56631 | What is to be done?" |
56631 | What is wanting? |
56631 | What kind of a dog do you call that, madam?" |
56631 | What makes courts of justice so often a mockery, but the want of principle and of conscience in those who administer the law? |
56631 | What might not be accomplished by such missionaries of love, labor, science, and peace? |
56631 | What more could be asked that he might exchange his feudal power for a throne in heaven? |
56631 | What more could be asked that she might pass from family honors to a throne in heaven? |
56631 | What news?" |
56631 | What provision are we making to meet the terrible responsibility which this state of society entails? |
56631 | What revenue officer would dare come here?" |
56631 | What saved us from being arrant hypocrites or open infidels?" |
56631 | What say you, Catherine? |
56631 | What should be better able to teach us what matter is than a system which recognizes nothing but matter? |
56631 | What style of church ornament shall we keep? |
56631 | What their name? |
56631 | What then is a transient act? |
56631 | What think you of the state of affairs?" |
56631 | What though_''twas said_ Count Ugolino gave, Through treachery, thy strongholds to the foe? |
56631 | What trade have you learned?" |
56631 | What was I thinking of?" |
56631 | What was he to do? |
56631 | What was the consequence? |
56631 | What was the number slain in the provinces? |
56631 | What was to be done? |
56631 | What was to be done? |
56631 | What were the desperate conflicts, free though you were, that rendered your decision so difficult and so painful? |
56631 | What will Mr. Heremore think of you?" |
56631 | What will Uncle Carl say to all this, I wonder?" |
56631 | What will avail the might of thy people against that of mine? |
56631 | What will it be if we pass to the organs of sense; to the most marvellous of them, the eye of man or that of the eagle? |
56631 | What would her young children do without her? |
56631 | What would not be their influence and their authority? |
56631 | What yer want us to do, now, sir?" |
56631 | What"solid reason,"indeed, could be given? |
56631 | What''s the matter?" |
56631 | What, according to pantheism, is the idea of the infinite? |
56631 | What, then, are all these books of medicine dating from the seventh to the tenth century,"accumulated in all the convents"? |
56631 | What, then, can neutral instruction be? |
56631 | What, then, is to prevent the utter failure of this great commission, and the complete ruin of all Christ''s work? |
56631 | What, then, must have been the effect of twenty monasteries in every county, expending constantly a large part of their incomes on the spot? |
56631 | What, then, was the result when Christianity, issuing from the bowels of the earth, bloomed forth in freedom? |
56631 | What, then, you ask, is wanted? |
56631 | What,"he continued, with rising indignation--"what would the true friends of art have thought of such beastly orgies, celebrated in her name? |
56631 | When Dubreuil had finished reading, he again took his seat, saying,"Well, you see now, do you not?" |
56631 | When day dawned, St. Peter said to him,"Before going hence, hast thou no petition to make to us? |
56631 | When is the work to begin?" |
56631 | When the country was to be defended, was I to be forgotten? |
56631 | When they had reached the foot of the cliff, Dives stopped, saying:"You are going to the mountain villages, are you not, Hullin?" |
56631 | Whence comes this necessity? |
56631 | Whence, then, do they or can they derive their character of catholic? |
56631 | Whence, then, their quality of catholic churches? |
56631 | Where are our munitions?" |
56631 | Where are the arms with which we can triumph? |
56631 | Where are there hospitals enough for them-- for fifty thousand wounded? |
56631 | Where did the Greek artists, driven out by iconoclasts, take refuge? |
56631 | Where do we arrive? |
56631 | Where else are the great festivals of our holy religion celebrated with the splendor and magnificence that they are there? |
56631 | Where else is God awarded the first place, and religion paramount? |
56631 | Where else is devotion to the blessed sacrament practised as it is in Rome? |
56631 | Where has it ever been a social life- truth, unless in the fold of Christ''s disciples? |
56631 | Where have discordant philosophies led them? |
56631 | Where is Hullin?" |
56631 | Where is it? |
56631 | Where is the authority to convoke it, to determine who may or who may not sit in it, and to confirm its acts? |
56631 | Where is the flaw in the whole structure of the Catholic argument? |
56631 | Where is the habitual communion of the heart and its works with the Word made flesh? |
56631 | Where is the pulpit, that_ chef d''oeuvre_ you so long since announced?" |
56631 | Where lies the mistake in this instance? |
56631 | Where may her Laoik, her little one, be? |
56631 | Where shall we find the strength to conquer this interior revolt? |
56631 | Where then was the freedom of worship? |
56631 | Where was this system of the movement of the earth adopted by Copernicus, and then first taught by Galileo? |
56631 | Where were the abandoned, the dissolute, the coarse, vulgar herd to find a God in such a snare? |
56631 | Where were you that you did not see it?" |
56631 | Where were you?" |
56631 | Where''s the grub to come from, I should like to know?" |
56631 | Where''s yer spunk? |
56631 | Where, then, is the elevation of the soul to the living God? |
56631 | Where, then, is this universal church? |
56631 | Where, then, was Mr. Irving? |
56631 | Wherein consists the palpable, open denial of the rights of reason? |
56631 | Which path will you take going, and which returning? |
56631 | Which shall we take?" |
56631 | Whither did these apostolic men wish to go? |
56631 | Whither had he gone? |
56631 | Who asks what has become of a one- time rich man after the bubble has burst?" |
56631 | Who can resist the appeal? |
56631 | Who can say that he ever saw the earth move? |
56631 | Who could write a political history of Christendom for the last three hundred years and omit all mention of Luther and the Pope? |
56631 | Who founded the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England? |
56631 | Who founded the universities of Paris, Bologna, Ferrara, Salamanca, Coimbra, Alcala, Heidelberg, Prague, Cologne, Vienna, Louvain, and Copenhagen? |
56631 | Who gave"_ majority_"any such power or right? |
56631 | Who instituted the professorships of the Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, and Chaldaic Languages at Paris, Oxford, Bologna, and Salamanca? |
56631 | Who is that?" |
56631 | Who is to know, then, that these ministers speak according to the Scriptures, especially when they differ one from another? |
56631 | Who knows how many the Pope would not influence if he would be at the trouble of addressing us by some such mundane instrumentality as the penny post? |
56631 | Who knows how many? |
56631 | Who replaces the choice of man? |
56631 | Who shall say that he was not"educated"in the highest sense of that vague term? |
56631 | Who shall say? |
56631 | Who spoke?" |
56631 | Who were the first historians of the West? |
56631 | Who will lend me a blouse and staff?" |
56631 | Who will not be forcibly reminded of"Ride a cock- horse to Banbury Cross"by the following verses? |
56631 | Who will say that these objects of veneration do not tend to keep faith alive? |
56631 | Who would take care of him? |
56631 | Who, then, will begin it? |
56631 | Why are the most suffering classes the first objects of his care and mediation? |
56631 | Why are there, as it were, two men within us, and why do we know what we ought to do, and why do we follow the opposite? |
56631 | Why are they not in the hospital?" |
56631 | Why are you in the world? |
56631 | Why choose him rather than another?" |
56631 | Why confine the Catholic Church, then, to these three alone? |
56631 | Why did it not save the Grecian states? |
56631 | Why did we not meet them as brothers, instead of trying to enslave them? |
56631 | Why did we not rather exchange thought, feeling, the products of our arts and industry with them? |
56631 | Why do n''t you answer me?" |
56631 | Why do n''t you have roast beef? |
56631 | Why do we feel a void, a sadness, a kind of pain, after having enjoyed the most stirring delights? |
56631 | Why does he call conceptions_ concepts_, if not because he holds the conception is both the act and the object of the mind in conceiving? |
56631 | Why does it modify itself? |
56631 | Why does not the same beautiful harmony reign in the moral as in the physical order? |
56631 | Why dread the future? |
56631 | Why end ye your life with a lie, and a vain boast of martyrdom? |
56631 | Why exclude Methodists, Presbyterians, Lutherans, and the Swiss, the Dutch, and the German Reformed communions? |
56631 | Why extend or why confine the Catholic Church to the three churches named? |
56631 | Why have his letters not arrived? |
56631 | Why is Christ identified, in his birth and companionship, with the poor? |
56631 | Why is it not so in Prussia, Austria, France, England, and the British Colonies? |
56631 | Why should I tell more? |
56631 | Why should these three terminations in the Godhead be persons? |
56631 | Why should they thus hate each other? |
56631 | Why should we expect any more from the Ritualists than we have realized from their cotemporaries or progenitors? |
56631 | Why suppose man could and once did domesticate races which he finds it difficult, if not impossible, to domesticate now? |
56631 | Why then do our High- Church friends hanker after the patronage of the Greek Church? |
56631 | Why, then, do they not depute a large body of their number to go to the council, attended by their most learned theologians, and ask for a hearing? |
56631 | Why, then, does he exclude them from the list of communions of which the Catholic Church is composed? |
56631 | Why, then, not say so at once with manliness? |
56631 | Why, then, should the wisdom of an ecclesiastical body be disturbed on a mere matter of opinion? |
56631 | Why, then, so much nervous excitement over it? |
56631 | Why? |
56631 | Why?" |
56631 | Will a joint on Sundays suffice? |
56631 | Will any man of modern science undertake to say that Galileo was right in denying the rotation of the sun? |
56631 | Will it now be believed that the organ of the ritualists, in New York, expresses itself pleased with this part of the pastoral? |
56631 | Will not rich America follow her example? |
56631 | Will our architectural legacies appear as well in the eyes of future generations? |
56631 | Will she be sorry to have me for a brother, I wonder?" |
56631 | Will such vows, unsanctioned by the public opinion of Protestant countries, be really binding? |
56631 | Will the Episcopal Church justify this description? |
56631 | Will they attempt the act of sacrifice itself? |
56631 | Will you believe the news I bring back?" |
56631 | Will you come?" |
56631 | Will you love her always, let what may be her fate? |
56631 | With no better reason can Schaff adduce the words of St. Augustine in the preceding tract:"Why prepare your teeth and your stomach? |
56631 | Without, the cry of"Who goes there?" |
56631 | Wo n''t you get the box, Dick, and we will open it up there? |
56631 | Would I not gladly have died a thousand times that they might live? |
56631 | Would his enemies, even if they had possessed the means, have done the like? |
56631 | Would it not tend to reform them, to beguile their weary hours, and sanctify them? |
56631 | Would not a supply of good books be a godsend to Catholic prisoners? |
56631 | Would such a wife have suited him, think you-- you who know the human heart? |
56631 | Would you have me compromise my eternity for the sake of twenty years which yet perhaps remain for me to live?" |
56631 | Would you not think you were reading the life of a modern individual? |
56631 | Yet again, if God is but an imaginary being, and if immortality is but a dream, what does one risk to have thought the contrary? |
56631 | Yet if there is nothing beyond the tomb, why should I fear it, and what have I to dread from oblivion? |
56631 | Yet what is the real fact? |
56631 | Yet what multitudes of exceptions are there not? |
56631 | You are not hurt? |
56631 | You have grown fat; you have had good cheer in Germany, have you not?" |
56631 | You here too?" |
56631 | You know all and only laugh? |
56631 | You know better, do n''t you, Rose?" |
56631 | You will come to us after Mass, to- morrow?" |
56631 | You, who should set your daughters a good example? |
56631 | [ Footnote 133] Can we believe that six centuries hence they will do the same for the ashes of Kant, Fichte, or Hegel? |
56631 | [ Footnote 157:"Who goes there?"] |
56631 | [ Footnote 182] And who were their first masters? |
56631 | [ Footnote 286] Why these preparations, this work of a great council? |
56631 | _ Shall we go elsewhere, then? |
56631 | _ Such things become thee from the beginning, etc._"Have you observed the character of the figures seen on the tombs of this period? |
56631 | an hour in all life when the heart can be weary of prayer? |
56631 | and all that which the book of the_ Imitation_ so well calls the familiar friendship of Jesus? |
56631 | and came at last where you are? |
56631 | and if so, how many ounces of each? |
56631 | and the bowed head-- like that of John-- upon his breast? |
56631 | and the tears poured out like Magdalen at his feet? |
56631 | and what shall we do?'' |
56631 | and when will God at last command that the walls of division shall be thrown down? |
56631 | and where has this been practically organized, except by its religious orders? |
56631 | and where the truth? |
56631 | are not souls in peril and the faith of whole nations menaced? |
56631 | asked Berbel of herself,"can the day of doom have come?" |
56631 | asked Hullin shortly;"do you want to surrender?" |
56631 | brother George will want to go to his room; is it ready for him?" |
56631 | cried M. Poquet, as he rushed into the room, followed by his wife and a number of the neighbors,"what is the matter here? |
56631 | cried the smuggler:"do you take me for a coward?" |
56631 | did you see her?" |
56631 | do n''t we owe him a candle, Guguste?" |
56631 | do n''t you know what it is?" |
56631 | exclaimed she;"is this for me, brother George? |
56631 | forgive me if I hurt you,"said the old hunter, bending over the wounded man;"how comes it that you are still here?" |
56631 | has recently adopted the words of Vincent of Lerins, and made them his own? |
56631 | hast thou heard Of Gwenolé the rede, Which unto Gradlon, king of Is, He spake, but gat small heed? |
56631 | he cried in despairing tones,"what has thy son Luitprand done to thee? |
56631 | he cries,"What make you, mother?" |
56631 | he repeated, finding no words of his own to say, so great was his bewilderment at such a question--"Would I like to go to the country?" |
56631 | hearest thou nothing? |
56631 | hearest thou, Louise?" |
56631 | if I only knew it was right, only knew--''"''What was right?'' |
56631 | if we are good, are we not happy? |
56631 | is n''t it, Marcel?" |
56631 | is our short life the whole of history? |
56631 | is she here?" |
56631 | it is terrible?" |
56631 | life? |
56631 | little one,"said the young man caressingly,"do you remember brother George?" |
56631 | may I have it?" |
56631 | no, Dick, dear Dick, how can anything take me away from you? |
56631 | of gold? |
56631 | or does the demand include meat and malt- liquor daily? |
56631 | or is it bread and bacon, in a two- roomed cottage? |
56631 | or must there be carpets and paper- hanging? |
56631 | or will the Scotch practice be approved? |
56631 | replied his mother;"nobody thinks as you do, and why will you be forcing your peculiar notions upon us?" |
56631 | returned Hullin;"what does that matter? |
56631 | said Fanny, with great curiosity,"how do you say them?" |
56631 | said Isabel,"whom was your letter from?" |
56631 | said Polycarpe angrily,"why, how can it be otherwise? |
56631 | tell me now, brave forester, The wild- horse hast thou seen Of Gradlon? |
56631 | that during the greater part of our lives we cling to the earth with our head downward?" |
56631 | that our senses are given to deceive us? |
56631 | the last charge of the thirsting lips? |
56631 | the music thine; And the deep shelter-- wilt thou scorn it? |
56631 | they all say the same thing; why should n''t they? |
56631 | those Russians and Austrians--""But where are they?" |
56631 | thou who show''st such bestial hate Of him on whom thy ravenous teeth so fall, Why feedest thou thus? |
56631 | to thee? |
56631 | to- day again?" |
56631 | was n''t he well soaped?" |
56631 | were you frightened?" |
56631 | what do you mean by that, you little polisson? |
56631 | what shall I do? |
56631 | what shall I do?" |
56631 | what will she do?" |
56631 | what worth exceeds thy worth? |
56631 | what''ll I do, at all?" |
56631 | when man, whom thou dost deign to hear in thy temple, can have no incense to offer before thy altar, no tear to confide to thee?" |
56631 | where are our bullets?" |
56631 | who was with her? |
56631 | who would close thy gates, O house of prayer? |
56631 | who?" |
56631 | why Dost thou not help me? |
56631 | why did I yield to anger?" |
56631 | why didst not ope for us? |
56631 | why is it that on that noble soil of the United States our church is still, I do not say unknown, but despised, by so many souls? |
56631 | why should I scold? |
56631 | you are not wounded?" |
56631 | you here, Father Rochart?" |
56631 | { 155} If, in the face of facts like these, we judge of the future by the present and the past, what shall we say? |
56631 | { 16} Were orders sent from court to massacre the Huguenots? |
56631 | { 189} But then, what were you? |
56631 | { 232} How could it be otherwise? |
56631 | { 245} But why can they not perfect an ass so as to make a horse of it? |
56631 | { 258}"Why, what is this?" |
56631 | { 300} Where now does the collision exist between reason and faith, science and revelation? |
56631 | { 309} Frantz sat down, and the old man proceeded good- humoredly,"And so, our good friends, the Austrians, will take nothing from us?" |
56631 | { 362} But it will be remarked: Are there no transitory acts? |
56631 | { 373}"On the other pole from yourself,"he replied quickly;"I believe in no creed, no church, no--""No God?" |
56631 | { 447} But are we to have one standard of justice for one class of men, and a far different one for another class? |
56631 | { 449} What solid proof was presented to it? |
56631 | { 492}"But does not experience show that in bearing the yoke of truth we are sure to yield to illusions?" |
56631 | { 524}"S''posin''me and you had dandified coats and yeller gloves, and the fixin''s to match, s''pose anybody''d know we was newsboys?" |
56631 | { 526}"How are you, Dick? |
56631 | { 603} But perhaps they are destitute of arms and have no arsenals and ammunition? |
56631 | { 706} Will tea, coffee, and tobacco be expected? |
56631 | { 750}"This is your resolution? |
56631 | { 770} Does Dr. Porter know his doctrine is sensism, and therefore materialistic? |
56631 | { 797} What then is the Catholic Church, and what is this council which is going, within a few months, to present so grand a spectacle to the world? |
56631 | { 808} Is liberty well established? |
56631 | { 855}"But this mother of fifteen children and twelve grandchildren who are her crown and her glory? |
43032 | ''Are you satisfied?'' 43032 ''But is it the right one? |
43032 | ''But,''said the captain,''the moushick, doctor, how is he?'' 43032 ''Did you call, master?'' |
43032 | ''I''m a Protestant,''says I,''pre- haps you can show me a meetin''-house that believes in the Holy Catholic Church; is that one there?'' 43032 ''Is it?'' |
43032 | ''Is not this Jesus the son of Joseph whose father and mother we know? 43032 ''Is there one here whom he has not beaten?'' |
43032 | ''My father, my father, and dost thou not hear What the Erlen King doth say in my ear?'' 43032 ''My father, my father, and seest thou not The Erl King''s daughters in yon wild spot?'' |
43032 | ''Seest thou not, father, the Erl King nigh? 43032 ''The Erlen King with his train, I wist?'' |
43032 | ''Then am I condemned to close my heart to love forever? 43032 ''Yes, villain; do n''t you see? |
43032 | A funeral is it? |
43032 | A letter for me? |
43032 | Afraid!--without_ me_? |
43032 | After all, what do we see? |
43032 | Ah, Morley, is that you? 43032 And Euphrasie did not return with her mother to France?" |
43032 | And Mary, was she a real manifestation of the power of God residing in a woman''s frame? |
43032 | And am I to understand, dear ladies,said the superioress,"that you also share these blessed dispositions?" |
43032 | And are the vulgar to have the highest portion? 43032 And did he offer to support them?" |
43032 | And did your mother take it very much to heart? |
43032 | And does he not, then, intend to honor us with his company? |
43032 | And does she really descend to these menial offices? |
43032 | And has Lady Conway renounced her predilection for the papists? |
43032 | And have they been together all this time? 43032 And her amiable daughter?" |
43032 | And her brother Eugene? |
43032 | And how am I to discover which historic facts are true? 43032 And how long have you been blind?" |
43032 | And how long have you been in the city? |
43032 | And how shall I do that, dear? |
43032 | And how will you live, rash boy? |
43032 | And if I did pardon you, rejoined he,"what use would it be? |
43032 | And is he a Catholic also? |
43032 | And is not poetry the highest truth? |
43032 | And is there no remedy for this? 43032 And is this your daughter?" |
43032 | And meantime Euphrasie works for her daily bread? |
43032 | And my father? |
43032 | And now what is all this that I have to learn? |
43032 | And our neighbor''s happiness is to tell for nothing? |
43032 | And pray what''s your business here? |
43032 | And save in the fulfilment of their expectation, is the Jewish creed Christian? |
43032 | And the children? |
43032 | And the second son is to be established in the neighborhood? |
43032 | And think you God speaks to all alike? |
43032 | And those means? |
43032 | And to what quarter of the world should I go?'' 43032 And was it for her religion that you persecuted her?" |
43032 | And what are those conditions? |
43032 | And what did you answer him? |
43032 | And what is man, that he should rely on himself alone? |
43032 | And what is that but idolatry? |
43032 | And what is this new principle, most compassionate sir? 43032 And what may you mean by concupiscence, most learned Theban?" |
43032 | And what other motive would you suggest, brother? |
43032 | And what part does reason take in religion? |
43032 | And what remedy do you propose? |
43032 | And what sort of happiness was theirs? |
43032 | And what will she live on? |
43032 | And what would they do with their spare time? |
43032 | And what, then, is the sanction of the moral law? |
43032 | And who are they who cause you this alarm? |
43032 | And who forbade you, my love? |
43032 | And who is it that is your emperor? |
43032 | And who''d have thought of seeing you, sir? 43032 And why not? |
43032 | And why? |
43032 | And will classical knowledge do it? 43032 And will you not accompany me also? |
43032 | And with such feelings as these, my lord, you dared to lead my daughter to the altar? |
43032 | And yet,mused she in sadness,"can high ideas spring from the evolutions of matter? |
43032 | And you have her in charge? |
43032 | And you have no more sense than to believe such a cock- and- bull story as that? 43032 And you never went to school?" |
43032 | And you say my father does not know? |
43032 | And you think the spiritual sense necessary to liberty? |
43032 | And you, in sober earnest, profess to think it possible to love God more than yourself? |
43032 | And your husband belongs to the coast- guard? |
43032 | And yourselves, ladies? |
43032 | Another man? |
43032 | Any news? 43032 Are you ill, Annie?" |
43032 | Are you poor, too? |
43032 | Are you serious? |
43032 | As for example? |
43032 | As for example? |
43032 | But because we can not do everything, shall we do nothing? |
43032 | But do men believe these precepts to be the rule of right? |
43032 | But does the reception or apprehension of truth, then, depend on human disposition? |
43032 | But eternally? |
43032 | But has not God commanded us to love our neighbor? |
43032 | But have you considered the cost, Annie? 43032 But have you reasoned with him on the subject? |
43032 | But how can his honor and glory be promoted by your being blind? |
43032 | But how can we turn them out of the house? |
43032 | But how did his family know this? |
43032 | But how do they live? 43032 But how do you manage? |
43032 | But how is she to be supported? |
43032 | But how? 43032 But if you can not keep it, how can others?" |
43032 | But if you could see you might read of God, and learn to love him better? |
43032 | But in this country,said Eugene,"how can you be a nun?" |
43032 | But interesting, you''ll allow? |
43032 | But my aunt and Euphrasie? |
43032 | But my aunt is not a Catholic that I am aware of,pleaded Annie;"and as for Euphrasie, she scarcely speaks, so how can she convert any one?" |
43032 | But she did not tell my father? |
43032 | But was Adam''s religion that of the Jews, then? |
43032 | But what are we to do if such theories be true? |
43032 | But what can be done? 43032 But why do you distinguish morality from spirituality? |
43032 | But why do you think the woman is a Roman Catholic, Adelaid? |
43032 | But why, I must yet inquire, why, with these feelings, did your grace marry at all? |
43032 | But why, if a peerless beauty were already yours, why seek another bride, my lord? 43032 But why? |
43032 | But why? |
43032 | But will not education affect this awakening? |
43032 | But will they go? |
43032 | But you surely are not a vowed nun, mademoiselle? |
43032 | But you, ladies,said M. de Villeneuve,"you, ladies, were not of that mind, surely?" |
43032 | But your long words,said Euphrasie;"do they too reveal God? |
43032 | But, in that case, their estates, would be confiscated, would they not? |
43032 | But,said Eugene,"is Adam''s religion yours? |
43032 | Can I serve you, sir? |
43032 | Can any one have told her the secret of the House? |
43032 | Can what be true, my good sister? |
43032 | Can you bear the voyage, Ada? |
43032 | Can you give me any rules respecting the exercise of reason? |
43032 | Can you tell me where to find the nearest Catholic priest? |
43032 | Cui Bono? |
43032 | Daubreythought Eugene;"can that the her maiden name? |
43032 | Did he not know my whole heart and soul were bound up in him? 43032 Did you hear of a woman fainting, almost under the carriage- wheels, on the morning of my marriage, father?" |
43032 | Did you not know that Euphrasie de Meglior is my ward, that her father increased her to my care the night before he died? 43032 Do yon think that disease was a good to Alfred?" |
43032 | Do you call me''dear sister''? 43032 Do you feel disposed to murder, then?" |
43032 | Do you hear? |
43032 | Do you love me still, Eugene? |
43032 | Do you mean that the lesser is ever producing the greater; and that in the aggregation of insentient matter life is evolved? |
43032 | Do you not like Mr. Alfred Brookbank? |
43032 | Do you praise God, my good woman, for making you blind? |
43032 | Do you really think''liberty''a good? |
43032 | Do you see that staircase? 43032 Do you then believe, father, that when Euphrasie throws off her religion, she will become such as these men are?" |
43032 | Do you think, Miss Acres, that one might be indebted to another for a laugh? |
43032 | Do you, then, think it a sort of madness to endeavor to find the true and living God, and having found, to worship him? 43032 Do you, then, think that man''s tendency is to degenerate?" |
43032 | Does not religion mean re- binding, madam? 43032 Does not the infant grow into the man by the aggregation of insentient matter assimilated into his being in the shape of food?" |
43032 | Does that diffusion take place among the poor, as a matter of fact-- at least among the masses? 43032 Dost thou know yonder land beyond the blue water?" |
43032 | Eh, what? 43032 Eh?" |
43032 | Friday we encamped at_ Glencurry_( Clon- curry?) 43032 Go on; how do you reconcile this with hell?" |
43032 | Ha, baron,said the goblin,"death is breathing in their faces even now, you see; it is hardly worth while to lay them to sleep in the snow, is it? |
43032 | Had you trouble in tracking her? |
43032 | Has no ceremony ever passed between your grace and another woman who claims to be your wife? |
43032 | Has she ever seen him? |
43032 | Have I not already said that the cause is unknown and unknowable? |
43032 | Have they, then, left Annie? |
43032 | Have you any other key? |
43032 | Have you any tenants in view for them? |
43032 | Have you ever considered the true sense of these things? |
43032 | Have you ever reflected on what God is, Annie? |
43032 | Have you many guests? |
43032 | Have you not heard, then? 43032 Have you? |
43032 | He has been a traitor to his own countryman,said he;"how can we be sure that he will not prove traitor to us?" |
43032 | How could you help it? |
43032 | How did man fall into the degraded state in which the masses are? |
43032 | How did you discover this? |
43032 | How did you know that it was Euphrasie''s? 43032 How does this concern you, my child?" |
43032 | How is it when you''re spoken about? |
43032 | How is she? |
43032 | How time thrown away? 43032 How was that, aunt?" |
43032 | I am most willing to do so, madam; but what shall I begin? |
43032 | I am serious; why doubt it? |
43032 | I do n''t wish to be too curious, but tell me from whence you come? |
43032 | I do; how else can lawlessness be restrained without force? |
43032 | I had youth, beauty, and intellect,thought she;"why should he not have loved me as he did that orphan girl?" |
43032 | I love you already, dear; you must not talk in that way-- how can I do other than love you? |
43032 | I say, baron, you''ve been an uncommon old brute in your time, now have n''t you? |
43032 | I think it was in this style our church was originally built,she said;"do you propose to restore it in any way similar to the primitive idea?" |
43032 | If human nature were utterly depraved, how could it hear the voice of God in the soul? 43032 In the name of heaven, where and how did you find this, Keene?" |
43032 | Is Dr. Brookbank dead? |
43032 | Is anything the matter, dearest mother? |
43032 | Is it I? |
43032 | Is it I? |
43032 | Is it aught beside the consequence of error? 43032 Is it that which frightens you? |
43032 | Is it to be wondered at,said Alfred,"that revolutions take place in blood, when property is so unequally divided? |
43032 | Is not all explained by the words, another vocation is mine? 43032 Is she still alive?" |
43032 | Is that the new philosophy? |
43032 | Is that the toleration of England, may it please your grace? |
43032 | Is that your final answer? |
43032 | Is that your only objection? |
43032 | Is the boy safe? |
43032 | Is the peace of your mistress to be preferred to that of your wife? |
43032 | Is the rest of the house like this? |
43032 | Is there any priest near here? |
43032 | Is there, then, no remedy for this? |
43032 | Is this the office of Mary? |
43032 | Is this your religion? |
43032 | It is excessively warm, do n''t you think so? |
43032 | It is growing dark; why does n''t he come? 43032 It is to attend Mass, then, I presume, that your grace desires Euphrasie''s company?" |
43032 | It is true, then? |
43032 | It is very pretty,she said,"but what does it represent? |
43032 | It made a gesture,she says,"sweet enough to win a thousand parts: what wonder? |
43032 | It may be so, but what of that? |
43032 | It may tell us so, but does it give the power to execute its bidding? |
43032 | It''s strange the news did not reach us before, but what business can our M. de Villeneuve have in England now? |
43032 | Lady Conway,said Sir Philip one day at the breakfast table,"do you know any thing of a Mr. Alfred Brookbank?" |
43032 | Lister, are you there? |
43032 | Literature? 43032 Madame, I am your most obedient; but in what particular am I required to show my duty?" |
43032 | Mary Wolstonecroft-- who is she, papa? |
43032 | May I take this silence for consent, dear Euphrasie? |
43032 | My poor child? |
43032 | My sister-- do you know anything about her? |
43032 | My son,said he,"do you not think the authority of the sovereign pontiff greater than the permission of your prior? |
43032 | Nay, defend yourself, M. de Villeneuve; you will not plead guilty to not loving art? |
43032 | Nay, have you not said already, that it was the love of truth? 43032 No acquaintance with the Duke of Durimond, madam? |
43032 | No legal ceremony; some kind of ceremony has taken place, then? |
43032 | No matter what; tell me, what are we to do with our high qualities more than cultivate them, and act upon them? |
43032 | No, I have threatened with dismissal anyone who makes a remark on the subject; meantime tell me, are you a Catholic? |
43032 | No, mother; the dead can do no harm, and what should I fear from my sister? |
43032 | No? 43032 No?" |
43032 | Not Alfred Holiday is it? |
43032 | Not much more angry than I was the day you took my horse away when I wanted to go hunting; do you remember it, Hester? |
43032 | Not very well, my business is personal; shall I be able to see her tomorrow? |
43032 | Now you mention candles and flowers,said the clerical gentleman,"what can be more appropriate symbols of joy and festivity? |
43032 | Now, please to tell me by what name I M to remember you? |
43032 | O my brother, can you say so? 43032 Of course not,"said Uncle George,"and what conclusion have you come to, sister Pilcher?" |
43032 | One, only one? |
43032 | Or your mother''s love, Eugene? |
43032 | Our correspondence must be secret; then? |
43032 | Papa,said Hester,"did I not hear you say those pretty farms in Yorkshire are about to change tenants?" |
43032 | Pleasant? 43032 Poor wife, where is thy husband? |
43032 | Prayer, what prayer? |
43032 | Quare Tristis es Anima Mea et Quare Conturbas Me? |
43032 | Scandalize? 43032 Seest thou yon dreary plain, forlorn and wild?" |
43032 | Shall I go with you, Keene? |
43032 | Shall I go, mother? |
43032 | Shall we not go to the house? |
43032 | Shall you return to Europe? |
43032 | Should not truth be self- evident, or be at least demonstrable to those whom it concerns? |
43032 | Sleep? 43032 So I have heard,"said Mrs. Godfrey;"but where is the duke, my dear?" |
43032 | So you are not afraid of ultimate success; you think she loves you? |
43032 | Solved one rule? 43032 Something is wanted, that is certain,"said Hester;"but if all virtue is typified in some material existence, tell me where is the type of purity?" |
43032 | Still, do you not think that you would feel more comfortable away from his society? |
43032 | Supernatural nonsense, child-- who put this precious style of reasoning into your head? |
43032 | Supposing that granted for the sake of the argument, what caused''the march of intellect?'' 43032 Sure''twas sometimes this way and sometimes that, and how should she know the names of all those fine London streets?" |
43032 | Sure, what should we do without you? 43032 Tell me,"said he,"how is a knowledge of the material law to produce happiness? |
43032 | That the Duke of Durimond is coming here to marry Adelaide? |
43032 | That''s the stuff to make your hair curl, is n''t it? |
43032 | The philosopher ends,he says,"by asking himself the questions, In what does chemical identity consists? |
43032 | The world is nearly six thousand years old, and is it but now to begin to discover truth? 43032 Their dogs and hawks,-- Who will now attend them? |
43032 | Then they asked him:''What must we do that we may work the works of God?'' |
43032 | Then what is the matter with you? 43032 Then where did you get your knowledge?" |
43032 | Then why are so many miserable? 43032 Then why are so many of the educated sickly, unhappy and immoral?" |
43032 | Then why not forestall her return by your own departure? |
43032 | Then you do not think religion essential to goodness? 43032 Then you think sin was absolutely a destroying power?" |
43032 | Then you will remedy it? |
43032 | Then you, you will write to me, you will not cast me off? |
43032 | There are many religions,said Eugene,"and how is the true one to be known?" |
43032 | There you have touched my only vulnerable point, my comfort; but then, my dear aunt, what becomes of your aristocratic scruples? 43032 These facts deserve attention, at any rate,"said Eugene;"can you refer me to authorities within my reach?" |
43032 | Thou art not afraid to be alone in this darkness, my child? |
43032 | Time enough, my darling, to think of that; but why this sudden resolved? |
43032 | Truth? 43032 Useful, meaning increase of luxury?" |
43032 | Valid? 43032 Was my mother a Catholic?" |
43032 | Was not the elder brother married? |
43032 | Was she even then dwelling on her own wild schemes? |
43032 | Was the water there deep enough to destroy life? 43032 Was your emperor good, and did you love him so much that you weep or him? |
43032 | Well, I used to think so, but--"But what? |
43032 | Well, and what do you infer from all this? |
43032 | Well, then,rejoined the duke,"he has not told me his plans; how then can I tell you mine, which must depend on his?" |
43032 | Well,somewhat petulantly rejoined the professor,"is not the definition of luxury a good? |
43032 | What am I to do? |
43032 | What am I to infer from this, your grace? |
43032 | What are you doing there? |
43032 | What did you hear, aunt? |
43032 | What do you infer from this? |
43032 | What does he wish? |
43032 | What freedom of thought is there in Catholicity? |
43032 | What has shaken your faith in us, if I might venture to ask? |
43032 | What have you been drinking for? |
43032 | What is he doing there? |
43032 | What is her name? 43032 What is it?" |
43032 | What is that long word you used, Hester? |
43032 | What is that noise? |
43032 | What is the matter with you? |
43032 | What is the matter? |
43032 | What is the world coming to? |
43032 | What is true? |
43032 | What kind of empire do you mean? |
43032 | What name, sir? |
43032 | What of this, father? |
43032 | What say you Euphrasie,he continued,"shall we rebuild it for your friends?" |
43032 | What sort of churches have you seen, aunty? |
43032 | What the deuce is all this about? 43032 What was your friend''s name?" |
43032 | What wizard? |
43032 | What''s that to you? |
43032 | What''s the time, John, by yours? |
43032 | What, then, is a natural law? |
43032 | What, then, would you do? |
43032 | When is he coming home? |
43032 | Whence had he come? 43032 Where are yez goin'', men, where are yez goin'', men, I say? |
43032 | Where did my Hester pick up Mary Wolstonecroft''s writings? |
43032 | Where is Lister Wilmot? |
43032 | Where is he? |
43032 | Where is she going to? |
43032 | Where is she? |
43032 | Where is she? |
43032 | Which of these gentlemen is Monsieur? |
43032 | Who can tell? 43032 Who could have dreamed of this?" |
43032 | Who is it? |
43032 | Who sleeps on the snow? 43032 Who the Pickwick are you?" |
43032 | Who? |
43032 | Why boys? 43032 Why did you not come in with Robert? |
43032 | Why do you suppose that Jones was not the man''s name, my lady? |
43032 | Why do you think so, my dear? |
43032 | Why not now? 43032 Why not, if she makes no objection?" |
43032 | Why not? 43032 Why not? |
43032 | Why not? |
43032 | Why should it not be true? |
43032 | Why should she marry,he reasoned,"since she had already everything that could embellish life? |
43032 | Why, papa;whispered Hester,"have you changed your opinion of convents? |
43032 | Why, then, are you going to Paris if you have no friends there? |
43032 | Why, what are you going to do? |
43032 | Why-- but? 43032 Why? |
43032 | Will he let his own sister and the orphan daughter of his friend suffer for want? |
43032 | Will he not continue my allowance to me? |
43032 | Will you ask the reverend mother to let me stay with you awhile, dear Euphrasie? |
43032 | Will you forgive me if I say I do not? |
43032 | Will you keep this for my sake, in case we never meet again? 43032 Will you undraw that curtain, sister?" |
43032 | Willingly; you are, then, in communication with Eugene? |
43032 | Wonderfully like, is she not, baron? |
43032 | Would he come, sir, do you think? |
43032 | Would you seriously wish it, my lord duke? |
43032 | Would you wish to have? |
43032 | Yes, and why not? |
43032 | Yet you admit that a system may be in advance of a people? |
43032 | Yet you do not believe that my schools and arrangements will make him happier? |
43032 | You are severe, father, but this is a case to make you so; may we not know where she is gone to? |
43032 | You believe him to be a wicked man? |
43032 | You believe, then, as I do, that a new era is dawning on mankind, and that the laborer must be protected and enlightened? |
43032 | You could swear to it, sir? |
43032 | You do n''t dislike it, do you? |
43032 | You do not favor Catholics in your heart, I suppose, my lady? |
43032 | You have not seen her, then? |
43032 | You made her very happy, did n''t you? |
43032 | You may be right-- nay, the principle is right; but what can my little Hester do? |
43032 | You mean Euphrasie, I presume? |
43032 | You mean the murder? |
43032 | You mean to say you have traced the housekeeper? |
43032 | You piece of mischief, be serious; what answer shall I give him? |
43032 | You promise? |
43032 | You who have been, cradled in luxury and reared in abundance? 43032 You will not accept it, then?" |
43032 | You would not, then, developed intelligence? |
43032 | You? |
43032 | Your ward? 43032 _ Father_.--Now is n''t it, sir? |
43032 | _ Neighbor_.--What''s this, what''s this? 43032 _ Neighbor_.--Will you please, ma''am, to go inside? |
43032 | _ Pray?_ Are you serious, Mr. 43032 ''But where would you have us go?'' 43032 ''Cured!--why, are you ill? 43032 ''Dost thou force me from my place?'' 43032 ''How can this Man give us his flesh to eat?'' 43032 ''How much?'' 43032 ''If we have not found peace in this retreat, why should we find it anywhere else? 43032 ''Is it you, my son?'' 43032 ''What is the matter? 43032 ''What matters now,''said I,''the cruelty of the world and its unjust disdain? 43032 ''What was it all about?'' 43032 ''Why, is that you? 43032 *Do you mean that she will love?" |
43032 | ---------- ORIGINAL"QUARE TRISTIS ES ANIMA MEA, ET QUARE CONTURBAS ME?" |
43032 | ----------{ 559} Translated from the German WHAT MOST REJOICES THE HEART OF MAN? |
43032 | 9 Harmony place, of course?" |
43032 | A few more desperate springs and struggles and I was free-- flying whither? |
43032 | A materializing, so to speak, of spiritual doctrine? |
43032 | A simple mind, or a simple age, receives these implicitly: will the influence of science on either dispose, or indispose it, to similar confidence? |
43032 | A troubadour? |
43032 | About Klootz? |
43032 | Acres,"we''ll have Mrs. McQuirey look them up, Bob, eh? |
43032 | Add all these complicating symptoms, and is there not something plausible about the diagnosis? |
43032 | After a short pause he said,"Who do you expect will attack to- morrow, I or Bonaparte?" |
43032 | After awhile she said:"Could not some arrangement be made with my brother on this subject?" |
43032 | All other parents, what are they? |
43032 | Am I not thine? |
43032 | Am I not very ungracious, never beforehand with any idea, but waiting to be urged out of what looks like indifference? |
43032 | And all the grandeur and the grace Of noble art-- Do they not beautify thy life, And cheer thy heart? |
43032 | And do not the majority suffer an enforced toil, which absorbs their time, and leaves them neither energy nor leisure for speculative thoughts? |
43032 | And has not insentient nature ever been made to depart from her ordinary rules, when such departure could forward the cause for which Christ died?" |
43032 | And in the midst of this conflict of the peoples of the earth for real or imaginary rights, how fares the church of God? |
43032 | And is my daughter for ever to play second part in your heart, and this incomparable miracle of goodness the first?" |
43032 | And is the purely spiritual distinct from the purely intellectual as well as from the animal? |
43032 | And love, most heavenly gift of all-- Is it not thine? |
43032 | And now what are the tendencies of the age? |
43032 | And searched it besides?" |
43032 | And she lifted her eyes and looked around in amazement, saying:"What has happened? |
43032 | And so, with every gift of God, With nought amiss, My heart is longing, longing still; What meaneth this? |
43032 | And the swallow with his wing Against the sky 1 Who brings the branch its green, And the honey- bee a queen? |
43032 | And the very question under discussion is, What is the intelligible essence of this ultimate entity? |
43032 | And this is but one rule; are the others of a like fashion?" |
43032 | And was the goblin ever explained? |
43032 | And what power, think you, elevated the mass, even to the extent in which we see them now? |
43032 | And what was a troubadour? |
43032 | And what were his mainsprings of action? |
43032 | And when I ask myself Where are those I love? |
43032 | And woman, Adelaide, what is woman out of Christianity? |
43032 | Annie turned to Alfred and said in a dignified manner,"You here Sir Philip''s request, Mr. Brookbank; will you consider it mine?" |
43032 | Another time, when some early vegetables were served at her table, at which I appeared surprised:"What would you?" |
43032 | Ar''n''t you blushing, you hard- hearted old monster?" |
43032 | Are not coins and medals more pleasing when viewed on the side bearing the principal legend and inscription? |
43032 | Are we, therefore, to suppose that he and the church will come to naught? |
43032 | Are you all leagued against me? |
43032 | Are you annoyed with me for this, and could you ever judge me by mere external signs? |
43032 | Are you born for no better lot than slavery? |
43032 | Are you ready?" |
43032 | As a finale, Miss Rossetti, too nimble for the unwary reader, anticipates his question of"What does it all mean?" |
43032 | At last, I tried a lady-- for I give the men folks up-- and says I to her:"''Is this a meetin''-house of the Holy Catholic Church, ma''am?'' |
43032 | At length he said,"May I see the letter, mother?" |
43032 | At what, may it please your grace? |
43032 | Ben?" |
43032 | Besides, what is this we hear about disputes among yourselves? |
43032 | Brothers and sisters, have we done right?'' |
43032 | But Catharine, wishing for martyrdom, answered,''I am well here, and where should I go? |
43032 | But I ask them to tell me at what time, during what year, what day, or what hour only this general submission existed? |
43032 | But are my peaceful inclinations unknown to you, or the weakness of my arm and my very doubtful courage? |
43032 | But do you know its power? |
43032 | But do you seriously think that perfect self- government may be acquired, or, as you say, regained?" |
43032 | But does it follow from this that supernatural agencies are at work? |
43032 | But ere I leave you, since since leave you I must, may I ask one favor?" |
43032 | But have you heard of nothing beyond philosophy? |
43032 | But how is it with the two nations of Europe as yet disintegral? |
43032 | But how to account for this likeness established so suddenly? |
43032 | But is this all that we are to say to the duchess? |
43032 | But might it not be wise to examine the principle of actions when we attempt to regulate for others on a new system? |
43032 | But then, how can contentment with the meanest things, or filling the humblest offices, assist this conclusion? |
43032 | But what ails you that you do not move?'' |
43032 | But what did you know? |
43032 | But what folly it is to complain; are there no troubles in the world but mine to weep for? |
43032 | But what had Eugene been doing all this time? |
43032 | But what if it were none of these things? |
43032 | But where have the projectors of this college learned geography? |
43032 | But where? |
43032 | But who can say that Shakespeare might not have had all the learning and science here supposed? |
43032 | But who shall be bold enough to say that other and subtler methods of communication may not exist in the material universe? |
43032 | But who were that troop of children gathered before the barn door? |
43032 | But why be afraid of being indiscreet in drawing upon my purse a little? |
43032 | But why dissect such music? |
43032 | But why is he created in this imperfect state, and obliged to run the risks of a difficult and dangerous probation? |
43032 | But why was Adelaide so sad? |
43032 | But, my friend, are you slumbering serenely on these fair promises? |
43032 | But, on the other hand, the same faith makes me feel a certain interest in it; for is not this disorderly, frantic new school a truant from our fold? |
43032 | By divine light also?" |
43032 | CHAPTER V. IS MERE MATERIAL PROGRESS A REAL BENEFIT, OR A PROGRESS IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION? |
43032 | Ca n''t you see the people are hungry, ye villains? |
43032 | Ca n''t you speak?" |
43032 | Can I recall often enough those memories all steeped in tears, that will ever dwell incorruptible within my soul? |
43032 | Can I, then, better end than with you? |
43032 | Can he not determine to do certain things on the condition that the creature uses his free- will in a certain way, if he pleases? |
43032 | Can it have had any relation to that of Origen under the same name? |
43032 | Can mere knowledge of physics do this?" |
43032 | Can such a race continue in ignoble bondage? |
43032 | Can this be peace that is stealing over me? |
43032 | Can this be true? |
43032 | Can you ever go to mass?" |
43032 | Can you tell me where I may find rest and a breakfast?" |
43032 | Can you, can he forgive me?" |
43032 | Capital, was n''t it?" |
43032 | Caught in a trap, are n''t you? |
43032 | Celsus asks:''What did your God say in his sufferings, like to this?'' |
43032 | Christ, and wilt not thou regard my sighs, Long wakeful hours, and lonely miseries, And hopes forlorn? |
43032 | Could anything better indicate the distance it has fallen below the Christian thought, or its failure to grasp the principle of Christian morals? |
43032 | Could it be that his benefactress had returned and withdrawn her affection, or was she more ill? |
43032 | Could it be true? |
43032 | Could there be any harm in thanking him, and in unfolding, at his request, the sketch which had occasioned the accident? |
43032 | Could you not read the literature of the languages? |
43032 | Did I not, on the contrary, say always that a city life is repugnant to my taste, and that I care not at all for any pleasures to be enjoyed here? |
43032 | Did he die on the journey? |
43032 | Did he find the object of his desires? |
43032 | Did he never sing to you there?" |
43032 | Did he not know that he was my very life? |
43032 | Did n''t I tell you she wanted to sleep down here beside her father? |
43032 | Did n''t I tell you to bring her to Drumbhan? |
43032 | Did not Pythagoras teach astronomy in the Copernican fashion? |
43032 | Did one story suggest the other, or are both real or fabulous? |
43032 | Did she tell any of you last night that she could n''t rest there; did she do that, I say? |
43032 | Did we all have a distinct existence, and enjoy a deliberative and decisive vote when the important question of human destiny was decided? |
43032 | Did we give way to our passions, and had we power, who can tell what we should do? |
43032 | Did you never observe how the progression of ancient times ever riveted woman''s chains? |
43032 | Did you not order yesterday, that Wilhelm and Friedrich, if they did not pay their rent tomorrow, should be turned out to sleep on the snow? |
43032 | Divided into two vast bodies, they peal forth the verses of the royal prophet in alternate chorus; and who could tire hearkening? |
43032 | Do I need any other happiness than this? |
43032 | Do n''t you see me?'' |
43032 | Do n''t you think that you should leave the place, now that you are alone? |
43032 | Do not we mentally associate an idea of weakness or effeminacy with melancholic writings? |
43032 | Do the subscribers to the Turkish Missions- Aid Society contemplate this as one of the results of their liberal donations? |
43032 | Do we not suffer in our affections from the misconduct of others? |
43032 | Do we not suffer, from natural predisposition, diseases of various kinds? |
43032 | Do you hear, my child? |
43032 | Do you know any one there?" |
43032 | Do you know what evenings we have now and then? |
43032 | Do you know what that suspense is,--that hanging on each minute which might bring the issues of life or death? |
43032 | Do you mean poetry and fiction-- such as your daughters read? |
43032 | Do you never fear that thus the acme may be reached of our delusions? |
43032 | Do you recognize this, sir?" |
43032 | Do you reject all human research?" |
43032 | Do you remember the Catholic priest whom I ordered to quit the house as soon as the duke was dead? |
43032 | Do you remember?'' |
43032 | Do you see how naturally they coalesce when brought in contact? |
43032 | Do you take all this seriously, my friend? |
43032 | Do you think there are any fathers that are changing like mine? |
43032 | Do you think, dear, good gentlemen, that there are any other"Little Sunbeams"like me? |
43032 | Do you wish to know the efficacy of that ceremonial? |
43032 | Does God create it sinful? |
43032 | Does freedom concern only half of the human race?" |
43032 | Does it not indicate a demand for the order of regeneration, and the completion of this order in the incarnation? |
43032 | Does not this failure partially thwart the divine plan, mar his work, and deprive his universe of its perfection? |
43032 | Does our Heavenly Father ever forget his weary children? |
43032 | Does she continue so?" |
43032 | Each time he was named, his eyes turned towards the curé, as if asking him:"Are you satisfied?" |
43032 | Echoing back and back again His wild halloo? |
43032 | Eugene, perhaps you will write to Mr. Godfrey in my behalf, to inform him of my wishes?" |
43032 | Eugene?" |
43032 | Euphrasie laid aside the embroidery on which she had been employed, and answered meekly,"What shall I do to please you, my dear madam?" |
43032 | Euphrasie looked dreamily in Annie''s face, and said doubtingly:"Heaven? |
43032 | Evan, you devil, where are you? |
43032 | Fierce tempests that roar in the midnight, The tempests both cruel and strong, Are driving me hither and thither; What wonder if I should go wrong? |
43032 | For God has created them for good; and to what end as he made them capable of this felicity, unless it be that they may possess and enjoy it? |
43032 | For how can he foresee future events that are purely contingent on the free choice of created wills? |
43032 | For if he loveth not his brother, whom he seeth, how can he love God, whom he seeth not?" |
43032 | For instance, can we suppose it consistent with the divine wisdom to create only a grain of sand? |
43032 | For what purpose is this capacity? |
43032 | For whom should I still ask a remembrance, a tear, an admiration? |
43032 | Fra Giovanni, can any one in the world be more wretched than I? |
43032 | Fritz-- Carl; where are the knaves? |
43032 | From a heart of infinite longing the youth Looks out on the world;"Where, spirit of candor-- where, spirit of truth, Are thy banners unfurled? |
43032 | From whence came this person, who was she, and what were her resources for living? |
43032 | Good and evil, what are they? |
43032 | Had he been privately married to Mrs. Haag? |
43032 | Hard words break no bones, they say, but angry men are quick, and a blow is soon struck, eh?" |
43032 | Has Hugh never spoken about it with you?" |
43032 | Has any one applied to you for one, or all of them?" |
43032 | Has she also been tampered with? |
43032 | Has she been ill long?" |
43032 | Has she forgotten how much those struggles cost her? |
43032 | Has she lost all?" |
43032 | Hath he said then, and shall he not do? |
43032 | Hath he said then, and will he not fulfil?" |
43032 | Have I made myself understood?" |
43032 | Have I met thee with a spear on thy cloud, spirit of dismal Loda? |
43032 | Have I met thee with a spear on thy cloud, spirit of the dismal Loda? |
43032 | Have my steps ascended from my hills into thy peaceful plains? |
43032 | Have my stops ascended from my hills into thy peaceful plains? |
43032 | Have they hitherto tended toward unity? |
43032 | Have yon also lost your mother? |
43032 | Have you any relatives?" |
43032 | Have you ever considered{ 771} what is the first step to take in the investigation of truth?" |
43032 | Have you ever studied that, Hester?" |
43032 | Have you formed any project? |
43032 | Have you not noticed this?" |
43032 | Have you not often said that the world has yet to learn the results of an equipoised, many- sided development? |
43032 | Have you not yourself taught me to cultivate every faculty to perfection, as a duty? |
43032 | Have you protested against such a monstrous piece of tyranny?" |
43032 | He answered in a tone so low that only she could hear its purport:"You have asked for a madman''s song, my lady; what else can memory produce?" |
43032 | He had entertained high ideas of woman''s purity, of woman''s devotedness, of woman''s disinterestedness, and what was he to think? |
43032 | He heard the tale relative to their withdrawal with undisguised indignation, and said:"And you do not know what has become of them?" |
43032 | He knows it is his mother''s, and she calls tenderly to him:"Robert, what do you believe? |
43032 | He looked round the room, and seeing they were alone, he said in a choking voice:"Is Lady Conway here?" |
43032 | He then said:"Is it not a sacred duty I owe my mother, that of accomplishing her last request?" |
43032 | He was constitutionally timid, and certainly was just now in no mood for quarrelling; so he said quietly:"Why, has any harm come of it?" |
43032 | Her noble mansion, rcplete with elegance, what was it worth to her now? |
43032 | Her order?" |
43032 | Her people were well fed at a common table; they were well sheltered and accommodated; why should they not be intellectualized? |
43032 | Here? |
43032 | Hester, but what is this to the purpose?" |
43032 | His name?" |
43032 | His wife hesitated ere she asked:"Any news of the countess to- day?" |
43032 | His wife was not happy-- how could she be? |
43032 | How am I to attain this faith?" |
43032 | How are we to reconcile or account for these strange contradictions? |
43032 | How came he here? |
43032 | How can he know, for instance, how the subject may affect me? |
43032 | How can he predetermine an end, to be infallibly accomplished, when this accomplishment is contingent on the free arbitration of the creature? |
43032 | How can they with him who commands it-- The Way, and the Truth, and the Life? |
43032 | How can we be sure of systems, unless we spend a life in verification? |
43032 | How can_ soul_ be corrupted by body? |
43032 | How could I after Hugh Atherton''s steady refusal of any explanation? |
43032 | How could he learn this science? |
43032 | How dare you have the impertinence to suppose such a thing? |
43032 | How did all mankind sin in Adam, and by his transgression incur the condemnation of death? |
43032 | How did he get the money? |
43032 | How do they act upon each other? |
43032 | How far ought the actual end of created existences to coincide, or does it really coincide with the end metaphysically final? |
43032 | How had they requited her? |
43032 | How had this strange and striking likeness arisen? |
43032 | How has the innocent soul deserved to be thrust into a body by which it must be polluted? |
43032 | How is it possible that there should be any evil? |
43032 | How is it that our philosophers fail to see the universal application of the laws which they themselves assert? |
43032 | How is it, then, that he saith, I am come down from heaven?" |
43032 | How is that, then?" |
43032 | How long before these strait- laced souls-- the moral progeny of that unhappiest of men, Calvin-- will learn to love God as well as believe in him? |
43032 | How many evils can man avert? |
43032 | How much does our mere board cost? |
43032 | How shall we restore the hardy races that peopled the earth, when these mighty types of glory ruled the populations?" |
43032 | How shall we sing the Lord''s song In a strange land? |
43032 | How shall we tell in a few words the story of one whose career extended over sixty- six years? |
43032 | How should I rest in Paradise, Or sit on steps of Heaven alone? |
43032 | How should that influence our actions?" |
43032 | How was he enabled to many times to escape his master''s rage? |
43032 | How were the obnoxious magistrates to be removed without a revolution? |
43032 | How were they to get fish? |
43032 | How will you compel them? |
43032 | How will you sell them the bushel? |
43032 | How, then, can each individual soul become involved in a original sin? |
43032 | How, then, did the paper labelled''strychnine''get into the prisoner''s pocket? |
43032 | I am leaving for America, can I bear a greeting from you to my father?" |
43032 | I cried,"what do you mean? |
43032 | I even fear that you may regard my letter as very eccentric, and say to yourself:"What nonsense is this? |
43032 | I exclaimed,''who do you mean, sire? |
43032 | I feel a sadness of the soul, A weariness, A constant longing of the heart; What meaneth this? |
43032 | I go, Lord, where thou sendest me; Day after day, plod and moil: But Christ my God, when will it be That I may let alone my toil, And rest with thee?" |
43032 | I had never liked Lister Wilmot much, even in old times; and of late-- well, what need to think of it, though his sins had been great? |
43032 | I have an intense desire to pay the place a visit; had you not come, I should have gone alone; now will you go with me?" |
43032 | I have lived without God; dare I hope, Eugene, he will accept my tardy return to him now?" |
43032 | I hear thee, my child, in the darkness; I know where thou wishest to be: But why in a pilotless vessel Didst venture alone on this sea? |
43032 | I know that few resemble thee in height; Thy utterance comes to me as from above, Like all that''s high and inconceivable; And know I not thy tone? |
43032 | I promised what I gave-- power, rank, grandeur, and respect; these she has: what cause is there for complaint?" |
43032 | I repeat, it conies merely to discourse with you about nature; and what can be more natural? |
43032 | I said, and when? |
43032 | I suppose Smith, Brown, or White would have served his purpose equally as well?" |
43032 | I think you have not seen my poem on Human Brotherhood, Miss Annie?" |
43032 | I, too, had loved the girl, as who indeed had not? |
43032 | If I may not approach the lady myself, who can procure me the evidence I demand?''" |
43032 | If his strength fails, can he not draw fresh force from prayer? |
43032 | If it is not poverty that makes unhappiness, what does make it? |
43032 | If not, how can the determination of the federal government, that the people have done so, be construed to confer it? |
43032 | If not, what is the distinction between them? |
43032 | If saints and angels spoke of love, Should I not answer from my throne,''Have pity upon me, ye, my friends, For I have heard the sound thereof?'' |
43032 | If so, I at least had better die, for what happiness can I expect with such a mate as I have? |
43032 | If so, what becomes of the fall of man?" |
43032 | If so, what is the story translated from its emblematic form? |
43032 | If the question, What shall be done with our freedman? |
43032 | If there is but one principle of imputability, how can there be two distinct intelligent voluntary operations? |
43032 | If this diamond in the rough shows so much brilliancy, what will it not be when it is polished? |
43032 | If you are not Catholic, are you not Christian?" |
43032 | If, then, this so- called resurrection of the western empire was purely nominal, was it merely honorific? |
43032 | In a few moments she partly recovered; yet it was in a faltering voice that she asked:"Father, is a marriage with a Roman Catholic valid?" |
43032 | In this passing world, what century is there that is not a century of transition? |
43032 | In what will these wonderful developments of allotropism end? |
43032 | Instead of replying, Annie asked in a faltering voice:"What has become of them?" |
43032 | Is all this toil necessary? |
43032 | Is he a likely one, think you, to consent to the catting off the entail?" |
43032 | Is it an argument against the divine perfections, that it was not such a period? |
43032 | Is it morally right? |
43032 | Is it not a bright day in your lives, my dear children, when you are proclaimed conquerors? |
43032 | Is it not reasonable? |
43032 | Is it one of hostility or of harmony, of illustration and confirmation, or of antagonism? |
43032 | Is it something we hold in common with cows, horses, dogs? |
43032 | Is it to descend when we aspire to imitate Jesus and Mary? |
43032 | Is it to hold communion with a higher being? |
43032 | Is it you, December? |
43032 | Is it you, October? |
43032 | Is it"worse than foolishness"now to kiss this little ring, and hold it to my heart to still the dull pain there? |
43032 | Is man only an animal? |
43032 | Is matter creative? |
43032 | Is multiplying luxury a good?" |
43032 | Is my dream true? |
43032 | Is not the contrary rather the case? |
43032 | Is not the earth most beautiful, What wouldst have more? |
43032 | Is not this simple? |
43032 | Is not this the history of all anterior civilization? |
43032 | Is physical science the handmaid, or the enemy of faith? |
43032 | Is she not founded on the Rock of Ages, and is it not said by him who is truth itself, that the gates of hell shall not prevail against her? |
43032 | Is that all you wanted to know? |
43032 | Is that it? |
43032 | Is that what the Catholic religion enjoins?" |
43032 | Is the housekeeper''s evidence to be relied on? |
43032 | Is the present age the age of maturity or of decrepitude? |
43032 | Is there a Protestant missionary in the place? |
43032 | Is there a soul, the functions of which are different, distinct, from those of the body, and to the knowledge of which mere intellect can not arrive? |
43032 | Is there no remedy for his wickedness? |
43032 | Is this a time for smile and sigh; For songs among the secret trees Where sudden blue- birds nest and sport? |
43032 | Is this so?" |
43032 | Is this what they call evangelizing the native Christians?] |
43032 | Is your mind easy now? |
43032 | Is_ this_ what the society put forth so boldly as the"Gospel in Turkey?" |
43032 | It has for years been very active and hard at work in imitation of charity; but what has it effected? |
43032 | It was easy to build a castle in the air, but how to find a companion worthy to share it with her, when no such being existed? |
43032 | Kavanagh?" |
43032 | Kavanagh?" |
43032 | Let me see; where was I? |
43032 | Life shows to thee its brightest side; Why not be glad? |
43032 | Living without aim or motion, Save thyself to please, Careless as the beasts that perish, Sitting at thine ease? |
43032 | Look at our national airs: what are they? |
43032 | Love may, then, hope to quite refund What sin hath ta''en away? |
43032 | Lowell?" |
43032 | MAX"Art thou drowsy, dull, indifferent, Folder of the hands, Dreaming o''er the silent falling Of life''s measured sands? |
43032 | Man, what is there at stake with you in comparison with_ him_ who has been driven from his fatherland and his home? |
43032 | May I hope, then, for a brother''s privilege, a friends affection? |
43032 | May I not recall to your memory the explanation I once gave at Durimond Castle?" |
43032 | May I venture to offer you a book to beguile the tedium of the way?" |
43032 | Mind and matter-- which is the true reality? |
43032 | Miss Rossetti alone has the courage to inquire"Was the fallow field left_ un_sown? |
43032 | Moreover,_ whence_ and_ what_ is evil? |
43032 | Mrs. Moreton was annoyed, and the wizard said:''Do you want her, madam? |
43032 | Must I live alone because there is wickedness around us?'' |
43032 | Must we not suppose that the divine plan ran the risk of a complete failure, so far as the co- operation of free- will is concerned? |
43032 | My Hester should have headed the procession?" |
43032 | My aunt, I will try my luck with this little_ Mees_; win her, we d her, and conquer her, too?" |
43032 | My friend, why interrupt the course of a wise resolution and mar a work that is so slow of formation and so costly? |
43032 | My son, why hidest thy face so shy?'' |
43032 | Nelly,"I cried triumphantly,"what do you think of the old house now?" |
43032 | Not a word, Mr. Kavanagh, not a syllable, sir, shall_ we_ here?" |
43032 | Not bad for, was it? |
43032 | Now what''ll be the price? |
43032 | Now, Eugene, answer me: have I not loved you well? |
43032 | Now, Euphrasie, do you honestly believe in the corruption of your heart?" |
43032 | O God,{ 235} will he not curse his mother, knowing what she is, and what she has made him? |
43032 | Of Sweden, vigorous for cut, or subtly tempered for trust[ thrust?]. |
43032 | Of what use is Plato in such a work as this? |
43032 | On one occasion Eugene was present, and he said with a smile,"So you, too, are seeking the philosopher''s stone, sister? |
43032 | On what side are we solemnly to arrange ourselves in this momentous dispute about a donkey''s shadow? |
43032 | Once, when Annie was a little calmer than usual, she suddenly asked her:"What made my mother desire to be a Catholic, Annie?" |
43032 | One of the ladies present put a few questions to him, and among others, asked him what he now believed of the Virgin Mary? |
43032 | Or will you study German and Italian?" |
43032 | Or, on the contrary, is it just as free to God to determine any limit, however low, as the term of creation, as it is to abstain from creating? |
43032 | Ought I to fly now that I have found what I have longed for? |
43032 | Over this man Jesus paused and said:"''Wilt thou be made whole?'' |
43032 | Pardon me; perhaps you are the Catholic?" |
43032 | Pasture was very good, but how were they to get firewood? |
43032 | Peace for such as I?" |
43032 | Perhaps you do n''t know my aunt, Patients Pilcher? |
43032 | Poor baby, where is thy father?" |
43032 | Pop, may not this be the meeting of''Mary''"? |
43032 | Pray, which are we to believe? |
43032 | Presently I heard Father Maurice say to her,"Are you able to speak without pain? |
43032 | Quid diadema tibi, pulcherrima? |
43032 | RELIGION-- PHILOSOPHY: WHICH IS THE TRUTH? |
43032 | Remember that I am more than twice your age; come, have I permission to make myself disagreeable?" |
43032 | Rise? |
43032 | Said April,"I?" |
43032 | Said bright July,"I?" |
43032 | Segat thu sceolde ic minne brothor healdon? |
43032 | Serjeant Donaldson:"What happened next?" |
43032 | Shall I fear thy gloomy form, spirit of Loda? |
43032 | Shall I fear thy gloomy form, spirit of dismal Loda? |
43032 | Shall I speak, after the poor, of that beloved chapel, where the former unbeliever of St. Petersburg opened her heart before the God of her maturity? |
43032 | Shall I try?" |
43032 | Shall we not hope and pray that our own dear land, also, will form not the least brilliant jewel in that crown? |
43032 | Shall we shut out, in our mirth and jollity, the cry of the hungry poor? |
43032 | Shall we then longer look calmly on the evils that beset the sex, when the means are at hand to remedy them, whenever we sincerely wish for them? |
43032 | She addressed Euphrasie respectfully:"Mrs. Ellwood can see no one to- day, miss; can you send in your business by me?" |
43032 | She answers:"What need of that? |
43032 | She embraced him affectionately, and asked him if he"would love her like a mother?" |
43032 | She held his hand and faintly whispered,"My last wishes, can you refuse them?" |
43032 | She must have been a happy wife, eh, baron?" |
43032 | She said she would lie there some day beside her father; do you hear that, men? |
43032 | She turned suddenly on the lawyer:"Where is the Duke of Durimond at this instant?" |
43032 | Should I not turn with yearning eyes, Turn earthward with a pitiful pang? |
43032 | Should n''t boys go to meetin''as well as girls?" |
43032 | Should we not blush at our cowardice when we remember that the infinite God is our consoler? |
43032 | Should you like hereafter to come in contact with such?" |
43032 | Sir Philip was present when the letter was opened; his eyes were fixed on Annie, and he sternly demanded,"From whom?" |
43032 | Smoke?" |
43032 | So the charming_ Mees Fannee_ has accepted me as her chaperone-- interesting girl, is she not? |
43032 | Spartan frugality would disapprove of much of modern luxury; and is not half the toil for luxury merely?" |
43032 | Such is the apostle''s judgment; and how, after giving it, does he proceed? |
43032 | Suddenly Mrs. Godfrey broke from her, and standing up laid her hand on Annie''s shoulder, saying:"Where is Eugene?" |
43032 | Suppose some one were to get up and say the same of temperance, prudence, justice, or fortitude, would he not be considered an imbecile? |
43032 | Suppose you were elected head of a community, you would need servants to do the manual labor?" |
43032 | Supposing we travel without horses at the speed of thirty miles an hour, can we travel nearer to truth? |
43032 | Talking of crust, by the way, what sort of a tap is it you''re drinking?" |
43032 | Tell me, first, have you any hopes of mother?" |
43032 | Tha cwoeth drihten to Caine, hwoet dydest thu? |
43032 | That hitherto too strong a bias has been given, and that a one- sided training has made a one- sided character?" |
43032 | That is the right thing for me to do, is it not, guardian?" |
43032 | That is, does he necessarily create for an end metaphysically final, and carry the creative act to its apex, or the summit of possibility? |
43032 | That very day Mr. Spence had proposed for Hester''s hand, because of her supposed freedom from superstition, What was to be done? |
43032 | That, surely, is not your grace''s meaning?" |
43032 | The Prince of Wales worked diligently to produce an impression upon his cousin''s flinty heart, which( shall we confess it?) |
43032 | The Saxon runs:"Tha cwoeth drihten to Caine, hwoer is Abel thin brothor? |
43032 | The cardinal has been almost always reproached for having established royalty without a basis; but this basis, where was he to find it? |
43032 | The ceremony over, Mr. Godfrey approached him, shook him, and in a harsh whisper said:"Boy, what mummery is this?" |
43032 | The duke had immense revenues; he offered ample settlements: what mattered it that he was thirty- seven, and she but sweet eighteen? |
43032 | The grand palace is still there, but where are the kings and courtiers? |
43032 | The high priest then said,"Art thou the Christ?" |
43032 | The hostess''fair- haired daughter stood apart,"What can he mean?" |
43032 | The influence of the Frank domination has been more superficial than was believed in the last century; the name remains to us, but what else remains? |
43032 | The ladies of his family-- where were they during this nomadic life of his, and how were they situated? |
43032 | The lady turned alarmingly pale, as she faltered forth,"And is the Duke of Durimond is dead?" |
43032 | The last is Dr. Newman''s, than whom no one knows better, none can describe so well, that_ Via Dolorosa_ which all converts tread? |
43032 | The marriage was agreed upon years ago; what would you have? |
43032 | The men looked shyly at each each other, as if to say,"Can he really mean it?" |
43032 | The old gentleman here looked around the car with an air that seemed to say, Will somebody have the kindness to tell me if I am asleep or awake? |
43032 | The only question to be discussed is, What is the real sense and meaning of the doctrine? |
43032 | The pagan woman-- what was she? |
43032 | The same may be said of a pigeon''s neck, a maiden''s cheek; and why not of a volume of poems? |
43032 | The second night they encamped at_ Manouth_( May- nooth? |
43032 | The second, Are the means chosen for carrying it out just? |
43032 | The soul has but one inquiry for every dogma, for every precept:"_ Teacher of God, what hast thou spoken?_"The teacher answers and the soul obeys. |
43032 | The streets were crowded, but what is a crowd by night, or even, by day? |
43032 | The strength of well- knit limbs? |
43032 | The world receives the theory of Copernicus now on trust; would it be wise to spend a life in verifying it?" |
43032 | Their questions were Sharp and loud:"''Rabbi, when camest thou hither?'' |
43032 | Then answered he and quoth, I know not Sayest thou should I hold my brother? |
43032 | Then quoth the Lord to Cain, What didst thou? |
43032 | Then they looked at their numbers and thought, What does this all mean? |
43032 | Then what do you say to making these poor people comfortable?" |
43032 | Then wherefore, Death, dost thou to me is wrong, So long estranged to linger from my side? |
43032 | Then, turning to me,"How was it?" |
43032 | There can be no doubt, you think, about this being funny?" |
43032 | There is always this great question to be solved, Have the people delegated such a power? |
43032 | There is more intense_ Irishness_( what other word will express it?) |
43032 | There needs not much eloquence to pray the publican''s prayer, and who shall say but there was gladness in heaven that Christmas morning? |
43032 | There was a community of the old faith near his residence? |
43032 | There was no alternative native but to hand the letter to him and he exclaimed in a fury,"And is it thus you would waste my substance madam? |
43032 | There you have it,"added he, waving the monkey triumphantly in the air,"and wo n''t it be grand?" |
43032 | These make the noble of the earth; And he I love is one of these:-- And shall I for a title fall From such a soul and love as his? |
43032 | They do, sometimes, eh, baron? |
43032 | They say that at Rome the adoration of the Virgin Mary has taken the place of the worship of the goddess Venus-- where is the gain there?" |
43032 | Thine Antitype? |
43032 | This was a manifest injustice, as the money was Annie''s private property, by right of her marriage settlements; but when was prejudice ever just? |
43032 | Thou frownest in vain: I never fled from the mighty in war; and shall the sons of the wind frighten the king of Morven? |
43032 | Thou frownest in vain; I never fled from the mighty in war; And shall the sons of the wind frighten the king of Morven? |
43032 | To be raised above the mists of this murky earth? |
43032 | To lose him was to lose everything; for who save he had shown kindness to the poor, friendless orphan girl? |
43032 | To the poetry that strove within her for expression, where was the listener? |
43032 | To what was my contempt of life leading me? |
43032 | To whom were these gorgeous collections of heathen idols, these entailed estates, these titles, honors, to descend? |
43032 | Was I then to clamber the rocky path to the end only to see hope receding in the distance? |
43032 | Was he to tell Frederic to be a hypocrite, and to study theology for a"living?" |
43032 | Was it a kindly or a spiteful fairy who crowned these gifts with a vanity that nothing could undermine or overthrow? |
43032 | Was it ever in his power to create it? |
43032 | Was it for you, whom she loved so dearly, to crush her loving spirit, and then stand by so calmly contemplating her remains? |
43032 | Was it not better to imitate the majestic silence of Jesus Christ, who spoke no word, but let his life speak for him? |
43032 | Was it true, then, as Shelley sings,"that all things are venal, and that even a woman''s heart may be put up in an auction mart?" |
43032 | Was not Eugene good, dutiful, noble, and generous? |
43032 | Was not man severed from God by disobedience? |
43032 | Was that a period of peace, prosperity, and contentment? |
43032 | Was the duke a Catholic?" |
43032 | Was there no authority attached to it? |
43032 | Was there not enough to surprise him? |
43032 | Was there, or was there not, any ale poured out in the glass before it was brought up into Mr. Thorneley''s study? |
43032 | We both eagerly turned to him with the same question:"Will she die?" |
43032 | We quote the first and last verses:--"Where are the winged words? |
43032 | We remained thus three- quarters of an hour, his cheek pressed to mine; he wept as bitterly as I did:''Oh why did you give time for these reflections? |
43032 | We see the waste-- how is compensation made? |
43032 | We, citizens and freemen, do we even for much money, what those servile beings did for a little honor? |
43032 | Wealth? |
43032 | Were the people to be shut out of the church again on the day of their patron saint? |
43032 | What Catholic can doubt of our obligations to the Holy See? |
43032 | What Christian would not wish to study therein? |
43032 | What Florimel embowers Lawn and lake with arching flowers? |
43032 | What are our national and party airs; our national and party festivals, but expressions of a similar character looking forward to similar results? |
43032 | What are we to live for-- the animal life, or the spiritual? |
43032 | What aërial artist limns Rock and cloud, with brush that dims Titian''s oils and Hogarth''s whims In shape and dye? |
43032 | What bad news have you heard?'' |
43032 | What can be greater harm than that Annie and her mother should both of them be papists?" |
43032 | What can this mean? |
43032 | What conclusion do you draw from all this? |
43032 | What could Hester do? |
43032 | What could be the matter with the lady? |
43032 | What could they do? |
43032 | What deity will you offer these victims to, monsieur? |
43032 | What did I see? |
43032 | What did she leave behind her in the world? |
43032 | What did these cries of joy, and stamping of feet, and clasping of hands portend, and the smiling old folks looking on and encouraging their sports? |
43032 | What did this mean? |
43032 | What did we care for that or anything else? |
43032 | What divinity rules here, young man? |
43032 | What do I know of the Catholic religion? |
43032 | What do you intend to do? |
43032 | What do you mean by that, Annie?" |
43032 | What do you mean by that?" |
43032 | What does he do? |
43032 | What does this mean?" |
43032 | What dost thou work?'' |
43032 | What good genii drop the grains Of brown sugar in the canes? |
43032 | What good have you done? |
43032 | What had I left? |
43032 | What has Euphrasie more than I have? |
43032 | What has been so notorious for ages as the wantonness and haughtiness of the Romans? |
43032 | What has caused the difference?" |
43032 | What have they been thinking of during these past years, while this destructive work has been going on? |
43032 | What have you found? |
43032 | What have you found?" |
43032 | What if it took centuries to abolish slavery? |
43032 | What if it were simply a perversion of the primitive traditions? |
43032 | What influence is it likely to have on the conclusions of faith? |
43032 | What is God?" |
43032 | What is a little trouble? |
43032 | What is distance, if viewed apart from the means at disposal for overpassing it? |
43032 | What is finished? |
43032 | What is it makes us so sure of this? |
43032 | What is it? |
43032 | What is life? |
43032 | What is nature? |
43032 | What is over? |
43032 | What is revelation? |
43032 | What is the difference to a reader whether an author passes beyond his reach by going apart into abstruseness or soaring away into idealism? |
43032 | What is the end of creation, or the relation of the universe of created existences to the final cause, which is metaphysically final? |
43032 | What is the fact in the case? |
43032 | What is the nature of that original sin in which we are born? |
43032 | What is the office, what the aim of each? |
43032 | What is this that has fallen upon my hand? |
43032 | What is winter? |
43032 | What is_ your_ little professional vanity to compare with what_ he_ has lost-- name, fame, position-- everything most dear to him save one?" |
43032 | What less could I learn from the favorite of Minerva and the protector of Athens?" |
43032 | What magician pulls the string That uncurtains pretty Spring? |
43032 | What matter passing trials to him who is to possess eternity? |
43032 | What mattered it that she had scarcely seen the noble duke; that she knew little of his private life, or of his tastes and feelings? |
43032 | What means this sudden change, this almost instantaneous forgetfulness of sorrow, which drives in an instant the tears of love? |
43032 | What more arbitrary, generally speaking, than the meaning attached to words? |
43032 | What more? |
43032 | What mortal can be made to believe, without demonstration, that the sun is almost a million times larger than the earth? |
43032 | What most rejoices the heart of man? |
43032 | What motive do you propose?" |
43032 | What must thou do? |
43032 | What now were to him the chances of heirship, the thoughts of transmitting his name to a long posterity? |
43032 | What objection can you have to what all the world terms master- pieces?" |
43032 | What reason can be given for this? |
43032 | What relation, then, we ask, has the modern advance of science to this undivided sum of revealed truth? |
43032 | What right have you to impose a ritual upon them inconsistent with their belief?" |
43032 | What says my Hester to this?" |
43032 | What shall I do?" |
43032 | What shall I tell you? |
43032 | What share in his inheritance had you?" |
43032 | What should he do? |
43032 | What suffices? |
43032 | What was it that disgusted Hester with her''march of intellect''scheme? |
43032 | What was she in Pagan Greece and Rome; what will she be, again if Christianity is abolished? |
43032 | What was she to do now? |
43032 | What was there in her manner to damp at once the ardor of Hester''s enthusiasm? |
43032 | What were the talks of these two souls on a subject in regard to which they had nothing in common, except their genius? |
43032 | What will be done to him? |
43032 | What will become of me? |
43032 | What will come next?" |
43032 | What will you ask-- the bushel? |
43032 | What, if anything, is the moral of all this? |
43032 | When I was in your Thebaïd, did I ever speak regretfully of the joys of Paris? |
43032 | When Mr. Godfrey told his children to think for themselves, did he mean that they were to think as he did, on pain of expulsion? |
43032 | When is it that the nations can stop, pitch their tents, and say,"It is good to be here?" |
43032 | When is our love and our zeal proportionate to the pardon which we have received from God? |
43032 | When peals ring out so mellow? |
43032 | When shall I get leave to explore your mystery?" |
43032 | When the twilight veil is closing Gently o''er each darkening scene, Love we not the shades reposing Underneath its misty screen? |
43032 | When will you find for me out of the whole of that populous city, who received you as Pope without bribe or hope of bribe? |
43032 | When, like ruins dim and hoary, Forms are outlined on the sky, See we not surpassing glory In the day- god''s closing eye? |
43032 | When, toward evening, she stood outside the{ 368} Porte Brulée, did not M. de Vilaine''s horoscope rise in her estimation? |
43032 | Whence is this uncertainty about the probable nature of this force? |
43032 | Whence, then, does all this labor originally come? |
43032 | Where am I to send them to?" |
43032 | Where are the great heaps of volcanic rocks among which he had been reared and which were so familiar to his eyes? |
43032 | Where did all sleep? |
43032 | Where do you live?" |
43032 | Where have you shown him to?" |
43032 | Where is Monsieur de Lauzun?'' |
43032 | Where is our gratitude for favors such as those? |
43032 | Where is she?'' |
43032 | Where is the substratum of a state of probation? |
43032 | Where on earth is sound or sense in this? |
43032 | Where the fresh flower of youth and glory? |
43032 | Where those dear parents who my life first gave, And where that holy twain, brother and sister? |
43032 | Where was Adelaide''s sharpness at repartee as of old? |
43032 | Where, in the name of wonder?" |
43032 | Where, then, was Wild Stephen? |
43032 | Where?" |
43032 | Whether the so- called chemical elements may not be, after all, mere allotropic conditions of purer universal essences? |
43032 | Which may be rendered in English by almost the same words, thus:"Then quoth the Lord to Cain, where is Abel thy brother? |
43032 | Whither should he bend his own steps? |
43032 | Who can hear the name of mother spoken without feeling a delicious sensation, and having a tear- drop moisten the eye? |
43032 | Who can measure these two sublimities and say that the second surpasses the first? |
43032 | Who does n''t believe in fairies after this? |
43032 | Who does not prefer the sunny side of a landscape to the dark one? |
43032 | Who fills up the apple''s veins With sweetened dew? |
43032 | Who hangs the painted air With the grape and golden pear? |
43032 | Who is it who binds and looses on earth, that our Lord may bind and loose in heaven? |
43032 | Who is that visible head? |
43032 | Who knows anything of her? |
43032 | Who makes the Yule- fire foam Round the happy hearth of home? |
43032 | Who should die but he, the old miser? |
43032 | Who that has lived through that year of misery and horror, but shudders at the remembrances its very name recalls? |
43032 | Who was the stranger?" |
43032 | Who would ever think of an annular eclipse of the moon as an illustration of religion? |
43032 | Who''d have thought of seeing you here?" |
43032 | Who, I say, is the successor to St. Peter, since a successor there must be, in his sovereign authority over the church? |
43032 | Why alas? |
43032 | Why can not those who write books for the young avoid this rock of offence? |
43032 | Why could they not treat this vagary as intellectual wild oats, and give him time to recover?" |
43032 | Why did I not write to you when my whole life lay before me at my own disposal? |
43032 | Why did she not know his address? |
43032 | Why did you not hasten matters?'' |
43032 | Why do you beat the little girl? |
43032 | Why do you wish to imprison Annie in one?" |
43032 | Why does God place him in a state of probation, knowing his defectibility? |
43032 | Why does he shut himself in that dark closet for hours? |
43032 | Why does it become necessary that every new book for our children should be redolent of the fumes of the bar- room? |
43032 | Why dost thou come to my presence with thy shadowy arms? |
43032 | Why dost thou come to my presence with thy shadowy arms? |
43032 | Why dost thou frown on me? |
43032 | Why had she not thought of this before? |
43032 | Why had she yielded to the temptation? |
43032 | Why has nature made the good ridiculous and the wicked handsome? |
43032 | Why have n''t I told this before? |
43032 | Why have we disease, plague, famine, war, and bloodshed?" |
43032 | Why is it that devouring inquietude and mental restlessness then comes to our souls, and tortures them without ceasing? |
43032 | Why is it that my soul is sad, What meaneth this? |
43032 | Why is it that some fail and others do not fail to attain their destination? |
43032 | Why is not the perverseness of their hearts to be read on their faces?'' |
43032 | Why is the English citizen so intelligent in commercial and political life, so hampered under the red coat? |
43032 | Why is the French peasant so stupid when he is taken from his plough, so much at his ease when in uniform? |
43032 | Why is the rational creature defectible or liable to fail of reaching his destination? |
43032 | Why is this? |
43032 | Why is truth so difficult, seeing that it is so necessary to him?" |
43032 | Why may not this be true in regard to the law which is said to militate against the doctrine of the blessed Eucharist? |
43032 | Why must the sacramental system revealed in the spiritual world be with equal justice refused its claim to an agency hardly more subtle? |
43032 | Why not have made the lady of your love your duchess?" |
43032 | Why not study this of which Eugene speaks?" |
43032 | Why not tell the living what they have lost in the dead? |
43032 | Why shake thine airy sphere? |
43032 | Why shake thy dusky spear? |
43032 | Why should he be allowed to destroy the political influence of the family, to mar the marriage of my sister, to bring a slur on a respectable name?" |
43032 | Why should he be sad when all nature was so joyous? |
43032 | Why should not other races pass through the same stages, especially when influenced by intercourse with modern civilized nations? |
43032 | Why should one part of mankind be sacrificed to the happiness of the other? |
43032 | Why should she distrust him? |
43032 | Why should this spoil- sport intrude on our fairest days? |
43032 | Why should we be silent? |
43032 | Why should we lose the simplicity, love, and truth that make childhood sweet?" |
43032 | Why then dost thou frown on me? |
43032 | Why then should a rational creature necessarily desire to transcend its own proper and connatural mode of intelligence? |
43032 | Why then should it not be the case, or rather is it not evidently the case, with those also which are connected with religion? |
43032 | Why was he treated like a criminal? |
43032 | Why was the young duchess apparently most constrained when with her husband? |
43032 | Why, Adelaide, how dare you apply such words to your father? |
43032 | Why, on the contrary, was he, as usual, gay, cheerful, and animated? |
43032 | Why, since they came to England, did these long absences take place? |
43032 | Why, then, did Ellen half surmise that the meeting was wrong? |
43032 | Why, then, is evil allowed to enter? |
43032 | Why, therefore, did God create rational existences with this imperfection? |
43032 | Why, when I went down to the Grange, did you send De Vos to follow me and drug the coffee?" |
43032 | Will not all the faithful find strength in their strength, and light in their light? |
43032 | Will not one term comprehend both?" |
43032 | Will reading Virgil and Horace tend to evolve moral power?" |
43032 | Will these buds be always unblown? |
43032 | Will these buds be always_ un_blown?" |
43032 | Will you accept me as your disciple in Jesus Christ? |
43032 | Will you give Adelaide to a man of seven- and- thirty?'' |
43032 | Will you have it so? |
43032 | Will you not let one of your people tell them that I am here and wish to see them?" |
43032 | Will you undertake the commission?" |
43032 | Wilmot?" |
43032 | Wilmot?" |
43032 | Wilt thou, while speeding into dawn, Bring me the will of heaven?" |
43032 | With Protestant missionaries in the East the practice is exceedingly rare: perhaps it is regarded as an infringement upon true religious liberty? |
43032 | With warmth and light and merry feasts ye hail his natal- day, But who have place for Jesus Christ who in the manger lay? |
43032 | Worldly and courtly as he seemed, who could suspect go strong an undercurrent of deep and passionate emotion? |
43032 | Would he,_ could_ he resist that appeal? |
43032 | Would it please his high born excellency to let them fish in the lakes?" |
43032 | Would not his excellency add to his gift? |
43032 | Would you have every one resemble you? |
43032 | Writing to Pope Eugenius during the troubles of the day, he says:"What shall I say of the people? |
43032 | Yes, I suppose so; why not, my dear?" |
43032 | Yes, where was the husband, where was the father? |
43032 | Yes; who does not know that it is of wood or metal? |
43032 | Yet why should I frighten you and inspire you with fear, when you trust so implicitly in the future? |
43032 | Yet, now three centuries after that even,_ has_,{ 592} my brethren, the Holy Church come to an end? |
43032 | You are my father''s idol, have you thought what it will be to break his heart?" |
43032 | You are not angry with me, then, Eugene?" |
43032 | You are poor, too high born to work, what then is left you but a wealthy marriage?" |
43032 | You can not think that''annoyed''is a term applicable to my sister''s feeling at your illness?" |
43032 | You could answer this; why are you so happy, why am I se wretched? |
43032 | You do n''t mean it, though, do you? |
43032 | You have relations there?" |
43032 | You have seen this proposal possible, you have weighed it; is it indiscreet to ask in confidence your reasons?" |
43032 | You know that, too?" |
43032 | You know the distance, maybe? |
43032 | You thought that you were good, did you, and Father Connor, too, to put her up in the hill beside the big church there? |
43032 | You thought there was no wickedness in the world, only innocence and virtue? |
43032 | You would not stop these new inventions, nor set a limit to improvement?" |
43032 | You? |
43032 | You? |
43032 | Young Carl is wild, perhaps, or drinks, or gambles, eh? |
43032 | Your exterior arrangements our splendid; your laws rigidly moral; but will you ensure their being kept? |
43032 | [ What brought the enemy outside their walls?] |
43032 | _ Much is finished known or unknown;_ Lives are finished, time diminished; Was the fallow field left unsown? |
43032 | a pagan heir to my Pantheon, sir? |
43032 | a snug bed for the little ones, and a nice white coverlet, eh? |
43032 | am I not always with you? |
43032 | and have I not told you? |
43032 | and how can we escape error if we can not light on truth?" |
43032 | and if it comes, can not we put it to flight? |
43032 | and if you here were utterly depraved, would you have opened your house and your heart to the wandering outcast?" |
43032 | and is it thus thou didst lament His absence for a day? |
43032 | and is that beginning to be the laying aside of all received traditional lore? |
43032 | and must I bear all the ills of such a child?" |
43032 | are you come at last? |
43032 | are you sworn to secrecy?" |
43032 | art thou, ofttimes, So faint and sad? |
43032 | at Estcourt Hall?" |
43032 | confound you?" |
43032 | could he believe his eyes? |
43032 | cried Ada,"my poor sick little moped Lucy, you surely do n''t mean to say that you believe in such vulgar things as ghosts?" |
43032 | cried I,''what do you mean? |
43032 | cried the child, transported with joy,"is it thee? |
43032 | dear mother, why was I not permitted to come to you before?" |
43032 | did I not want a duchess in my halls? |
43032 | did she tell you so?" |
43032 | do you refuse to obey your master? |
43032 | do you think that of him who never bore an unkindly thought even to a dumb animal?" |
43032 | has Protestantism weakened her powers, terrible enemy as it seemed to be when it arose? |
43032 | has Protestantism, that bitter, energetic enemy of the Holy See, harmed the Holy See? |
43032 | have I not been a good mother to you?" |
43032 | have I really been so ungrateful as to give you this idea?" |
43032 | have you no pity on me?'' |
43032 | here in the convent? |
43032 | how did she bear it? |
43032 | how did you come?" |
43032 | how investigate this truth, if truth it were? |
43032 | how long have you been there?" |
43032 | how should we know aught of such a being?" |
43032 | how was he repaid?" |
43032 | i. page 17_ et seq._]"And through what agency is this effected?" |
43032 | in heaven''s name, why?" |
43032 | in this poor place?" |
43032 | is every creature by to be the hero of some dream of yours? |
43032 | is it the priest, alanna?" |
43032 | is it too late to reclaim him? |
43032 | is that you? |
43032 | is this"worse than foolishness,"the tears should rush to your old guardian''s eyes when he thinks of you, and writes your name for the last time? |
43032 | muttered Napoleon, bitterly;"have I made you too rich?" |
43032 | my aunt labor?" |
43032 | my child?" |
43032 | my dear child, what is it?" |
43032 | nay, when oftentimes the property is in the possession of the fool, while the wise man has to get his living by hard labor? |
43032 | none of these? |
43032 | or rather, why did she make such beautiful creatures so wicked? |
43032 | or that the world of spirit has none more vivid than those subtle currents which permeate the world of matter? |
43032 | quid tibi gemma? |
43032 | repeated Eugene;"what is prayer? |
43032 | replied Lord Howe, hastily;"what do you mean by that, sir? |
43032 | roared the steward, almost powerless with rage--''what do you mean by this insolence? |
43032 | said Adelaide, a little impatiently;"shut up our books, and sit and dream on the sea- shore on matters beyond all practical use?" |
43032 | said M. Bertolot,"is it thus she veils herself? |
43032 | said his sister;"how many of the pagans, think you, would mistake a statue of Minerva for Minerva herself? |
43032 | said the father"and was this your honeymoon?" |
43032 | said the goblin,"you do n''t mean to say you''re sorry? |
43032 | says I, almost swearin'',''they believe in the Holy Catholic Church in this meetin''-house, do n''t they?'' |
43032 | says Mr. Ball;''where does he live?'' |
43032 | she asked of herself:"and am I to leave Annie here?" |
43032 | she exclaimed,"what has happened you? |
43032 | she said gravely;"_ I have heard it._ Now tell me, Lucy, does your aunt know anything of all this?" |
43032 | she said to me;"there are people who raise these for us; would it not be ungrateful for those who can, not to recompense them for their labor?" |
43032 | she said:"How shall we welcome you, dear martyr, for his sake?" |
43032 | sire, who would have doubted your majesty''s word? |
43032 | snow?" |
43032 | sweet security, blissful trust of childhood, why must it pass away with advancing years? |
43032 | tears? |
43032 | the gentleman was called Colonel Ellwood, was he not? |
43032 | thought I,''can such cruelty be allied to such genius?'' |
43032 | twenty florins or so is no great matter, is it? |
43032 | what crime has it diminished? |
43032 | what did you know? |
43032 | what do you mean, confound you? |
43032 | what do you mean, you old conundrum?" |
43032 | what do you mean?" |
43032 | what gave the impetus to raise the''toiler for bread''in the scale of humanity?" |
43032 | what is truth?" |
43032 | what physician?'' |
43032 | what social evil has it removed? |
43032 | what suffering has it solaced? |
43032 | what thinkest thou, mother? |
43032 | what vice has it corrected? |
43032 | what was the occupation dropped over our soldier- poet''s head, and doing all in its power to extinguish his imaginative and poetic faculties? |
43032 | what will become of him? |
43032 | what''s come to the boy?" |
43032 | what, my pretty? |
43032 | what?" |
43032 | where are they, then? |
43032 | where are you? |
43032 | where did they go to?" |
43032 | where is my boy?" |
43032 | where is she? |
43032 | where? |
43032 | whither shall I flee? |
43032 | who could ever dream our love for each other could melt away to this?" |
43032 | who has now the keys of the kingdom of heaven, as St. Peter had then? |
43032 | who is responsible in the matter? |
43032 | who is the vicar of Christ? |
43032 | who''s dead now? |
43032 | why could we not understand?" |
43032 | why did nature make these wretches so beautiful? |
43032 | why should there be such a prejudice against any one form of religion?" |
43032 | why, what can bring him here? |
43032 | wilt thou that I also should deny That I am thine? |
43032 | would it never give way? |
43032 | would she ever wake from that terrible unconsciousness? |
43032 | would you leave us? |
43032 | would you marry your cousin''s servant? |
43032 | you rascal, where are you?" |
43032 | { 178}"No? |
43032 | { 187}"How can I satisfy you save by denying any other marriage?" |
43032 | { 231}"She is a Catholic, sir, I believe; she''ll tell her priest, but what use is that to us?" |
43032 | { 265}"Where''s the good of excuses?" |
43032 | { 266}"But,"said I one evening,"what would become of society if we adopted your maxims? |
43032 | { 27} But between the publishing of the first part of Don Quixote in 1605, and the second in 1614, how had the great heart and head been occupied? |
43032 | { 292}_ Whence_, then, and_ what_ is evil? |
43032 | { 394}"''Dost thou force me from my place?'' |
43032 | { 488}"A respect that will place them at liberty to proselytize all the parish? |
43032 | { 493}"You will at least spend money, Hester?" |
43032 | { 494}"And if he succeeds, my aunt will go back to France?" |
43032 | { 50}"I hardly know; I am terrified; what if it is true, as this man says, that weak minds must obey the strong; that resistance is useless? |
43032 | { 603}"But"said M. de Villeneuve,"how does the knowledge of the material world affect man''s existence as a moral agent? |
43032 | { 615}"And why not, my lady? |
43032 | { 618}"You think the earlier men really possessed higher intellectual facilities than we have now?" |
43032 | { 690} Can discouragement seize upon me there? |
43032 | { 754}"And is Annie not to see her own children again?" |
43032 | { 760}"How would it have been if those men had been crushed to death, or worse, hopelessly maimed for life?" |
41032 | ''Why can I not always replace you thus?'' 41032 About two hundred pounds, father, including the-- what is it you call it, father?'' |
41032 | Ada, it is not all; can you bear the rest? |
41032 | Again how can I tell? 41032 An''th''ould masther done for him!--God be praised? |
41032 | And Rita? |
41032 | And did you ask where the man went to? |
41032 | And did you like her from the first? |
41032 | And hath a silent, viewless thing Laid danger''s darling low, When youth and hope were on the wing And life in morning glow? 41032 And have you come to receive my thanks?" |
41032 | And how did-- how-- did-- poor Emon hear of it? |
41032 | And if it proves true-- that which Corny Nugent says, what then? |
41032 | And is heresy catching, mother, like the itch? |
41032 | And now that I have come, and I see you, my son, what have you to ask of me? |
41032 | And soon as ceased that wildering tramp''What ails thee, boy?'' 41032 And the housekeeper?" |
41032 | And the young fellow,_ my_ man, does he know anything? |
41032 | And there is your next- door neighbor, father, never had but the one, and instead of a treasure, has he not been a curse? 41032 And these ears of grain?" |
41032 | And this dog? |
41032 | And treat her well? |
41032 | And what is his real name? |
41032 | And what of it? |
41032 | And what one''s life are you reading now? |
41032 | And what would you have me do-- dance a fandango, because I am going to be married? |
41032 | And where is she? |
41032 | And who can it be? |
41032 | And who was he? |
41032 | And why is he called Melampo? |
41032 | And why not,exclaimed Pedro,"for the best? |
41032 | And why so? |
41032 | And you, father? |
41032 | And you, too, Ventura, are you coming to take a rest? |
41032 | And your third point? |
41032 | Are there any such things? 41032 Are they after us?" |
41032 | Are you a magistrate, sir? |
41032 | Are you afraid you shall take root? |
41032 | Are you aware, my young champion, that if you set the dog at the deceased you would be guilty of manslaughter at least, if not murder? |
41032 | Are you come to commit murder? |
41032 | Are you dumb? |
41032 | Are you game for a dhrop of whiskey? |
41032 | Are you not glad to see me, madam? |
41032 | Are you not going to eat your supper, Perico? |
41032 | Are you out of your senses too? |
41032 | Are you ready? |
41032 | Are you sick, my son? |
41032 | Are you there, Emon? |
41032 | Arra blur- an- ages, Miss Winny, did n''t I cut across by Shanvilla, an''tould him every haporth? 41032 Arrah, what i d he be plaised at? |
41032 | Aunt, what was it? |
41032 | Aunt,continued the soldiers,"shall we help you down from that gay colt?" |
41032 | Aunt,said another,"does your grace retain any recollection of the day you were married?" |
41032 | Aunty,cried another"is the church where you were christened still standing?" |
41032 | Be this thy shield? |
41032 | Boy, boy, what have you done? |
41032 | But I may say I am innocent? |
41032 | But he did not know you? |
41032 | But how did the police hear of it, Winny, or find out which way they went; an''what brought Jamesy Doyle up with them? |
41032 | But how was that? |
41032 | But is he dead and is he sped Withouten scathe or scar? 41032 But not dead?" |
41032 | But since you like soldiers so much, mother,proceeded Rita,"why did you take such trouble to prevent my cousin Miguel from becoming one?" |
41032 | But why did you ask? |
41032 | But why have you come here? |
41032 | But why,some of our readers will say,--"why does l''Abbé Gerbet''s name imply all this?" |
41032 | But you received what is called an''enclosure''of a £ 10 note, did you not? |
41032 | But you rob? |
41032 | But you were fond of Sir Geoffrey? |
41032 | But, madam, have you seen anything of the kind, or is it only because you can swallow everything, like a shark? |
41032 | But, mother,he answered,"where do you see it? |
41032 | But,said Maria,"to whom shall we lend if not to the poor? |
41032 | But_ where_ is that will, sir? 41032 By what right do you ask me, sir?" |
41032 | Can you say where this man is? 41032 Can you swear to it?" |
41032 | Children,she cried,"the night is falling, what are you doing out here, freezing yourselves?" |
41032 | Could any one have told him that goats have broken into the wheat? |
41032 | Could n''t you set him to do something? |
41032 | Could you oblige me with a fusee, sir? |
41032 | Could you swear that the figure standing before you now and the woman you met are one and the same? |
41032 | Cut him, is it? 41032 Did Mr. Thorneley mention in whose favor his previous will had been made?" |
41032 | Did Perico send you? |
41032 | Did Ventura not come to the village to- day? |
41032 | Did he succeed in tracing out the evidence in that celebrated cause he was conducting? |
41032 | Did n''t I tell him, and was n''t it I pointed out the deceased to him, and tould him to hould him? 41032 Did you bear the name of Bradley?" |
41032 | Did you go to the feast? |
41032 | Did you hear my question, sir? 41032 Did you hear or know of any one being in the hall for any length of time whilst Mr. Atherton was with his uncle?" |
41032 | Did you know M. Gireaud when he was in England? |
41032 | Did you know anything of this transaction, sir? |
41032 | Did you let him out? |
41032 | Did you see him home? |
41032 | Did you see how the clouds ran this afternoon? |
41032 | Did you see_ her_? |
41032 | Do any of the family still live in the place? |
41032 | Do you know that Mr. de Vos is in England? |
41032 | Do you love jasmine? |
41032 | Do you not know that there is a spirit within you more than flesh? 41032 Do you think a man is like a beast that dies and is ended?" |
41032 | Do you think she had a hand in this, O''Brian? |
41032 | Do you think that I am an_ aumadhawn_, Emon? 41032 Do you think, you unfeeling father, that the silver or the tobacco are worth the lives they cost and the tears? |
41032 | Do you think_ he_ will be present? |
41032 | Do you want to cow me, father, as you said yourself, just now? |
41032 | Does Eleanor love me? |
41032 | Does she know me? |
41032 | Does the Episcopal Church teach the Exclusive Validity of Episcopal Orders? |
41032 | Dost thou know it, love? 41032 Ethikkan, will you take Toqueiyazi to be your lawful husband?" |
41032 | Eve,said she,"you answer nothing?" |
41032 | Father Farrell,he said, still holding the priest''s hand,"is this the note, the very note, the identical note, she sent me?" |
41032 | Father, if I could only see her before I die? |
41032 | First deceived, and afterward beaten; who is the saint that could bear it? |
41032 | For heaven''s sake, you do not mean to say that he actually killed him, Jamesy? |
41032 | For the vile red dust you gave in thrall The heart that was God''s above; How could you think that money was all, When the world was won for love? 41032 For was he dead and was he sped, When he could ride so well, So bravely bear his plumèd head? |
41032 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, but the spirit of man which is in him? 41032 For what?" |
41032 | For which little business,he continued with unutterable irony,"you were doubtless to receive some_ small_ compensation?" |
41032 | For whom can it be? |
41032 | God be with you, sir,said the innkeeper, with more fear than cordiality,"what might be your pleasure?" |
41032 | Great heaven I do you say so? 41032 Had it any bearing upon the unhappy catastrophe, either directly or indirectly?" |
41032 | Had n''t you better go to your own bed in the barn, Jamesy, where you can take off your clothes? 41032 Had not the king already cities enough in this? |
41032 | Had you any children? |
41032 | Hadji,at last the emir said to me,"you have come from Turkey, I understand, to visit the tombs of Baveddin and the saints of Turkestan?" |
41032 | Has she pronounced any name in her delirium? |
41032 | Has she told all that passed-- all that he said? |
41032 | Has there been a murder in this quiet place? |
41032 | Hast thou heard,said he,"what sang the_ petit savant_ seated at table with the bards?" |
41032 | Have the results fulfilled your anticipations? |
41032 | Have you any news? |
41032 | Have you been in Ireland since the girl left it with her husband? |
41032 | Have you dined? 41032 Have you more to tell us about O''Brian?" |
41032 | Have you not told me yourself, in answer to my first questions, before giving you my reasons for inquiring? |
41032 | Ho, craven, shun''st thou the melée, When she expects thy brand To prove to- day in fair tourney A title to her hand? 41032 How do we know? |
41032 | How do you like that, my old chap? |
41032 | How do you propose setting to work, Keene? |
41032 | How freezing ourselves? |
41032 | How is Ada? |
41032 | How is he, oh, how is he, Father Farrell? |
41032 | How is he? |
41032 | How is papa? 41032 How is that, father?'' |
41032 | How is that? |
41032 | How long was he at the table? |
41032 | How long was it between the time Mr. Wilmot went away and the time Mr. Atherton left the house? |
41032 | How many years ago? |
41032 | How many years is it since they married? |
41032 | How was it, then, that you returned to London by the twelve o''clock train the following day-- I mean arrived in London at that hour? |
41032 | How, is it,said the master,"that you have always passed over the knave in your reckoning?" |
41032 | I am come, Emon dear, to fulfil that love in the presence of heaven, and with Father Farrell''s sanction-- am I not, Father Farrell? |
41032 | I am of the same mind,said Perico,"but how can I leave my mother and sister who have only me to look to? |
41032 | I do n''t know the particulars,--tell me what they are? |
41032 | I wish to know if this caprice has anything reasonable in it? |
41032 | I wonder whether you know how wise you are? |
41032 | I? |
41032 | If I only had the time to look after him? |
41032 | If there are any? 41032 If you have no belief in a future state, why should a man be good? |
41032 | In the name of God, my dear effendi,said he at last,"how could you quit such a paradise as Stamboul to come into our frightful country?" |
41032 | In this solemn moment of sincerity, tell me-- do you think Eleanor loves me now? |
41032 | Is Haag your married name? |
41032 | Is Wolff banished from the parquet? |
41032 | Is it confined to one rank of the ministry, or possessed by two? |
41032 | Is it done? |
41032 | Is it he? |
41032 | Is it sthrivin''to cow me you are, Emon? |
41032 | Is it true, Uncle Pedro, what my mother says,asked the muleteer,"that in old times, when you were young, you were a lover of Maria''s?" |
41032 | Is n''t it glorious? 41032 Is not a man superior in sense to an ox? |
41032 | Is she sure? |
41032 | Is that the coat? |
41032 | Is that_ all!_Was it not better to tell the truth to her at once? |
41032 | Is there anything wrong, my dear? |
41032 | Is there so much water in the sea? |
41032 | Is this my son? |
41032 | Is this, then, the way to_''continue in God''s goodness? 41032 Is''Sullivan''De Vos''s right name?" |
41032 | Is_ episcopal_ succession necessary to the validity of holy orders? |
41032 | It is then impossible to overcome the pride of those unfortunate Mirefonts? |
41032 | It was n''t a sorrel mare you lost? |
41032 | Jasmine is, then, Eve''s adoration? |
41032 | Jesus, when his three hours were run, Bequeathed thee from the cross to me; And oh I how can I love thy Son, Sweet Mother, if I love not thee? |
41032 | Listen, Ada; do you hear what the nightingale is singing? 41032 Mamma Anna, who has killed a man, and what made him do it?" |
41032 | Maurice, my friend, what is heaven, that home of friends? 41032 May it be for good, neighbor?" |
41032 | May we play a game, mother? |
41032 | Mr. Dawson in? |
41032 | Mr. George better? |
41032 | Mr. Wilmot has stated that you_ volunteered_ to give evidence against the prisoner: is it so? |
41032 | Must I speak, father? |
41032 | My child,said the marquis again,"is anything lacking that you wish? |
41032 | Never; where is your master, I say? |
41032 | No; it is not"On your oath? |
41032 | Nor remember his coming into your shop? |
41032 | Not go to the field, and why? |
41032 | Nothing, Mamma Maria,answered Perico, laughing;"what would it be? |
41032 | Now, my darling, Horace has told us his love story-- and so he is very fond of you? |
41032 | Now, sir,he said when he came out,"what has happened to bring you here this morning from Lincoln?" |
41032 | Of me? |
41032 | Of murdher, is i d? 41032 Oh, Jamesy, why did you not go straight for the police, and never mind Emon- a- knock?" |
41032 | On the part of the Crown!--whose management is that? |
41032 | Perhaps you thought we were firing sugar- plums? 41032 Perhaps you would like to get a crack of my fist on your bugle?" |
41032 | Perico, what are you doing? |
41032 | Quis enim hominum, scit quae sunt hominis, nisi spiritus hominis qui in ipso est? 41032 Remanded!--that''s the way; why ca n''t they commit him at once? |
41032 | She who lives with Madam Morier, of course? |
41032 | Should we not hide, Emon? |
41032 | Since,proceeded Anna,"you do not fear to deceive my son--""Ho, is that the matter?" |
41032 | Sirs,said Perico, crossing his arms upon his breast with a look of suppressed rage,"have I a monkey show in my face?" |
41032 | So so,thought I,"you wanted to fasten yourself upon me with the dodge of knowing my friends, did you? |
41032 | So, then, Mamma Maria,Perico hastened to say,"yon are afraid of everything-- and witches?" |
41032 | Still, why is he not suspected as much as the other? |
41032 | Sufficient time to have put anything in the ale? |
41032 | Tare- an- agers, boys, do n''t spare the_ rope_ on his lordship; do n''t you know he was always fond of it? |
41032 | Tell me, my good boy,said the magistrate,"did you_ set_ the dog at{ 256} the deceased?" |
41032 | That was your motive? |
41032 | The evil- doer,said Jenifer;"who says he did it?" |
41032 | The policeman took what, Jamesy? |
41032 | Then from what does she suffer? |
41032 | Then how are you sure that she did not go into the hall? |
41032 | Then what do they eat? |
41032 | Then who can you mean, for there is n''t another Irishman here? 41032 Then, just now,"she said after a moment''s interruption,"you divined my thoughts?" |
41032 | Then_ why_ did he do it? |
41032 | There is some one at the front door; will you open it? |
41032 | They know but little of thy worth Who speak these heartless words to me; For what did Jesus love on earth One half so tenderly as thee? 41032 Thy name? |
41032 | To me? |
41032 | Toqueiyaza,said the priest,"will you take Ethikkan to be your lawful wife?" |
41032 | Uncle Pedro,asked the muleteer, laughing,"was that the cause of your remaining estranged?" |
41032 | Uncle,asked the fourth,"are you going with this maiden to Alcalá to have the bans published?" |
41032 | Uncle,said one,"where are you going with that ancient relic?" |
41032 | Was he in the shop on the evening of the 23d? |
41032 | Was it a man or a woman? |
41032 | Was it a will you called the two servants to witness? |
41032 | Was it not so? |
41032 | Was it the housekeeper? |
41032 | Was the housekeeper with you? |
41032 | Well, sir? |
41032 | Well, then, why do you put yourself into so wide a garment? 41032 Well?" |
41032 | What account does he give himself of going to the chemist''s? |
41032 | What are you doing here? 41032 What are you laughin''at, Mr. Cotter? |
41032 | What are you saying? 41032 What are you saying?" |
41032 | What are you telling me, my son? |
41032 | What can I answer? |
41032 | What can I lack? 41032 What can he do?" |
41032 | What can the man be doing in such a place as this? |
41032 | What do I care for Diego and his band? |
41032 | What do you say, daughter? |
41032 | What do you want with me, Jones? |
41032 | What good thought has brought you, sister? |
41032 | What has Dr. Newman ever done for God''s humanity? 41032 What has taken you? |
41032 | What have you said, madam? 41032 What is it?" |
41032 | What is that? |
41032 | What is that? |
41032 | What is the appointed channel of this ministerial authority? |
41032 | What is the matter? |
41032 | What is the meaning of that offering? |
41032 | What is this? |
41032 | What is thy name? |
41032 | What kind of_ gazpachos_[ Footnote 171] can they make with black bread, and without oil? |
41032 | What makes you so late? |
41032 | What meaneth this haste, my daughter fair? |
41032 | What message? |
41032 | What more had I here, Winny, except the crops coming round from the seed to the harvest, an''the cattle, an''the grass, an''the birds in the bushes? 41032 What news?'' |
41032 | What right have you to ask me such a question? |
41032 | What shocks you? |
41032 | What the mischief have I been saying? |
41032 | What then? |
41032 | What time have I to attend to him, Margaret? 41032 What took you to Peterborough on the 30th of last month?" |
41032 | What was he good for? |
41032 | What was your husband? |
41032 | What will become of thee if l am taken? |
41032 | What will you bet that he, with his own hands, has not put the man in this state? 41032 What''s the odds to you? |
41032 | What''s the time of day by your ticker? |
41032 | What, thou just risen from the grave, Atilt with an armèd man? 41032 When thou hearest that God speaks from the bush,"asks Theodotus,"in the bush seest thou not the Virgin?" |
41032 | When you met the prisoner in Vere street, did he say he was going to visit his uncle then? |
41032 | When? |
41032 | Where am I? |
41032 | Where are you going, I say? |
41032 | Where are you going, Perico? |
41032 | Where is Edward? |
41032 | Where is Hugh now? |
41032 | Where then are Mamma Anna, and Aunt Elvira? |
41032 | Where''s the lady who came here yesterday evening? |
41032 | Where''s your husband? |
41032 | Where''s your mistress? |
41032 | Which is the one? |
41032 | Which means that you have nothing, you thief? 41032 Which one do you mean, John? |
41032 | Which was it? |
41032 | Which way? |
41032 | Who can please you, Uncle Pedro? |
41032 | Who can prevail agamst the Nasib? |
41032 | Who can tell? 41032 Who dares to say that Perico Alvareda consents to an indignity?" |
41032 | Who is Mr. de Vos? |
41032 | Who is suspected? |
41032 | Who lives here? |
41032 | Who shot you? |
41032 | Who staid with you? |
41032 | Who told you of a stranger? |
41032 | Who would have thought of seeing you here? |
41032 | Who''d ha''thought he''d a done it? 41032 Who''s your Irish friend, Elinor?" |
41032 | Why did you tell the colonel it was not you? |
41032 | Why do you lay such an emphasis upon the word_ that_? |
41032 | Why do you say that, Father Farrell? 41032 Why have you come here?" |
41032 | Why not, aunt? |
41032 | Why not, spooney? |
41032 | Why should I wish to harm you? |
41032 | Why should it rain, since we are in March? |
41032 | Why this extreme emotion? |
41032 | Why, where upon earth are we going, Jones? |
41032 | Why? 41032 Will I lind you a hand, boys?" |
41032 | Will the money, you foolish good- for- nothing, be better in the hands of that big thief than in ours? 41032 Will you ask Mrs. Evelyn to come to us?" |
41032 | Wilmot told you that, did he? 41032 Winny Cavana, do you think God can?" |
41032 | With the fortunate name of Eve,she continued,"should one not always be the first to show herself?" |
41032 | Withered,said Ventura,"why do you put on roses? |
41032 | Would it affect Atherton or his prospects? |
41032 | Would n''t you be able for that yourself? 41032 Would you have the goodness to send word to Ada that I am here?" |
41032 | Would you swear you did not? |
41032 | Would you tell me, companion of my sins,interrupted Pedro,"what remains to Elvira? |
41032 | Yes, I did, and why would n''t she? 41032 Yes, Rita, yes,"said Anna,"and I have come--""To threaten me?" |
41032 | Yes,Emon replied from his bed;"who are you, or what do you want?" |
41032 | Yes,answered the boy,"and where were they going?" |
41032 | You and she will go to Alcalá? |
41032 | You are a clever fellow, Keene,said Merrivale;"how upon earth did you contrive to pass muster amongst those city swells?" |
41032 | You are a fine and clever young man,he seemed to say;"but to what purpose are your accomplishments and your journeys hither and thither? |
41032 | You are later than usual-- all right? |
41032 | You do dine early, do n''t you? |
41032 | You do n''t usually get up at six, or before the girl gets up, do you? |
41032 | You feel certain of this? |
41032 | You have collected your money? |
41032 | You hear Leonore, young ladies,cried Clarisse;"would it still be wicked to find this abuse of jasmine monotonous?" |
41032 | You know it? |
41032 | You mean disguised? |
41032 | You promise, then, to ask his pardon? |
41032 | You see, sirs,said Uncle Pedro, slyly winking,"that she has not yet forgiven me, which proves, does it not, that she was fond of me? |
41032 | You then forgive your murderer? |
41032 | You think it is not? |
41032 | You think so, Father Farrell? |
41032 | You were with him last evening, sir, were you not? |
41032 | You will marry Elvira? |
41032 | Your brother-- he with whom Eleanor lived in Ireland? |
41032 | Your brother? |
41032 | Your mistress at home? |
41032 | Your receipt? 41032 _ Och badhershin_, does n''t he go up to walk home wid Kate Mulvey, for she''s always iv the party?" |
41032 | ''"Is it Eleanor''s duty to find out if Henry Evelyn and Horace Erskine are one?" |
41032 | ''Does any one bishop hold it? |
41032 | ''Well,''said Reding,''is it a tolerated view?'' |
41032 | ''What would it be,''answered the black,''but that I went up on my tiptoes and came down on my ribs?'' |
41032 | ''Yes?'' |
41032 | (_ Quid est veritas?_)"Truth is what is based on the indisputable proofs of history and agrees with the nature of all things." |
41032 | --"Well, how do you account for it?" |
41032 | --Asked by the prisoner if the sentence had not been,"He is getting very old, and wo n''t live long; he ought not to be worried with our affairs"? |
41032 | --was it a vain repetition that she said it again and again? |
41032 | 13 Charles street, Leicester Square?" |
41032 | 49,"Did you not know that I must be about my father''s business?" |
41032 | ?, New York: Victor Hugo''s Les Travalileurs de las Mer. |
41032 | Abbot Pastor was asked,"Is it good to cloak a brother''s fault?" |
41032 | Accustomed to the docile obedience of her son, who had never failed to keep his word, she said to him:"To the war? |
41032 | Across the green salt waves? |
41032 | Addressing herself to Perico, she continued with asperity,"Look here, are you determined to throw down the wall? |
41032 | After some moments the man concluded his prayer, replaced his hat, and turning to Perico said,"Where are you going, sir?" |
41032 | Am I not entirely absorbed in business? |
41032 | An English gentleman dining in the house of an Irish lady, was greatly surprised at hearing the Butler ask,"please, ma''am, will I strip?" |
41032 | And Ada Leslie, what of her? |
41032 | And I am sure I can smell a cigar-- and I could hate smoking, could n''t I?" |
41032 | And as to this letter, which I call a very painful letter, do n''t you think we had better burn it?" |
41032 | And canst thou tell how long a spell Such slumbers keep? |
41032 | And did not the All- wise know the human heart when he took to himself a mother? |
41032 | And do you doubt that there are extraordinary things?" |
41032 | And first, will you let me ask you one or two questions?" |
41032 | And for what had he exchanged them? |
41032 | And has he read them through? |
41032 | And he, blest boy, where lingers he? |
41032 | And how do we show our love for her, by wounding her in the very apple of her eye? |
41032 | And how shall they hear without a preacher?" |
41032 | And if all this is felt below Assouan, what can be said of Philae-- beautiful Philae-- that"dream of loveliness,"as a modern writer justly calls it? |
41032 | And if so, what church? |
41032 | And if the latter, how is any one to decide which is the parent? |
41032 | And is it secret? |
41032 | And now Rita, what do you think?" |
41032 | And now what new scene in this drama of life was I going to see unfolded? |
41032 | And on Sunday, what could be greater than Gaston''s sincere goodness toward my father while my mother and I had gone to pray for him? |
41032 | And ought_ money_ to be given to recompense virtuous acts? |
41032 | And stay, has he got legal assistance?" |
41032 | And then again, if I hate those perverse sayings so much, how much more must she, in proportion to her love of him? |
41032 | And this traditionary system not only inculcates what I can not conceive( receive? |
41032 | And what conclusive reason is there for deciding that we may not? |
41032 | And where does not the air enter? |
41032 | And where is the place the wrath of God does not reach? |
41032 | And who compose this admirable congregation? |
41032 | And who is there, except perhaps Jamesy Doyle, who would not pity them as they rumbled their melancholy way down the boreen to the road? |
41032 | And why should integrity pass unrewarded? |
41032 | And you do n''t like Beremouth now?" |
41032 | And you, Anna, are you satisfied? |
41032 | And, if the first woman is not an allegory, why is the second? |
41032 | And, pray, why not? |
41032 | Are n''t ye all as wan as the same thing to me now?" |
41032 | Are the authors whom he gives as fair specimens of Catholic teaching acknowledged as writers of credit, or are some of them even on the Index? |
41032 | Are these ideas abstract, independent of reality, antecedent to the idea of real, concrete being? |
41032 | Are these ideas immediate affirmations of this real being? |
41032 | Are these your children? |
41032 | Are they brother and sister or parent and child? |
41032 | Are they sisters, or nieces, or grandchildren? |
41032 | Are we not, then, bound to more than ordinary exertion to comply with it? |
41032 | Are you comfortable? |
41032 | Are you in a hurry to be put in the lock- up?" |
41032 | Are you mad, Hugh?" |
41032 | Are you so fierce, poor beast-- were you the terrible avenger?" |
41032 | As far as our experience goes of religious changes in individuals, he can mean nothing else; yet how_ can_ he mean this with the gospels before him? |
41032 | Athen, Father Farrell, maybe it was yourself laid it down for the little girl?" |
41032 | Atherton?" |
41032 | Atherton?'' |
41032 | Aunt Maria?" |
41032 | Besides, where can you go hereabouts? |
41032 | Brewer said there was always cruelty in that-- and did they smell, and give trouble, and would they be mischievous, and tear Mrs. Betty''s cap? |
41032 | Brewer; who, when she paused at this point, asked:"What next did you do? |
41032 | But I have not sneezed, that I know of, for a quarter of an hour, at least; and_ apropos de quoi_ do you say that? |
41032 | But are you strong enough to help me; are you loving enough to trust me?" |
41032 | But hark to the challenge,"Who rideth alone?" |
41032 | But have we reflected, as well as we might, that before men will pray to God they must first believe in him? |
41032 | But how dreadfully ill you are looking-- what is the matter?" |
41032 | But how shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? |
41032 | But is this the_ ultimatum_ of reason? |
41032 | But it may be said, How does this enable us to say that she was conceived without_ original sin_? |
41032 | But now, as to the fact, where is it said that to pray to our Lady and the saints is necessary to salvation? |
41032 | But of course they are acquainted with your desire of having my services?" |
41032 | But of this necessity who shall be the judge? |
41032 | But oh, what aileth the gallant Grey, Why droopeth the barbèd head? |
41032 | But the other voice, whose was it? |
41032 | But these dark eyes, Christine? |
41032 | But these dear eyes, Christine? |
41032 | But was the waiting to be over now?--was something coming? |
41032 | But what is the intuition of the possible without the intuition of the actual? |
41032 | But what then? |
41032 | But whence did the poor solitary who wrote it draw this inexhaustible love? |
41032 | But where is the man with Tom Murdock''s heart, and in Tom Murdock''s place, who would not have hated him as he did? |
41032 | But who is he, with step of fate, Goes gloomily through the castle gate In me morning''s virgin prime? |
41032 | But who, they ask, is to be voucher in turn for the church and St. Augustine? |
41032 | But, Christian woman, who the deuce tempted you to lend money to that vagabond? |
41032 | But-- and here prose intrudes itself a little-- her father had a vicar, and what could an English vicar do but be married? |
41032 | But_ apropos_ of the performances of another bird, our philosophic poet inquires:"Is it for thee the lark ascends and sings?" |
41032 | But_ cui bono_ is a visible kingdom, when the great end of our Lord''s ministry is moral advancement and preparation for a future state? |
41032 | By Mr. Merrivale:"Did you not find also a bottle of camphorated spirits?" |
41032 | By a juryman:"How do you know it was the identical coat worn that evening?" |
41032 | By the bye, have you been to the Leslies? |
41032 | By the coroner:"Have you been in communication with the chemist in Vere street?" |
41032 | By the coroner:"What was the nature of the business which you transacted with deceased?" |
41032 | Ca n''t I?" |
41032 | Came ever knight in such sad array On the merry morn of his bridal day? |
41032 | Can I see her alone?" |
41032 | Can a dead man get out of his grave unless we dig him out?" |
41032 | Can a man touch pitch and not be defiled? |
41032 | Can anything be more shocking than the contrast insinuated here? |
41032 | Can human handcraft ever compete in skill with him, Whose throne is in the heavens amid the cherubim? |
41032 | Can orthodox Protestantism recover its ancient sway, and reproduce a state of religions belief and moral virtue equal to that which once prevailed? |
41032 | Can such things be, and we not waken from our lethargic sleep, remembering what our account will one day be? |
41032 | Can there be such a disfranchised pauper class among the citizens of the New Jerusalem?" |
41032 | Can they apply it? |
41032 | Can they create truth, honor, and magnanimity, patriotism, chastity, filial obedience, domestic happiness, integrity? |
41032 | Can they give us incorruptible legislators, faithful magistrates, honest men of business, a virtuous commonalty? |
41032 | Can we wonder that the heart of her father was bound up in her? |
41032 | Can you tell me?" |
41032 | Careschi[? |
41032 | Christ?? |
41032 | Christ?? |
41032 | Come, come, Andres, what are you doing, standing there like a post? |
41032 | Common flowers no doubt, but who ever saw Father Daniels''s Canterbury bells and forgot them? |
41032 | Concealment is the worst thing that can be practised in such a case as this-- have you any idea where he is? |
41032 | Coroner to witness:"I see you are using your eyeglass now; were you using it when you say you met this person in Vere street?" |
41032 | Coroner:"Did you see the prisoner pour out the ale? |
41032 | Coroner:"Have you anything further to state?" |
41032 | Coroner:"Was this so?" |
41032 | Could I tell her the truth now? |
41032 | Could I undeceive her and say I have done as much and perhaps more to condemn him than any one-- that I should have to bear witness against him? |
41032 | Could it be otherwise with the spectators, if they had human affection? |
41032 | Could not God have made you blind as well as me? |
41032 | Could the architects have been Irish, and could they have adopted their principles from the study of older edifices{ 786} in England? |
41032 | Cross- questioned by Mr. Forester:"Does your master keep an errand- boy?" |
41032 | Cur sibi sternutans, non clamat, Jupiter adsit? |
41032 | Dapple, who was called_''old''_ nine years ago?" |
41032 | Davis?" |
41032 | Did I tell you of this, and of our_ royal_ wrath? |
41032 | Did Martha Gannet keep three parrots, and did they eat as much as a young heifer? |
41032 | Did Saul have the happiness to see his divine Master during his mortal life? |
41032 | Did any one bishop ever hold it? |
41032 | Did he die for a metaphor?" |
41032 | Did he have already a glimpse of the martyr''s crown, and did this vision transfigure him in advance? |
41032 | Did he pass the guarded portal In the armor of a saint? |
41032 | Did he write on the blessed sacrament? |
41032 | Did n''t I help Mr. Cotter to carry him out, or rather to dhrag him? |
41032 | Did n''t he strike down Tom Murdock wid lightning, an''he batin''me out a horseback? |
41032 | Did n''t they tie Biddy Murtagh? |
41032 | Did n''t they tie Miss Winny and carry her off to murdher her, or maybe worse? |
41032 | Did n''t they tie th''ould masther neck an''heels? |
41032 | Did our Lord fulfil these expectations? |
41032 | Did the sacred communion extend further still, on to the inhabitants of heaven itself? |
41032 | Did they mean Ada, forsooth? |
41032 | Did you go upstairs again to bed?" |
41032 | Did you imagine, Monsieur, that I should not write to you any more? |
41032 | Did you know him, Eleanor?" |
41032 | Did you or did you not receive that £ 10 note on the 24th of October last? |
41032 | Do I deceive myself? |
41032 | Do I put the case clearly and fairly, gentlemen?" |
41032 | Do n''t you hear that it is the water in the gutter?" |
41032 | Do n''t you know what the idyl says about the fame and shame being mine equally if his? |
41032 | Do n''t you think you could send Horace off to Scotland again immediately?" |
41032 | Do the whispering woods praise him; and are their prayers in the tall trees? |
41032 | Do we not believe in a presence in the sacred tabernacle, not as a form of words, or as a notion, but as an object as real as we are real? |
41032 | Do you follow me, gentlemen?" |
41032 | Do you know her, sir?" |
41032 | Do you know such a man, Hugh?" |
41032 | Do you know that? |
41032 | Do you know what the lightning is? |
41032 | Do you know whom you are talking to, and that I am hungry and thirsty?" |
41032 | Do you not dream and wander in thought to distant places in your sleep? |
41032 | Do you not know that I loved you before I knew you? |
41032 | Do you not know well that he makes us as he pleases, and that we should thank him that he has given us such a being as he has?" |
41032 | Do you remember receiving a letter on the afternoon of the 24th containing a Bank- of- England £ 10 note?" |
41032 | Do you see that half starved, thin- flanked old horse over there? |
41032 | Do you think Tom is armed?" |
41032 | Do you think he did know, and that it was Wilmot''s voice I heard?" |
41032 | Do you think that I shall lose my soul for that?" |
41032 | Do you wish to be lost? |
41032 | Do you wish to know the reason? |
41032 | Do you wish to lose your sister? |
41032 | Do you, Eleanor?" |
41032 | Does Ada know?" |
41032 | Does Eleanor love me?" |
41032 | Does Mary like him, or laugh at him, I wonder?" |
41032 | Does he know what St. Peter Claver did for the negroes, and can he point to any Protestant who has done the like? |
41032 | Does he mean by"a short cut,"believing on the word of another? |
41032 | Does he quote rightly? |
41032 | Does it at last wear out and drop off? |
41032 | Does old Dapple live, father? |
41032 | Does our Lord want her for himself?" |
41032 | Does she wish to change the custom of the church, which permits it?" |
41032 | Does the fact that we are able to form a conception of God prove that God really exists? |
41032 | Does the will force the intellect to judge that those propositions are certain which it apprehends only as probable? |
41032 | Does the will merely determine to act practically as if these proposed truths were evident, in spite of the lesser probability of the contrary? |
41032 | Does the worm that bears it die after a time without leaving any children? |
41032 | Dost dream that youth alone is brave, Dost deem these sinews too old to save The honor of Miolan?" |
41032 | Dost know me, girl?" |
41032 | Dost thou believe on the Son of God? |
41032 | Eh, sir?" |
41032 | Else, why is every pope"shrewd,"every priest an"incarnation of fiery zeal?" |
41032 | Emon, Emon, have they killed you at last? |
41032 | Eve was kneeling; the Marquis de La Tour- d''Adam, assisted by his valet, entered, and in a reproachful tone--"Why do you fatigue yourself thus?" |
41032 | Eve, my darling daughter, is this your secret?" |
41032 | Eve, thou wishest then to die?" |
41032 | Fame, for what? |
41032 | Father Farrell,"she added, solemnly, but with a full, untrembling tone,"will you marry me to Edward Lennon?" |
41032 | Father Farrell?" |
41032 | Finally, is charity the growth of one period of life rather than of another? |
41032 | First, what was it not? |
41032 | For an instant I stopped short; what reply to offer to a man who judged the saints by their practical utility? |
41032 | For your own sake, do you understand?" |
41032 | Gentlemen, is this the honor that shall be yours, and is this the religion which you will have?" |
41032 | Given, that the intellect has this certitude, how is it that we can not attain to it by the natural operation of reason? |
41032 | Go to him at once!--why do you stay here?" |
41032 | Good- by, good- by; till when? |
41032 | HE IS NOT A LOW CHURCHMAN? |
41032 | Haag?" |
41032 | Haag?" |
41032 | Had he given up"all for Jesus?" |
41032 | Had he no cause to fear that some one else might supplant him with Rahel? |
41032 | Had it not been that of a courageous, faithful boy, who had risked his own life in obstructing the escape of the murderer? |
41032 | Had she not for ever bid adieu to the sweet and simple girlish beliefs which had surrounded her? |
41032 | Had{ 542} he for such a thing a mandate of the Sanhedrim, as we shall soon see him vested with full powers against the brethren of Damascus? |
41032 | Hardy? |
41032 | Has he ever lifted up his voice in behalf of our down- trodden little ones? |
41032 | Has he ever thought of saving men from the great hell of ignorance and superstition, or are these the safeguards of his precious faith? |
41032 | Has he not a mind to direct his actions?" |
41032 | Has he understood the books he cites, where he has read them? |
41032 | Has it ever been formally admitted as tenable by any one bishop? |
41032 | Has not this been insisted on by all dogmatic Christians over and over again? |
41032 | Has she heard anything of him?" |
41032 | Has she not given some to you also?" |
41032 | Has the oppression of the English masses ever weighed upon his heart? |
41032 | Hath not my hand made all these things?" |
41032 | Have I molested them? |
41032 | Have I sought justice? |
41032 | Have I told you everything, and made you see thoughts, words, and actions, just as you like? |
41032 | Have you any particular reason for wishing to hear about him?" |
41032 | Have you been wounded?'' |
41032 | Have you even hinted that our love for her is anything else than an abuse? |
41032 | Have you not been touching us on a very tender point in a very rude way? |
41032 | Have you seen any?" |
41032 | Have you thrown her one kind word yourself all through your book? |
41032 | Have you?" |
41032 | He approached our traveller, clapping his hands like a child who has made a happy discovery:"Say, say,"added he,"are you not an Englishman?" |
41032 | He had no pity on an innocent boy, an''why should you have pity on a guilty villain?" |
41032 | He said to the servant,"Can you tell me where a person called Eleanor Evelyn is to be found? |
41032 | He says, for instance, that it"is a practical question, affecting our whole eternity: What shall I do to be saved? |
41032 | He threw a rapid glance around, and abruptly asked,"Where is Rita?" |
41032 | Her mother or Horace? |
41032 | His brethren shook him, sayings"Abbot, where are you?" |
41032 | His mother died when he was very young, did n''t she? |
41032 | His scrutiny finished, he asked,"Are you a fugitive from justice?" |
41032 | His winding- up apostrophe to the Paulists,"O foolish Paulists, who hath bewitched you? |
41032 | Hold not those gleaming skies for her The same unfailing Comforter? |
41032 | How am I to get back?" |
41032 | How are we to be certain that there are no living germs in the organic matter before we begin the experiment? |
41032 | How came these charges to be made? |
41032 | How can that be? |
41032 | How can we explain a"system"which we deny to exist? |
41032 | How could an effendi, accustomed to a life of luxury, resolve to encounter so many dangers, to endure so many trials? |
41032 | How could he do so at that moment? |
41032 | How could_ she_ enlighten_ him_?" |
41032 | How do we know this to be true? |
41032 | How do you account for this?" |
41032 | How do you know my name, master Sawney?" |
41032 | How do you like it? |
41032 | How do you like that specimen of''the noblest conquest that man has ever made''? |
41032 | How does Winter treat you in the new parlor? |
41032 | How does the mind pass through the knowledge of God to belief in God; through"_ Cognosco Deum_"to"_ Credo in Deum_"? |
41032 | How had she received the intelligence? |
41032 | How is it evident that God really is? |
41032 | How is one in such a condition known not to be dead? |
41032 | How is that?" |
41032 | How is this other than casting down of the substance of Christ from his royal throne, and a degradation of it to some inferior sitting- place? |
41032 | How is this possible? |
41032 | How long have you been a widow?" |
41032 | How much will that take, Winny?" |
41032 | How say you, prisoner at the bar-- are you guilty or not guilty?" |
41032 | How, then, do Anglicans differ from Rome here? |
41032 | However, who knows how things may turn out? |
41032 | I am going to the country, to another Rayssac, for Les Coynes is among the mountains;--shall I find another Louise there? |
41032 | I asked, meaning Gireaud;"have you seen him lately?" |
41032 | I cried-- Taking his hand all chill and damp--''What means this fearful ride? |
41032 | I cried;"what is the matter there?" |
41032 | I dare say now it''s here on Monday last you were to see me play?" |
41032 | I do not know what Christian voice addresses him:"Where are you going this morning with your black dog?" |
41032 | I fake to my marriage vows? |
41032 | I have no doubt they are right: have you? |
41032 | I hope you are able to satisfy the"Eh; b''en, M''sieu''?" |
41032 | I know this; but can that estrange me-- I, who loved the Marie you weep? |
41032 | I make a further remark; it is sometimes asked, Why do not the sacred writers mention our Lady''s greatness? |
41032 | I now ask likewise, as proof of its genuineness, where is the_ heir_? |
41032 | I said,''Who is he?'' |
41032 | I suppose they''ve brought it up, and also the hot water?" |
41032 | I turned upon him:"And your own patron,"I replied,"what maladies does he care?" |
41032 | I wonder what brought it here? |
41032 | If Eve was raised above human nature by that indwelling moral gift which we call grace, is it rash to say that Mary had a greater grace? |
41032 | If I could I would write to you forever, which means very often, and what should I not scribble? |
41032 | If he left her, would she take the blame on herself? |
41032 | If it can, why is not the mind capable of giving them the firm, unwavering{ 586} assent of faith by its own natural power, without the aid of grace? |
41032 | If it is said that the will, inclined by the grace of God, determines to adhere positively to the proposed revelation as true, what is meant by this? |
41032 | If not, how have they a rational and certain ground for the judgment that God has really revealed the truths of Christianity? |
41032 | If she could prove that he passed himself off as a Catholic, she might have some ground against him-- but, can she?" |
41032 | If she is not to attract our homage, why did he make her solitary in her greatness amid his vast creation? |
41032 | If so, how are they capable of comprehending them, and what are they to do before they have gone through with the process of examination? |
41032 | If there is but one religion, why do you white people differ so much about it? |
41032 | If this be so, what can be said of any creature whatever which may not be said of her? |
41032 | In his"Exposé of the Motives of his Conversion"he states that they put him the unfair question,"Are you a Protestant at heart?" |
41032 | In parting from him I saw a tear glisten in his eye; who can tell what sentiment caused it to flow?" |
41032 | In the second chapter of his twenty- eighth book, the elder Pliny expresses himself thus:_ Cur sternumentis salutamus? |
41032 | In what state was man originally created? |
41032 | In what, then, did he consider his royalty to consist? |
41032 | In which of these senses, or in what sense, was our Lord the Son of God? |
41032 | Inspector?" |
41032 | Instinctively they knelt, and then arose the question"Where could the bell come from?" |
41032 | Is Miolan false or dead?" |
41032 | Is civilized man positively to be given over in the name of the society for the prevention, etc., as a victim to the instincts and caprices of cats? |
41032 | Is he afraid of the rope himself which he would thus put round your necks?" |
41032 | Is it a demonstration founded on the arguments for credibility? |
41032 | Is it a remembrance of infancy, a tribute to the mother who taught him to pray? |
41032 | Is it a view got up to meet existing difficulties, or has it an historical existence?'' |
41032 | Is it any cause of wonder that, with his views and practice, it should not turn out well with his children; or, at least, with some of them? |
41032 | Is it any wonder that she took them as the man who is dying of thirst takes the longed- for draught, and drains the cup of mercy to the dregs? |
41032 | Is it going to rain, Aunt Maria?" |
41032 | Is it hypocrisy? |
41032 | Is it merely the expression of strong desire? |
41032 | Is it moral weakness? |
41032 | Is it not a representation as absolutely true as it is trite? |
41032 | Is it not as strange that she should hold her breath so long, and continue with it as she doth? |
41032 | Is it not enough to have lived once even if we have lived wisely? |
41032 | Is it not known that they always die of envy on the head of a handsome woman?" |
41032 | Is it not possible to go further in showing the conformity of the revealed truth with rational truths? |
41032 | Is it not therefore probable that the walls of this gigantic crevice will exhibit many rich deposits? |
41032 | Is it not undeniable, that the very life of personal religion among Catholics lies in a knowledge of the Gospels? |
41032 | Is it possible that those descendants, pious and happy from age to age in their temporal homes, would have forgotten their benefactors? |
41032 | Is it superstitious fear? |
41032 | Is it surprising, then, that on the one hand she should be immaculate in her conception? |
41032 | Is it to see a Shanvilla boy, without a cross, intherlopin''betune him an''his bachelor?" |
41032 | Is it true that that interpretation is supported by Roman and Greek authorities? |
41032 | Is it true that the"Catholic"interpretation is the legitimate sense of the Articles? |
41032 | Is it true, father, are we the devil''s little witnesses?" |
41032 | Is it well, I said to myself, to come here and trifle under the very beards of the blessed souls that in suffering are expiating their sins? |
41032 | Is n''t he lyin''there abroad in the barn as stiff as a crowbar, an''as ugly as if he was bespoke, miss? |
41032 | Is n''t it all your own; what do I want with it, mavrone, but to see you happy? |
41032 | Is n''t it grand, this great expanse and this perfect calm? |
41032 | Is n''t that a mercy at all events, Winny?" |
41032 | Is not my liberty to think, to play my violin, to take my usual nap after dinner abridged by the liberty of Miss Lambkin''s detestable foster child? |
41032 | Is not my life a burden to me? |
41032 | Is not some idea expressed in the act of exhuming the bones after the flesh is decayed?" |
41032 | Is not the effect of what you have said to expose her to scorn and obloquy who is dearer to us than any other creature? |
41032 | Is not this Trinity a wonderful idea? |
41032 | Is not this a frightful sin? |
41032 | Is our exterior morality to be so far behind, so infinitely below, that of tribes and nations on whom we stoop to trample? |
41032 | Is such an eternal see- saw of sound bearable? |
41032 | Is that which the reason perceives not real being? |
41032 | Is that which the reason perceives real being? |
41032 | Is there any need of multiplying instances? |
41032 | Is there any place we could draw him into, until we find out who he is?" |
41032 | Is there no statement, for instance, in the Council of Trent about justification to which any in the Anglican communion can object? |
41032 | Is this a visionary idea? |
41032 | Is this you, Perico? |
41032 | Is''t the throes of nascent genius; or the strength Of high immortal thoughts to find vent; Or, is it wind?" |
41032 | It is pleasant to praise them for their real qualifications; but why do you rest on them as authorities? |
41032 | It would injure him in his future hopes and prospects to have it supposed to be_ his_ doing if they parted? |
41032 | It''s a terrible thing, an''t it, sir, to be hurried off so quick? |
41032 | Kavanagh?" |
41032 | Know you why the lark''s sweet lay Man''s divinest nature reaches? |
41032 | Know''st not thy father''s voice? |
41032 | Knowing what herbs were produced by good ground, and what herbs by bad ground, he asked from time to time of his guide:"Seest thou the green clover?" |
41032 | Lister, when I thought you were going to bed?" |
41032 | Look at his arm; look at the wound--""And what matter, father,"interrupted Ventura,"since they are cured now?" |
41032 | Look at me that never had but the wan, an''was n''t she, an''is n''t she, a threasure to me all the days of my life? |
41032 | Marcela, what are you doing there, poor child, as cold and fixed as a statue? |
41032 | Marry, what ails the bridegroom gay That he strideth a coal black steed, Why cometh he not on the gallant Grey That never yet failed him at need? |
41032 | Mary?''" |
41032 | May I add, that nothing was further from my wish than to write anything which should be painful to those in your communion? |
41032 | May I not, without sensitiveness, be somewhat pained at the omission? |
41032 | Men sometimes wonder that we call her mother of life, of mercy, of salvation; what are all these titles compared to that one name, Mother of God? |
41032 | Merrivale?" |
41032 | Merrivale?" |
41032 | Merrivale?" |
41032 | Might I not have expected it? |
41032 | Might not her heart, naturally sceptical, and shaken by contact with the world, distrust the effect of opinion upon so young a man? |
41032 | Might not"that hound"be there?--Tom sometimes varied his epithets-- might it not be a place of assignation? |
41032 | Mr. Forster, to Mrs. Haag:"Is this your handwriting?" |
41032 | Mr. Forster:"Who was the person?" |
41032 | Mr. Merrivale:"Can you swear to the overcoat which Mr. Atherton wore the last evening he came to Wimpole street?" |
41032 | Mr. Merrivale:"Can you swear to those words?" |
41032 | Mr. Merrivale:"Did Mr. Atherton say,''we shall,''or''you will''?" |
41032 | Mr. Merrivale:"Did you not pour some ale out into the tumbler before taking it up- stairs?" |
41032 | Mr. Merrivale:"Have you and the housekeeper ever fallen out, cook?" |
41032 | Mr. Merrivale:"Were you aware what the contents of your late uncle''s will were before you opened it at Messrs. Smith and Walker''s?" |
41032 | Mr. Merrivale:"Will you have the goodness, Mr. Kavanagh, to look toward the end of the room, and see if you identify any one there?" |
41032 | My absence is to be prolonged more than I supposed, but how could I refuse these good friends a request they had such a right to ask? |
41032 | My darling wife, I give you joy: but what shall I do without you?" |
41032 | My feeling about the interpretation is expressed in a passage in"Loss and Gain,"which runs thus:"''Is it,''asked Reding,''a received view?'' |
41032 | Neither do we think it suffices to answer the infidel,"Who hath aided the Spirit of the Lord, or who hath been his counsellor and taught him?" |
41032 | Nevertheless, Anna looked at her with the penetrating eyes of a mother, and thought,"Will the hopes fail which I placed in Ventura''s return? |
41032 | Next, what was that plan? |
41032 | No one doubts that the"man- child"spoken of is an allusion to our Lord; why, then, is not"the woman"an allusion to his mother? |
41032 | Now I leave you, for I know you are tired of sight- seeing and want a moment of''repose-- and, may I not also add, a little time to pray here? |
41032 | Now by what process does he attain a rational certitude of the truth of the revelation made by the lips of Christ? |
41032 | Now this cat which you must have, shut up in a chest, without room to breathe, what better occasion could there be to give it the air? |
41032 | Now what are we to say of Horace Erskine? |
41032 | Now, forsooth, we are gravely asked why we do not exert a greater influence for promoting the general well- being of the country? |
41032 | Now, in the first place, what were Eve''s endowments to enable her to enter upon her trial? |
41032 | Now, sir, do you see why I asked you to meet me?'' |
41032 | Now, sir, will you please to tell me, if you can, why you are anxious to find out about this Mr. de Vos?" |
41032 | Now, six- footer, who pisened the old man?" |
41032 | Now, was not the announcement which John made to them"a short cut to belief"? |
41032 | Now, was this spiritual bond to cease with life? |
41032 | Now, what advantages may we not hope to reap from this one isolated fact? |
41032 | Now, why was all this? |
41032 | O bitter task To rear aloft that shining head, While round thee, cruel whisperers ask--"Marry, what aileth the Bridegroom gay? |
41032 | O dear dark eyes that seem to dwell With holiest things invisible, Who may read your oracle? |
41032 | Of that paper he most solemnly denies all knowledge, and I believe him; but how will the jury dispose of such circumstantial evidence?" |
41032 | Of what importance to the world were the marchings and counter- marchings, the stupid obstinacy and the unsavory morality of a few thousand Hebrews? |
41032 | Of what use is it to return to the past, for which there is no remedy?" |
41032 | Of what, of whom, had he been afraid? |
41032 | Oh, am I doomed to sec nothing but blood-- blood? |
41032 | Oh, tare anages, what''s this for? |
41032 | On an ape''s head a crown you fling; Say-- Will that make the ape a king? |
41032 | Once more, what is the evidence of the fact of revelation to ordinary minds? |
41032 | One side or the other, and this is mine, that which can be said in five minutes, why waste an hour talking about it? |
41032 | Or again:"Why do not the Turks wear the turban and the long robe which the law prescribes? |
41032 | Or how shall they believe him of whom they have not heard? |
41032 | Or is it the individual? |
41032 | Or shall the church judge? |
41032 | Or, was''t some spirit fell In causeless wrath had crossed his path With fiendish spell? |
41032 | Perico, are you going to kill a woman?" |
41032 | Perico, what if, following the good example of your mother, as mine exhorts me to, I also should change my mind and now say no?" |
41032 | Pulchra, quam tinxit Cytherea, rosa,"Cujus, quaeso,"inquit,"manus, infaceta Carpere inaudax?" |
41032 | Rankin''s?" |
41032 | Rankin''s?" |
41032 | Reading effusions of this kind, we are reminded of Beppolo''s Fanfarone:"What is''t that boils within me? |
41032 | Religion acts on the affections; who is to hinder these, when once roused, from gathering in their strength and running wild? |
41032 | Reëxamined by the Solicitor- General:"It was against your consent that the prisoner was engaged to your ward Miss Leslie, was it not?" |
41032 | Rita looked out of the window and asked of a woman that was passing, who was the sick person? |
41032 | Rita rushed impetuously out of her room and snatched him up, exclaiming:"What has he done to himself? |
41032 | Sarsfield''s declaration ends the animated discussion rather lamely; but what poet has maintained a uniform grandeur or dignity? |
41032 | Serait- ce, par hasard, qu''ll n''entend pas tres- blen? |
41032 | Sergeant Donaldson:"Do you mean to say you took that journey with the chance of finding your friend away?" |
41032 | Shall God, who, of course, knows all the circumstances of mankind and estimates them at their proper value? |
41032 | Shall I call your mother to you?" |
41032 | Shall I describe one to you, Plato? |
41032 | Shall I never hear you, as the dead are sometimes said to make themselves heard? |
41032 | Shall I tell you what he said to me one day? |
41032 | Shall we drive by a roundabout way to Blagden? |
41032 | She complains perhaps?" |
41032 | She did not pause once; what should stop her again?" |
41032 | She herself confessed it, and if she had not avowed it, we could divine it,"Those who love, have they not dreams?" |
41032 | She stands in the silent avenue, Her back to a cypress tree; O Savoyard once bold and true, Late bridegroom, where canst thou be? |
41032 | Sometimes, after he had knocked them senseless to the ground, he would call out to them,"What the deevil are ye fighting at-- can ye no''''gree? |
41032 | Such love was Rahel''s; was it Varnhagen''s? |
41032 | Sullivan?" |
41032 | Takes it any care to control the things which pass before its eyes, or to{ 467} render to itself any account of them by serious reflection? |
41032 | Tell me who mentioned a stranger to you, so as to send you here to me?" |
41032 | That is business, do you understand?" |
41032 | That sacred bond, that holy trust, How could it die? |
41032 | The Chief- Justice:"Is that the person?" |
41032 | The Chief- Justice:"Is this so? |
41032 | The Dauphin eyed Christine askance:"We have tarried too long,"quoth he;"Doth the Savoyard fear the thrust of France? |
41032 | The church, from which Luther, and Calvin, and Cranmer, and Parker separated? |
41032 | The church, from which came forth the Puritans and Methodists? |
41032 | The convict considered a moment, and then continued,"Where do they think we are?" |
41032 | The good care Perico takes of you-- and you Perico, always digging? |
41032 | The lad was to be here by then, was n''t he?" |
41032 | The next question is, Who did? |
41032 | The password? |
41032 | The question forever rang in my ears,"_ Who_ bought that grain of strychnine on the 23d of October?" |
41032 | The scribe prepares his materials and the magistrate asks:"What has been the cause of your death?" |
41032 | The son of the countess was there, and I killed him?" |
41032 | The traveller is resolved to render his sensations precise, and he asks himself emphatically,"Whence springs the resistless charm of Rome? |
41032 | The word is emphatic in the original,''Thou-- believest thou?'' |
41032 | Then he asked again,"And do you live a harder or an easier life now than then?" |
41032 | Then said his attendant to the brother:"What were you before you were a monk?" |
41032 | Then said the other,"Seest thou this abbot? |
41032 | Then she interrogated herself with a simple severity:"Would I then be culpable for not speaking of that of which I am myself ignorant?" |
41032 | Then suppose A raises offspring in the usual way from eggs, what relation are these young to B? |
41032 | Then what had been his conduct all through? |
41032 | There is no doubt of your being forthcoming at the next assizes?" |
41032 | There were so many to care for, to fear for, to suffer for, and to love-- how could I put things right, or keep off dangers? |
41032 | They might have ill- used me, and then murdered me, but what of that? |
41032 | They returned our gaze suspiciously enough, and we could hear one whisper to the other,"Who''s them coves?" |
41032 | They said then:"Is it so? |
41032 | Think of the letters that have passed-- you read them, or knew of them?" |
41032 | Thinkest thou that clouds and mists are less God''s work, Than sun or moon or stars? |
41032 | This answers the puzzling question sometimes asked,"Can God annihilate space?" |
41032 | This epigram, undoubtedly, is not much more than two thousand years old; and why may it not have been written by Pomponius the ancient? |
41032 | Thorneley?" |
41032 | Thorneley?" |
41032 | Those, perhaps, who waste so much paper and phraseology in favor of humanity, philanthropy, and fraternity? |
41032 | Though my pillow be hard, where so well could I rest As on that on which Amy''s fair head has been pressed? |
41032 | Tinnitans argentum:"Melos istud audi: Musicae nostine modes suaves?" |
41032 | To a sick man who inquires"what he shall do?" |
41032 | To begin with, what is an egg? |
41032 | To deceive me would be no real kindness; and who has a better right to know everything than I, who am part of himself? |
41032 | To the witness:"Did Mr. Thorneley give you any clue to the''_ other person_''who was with him at his wife''s death?" |
41032 | To what extremes had they been carried by resentment, grief, despair, and revenge? |
41032 | To what, then, have we to ascribe this forgetfulness or indifference? |
41032 | To what, then, is the peculiarity to be attributed? |
41032 | True that a respite{ 739} might be asked, and the trial postponed until the following sessions; but upon what plea could the request be preferred? |
41032 | Undoubtedly, he is an able man; but what can he possibly mean by startling us with such eccentricities of argumentation as are familiar with him? |
41032 | Unhand me, my lord, have I woman grown? |
41032 | Ventura, what are you thinking of that you do not move? |
41032 | Was he aware of the nature of the document? |
41032 | Was he not as well versed in the knowledge of the Koran and the customs of Islam as the most devout disciple of the Prophet? |
41032 | Was he wholly bad? |
41032 | Was it hard to look in her face, meet her clear trusting eyes, and answer back,"_ You_ were right, Ada; he is laboring under some delusion?" |
41032 | Was it on this account that he had manifested so warm a friendship for me? |
41032 | Was it the roar of the wind, the pipe of an organ, or a voice of lamentation? |
41032 | Was she untroubled by dread of the cruel dangers that threaten and disturb the affections? |
41032 | Was the secret and mystery of the will in any way connected with the secret and mystery of the murder? |
41032 | Was there anything so wonderful in a woman loving him? |
41032 | Was there ever such a piece of scribbling as this letter-- begun, left, begun again, in so many places? |
41032 | Was there then nothing substantial in the royalty he claimed? |
41032 | Was there to be no end to this misery? |
41032 | We are now prepared for the question, Are we doing our duty in this matter? |
41032 | We do not learn_ Quid sit Deus_, but still we can not help asking the question, What is God, what is his essence? |
41032 | Well, then I had Gaston broken his promise? |
41032 | Were they false words I spoke, my own heart giving them the lie? |
41032 | Were they front or back- stairs? |
41032 | Were they moved by some dismal presentiment? |
41032 | Were those desires troubling me a taste of the vain, futile, heart- bitter wishes which the morrow was to bring forth? |
41032 | What answer can be made to the rational objections of the unbeliever? |
41032 | What are the means established by Jesus Christ for the regeneration and salvation of mankind? |
41032 | What are you doing? |
41032 | What awe and surprise must attend upon the knowledge that a creature has been brought so close to the Divine Essence? |
41032 | What becomes of that ancestral tail in the course of years? |
41032 | What brings that chap here Sunda''afther Sunda'', and what takes him up to ould Ned Cavana''s every Sunda''afther mass? |
41032 | What can be meant by having"come to the spirits of the just,"unless in some way or other they do us good, whether by blessing or by aiding us? |
41032 | What can be more pretentious, not to say gaudy and even tawdry, than his paraphrase of St. John''s passage about the woman taken in adultery? |
41032 | What can escape the eyes of one who loves? |
41032 | What can he mean? |
41032 | What can they do now? |
41032 | What can they do to a poor old man like me? |
41032 | What cared he for the admiration or contempt of others, the vain clamors of the multitude, whom he considered infinitely his inferiors? |
41032 | What clue was there in that to the dark mystery we were bent on solving? |
41032 | What could it be? |
41032 | What could she do but go to God, and his priest? |
41032 | What could the church do more? |
41032 | What did he die of?" |
41032 | What did master{ 596} Pomponius under the fire of this gay frolic? |
41032 | What dignity can be too great to attribute to her who is as closely bound up, as intimately one, with the Eternal Word, as a mother is with a son? |
41032 | What do we teach about the Blessed Virgin more wonderful than this? |
41032 | What do you mean by it?" |
41032 | What does that mean? |
41032 | What drew them together? |
41032 | What else is it now, but_ the_ great FACT of the world''s history and of the world''s present advanced and civilized state? |
41032 | What evidence could we hope for? |
41032 | What fatality was it that was hedging me in and fencing me round, without any agency of my own? |
41032 | What fault can she find with Rita, who is young, good- looking, and comes of a good stock, since she is own cousin to you?" |
41032 | What flowers are those you gather there?'' |
41032 | What ghost? |
41032 | What good has it done? |
41032 | What greets her there by the torches''glare? |
41032 | What grounds has Dr. Pusey for asserting that to be true which we all know to be so false? |
41032 | What had been old Thorneley''s motive in exacting it? |
41032 | What harm is there in giving two or three hops? |
41032 | What has the sect of the philosophers ever done yet to produce virtue and morality in the mass of mankind? |
41032 | What human foresight could have prevented this? |
41032 | What human wisdom could set things right? |
41032 | What if it were really this attempt-- supposing that positive proof could be adduced of the fact-- what then? |
41032 | What if such an awful, unlooked- for blow fell, crushing the bright hopes and darkening the radiant happiness of her young life? |
41032 | What if such news were carried suddenly, inconsiderately to her ears? |
41032 | What is God? |
41032 | What is he like?" |
41032 | What is infinite idea, or infinite object of thought, without infinite intelligent subject? |
41032 | What is it then that bends his neck and detains him to pray in the presence of the dead? |
41032 | What is it to you if Perico, who is the one interested, consents?" |
41032 | What is meant by calling God Father, Son, and Holy Spirit? |
41032 | What is nature, and what do we mean by the natural? |
41032 | What is original sin? |
41032 | What is really meant by the immaculate conception, and what was in truth the history of the late definition? |
41032 | What is that?" |
41032 | What is the first impression it makes upon us? |
41032 | What is the great rudimental teaching of antiquity from its earliest date concerning her? |
41032 | What is the idea, or ideal truth or being, without an intelligent subject? |
41032 | What is the matter with me? |
41032 | What is the matter? |
41032 | What is the matter?" |
41032 | What is the real unity of the church? |
41032 | What is the relation of the race to Adam? |
41032 | What is the remedy for the present deplorable condition of both Christendom and heathendom? |
41032 | What is the true doctrine of her infallibility and of that of the Roman Pontiff? |
41032 | What is there difficult in this doctrine? |
41032 | What is there to hurry us? |
41032 | What is there unnatural? |
41032 | What is this, Jamesy, do you know?" |
41032 | What is to be the political and ecclesiastical destiny of the East, and Russia, its gigantic infant, who can foretell, without prophetic gifts? |
41032 | What matter if we are the last of the Cavanas, as you say? |
41032 | What more can I do?" |
41032 | What more could he do? |
41032 | What novelty is this? |
41032 | What other institutions can compare with it for actual and permanent success? |
41032 | What said the tailor''s boy to the gentleman who, on his presenting his bill, said tartly, he was not running away? |
41032 | What said the tiler to the man when he fell through the rafters of his house? |
41032 | What say you, father-- are you able and willing to push on, and to stand by me? |
41032 | What says Hugh?" |
41032 | What songster hast thou caught, my Queen, Whose harp may soothe a Monarch''s ear?" |
41032 | What spell was over us all that fatal evening? |
41032 | What though it bled? |
41032 | What traveller ever started on an expedition without meeting with his most irritating obstacles at the threshold? |
41032 | What was it that made me start and shiver as my eye fell upon that statue- like form? |
41032 | What was meant by the kingdom of God? |
41032 | What was the matter with me? |
41032 | What was to be done with Mary? |
41032 | What whispereth he half trustfully And half in fear? |
41032 | What will hinder, if this doctrine be admitted, our also admitting that there is something in Christ which is detestable? |
41032 | What will our Anglican friends say to this? |
41032 | What would I want with it? |
41032 | What''s that feller sayin''? |
41032 | What, my lord, would the Holy See think of the works of these Puseyites? |
41032 | What, then, are the remains which we have of the buildings or structures of the ancient Irish belonging to the first, or pagan, period? |
41032 | What, then, is it? |
41032 | What, then, is the genesis of our rational conception and belief of the divine being and attributes? |
41032 | What_ is_ this nameless presence that mantles all things with divinity? |
41032 | When John the Baptist sent two of his disciples to our Lord to ask him,"Art thou he that is to come, or are we to look for another?" |
41032 | When Miolan? |
41032 | When begged to try a new treatment, he consented, saying,"I ask myself, as I often do, what would Père Lacordaire have done in my place? |
41032 | When he came back, the saint asked him"what answer they had made?" |
41032 | When he had done so, Antony said,"Did the stone say anything?" |
41032 | When he says one, he still asks, one what? |
41032 | When the accusers had been heard, the pontiff requested Stephen to answer them:"Are these things so?" |
41032 | When will the busy hum of life replace the silence of death which broods over these regions?" |
41032 | When, and by whom, were these wild spots cultivated? |
41032 | Whence the need of a Divine Redeemer and a revelation? |
41032 | Whence then came the gigantic pride of the old Jew? |
41032 | Where are we to look for a remedy to this state of things? |
41032 | Where are you going, blind brawler?" |
41032 | Where are you going?" |
41032 | Where can he now go for a fresh sensation? |
41032 | Where do they come from? |
41032 | Where does the Shekinah reside?" |
41032 | Where is Francis Gilbert Thorneley?" |
41032 | Where is he, I say?" |
41032 | Where is he? |
41032 | Where is the imaginable limit to which validity must be acknowledged and beyond which it must cease? |
41032 | Where is the passage from the abstract to the concrete, from the mental conception to the objective reality? |
41032 | Where is the proof that that conception is not merely in our mind? |
41032 | Where is the son of my old friend? |
41032 | Where is the will? |
41032 | Where is your master, I say? |
41032 | Where was Mary? |
41032 | Where was he standing with regard to yourself?" |
41032 | Where were you? |
41032 | Where will you be buried, Tom Murdock? |
41032 | Where''s Miss Winny?" |
41032 | Wherefore doth the bridegroom stay? |
41032 | Wherein does the true glory of Rome consist? |
41032 | While all whisper again,"Is the Savoyard dead?" |
41032 | While steadily gaining, stride by stride, The Black Knight thunders to her side-- Heaven, must she meet her fate? |
41032 | While those arching- wings took care of her? |
41032 | Whither next shall they direct their strides? |
41032 | Who are the victims of oppression, most eminent and sage magistrate? |
41032 | Who can prove that the Pyrenees did not rise on the limits of Eden? |
41032 | Who do I know?"'' |
41032 | Who gave you a candle for this funeral? |
41032 | Who indeed, could help loving a being so pure and bright? |
41032 | Who is there in the whole five parts of the world that has not heard of the noted"cat trial"? |
41032 | Who is this young girl, and what is Gaston saying to her? |
41032 | Who knows? |
41032 | Who may speak your spell? |
41032 | Who of us has not? |
41032 | Who was interested to hear how their prophets scolded them, or their enemies destroyed them, or their kings tyrannized over them? |
41032 | Who was to bring up that unfortunate child on a paltry one hundred a year? |
41032 | Who would have said last year that I should be so far away? |
41032 | Who, from his prerogatives and the testimony on which they come to us, had a greater claim to receive an early recognition among the faithful? |
41032 | Who_ could_ have written the Old Testament but the Demiurge? |
41032 | Whom and what shall I see? |
41032 | Why can not he let us alone? |
41032 | Why did n''t you speak?" |
41032 | Why did not Mrs. Lorimer, widow, go out as a governess? |
41032 | Why did you send him to Jenifer? |
41032 | Why did you send him to Marston?" |
41032 | Why did you wake me? |
41032 | Why does he denounce religious fear as hypocritical, when it is written,"He that believeth not shall be damned"? |
41032 | Why does he denounce"short cuts,"as a mental disfranchisement, when no cut can be shorter than to"believe and be saved"? |
41032 | Why does this author stop short in the delineation of principles which he has so admirably begun? |
41032 | Why had I not more earnestly followed up the impulse-- nay, dare I not call it inspiration?--to return after him and bid him come back with me? |
41032 | Why is a soldier said to be of such great antiquity? |
41032 | Why is the relation of the Holy Spirit to both called procession? |
41032 | Why is the relation of the Son to the Father called filiation? |
41032 | Why is this? |
41032 | Why not? |
41032 | Why scattereth he with frenzied hand The fierce flame of that burning brand, Chaunting an ancient rhyme? |
41032 | Why should bright conduct be hid under a bushel? |
41032 | Why should he not be bad, if he can prosper by wickedness?" |
41032 | Why should not the minds of adults be stimulated by similar persuasive forces? |
41032 | Why should the memory of his time of subjection be so dear to Christians, and so carefully preserved? |
41032 | Why was I nurtured of a noble race, And taught to stare destruction in the face? |
41032 | Why was he there in the Beremouth woods-- appearing at this hour, among the ferns and grass, like a wild creature risen from its lair? |
41032 | Why were they there? |
41032 | Why were this man and this young English girl travelling thus to the sweet south coast, and to expecting friends? |
41032 | Why will you make yourself wretched? |
41032 | Why would he speak so fiercely-- why had he taken this advantage of her? |
41032 | Why, in heaven''s name, did you not send us a letter, to tell us where you were?" |
41032 | Why, when he spoke of you by your name, did you not answer for yourself? |
41032 | Why? |
41032 | Will I call her?" |
41032 | Will it be an indiscretion if I enter this charming household and describe one day there, at least, in its clever and literary attractions? |
41032 | Will she be Russian or English? |
41032 | Will the president of the society for the prevention, etc., inform us if there is any protection for aged pianos? |
41032 | Will you never give me any sign of life? |
41032 | Will you not, like a good man, take all the arrangement of the funeral upon yourself? |
41032 | Wilmot?" |
41032 | Wilmot?" |
41032 | Wilmot?" |
41032 | Wilmot?" |
41032 | Wiping his face, which was dirty, with her apron, she continued:"What is the matter? |
41032 | With melody, flowers, and light Hath the maiden come to play, As fragile, fair, and bright And lovelier than they? |
41032 | Within the precincts of-- the jail? |
41032 | Witness violently:"Of what do you suspect me? |
41032 | Witness,( much agitated:)"Am I obliged to answer this?" |
41032 | Wo n''t{ 260} you take care iv me, Winny asthore? |
41032 | Woman, did I say? |
41032 | Would he prosecute Tom Murdock? |
41032 | Would she come back to her father''s house? |
41032 | Would she go abroad? |
41032 | Would they not have followed them in thought into the heavens, and gratefully commemorated them on earth? |
41032 | Would you repulse me if fortune favored you? |
41032 | Wouldst stop the rushing of the Rhone, Or stay the avalanche?" |
41032 | Yes; and on what errand? |
41032 | Yet our brother''s strength was mortal; Bore he naught of earthly taint? |
41032 | You have your knife ready to cut the cords that tie her?" |
41032 | You knew him?" |
41032 | You know I am of age in December, and he thinks of after Christmas; and do you know he wants it to be on the day but one after the Epiphany? |
41032 | You know Jerry Carty? |
41032 | You think I must visit the Grange immediately?" |
41032 | You will come to see me, will you not?" |
41032 | You would never have the face to ask us to believe that this brayer actually spoke to you?" |
41032 | You, Mr. Wilmot, have asked, as proof of this strange statement being true, where is the will? |
41032 | [ Footnote 125][ Footnote 125: That is, who can prove it from reason alone, without the evidence of Revelation itself that it is already completed?] |
41032 | [ Footnote 191][ Footnote 191: The Breton text of the legend of Saint Hervé, in verse appears in the fifth edition of the_ Barsas[??] |
41032 | [ Footnote 191][ Footnote 191: The Breton text of the legend of Saint Hervé, in verse appears in the fifth edition of the_ Barsas[??] |
41032 | [ Footnote 72][ Footnote 72:"What will I but that it burn?"] |
41032 | _ It is she!_"Coroner:"Who?" |
41032 | _ Mister_ Pouter, is there liberty for wolves? |
41032 | _ Query_ as to the degree of affinity required by the French intellect to produce the degree of identity? |
41032 | _ Why not all agree, as you can all read the book?_"We should like to know what answer the missionary made, or could make, to that argument. |
41032 | _ he?_ he is my last treasure- trove: he''s not Irish, my dear; he''s half French and half English. |
41032 | _ who_ are the woman and the child? |
41032 | an''did n''t you tell me already that you''d like me to let you give it to the charities of that religious establishment? |
41032 | an''have n''t you laid out a plan for both yourself an''myself that ca n''t be bet, Winny mavoureen?" |
41032 | an''shure it''s not the poor ould masther?" |
41032 | an''wo n''t you want the most iv it where you are agoin? |
41032 | an''would you want Bully- dhu to sit on his boss, lookin''on at all that, your honor?" |
41032 | and also, why have they not the long beard and short moustache which the Prophet wore?" |
41032 | and his father?" |
41032 | and his leg? |
41032 | and how is all going on?" |
41032 | and if I had a pistol, an''shot every man iv''em, would n''t your honor make a chief iv me at least, instead of sending me to jail? |
41032 | and scream, too? |
41032 | and what answer did this''_ mater_''not''_ amabilis_''give you?" |
41032 | and what the harm of it? |
41032 | and whither away so soon, old fellow?" |
41032 | and why would n''t Bully- dhu, who had on''y a pair of double- barrel tusks, do his part an''help us? |
41032 | and will you enter into a Roman school, in the time of Camillus or Coriolanus? |
41032 | and would n''t they ha''tied me af they could get hoult of me? |
41032 | and would not his incognito be betrayed? |
41032 | are they such friends?" |
41032 | are we always to go back to that? |
41032 | art thou too afraid, O father?" |
41032 | asked Ventura,"and why? |
41032 | asked the Count of Villaoran when he saw them together--"which is the one that killed my brother?" |
41032 | continued Smith, rising from his chair and literally shaking with excitement,"what do you mean by that? |
41032 | de Rouvray, had he, in an excess of zeal, revealed the secret of a distress courageously concealed for more than four years? |
41032 | dear son, do you wish to kill me?" |
41032 | did he not anticipate our emotion at the sight of such an exaltation? |
41032 | do n''t you see that he is drunk? |
41032 | do you you too fear? |
41032 | exclaimed Ventura,"who or what can oppose your getting married?" |
41032 | exclaimed the audience, laughing heartily;"is that the way you show your heels when you are frightened, Uncle Pedro?" |
41032 | for have n''t I come to ask after the sick, like the porter of a convent?" |
41032 | have they killed you? |
41032 | he cried,"can I see and remember, and feel all this, and yet live?" |
41032 | he exclaimed,"but what would it be?" |
41032 | he murmured;"they counselled me to be severe; how could I be? |
41032 | his direct offers being refused, had he employed indirect means? |
41032 | how could Emon, her own Emon, fail, not only to creep but to rush into the good opinion, the very heart, of all who knew him? |
41032 | how he dressed, and if there had ever been any report of his going to be married? |
41032 | how, have you no other motive for undertaking so long a journey?'' |
41032 | if the first woman is Eve, why is not the second Mary? |
41032 | is he as well as he was last year?" |
41032 | is it not as difficult to prove the authority of the church and her doctors as the authority of the Scriptures? |
41032 | is there any outhouse or place?" |
41032 | is there no alternative between a marriage which will make you wretched and the war which will cost you your life?" |
41032 | is''t meet A sire should summon thrice? |
41032 | might he not be, finally, Eve de La Tour- d''Adam''s agent, her associate, her agent in good works?" |
41032 | my selfishness, my blindness-- could any remorse ever atone for them and the terrible evil they had brought about? |
41032 | or could n''t you bring your father with you? |
41032 | or do you find me unworthy to share your lot? |
41032 | or had Christians similar duties to their brethren departed? |
41032 | or on the other that she should be exalted as a queen, with a crown of twelve stars? |
41032 | or rather, why and wherefore do they always say so to people who sneeze? |
41032 | poor beast-- did you do it-- that awful thing? |
41032 | proceeded the questioner,"or is it because you do not choose to answer? |
41032 | shall I ever forget the look he gave me? |
41032 | she continued more vehemently;"why are_ you_ not with him, helping and defending him?" |
41032 | she cried, as they stopped her in the doorway;"or have you done it already? |
41032 | she cried,"come, make haste: here is your aunt-- what do I say? |
41032 | shouted Diego;"what has happened? |
41032 | that I can tear to pieces with three fingers; do you lay your hands upon me? |
41032 | that none are brought by the air? |
41032 | that there are none in the water? |
41032 | that which can be done to- day, why leave it until tomorrow? |
41032 | the marquis replied, with hesitation,"and-- after me--""After you whom shall I love?" |
41032 | to her salutary plants less brilliant but more useful and more durable than flowers? |
41032 | to the compassionate soul who picked you up? |
41032 | to the golden herb which spreads light, and in opening the eyes of the body and the mind, opens to the knowledge of things of the future? |
41032 | to those graceful dances which she herself, perhaps, had led, and to her songs in the wood? |
41032 | upon what future revelation could we rely? |
41032 | was the reply,"have you never seen similar ones in Turkey? |
41032 | we say pathetically;"who can tell what fate awaits them in married life?" |
41032 | what are you doing, madman?" |
41032 | what can be said too much, so that it does not compromise the attributes of the Creator? |
41032 | what do I not scribble? |
41032 | what is the matter with mother''s glory?" |
41032 | what is this? |
41032 | what was it that, amidst an overpowering and unaccountable drowsiness creeping over me, seemed to sting me into life and vigilance? |
41032 | what was she thinking of it-- of me? |
41032 | what were they talking of in our absence?" |
41032 | what''s this for?" |
41032 | when shall we remember that''vengeance is mine, saith the Lord?''" |
41032 | when would she sing again? |
41032 | who will take me to her?" |
41032 | why do n''t you speak to me? |
41032 | why does he not ordain every year a holy war against the unbelievers?" |
41032 | why had I not yielded to his wish the evening I met Hugh Atherton in that fatal street, and taken him home with me? |
41032 | why must we add that in entering this city all this prestige vanishes, and gives place to a bitter disappointment? |
41032 | why shave so close as to lay bare the brains? |
41032 | why"Bloody Mary"and"Rom_ish?_"why is"superstition the usual trait of Romanists?" |
41032 | why"Bloody Mary"and"Rom_ish?_"why is"superstition the usual trait of Romanists?" |
41032 | why"the lonely existence and the subtle eye of the Catholic?" |
41032 | will nobody come and play with me?" |
41032 | will that hand, so near his brand, Ne''er strike again? |
41032 | you can not answer me the simple question, Who are you? |
41032 | you can talk, can you, my Bucephalus, and in English too? |
41032 | you mean our Sister of Charity?" |
41032 | { 131}"But will you not tell me_ how_ I shall go to him?" |
41032 | { 194}"Ring for night prayers then in five minutes, will you?" |
41032 | { 245}"Where can we bring him to? |
41032 | { 312}"Is there not something divine in every benefit?" |
41032 | { 410}"You have heard of Mr. Thorneley being found dead, sir?" |
41032 | { 449}"Which of course you did n''t do?" |
41032 | { 451}"Did you know that Mr. Thorneley''s other nephew was with him last night? |
41032 | { 494} Who cared for the_ minutiae_ about Pharaoh''s butler, Joseph''s coat, or Tobias''s dog? |
41032 | { 500}"And Elvira?" |
41032 | { 606} Mr. Merrivale:"Did you not observe that some ale was poured out in the tumbler when it was brought up?" |
41032 | { 612}"Then, sir, will you condescend to honor me by coming home first for a few minutes? |
41032 | { 624} He is, then, a King, as well as a Prophet; but is he as one of the old heroic kings, David or Solomon? |
41032 | { 750}"Whar are ye from?" |
41032 | { 754}"Can you remember the words in which he alluded to his wife and son?" |
41032 | { 757} Witness, defiantly:"Well, if I did, what''s that to any one here? |
41032 | { 791}"What?" |
41032 | { 845} Do these women explain_ the women of our times_? |
55841 | ''Are not my ideas like other people''s?'' 55841 ''Are you certain of it?'' |
55841 | ''But do n''t you know that I adore you? 55841 ''Eva, are you ill, my darling, or unhappy? |
55841 | ''Have you nothing to say, Bellini?'' 55841 ''Monsieur de Béranger, are you acquainted with that new air composed for your_ Vieux Caporal_?'' |
55841 | ''Nothing,''said my husband,''but the heat is too great; will you come home, Eva?'' 55841 ''Perhaps he is unhappy,''I said simply;''is he married?'' |
55841 | ''Very well, then; why is your light not placed as it is in nature? 55841 ''What do you want?'' |
55841 | ''What is your name?'' 55841 ''Why not wait the short time?'' |
55841 | ''Why, why, Eva, did you not tell me this before? 55841 ''Why?'' |
55841 | ''Yes; but why this haste?'' 55841 ''You Couture? |
55841 | ''You never saw such a flower- seller, did you? 55841 ''You think so; did you look at your model very attentively?'' |
55841 | And can you deliver her? 55841 And did Jesus give his flesh and blood, as he said he would?" |
55841 | And did he deceive you? 55841 And do you promise never to leave me till I die? |
55841 | And does the fool think making a good singer was not doing something great-- eh? |
55841 | And how came you with Magas again? |
55841 | And in what can I serve my honored patron? |
55841 | And is he expected soon? |
55841 | And is his name unknown? |
55841 | And it is Chione who is this famous Leontium, who has made so great a sensation in the eastern cities? |
55841 | And must this one example of vengeance work on for ever? 55841 And this letter, mother-- may I see it?" |
55841 | And what is that? |
55841 | And what will our families think when they learn this disaster? |
55841 | And why not? |
55841 | And yet you are not happy? |
55841 | And you have seen her? 55841 And you think she knows how?" |
55841 | And you will keep the secret to all the rest of the world? |
55841 | And you-- you will always think of me; you will not love another? |
55841 | Anxiety? |
55841 | Archdeacon Jolly observed, without rising from his seat--''What say you to the Archbishop of Canterbury?'' 55841 Archdeacon Jolly: Well, then, her Majesty the Queen, whom the church admits to be''supreme''in all causes, spiritual as well as temporal? |
55841 | Archdeacon Jolly:''How about the Privy Council? 55841 Archdeacon Jolly:''Might it be permitted to suggest the formularies?'' |
55841 | Archdeacon Jolly:''Will you accept convocation as your authority?'' 55841 Are there any for me?" |
55841 | Are they not recoverable then? |
55841 | Are they so very hard? |
55841 | Are you a Catholic? |
55841 | Are you also touched with this mania? |
55841 | Are you speaking,cried the young Frenchman,"of the creator of_ Armida_, of_ Orpheus_, of_ Iphigenia?_""Ahem! |
55841 | As the Roman keeps his foot on ours, eh, Magas? 55841 At what theatres has he appeared?" |
55841 | Ay, by what right, base slave? |
55841 | But do n''t eat his flesh nor drink his blood? |
55841 | But how is this to be effected for ourselves? |
55841 | But not his handwriting? |
55841 | But what could take our boy- organist in that out- of- the- way direction at such an hour, and in such haste? 55841 But what good will it do them?" |
55841 | But what remedy does she propose? |
55841 | But what will we do? |
55841 | But where can we get it to eat and drink? |
55841 | But where will I get my soup? |
55841 | But, Mr. Billups, is it all true? |
55841 | But, then,asked Ally, pushing the difficulty,"do n''t we eat and drink what we_ believe_ we eat and drink?" |
55841 | But, yourself considered, may you not be placed among the most favored? |
55841 | But,she concluded, with an air of infantile_ naiveté_,"it would n''t have been anything but a great frog, would it?" |
55841 | By what right dare you to interfere with the fairest muse of earth''s bright temple? 55841 By what right?" |
55841 | Can he have imagined he does not know the true religion? 55841 Can not we hear music and see candles without getting out of bed for the purpose at such unearthly hours? |
55841 | Can you believe that I will ever leave you again? |
55841 | Chione, my niece; nay, my daughter in Jesus Christ, tell me, for pity''s sake, why do I find you here? |
55841 | Cremato the husband of your daughter? |
55841 | Did she? |
55841 | Did you ever hear anything like this rustic? |
55841 | Did you heed the words of the last hymn? |
55841 | Did you see anything of her? |
55841 | Did you see him, Joseph? |
55841 | Did you see? |
55841 | Died of heart- disease? |
55841 | Do I not remember how the news of that marriage affected Vincenzo? |
55841 | Do me good? 55841 Do n''t you see?" |
55841 | Do people take bitters with their dinner? |
55841 | Do we want an armistice, after having beaten those Prussians and Russians three times? 55841 Do you know I pity the editor of that paper? |
55841 | Do you really think so? |
55841 | Do you remember what he said? |
55841 | Do you see that tall, thin fellow? |
55841 | Do you think it is very prudent, sir? |
55841 | Do you think so, sergeant? |
55841 | Do you think, Monsieur Goulden,I asked, in great trouble,"that they will take the lame?" |
55841 | Do you want anything, miss? |
55841 | Do you wish some March beer? |
55841 | Dost eat at this hour on the sixth feria? |
55841 | Even on the threshold of the grave, could not that last insult have been spared? |
55841 | Even to Magas? |
55841 | For what earthly purpose? |
55841 | Front rank, kneel? 55841 Froude, you say, puts the number at 10,000?" |
55841 | Hallo, conductor, how long do you remain here? |
55841 | Has he? 55841 Has not the graceless boy been robbing his majesty, who was pleased to place him in the conservatorio after his father''s death?" |
55841 | Has she ever been to Athens? |
55841 | Has she given no rule? |
55841 | Have I found thee at last? |
55841 | Have you not taught me early, beloved mother, that renunciation and offering is our destiny? |
55841 | Have you nothing,at length he said,"to ask for yourself? |
55841 | Have you spoken to any one in an uncharitable manner? |
55841 | How can a man be at his ease,said the fat merchant, with a certain pride,"if he ca n''t eat the best of everything? |
55841 | How can you wonder that a man who learns such nonsense in his childhood should say foolish things when he grows up? 55841 How does Froude stand in this matter of the rejoicings at Rome?" |
55841 | How long ago was that? |
55841 | How many wounded? |
55841 | How should I know? 55841 How was it, doctor, that you first thought about it?" |
55841 | How, my lord,cried he,"is it possible that you believe that these monks can forward your plans? |
55841 | How,answered he,"how can you contradict yourselves in this way? |
55841 | I am not an unwelcome guest, I hope? |
55841 | I can easily believe you,said Monsieur Tardieu;"you want a pass to the city?" |
55841 | I looked then,says Bunyan,"and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,''Wherefore dost thou cry?'' |
55841 | I must hear her, Lydon; can not you smuggle me into her presence? |
55841 | I would give something to know what the Jewish fellow did say; do you remember? |
55841 | Indeed? 55841 Is he dead?" |
55841 | Is it not as I said? |
55841 | Is it not their trade? 55841 Is it? |
55841 | Is my uncle at home? |
55841 | Is she indeed dying? 55841 Is she really so beautiful as they say?" |
55841 | Is that you, Joseph? |
55841 | Is there any opening,I cried,"in the tower roof?" |
55841 | Is this a challenge? |
55841 | Is this the great philosopher? |
55841 | Is this the way you go off without waiting for the passengers? |
55841 | It shows their villainy,replied my aunt, and, growing more and more excited, she cried,"Will a revolution never come again? |
55841 | Louis-- what? |
55841 | Madam,said he,"will your majesty pray for your illustrious brother, especially for his soul?" |
55841 | Madame Malibran, too? |
55841 | May I ask,he began,"if a lady who some time since obtained shelter at the hospital, is still here? |
55841 | May it please the Reverend Father Prior to grant me a short interview? |
55841 | Merion, do you remember the Jew preacher? |
55841 | Mr. Andrew,she said,"what should put me in mind of the frog that tried to swell to the size of an ox?" |
55841 | Mr. Billups,said I,"do you know that Ally Button is ill?" |
55841 | Must death resign the booty long due him in order to torment me? 55841 Must pictures of a miserable past swing for ever before me?" |
55841 | My dear, de- ar child,cried Mr. Billups, quite distractedly,"what_ can_ you have been reading to put this in your head?" |
55841 | My dear, what are you talking about? |
55841 | My lord, may I venture to ask of you, do you believe, as some do, that Chione is in possession of a truth she dare not declare? 55841 My uncle?" |
55841 | Nay, surely the divine Euterpe, aided by the equally divine Erato,said Pierus;"who but a muse could thus conceal herself?" |
55841 | No? 55841 Not if you learn that he is concerned in hatching a conspiracy against the state?" |
55841 | Notwithstanding the fog? |
55841 | Often? |
55841 | One word,said Magas, springing forward so as to prevent the old man from departing;"one word Is it yourself?" |
55841 | Or him who dares foment sedition among them? |
55841 | Plays the organ, sir? 55841 Say''st so? |
55841 | See, Duchêne; you have only to go down the street, opposite that well, do you see? |
55841 | Sentiments,said Magas;"what business have slaves with sentiments?" |
55841 | Shall Ellen sing before you, Master Handel? |
55841 | Shall I remind you of Voltaire, the inventor of the title_ The Infamous_, by which he designated the church? 55841 So the sacrifice of Mr. Basher did not consist in popping the question?" |
55841 | Stop,said Magas;"where did you find that written?" |
55841 | The Christian bishop? |
55841 | The dreadful Cremato,continued she,"has he kept his word? |
55841 | The future, father,she said--"the future without_ her?_""Courage, dear child,"answered he. |
55841 | The subject of the picture? |
55841 | The voice was heavenly,said Critias,"and the music faultless; but who could be the player, who the singer?" |
55841 | Then we can apply the torture? |
55841 | Then why have you spoken as if it were attainable? 55841 Then why is he not proclaimed? |
55841 | Then will you say some short prayers, while I go and visit my other patients? |
55841 | They are Christians? |
55841 | They do not seek to emulate man;and when all is said, what is it, that M. de Maistre calls"emulating man"? |
55841 | Thou dost not enquire whither? |
55841 | To dry one''s self? |
55841 | True? |
55841 | We shall be able to save them all, father, shall we not? |
55841 | Well, my child,said the curé,"are your labors over?" |
55841 | Well, see here, Tom; when I was out of my head, did I talk much? |
55841 | Well, what have you discovered? |
55841 | Well, what next? |
55841 | Well, young man,said he.,"will you have some, too? |
55841 | Well,he said, smiling,"is it not true?" |
55841 | Well,rejoined Critias,"and what did he say?" |
55841 | Well,said he,"well; how goes our young man?" |
55841 | Well? |
55841 | What are the most ancient vestiges of man''s existence? 55841 What became of Ally?" |
55841 | What book have you there? |
55841 | What can we say of St. Catharine of Siena, who shares the glory of the great writers? |
55841 | What can you expect? 55841 What can_ what_ mean, Magas, that you are here talking to yourself, and flinging yourself about like a madman?" |
55841 | What could possibly take our organist away during church time? 55841 What did you do with it after having dried it?" |
55841 | What did you hear at Ephesus that has so unnerved you? |
55841 | What do you here, Miss Ellen, in this young man''s study? |
55841 | What do you want? |
55841 | What does that signify, for men? |
55841 | What does the Captain say? |
55841 | What does''oo say? |
55841 | What fool can have made such a lock? |
55841 | What harm, rather? 55841 What has happened?" |
55841 | What have we to do with wars? 55841 What have you to wish for? |
55841 | What is her doctrine? |
55841 | What is n''t true, my dear? |
55841 | What is that you are saying, you flatterer? |
55841 | What is the matter? |
55841 | What is this I hear of thee, my poor child? |
55841 | What is to be done in order to draw well? 55841 What is your name, young man?" |
55841 | What is your name? |
55841 | What is your name? |
55841 | What is? |
55841 | What man? 55841 What may all this mean?" |
55841 | What must we do? 55841 What number did you draw, Joseph?" |
55841 | What possible fault can you find with the Lady Damaris? |
55841 | What regiment? |
55841 | What regiment? |
55841 | What said Vincenzo to this? |
55841 | What shall I do? |
55841 | What sort of men are these? |
55841 | What sudden caprice is this? 55841 What truth can he mean?" |
55841 | What use are they? |
55841 | What vinegar? |
55841 | What was it like, Ally dear? |
55841 | What will Cremato here? |
55841 | What wish you, Messire? |
55841 | Whence these wonderfully entrancing tones of home? |
55841 | Where do you stop, sir? |
55841 | Who are you? |
55841 | Who is dead? |
55841 | Who is her master now? |
55841 | Who is there,he exclaimed,"who, at moments when the state of his own country saddens him, has not turned his eyes toward the republic of Washington? |
55841 | Who is this_ Word_ of whom Chione speaks? |
55841 | Why did you baptize that Iroquois? |
55841 | Why have you slandered the noble chevalier, and striven to bring down his works and his character to your own level? 55841 Why not? |
55841 | Why should he have sent this to me? |
55841 | Why should they say it is n''t true, then? |
55841 | Will the Lady Damaris consent? |
55841 | Will you call at my house? 55841 Will you hear her?" |
55841 | Wo n''t we have a feast? |
55841 | Would John Sharon never move? 55841 Would to- morrow, think you, do, doctor?" |
55841 | Would you believe it,he wrote in 1824,"I am every day growing more and more a Christian? |
55841 | Yes, do you know him? |
55841 | Yes, miss,responded Basher,"it is both beautiful and-- ah--"a look at Rosina--"and-- ah--""Very red, you would say, Mr. Basher, would you not? |
55841 | You are much sinned against, Eva; but tell me how could Lord Montford marry you when he knew his first wife was living? |
55841 | You can not read? |
55841 | You can say that so calmly? |
55841 | You did not weigh that speech then; did not observe its tendencies? |
55841 | You find me very stout? |
55841 | You have company, Mademoiselle Louise? |
55841 | You have decided it shall remain where it is? |
55841 | You know all, my darling? |
55841 | _ Is it?_asked the composer, looking in the king''s face, and well pleased. |
55841 | ''Do you know her?--are you ill?--what is the matter, Percy?'' |
55841 | ''Mid the grasses green, Or those dim boughs that mix above? |
55841 | ''Tis ability and courage, and not blood and rank, you depend upon? |
55841 | ''What do you think that the brute dared to propose to me? |
55841 | ''What will Malibran say to it?'' |
55841 | ''Will you watch with me tonight, Arnold?'' |
55841 | ''With whom did you study in Germany?'' |
55841 | -------- The Old Religion; Or, How Shall We Find Primitive Christianity? |
55841 | --------{ 403} What shall we do with the Indians? |
55841 | ... And who will raise this building? |
55841 | ...''Are we, then, to give up literature?'' |
55841 | 9, Know ye not that the unrighteous shall inherit the kingdom of God?" |
55841 | A brother asked him:"What does this mean?" |
55841 | A game of ball he especially recommends,( who knows but there may have been base- ball clubs in Egypt?) |
55841 | A word, and nothing more? |
55841 | Abbot Marcus said to Abbot Arsenius:"Why do you avoid us?" |
55841 | Above stood a sentinel, who, with his musket raised, cried out:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | After a consultation of human laws, after a calculation of probabilities, did not Christianity appear doomed? |
55841 | After a moment''s silence, he said:"Have we permission to go outside our quarters, old fellows?" |
55841 | Again I should like to know what reasons Miss Edwards has for styling Claret''s work,_ La Clave de Oro_, a_ coarse_ work? |
55841 | Again, When and how shall the books be distributed? |
55841 | All this being so, and being one great ground of objection against the church, why is her system so_ subjective_, all the while, in other departments? |
55841 | Am I mistaken, gentlemen; is there not a school between the family and the workshop, the primary school first and the professional school afterward? |
55841 | Am I not Magas?" |
55841 | Am I right in this?" |
55841 | And I repeat, if the standard of conversation could be raised a little, drawn out of the monotonous circle in which it moves, where would be the harm? |
55841 | And after all, with the truest aim and best powder-- who is hit? |
55841 | And as the globe is large, why need we wrangle for a small spot of it? |
55841 | And does_ The Churchman_ pretend that any man in the interest of science or any other interest has the right voluntarily to do that? |
55841 | And he, hearing these words, was astonished and said: The field is thine, Father, and dost thou ask me? |
55841 | And he, what name did he give himself? |
55841 | And if so, does she present it as her own will, or as a will above herself? |
55841 | And if they had it, who would obey it? |
55841 | And if this is the cause of a"_ reformed_ religion,"what need has any honest man of any further arguments to convince him of its error? |
55841 | And now where was the exile to go? |
55841 | And of what use is it all? |
55841 | And then the father replied,"Why, then, do you desire to take away what you have not placed there?" |
55841 | And this Italy dares to demand that the gate of the papacy should be intrusted to her safe- keeping? |
55841 | And up yonder, do you see? |
55841 | And what did Tom mean by saying that"we two knew best?" |
55841 | And what name did he bear? |
55841 | And what other could she hope for? |
55841 | And what was the origin of this institution? |
55841 | And what was there below? |
55841 | And when there is a corrupt understanding between the trader and the agent, what chance has the poor Indian for justice? |
55841 | And when they had entered his cell, he said:"What hast thou done, brother, for I no longer see the grace of God in thee as heretofore?" |
55841 | And who can read the following without emotion? |
55841 | And why? |
55841 | And you-- Bellini-- talk thus? |
55841 | And you?" |
55841 | Another soldier, seated near a pot, turned his head, saying:"It is you, Joseph, is it? |
55841 | Are Oxford and Cambridge silent? |
55841 | Are all Episcopalians feeling their way to something settled in faith and worship? |
55841 | Are not women who have serious tastes obliged to hide them or make excuses for them by every means in their power, as if they were concealing a fault? |
55841 | Are such friendships possible outside of revealed religion? |
55841 | Are the Thirty- nine Articles, to which every minister effectually subscribes, no rule of faith whatever? |
55841 | Are they superior to nature, or inferior? |
55841 | Are thoughts of liberty foreign and unknown to Christianity? |
55841 | Are we so much better than the gluttons of Egypt? |
55841 | Are we who work by grace and merit the reward the same_ we_ that prior to regeneration sinned and were under wrath? |
55841 | Are you a Frenchman, then?" |
55841 | Are you a man? |
55841 | Are you a young man? |
55841 | Are you an artist? |
55841 | Are you going to Quatre- Vents in that little coat? |
55841 | Are you no longer Chione? |
55841 | Are you not already as free as is safe for you? |
55841 | Are you not ashamed of such pitiful behavior? |
55841 | Are you not so still? |
55841 | Are you satisfied?" |
55841 | At the time of the French Revolution the nobility were corrupt enough, but were they more so than the people who warred against them? |
55841 | At what point of the voyage did the pope''s supremacy begin to dawn upon him? |
55841 | Aunt Grédel asked:"But what is this painted upon the face?" |
55841 | Be it so, what then? |
55841 | Be it so; but do these differences prove diversity of species, or, at most, only a distinct variety in the same species? |
55841 | Because she sinks with the art that ministers to your pleasure, is it impossible for her to rise with noble, true, serious art? |
55841 | Because you have never seen God at the end of your telescope, can you logically conclude that there is no God? |
55841 | Besides, are you able to say what changes of land and water have taken place since men first appeared on the face of the earth? |
55841 | Besides, could I not help him? |
55841 | But God answers you, Where, then, is your faith? |
55841 | But Hernando Cortez never besought the royal bounty; why, then, should Fonseca persecute him? |
55841 | But all this while may not he be bawling the blessed truth, and I slinking behind the shutters? |
55841 | But can not the clergy be appealed to as authorized interpreters? |
55841 | But come, where shall I place myself? |
55841 | But come: have we any more weeds to look at?" |
55841 | But do n''t you think, now, Mr. Ned, that I ought to be very proud of Our Baby after that? |
55841 | But does education as it is bestowed to- day often accomplish great things? |
55841 | But does it follow that opinion has espoused the opposing cause, and that hostility and warfare against modern laws and ideas are generally favored? |
55841 | But first, how many grains do you expect to find in this cattle- merchant before us?" |
55841 | But for the Protestant, what apology can be offered? |
55841 | But have we reached that point? |
55841 | But have you, geologists, really proved what you pretend? |
55841 | But how am I to get one?" |
55841 | But how are they to secure their triumph? |
55841 | But how are we to do this? |
55841 | But how can there be psychology without ontology? |
55841 | But how do they pass from being to existences, from the necessary to the contingent, from God to creation? |
55841 | But how is it to be put down? |
55841 | But how is the library to be supported and enlarged? |
55841 | But how was I to get the thirty francs? |
55841 | But is intelligence measured out to them in the same exact proportions and with the same limitations as physical strength? |
55841 | But now, cease this dallying and confess the truth: was not thy song for me?" |
55841 | But on page 166 we find the following:"Will the martyrs, who sowed the seed of the church in their blood, have no part in the final harvest? |
55841 | But out of what was the"dust of the ground"or"the ordinary elements of nature"formed? |
55841 | But suppose you have proved the antiquity of the earth and of man on it to be as you pretend, what then? |
55841 | But the body of the church is a society of individuals; and is it meant that all individuals in the communion of the church are infallible? |
55841 | But these laws, whence come they? |
55841 | But to come to practical results, what are the faculties to be cultivated in women? |
55841 | But what avail the best reasons, were they given by angels, when we have wilfully yielded ourselves up to the tyrannical mastery of passion? |
55841 | But what could the vulgar habit of the colonel have to do with such a sacrifice on the part of Mr. Basher? |
55841 | But what do I hear? |
55841 | But what has the author proposed to himself in treating them? |
55841 | But what if this same power is malevolent? |
55841 | But what is a congregation or society of the faithful under Christ its head? |
55841 | But what is a well- planned and well- organized workshop? |
55841 | But what is saving faith? |
55841 | But what is the sense of sticking a chaplet of roses on the top of your head where you can neither see it nor smell it? |
55841 | But what means were there through which the will could operate when nothing besides itself existed? |
55841 | But what reason has it to complain? |
55841 | But when I first received a furlough and reached home, what did I hear? |
55841 | But when the brake is old and shattered, how replace it? |
55841 | But where can we find the beautiful realized with more vividness, more simplicity, more nature and grandeur? |
55841 | But while I stood thus, the door of the kitchen opened, and Mademoiselle Louise, their servant, putting out her head, asked:"Who is there?" |
55841 | But why can I not investigate the truth I do not doubt or deny? |
55841 | But why seek so far that which is near at hand? |
55841 | But, I''d like to know, if_ they_ did not lift these stones into their places, who did do it? |
55841 | But, does nature when she presents the designs, the ideas, intentions, present the will whose they are? |
55841 | But, have they any right, on this account, to favor unjust and unlawful attempts to wrest from him his temporal sovereignty? |
55841 | But, here, I am smoking all the cigars; do n''t you smoke?" |
55841 | But, in spite of these good and solid reasons for battling on, some are frequently tempted to ask,"Is the struggle to go on for ever? |
55841 | But, on further consideration, will not this be found especially fit and serviceable? |
55841 | But, speaking of this, can we not stop again before we come to Anse?" |
55841 | But,_ à propos_, do you know it was a most happy coincidence that I obliged you to tell me your name, that you did not want to give me? |
55841 | By argument, by moral means, in a just manner, or by violence and injustice? |
55841 | By the way, who is it plays the organ so beautifully in Meadowbrook church? |
55841 | By what power did that girl sometimes divine the thoughts which he had not yet owned to himself? |
55841 | By what process? |
55841 | By whom? |
55841 | Béranger?'' |
55841 | Ca n''t I see you laughing behind your handkerchief? |
55841 | Can it be possible that you have no parish library? |
55841 | Can it become to each of us the personal and intimate thing, which may converse with us as a friend while we submit to it as an authoritative guide? |
55841 | Can not our Catholic publishers wake up to the importance of correcting their proofs properly? |
55841 | Can not the millions of Catholics do to- day what twelve fishermen of Galilee did? |
55841 | Can our friend name anything more that can be an object of knowledge with Sir William Hamilton and his school? |
55841 | Can reason operate freely without principles, without data, without light, without any support, or anything on which to rest? |
55841 | Can the laws of science be denounced as forgeries? |
55841 | Can the succession of several races, and their traits, be discovered, especially in Western Europe?" |
55841 | Can we doubt that Father Sainte Foi experienced that charity, like mercy,"is twice blessed,""It blesseth him that gives, and him that takes"? |
55841 | Can you believe, Raoul, that I will accept your sacrifice? |
55841 | Can you imagine any use to which such information could be turned by the church? |
55841 | Can you imagine anything more childish than listening to Bridget''s and Mary Ann''s reports of the daily life of their master and mistress? |
55841 | Can you wonder that I craved to die, and hide my shame and misery?" |
55841 | Can you write? |
55841 | Catharine did not leave me; she sat by me and said, pressing my arm:"You will return?" |
55841 | Connell?" |
55841 | Could aught have been more dissimilar and contradictory? |
55841 | Could military mechanism have accomplished such results? |
55841 | Could military mechanism, when it was no more, possess a renovating influence? |
55841 | Could there not, indeed, be hope for the soul of him whose first thought on receiving the death- blow was to say,"Pardon my murderer"? |
55841 | Could they not put me in the cavalry?" |
55841 | Could you?" |
55841 | Critias laughed, and said,"Slaves have sentiment, and memory, and reflection; by whose permission I do not know; but how are you to get rid of it? |
55841 | Developed from what? |
55841 | Did Cremato leave relatives to whom I can return the price of this masterpiece?" |
55841 | Did I promise you anything else than from the height of my cross I baptized you in my blood? |
55841 | Did Monsieur the Mayor and the hospital surgeon say nothing?" |
55841 | Did he leave Dover an Anglican, and disembark at Calais a Roman Catholic? |
55841 | Did he think that the world would regard his compilations as a faithful reflector of ancient minds and ancient life? |
55841 | Did he write to instruct the student, or amuse the indolent, or delight the world, or add to the lore of the learned? |
55841 | Did it comprehend how much this was to be preferred, for the cause of religion and for its own sake, to former courtly favors? |
55841 | Did it not share the ideas, principles, and even the good fortune and greatness of royalty? |
55841 | Did it not submit to it with a good will? |
55841 | Did it offer any opposition to the change? |
55841 | Did not Christ say to his Apostles,"I send you forth as sheep among wolves"? |
55841 | Did not Molière himself write this beautiful line? |
55841 | Did not the Duke of Anhalt-- swear she was ravishing in beauty as in acting, with eyes like diamonds, and a figure majestic as Juno''s?" |
55841 | Did the monks effect nothing for the good of humanity? |
55841 | Did we not carry the battery at Fleuries?" |
55841 | Did you become a Christian in order to enjoy here below all temporal prosperity? |
55841 | Did you come out here with Leontium? |
55841 | Did you remark anything in the city?" |
55841 | Do faith without reasoning and pure instinct comfort us? |
55841 | Do n''t you remember what Hallam says about it? |
55841 | Do not duties, tastes, affections often appear to contradict each other? |
55841 | Do not we see this every day? |
55841 | Do the secular and regular clergy, the parliament, the laymen of every condition of life, all acquiesce? |
55841 | Do these men, whose minds are so enlightened, not see that they are in the presence of an administration of supernatural power? |
55841 | Do they not suspect the strength of the church militant ranged about its chief, and praying with him for the assistance of the church triumphant? |
55841 | Do they not witness the pious eagerness of the people to venerate, to invoke, and to imitate the new patrons which are given them? |
55841 | Do we depreciate the military mechanism of Rome? |
55841 | Do we not feel a little ashamed at reading this? |
55841 | Do you come and tell me that you are no creature? |
55841 | Do you deny it, and say there is no God? |
55841 | Do you hear me, Bellini?'' |
55841 | Do you hear, conscript?" |
55841 | Do you know they could not? |
55841 | Do you not recognize your old acquaintance-- the runaway Louis?" |
55841 | Do you not see whole families, hitherto all but ignorant of the blessings of faith, almost transformed by a new baptism? |
55841 | Do you promise me?" |
55841 | Do you say ethnology can not trace all the kindreds and nations of men back to a common origin? |
55841 | Do you take me for a fool?" |
55841 | Do you think I do not know where the shoe pinches?'' |
55841 | Do you think of devoting yourself to dramatic composition?" |
55841 | Do you think that such tall fellows as you and I were born to die in a hospital? |
55841 | Do you wish to give me pain?" |
55841 | Do you wish to have the proof of this? |
55841 | Does a single bishop protest? |
55841 | Does faith, of its own nature, produce charity? |
55841 | Does he mean to assert that their intellectual efforts have been, and that they always will be, sterile? |
55841 | Does it cost anything to speak? |
55841 | Does nature will or act from will? |
55841 | Does not Sallust assert the superiority of the Gauls to the Romans in war? |
55841 | Does not a map surpass all language in communicating geographical knowledge? |
55841 | Does not man himself, when bowed down by great affliction, feel that a woman''s heart is being born and awakening within him? |
55841 | Does not the bird build its nest in the soft moss, under the shelter of the hedge and among the branches of the tree? |
55841 | Does not the secret of living lie in the reconciliation of apparent difficulties? |
55841 | Does social hierarchy, entirely prostrated before the force of numbers, constitute the grandeur of intelligence and virtue? |
55841 | Does the century intend to belong to liberty and its severe duties, to the caprices of demagogues, or would it be fired by the military spirit? |
55841 | Does the color make any difference in the warmth of the robe? |
55841 | Does the end justify the means? |
55841 | Does the pretence that the glory and advantage of Italy require it to have Rome as a political capital justify its forcible annexation? |
55841 | Does there exist a more overwhelming proof of the poverty of our intellect? |
55841 | Dyed garments are silly and extravagant; and are they not, after all, offences against truth? |
55841 | Elsewhere, he asked, is the situation more favorable? |
55841 | Epicurean that you are, will you never see harm till you hear the house is on fire? |
55841 | Even for the young, who knows what its length maybe?" |
55841 | Every time one of us moved, he would try to talk and say:"Well, conscript?" |
55841 | Father Féral?" |
55841 | Fifth question:"What are, in the different countries of Europe, the chief characteristics of the first epoch of iron? |
55841 | Flower of the forest, that, unseen, With sweetness fill''st the vernal grove, Where hid''st thou? |
55841 | Fonseca could not be just; how much less could he be generous? |
55841 | Fonseca was never in the right; for what opponent of their idols could have any reason or justice on his side? |
55841 | For a long while we watched their labor, while again and again we heard the sentry''s"_ Qui vive?_"It was the regiments of the third corps arriving. |
55841 | For example: Has a child been angry with his companion? |
55841 | For instance, can it be brought about that most women''s hearts will not yield to the necessity of praying and believing? |
55841 | For on whom does the priest lay his hand? |
55841 | Franklin?" |
55841 | From nothing? |
55841 | From the wind that sighs over Eva''s grave, comes there, my dear young reader, no warning to you? |
55841 | From whom did they receive it? |
55841 | Gentlemen, is all this what they call liberalism? |
55841 | Gentlemen, what do the radiant looks of this assembly, this clapping of hands, these outbursts of enthusiasm, express? |
55841 | Glory and misfortune have attended him through life; but what_ we_ call glory-- has it any merit in thy eyes? |
55841 | Got your wits again, have you?" |
55841 | Granted that Catholicity is objective in its essence, is it subjective in any of its qualities or manifestations? |
55841 | Had he any settled dwelling- place? |
55841 | Had they been traitorously ensnared and were they now languishing in some Moorish dungeon? |
55841 | Had they fallen in the last bloody encounter? |
55841 | Has Christianity never acted in accordance with them? |
55841 | Has a pontificate ever shown this divine spectacle of the struggle of spiritual forces with the powers of materialism better than that of Pius IX.? |
55841 | Has he any special bugaboo to- day?" |
55841 | Has he eaten out of meals? |
55841 | Has he eaten to excess and in an unbecoming manner? |
55841 | Has it persevered in burning incense before God only, in adoring none but him? |
55841 | Has it since guarded against the temptations which have surrounded it? |
55841 | Has not Providence implanted this instinct in the heart of all his creation, even in the species inferior to ours? |
55841 | Has not that system of elections, discussion, and censure which honors our modern spirit come forth from the very womb of the church? |
55841 | Has she fine teeth? |
55841 | Has she not her Franciscans and her Dominicans, her Benedictines and her Seculars, her Jesuits, and I know not who besides? |
55841 | Has she told me the truth?'' |
55841 | Has she_ no flanks? |
55841 | Have Episcopalians no settled forms of worship, and no fixed creed? |
55841 | Have I not just said she is immaculate, faultless? |
55841 | Have not more earthly and apparently less disinterested bursts of enthusiasm caused it to lose a goodly portion of the conquered ground? |
55841 | Have not the Catholics of the world a right to sustain the papal jurisdiction as a part of their religion? |
55841 | Have not those thoughts watched, rather, over the cradle of religion? |
55841 | Have nothing to do with Pompey Simpson, my dear,"again addressing Ally,"or who knows you might be led away to become a Romanist?" |
55841 | Have we not more need than ever of intercessors in heaven, and models of religious virtue in the world?" |
55841 | Have we not more need than ever of intercessors in heaven, and models of religious virtue in the world?" |
55841 | Have women the time to devote to intellectual pursuits? |
55841 | Have you a ready pen? |
55841 | Have you brought with you the picture of which the count has spoken?" |
55841 | Have you no women aboard, conductor?" |
55841 | Have you the means, or have you not?" |
55841 | He flings at once into your face the terrible Antoninus with the cry,"Who shall change the opinion of these people?" |
55841 | He glared with his little eyes like a wolf, and repeated,"Who goes there?" |
55841 | He saluted us, and then said to the master of the house, in German:"These are recruits?" |
55841 | He turned fiercely upon Merion:"Where is the girl flown to? |
55841 | He went up to the hussar and asked:"What is that you say?" |
55841 | Heaven and earth have abandoned me; why need you care for me?" |
55841 | Here was a pleasant scene to open one''s eyes upon; but where was I? |
55841 | Here; what for you send me the pay before you get the picture?" |
55841 | Hers? |
55841 | His last work? |
55841 | Hold up our eyes in holy horror, but let our hands hang unemployed by our side? |
55841 | How act upon them? |
55841 | How are they to know whether we are all swindlers alike, or are only in the habit of appointing swindlers to positions of trust and responsibility? |
55841 | How can Malibran survive him? |
55841 | How can he be accounted virtuous, if at times he is vicious? |
55841 | How can he be received as good, when he has advised what is bad? |
55841 | How can one love a position which is to be abandoned on such or such a day in accordance with a caprice? |
55841 | How can they be applied? |
55841 | How can we be astonished, therefore, that a youth like Görres should have been carried away with the spirit of the age? |
55841 | How can we denounce injustice from the pulpit if we exhibit an example of it in our own persons? |
55841 | How can we effect this? |
55841 | How can we hope to find earnest mothers of families among those whose youth has been spent in balls,_ fetes_, and morning visits? |
55841 | How comes it, then, that, despite so many causes of alarm, in the depth of our soul we are calm, and our fears are mingled with so much hope? |
55841 | How could I help it? |
55841 | How could he better prove his devout obedience to the Holy Father than by seating himself at the very foot of the papal throne? |
55841 | How could he help it? |
55841 | How could she err? |
55841 | How could that society be brought to respect the just rights of the church? |
55841 | How did you come into this room, Frau von Albo?" |
55841 | How does he do it? |
55841 | How from any possible number of fallibles get an infallible? |
55841 | How long has the unholy gift been in your hands? |
55841 | How many gods are there in the''best society''? |
55841 | How many of these debts do our readers suppose are just? |
55841 | How often had I eaten bread and drank white wine with Zunnier there at the Golden Sheaf when the sun shone brightly and the leaves were green around? |
55841 | How shall the books be selected? |
55841 | How should I? |
55841 | How should they when they rate the spiritual no higher than, if not below, the intellectual? |
55841 | How then can he assert the universal reign of law? |
55841 | How then do we enter that order? |
55841 | How then, can she be not infallible? |
55841 | How would American Catholics like to have King Victor Emmanuel and Ratazzi or Ricasoli dictating the affairs of the church in this country? |
55841 | How, that is, from what physical causes, does that order come to be? |
55841 | How, then, conclude that what in thought seems to be object is really anything distinguishable from myself? |
55841 | I am cursed? |
55841 | I am the child''s mother, am I not? |
55841 | I ask, are such dwellings tolerable for the free citizens of France or Belgium; for men redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ? |
55841 | I called out in the alley:"Is any one here?" |
55841 | I cried,''it is then here that thou art awaiting me? |
55841 | I cried;"have you no ladders?" |
55841 | I had never seen him so sad, and I asked:"Are you not well, Monsieur Goulden?" |
55841 | I have just been to see your mother--"{ 157}"And how did you find her? |
55841 | I have sinned and suffered-- will you hear me?" |
55841 | I have traced her here; can I be allowed to see her?" |
55841 | I ran on thus some twenty minutes, scarcely daring to breathe, when a drunken voice called out:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | I should not wonder,"he replied,"if they had hit the right nail on the head there; I must read that article-- how is it headed?" |
55841 | I still think they will exempt you, but who can tell? |
55841 | I study military tactics?_ Yes, infantry tactics, you rogue, under Mrs. |
55841 | I tell you there is harm; he preaches''equality''to slaves, and what good can come of that?" |
55841 | I thought myself saved, when Monsieur the Sous- Préfet asked:"You are really Joseph Bertha?" |
55841 | If facts, then, of the first magnitude are Overlooked in the new world, how many more will be overlooked in the old? |
55841 | If he doubted the being of God, how could he expect to find such a principle or such a first truth? |
55841 | If in their view we had become so corrupt, why have they taken for themselves the ritual which the doctor says is essentially modified by later ideas? |
55841 | If inferior, how can they govern her operations? |
55841 | If it be the ultimate judge of doctrine, must it not be the authority for which you are seeking?'' |
55841 | If not, what is Christianity, and what fate have you in store for it? |
55841 | If religion is to wage war upon civil liberty, ought it not to be authorized to allude to beneficial freedom? |
55841 | If she will not yield one jot or tittle of doctrine, why allow so large an oscillation in forms of devotion? |
55841 | If so, at what particular spot in the Channel did he drop the Anglican articles and take up the Roman missal? |
55841 | If so, how have they become distributed over the several continents of the earth and the islands of the ocean? |
55841 | If the grace itself, how can it be said that we are rewarded? |
55841 | If the senses are channels for communicating thought, why decry the legitimate use of any one of them performing its own function? |
55841 | If the translators knew English but imperfectly, whose fault was it? |
55841 | If they do these things in the green tree at Boston, what shall be done by a Dryasdust in London? |
55841 | If they had a hankering after eel pot- pies, pray, is the taste unknown to ourselves? |
55841 | If you open to woman the most dangerous and frivolous of all the arts, why close to her the others? |
55841 | If you pierce your ears, he says, why not have rings in your noses also? |
55841 | In a few moments a lucid interval occurred, and, noticing me, he said:"Doctor, why ca n''t we have Mass in our church? |
55841 | In the meantime, gentlemen, what shall we do? |
55841 | In the present paper Carlyle has used to perfection(?) |
55841 | In what respect does the church restrain freedom of thought? |
55841 | In what respect were the principles of the evangels and those of a free government incompatible with each other? |
55841 | In whose name has the first stone been laid? |
55841 | Instead of this, what are they? |
55841 | Intelligence can speak only to intelligence, and no mind absolutely unintelligent can ever be taught or ever come to know anything? |
55841 | Is Chione bewitched?" |
55841 | Is The Charge In History Against Him Sustained? |
55841 | Is it God, the living, personal God, who redeems, inspires, regenerates, sanctifies, and glorifies humanity, or is it not? |
55841 | Is it any wonder that a shade was cast over the rest of her life, and that she was never among the light- hearted or the gay? |
55841 | Is it because a secret conviction of her infallibility lurks in the minds of all who are Catholic by their reminiscences? |
55841 | Is it by its will fire melts wax, the winds propel the ship at sea, or the lightning rends the oak? |
55841 | Is it desiring to do all that he does? |
55841 | Is it here that we are to receive them?" |
55841 | Is it illness or magic that has worked this mental derangement? |
55841 | Is it lawful to do evil that good may come? |
55841 | Is it made saving by its quality of supernaturalness, or as proceeding from the grace of the Holy Spirit? |
55841 | Is it mischief?" |
55841 | Is it not possible that, had she been questioned at a later day, in other terms and under other circumstances, her reply might have been different? |
55841 | Is it not quite certain that they will side with the antichristians? |
55841 | Is it not so? |
55841 | Is it possible?--Why not? |
55841 | Is it radical revolution? |
55841 | Is it really so, that the voice of the bishops is of no weight, that it neither declares the sense nor speaks the authority of the Episcopal Church? |
55841 | Is it the brutal level which passes over all things to crush and to lower? |
55841 | Is it the chronology of the Bible or chronology as arranged by learned men that you have disproved? |
55841 | Is it to be supposed that we assert that Christianity has ever lacked enemies, and enemies acting in concert in their attacks? |
55841 | Is it true of one race alone, referable to one and the same epoch?" |
55841 | Is it we who by the aid of grace merit the reward, or is it the grace in us? |
55841 | Is its cause obscure, badly defined, ill- defended? |
55841 | Is man by divine right the sole proprietor of the domain of intelligence? |
55841 | Is n''t it, mother?" |
55841 | Is not intellectual ability a talent, and was not the servant of the gospel condemned for returning his to his lord unimproved? |
55841 | Is not one king the supreme head of the church? |
55841 | Is not science truth? |
55841 | Is not the party under a better guidance than in earlier days? |
55841 | Is not this horrible?" |
55841 | Is she short? |
55841 | Is she still in Meadowbrook?" |
55841 | Is she tall? |
55841 | Is the Book of Common Prayer no established rule for the order of divine worship? |
55841 | Is the work to be accomplished by practices of high piety and by productions intended for the edification of skilled believers? |
55841 | Is there a new conspiracy to denounce? |
55841 | Is there any danger here?" |
55841 | Is this a work that Catholics can prudently neglect? |
55841 | Is this all the light that we can gather from this source? |
55841 | Is this epoch anterior to the historical period?" |
55841 | Is this for want of intelligence or aptitude? |
55841 | Is this really the case? |
55841 | Is this the unspoken word that Chione might not utter? |
55841 | Is this what the Romanists call the Bible in the vulgar tongue?'' |
55841 | It believes and hopes in us; ought we to discourage it? |
55841 | It says to every accredited opinion, Have you any right to exist? |
55841 | It was Pilate''s question to our Lord:"What is truth?" |
55841 | Know it? |
55841 | Know you the true cause of alarm, the true peril? |
55841 | Ladies and gentlemen, will you be quiet?" |
55841 | Leger lay stretched out in his great coat, his feet to the fire, asleep, when the sentinel cried:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | Liberty is a right, but, if there is no right, how can you defend liberty as a right? |
55841 | Look at our generals who are married, do they fight as they used to?" |
55841 | Look at this;"and I gave her my crucifix--"does not this teach you to love and hope?" |
55841 | Many sects discussed and disputed: but truth? |
55841 | May they not all be owing to accidental causes? |
55841 | May we not advance the direct contrary? |
55841 | May we not rather say, it was pre- Adamite? |
55841 | Miss Madeleine, why should you say that prayer is better than sleep? |
55841 | Moreover, is it lawful, even provisionally, in the interest of science, to doubt, that is, to deny, the being of God? |
55841 | Moreover, what are we to do?--to what other party can we attach ourselves? |
55841 | Mr. Morton put out two of his fingers with an icy,"How are you?" |
55841 | Must they study the exact sciences, politics, the secret of government, military art? |
55841 | My mother, could I leave her thus? |
55841 | My name is Sister Magdalen; what shall I call_ you?_"She looked up with a sad face, and replied,"My name is Eva." |
55841 | Nay, was he not one of that pestiferous brood which De la Mennais had hatched in the woods of La Chesnaie, and which the Pope had solemnly condemned? |
55841 | Next question:"Has the dwelling of the primitive man in caverns been general? |
55841 | No; not absolutely, perhaps; but how can you prove they could and have? |
55841 | No? |
55841 | No? |
55841 | No? |
55841 | Nor for mine, perhaps?" |
55841 | Nothing? |
55841 | Now tell me truly, did you not recognize me and address yourself to me?" |
55841 | Now, do not be frightened; but I have decided to leave Paris by the midnight train: it is now ten o''clock; will you be ready?'' |
55841 | Now, tell me, sister, was not my punishment bitter? |
55841 | Now, tell me, what induced you to act in this dishonorable manner toward your benefactor?" |
55841 | Now, what can this be?" |
55841 | Now, whose fault is this? |
55841 | Of what account are they? |
55841 | On the other hand, what place is to be found in true religion for the_ subjective_ principle? |
55841 | On thy death- bed, hast thou after so many years kept thy pledge and made the shade of the murdered one at home in my court? |
55841 | Ought it not to be encouraged to speak of it in kindly terms, to place it in the brightest light, to make us understand and cherish it? |
55841 | Our Basher? |
55841 | Our secret will be safe with you, of course?" |
55841 | Percy,''I cried,''tell me, is this true? |
55841 | Raoul, Raoul, do you know me so little? |
55841 | Sardian, olive, rose- colored, green, scarlet, and ten thousand other dyes-- pray, of what use are they? |
55841 | Say what has caused your absence?" |
55841 | Say, Eva, shall this be? |
55841 | Say, will you stay with me?" |
55841 | Science borrows its remedies from the sap of venomous plants; why, then, may we not from passion, misfortune, or inequality draw much that is good? |
55841 | See that hair; it is like velvet, and the shadows of the head, how transparent and strong; it reminds one of Titian; do you not think so? |
55841 | Shall I ever make a tragic actor?" |
55841 | Shall I have joy if thou dispense Thy bounty on their need, And if thou pardonest their offence Feel not the loving deed? |
55841 | Shall I live to see true French art born into this world? |
55841 | Shall I remind you of Voltaire, who invented the name wretch, by which he designated the church? |
55841 | Shall blood flow again? |
55841 | Shall the innocent again wander in misery? |
55841 | Shall they pray in vain?" |
55841 | Shall those wretches always be our masters?" |
55841 | Shall we pass the woods of Orrigt? |
55841 | She gave a quick start, and said,"Who are you?" |
55841 | She was an old Alsatian, round and chubby, and, when I asked for the_ Capougner- Strasse_, she replied:"What will you pay for?" |
55841 | Should you be satisfied to send her there?" |
55841 | Since our Lord has declared that it is the''_ poor_ who are blessed,''and he himself asks,''How can ye believe, ye who receive honor one of another?'' |
55841 | Slowly, however, they are beginning to ask themselves the question which they should have asked in the beginning,"How shall it grow without a root?" |
55841 | Sometimes I imagined she would cry out,"O Joseph what are you thinking of? |
55841 | Spain groans beneath the yoke of the Saracen: would you not rather choose to be the deliverers of a great nation than the ruin of this fair country?" |
55841 | Speaking of Dolickem reminds me of Basher and his heroic sacrifice, about which I was speaking, was I not? |
55841 | Success must therefore follow our efforts; for if God is for us, who can withstand us? |
55841 | Such authors as M. Quinet find material here for their eloquence,(?) |
55841 | Suddenly she turned upon him with the question:{ 814}"And is Jesus Christ an inspired man, or is he God?" |
55841 | Taking this view, what is nature? |
55841 | Tell me, can I help you-- can I do anything for you? |
55841 | That is nothing to the purpose; can it say they can not have had a common origin? |
55841 | That one slave, as you see, has got that and more by heart; do you think it has no effect on him?" |
55841 | That will is the will of the creator: and does the author mean to assert that the distinction between the creator and the creature is unreal? |
55841 | The answer to the question, how? |
55841 | The beautiful hymn of St. Thomas,"Adoro Te devotè,"is added:"Devoutly I adore thee, Deity unseen, Why thy glory hidest''neath these shadows mean? |
55841 | The children then go to college or to a convent, and what becomes the mother''s chief care? |
55841 | The crown had resolved to check the atrocity; but how could it be accomplished? |
55841 | The fault of the writers? |
55841 | The first series referred to the very essence of the Christian religion; what is the subject of the second? |
55841 | The fourth was:"Is brass the product of indigenous industry, the result of a violent conquest, or the effect of new commercial relations?" |
55841 | The guards at the French gate raised the drawbridge, and the old watchmaker said:"You have seen him?" |
55841 | The ideas must be real, and therefore being; and what is perfect, universal, immutable, eternal, real and necessary being but God? |
55841 | The impetus once given, one must reach the goal; otherwise, who can say how low one may fall?" |
55841 | The men seeing me approach, looked distrustfully at me, as if to say:"Does_ he_ want some of our beef? |
55841 | The night was clear, and as we approached the bivouac, the sentry challenged:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | The old man asked:"You are rejoining your corps?" |
55841 | The old man looked at him in astonishment, and asked,"Didst thou place them there?" |
55841 | The old man, in a moment, continued his train of questions:"You were wounded?" |
55841 | The princess was so struck by it that she went up to her, and said by impulse,"Madam, were you not a religious?" |
55841 | The question put to us a few years since, with a smile of mixed incredulity and pity,"Do_ you_ believe that this country will ever become Catholic?" |
55841 | The question was, did Las Casas, in 1517, recommend the importation of negroes? |
55841 | The question, therefore, as between Christians, narrows itself to the simple issue, Which is the old religion, and what was primitive Christianity? |
55841 | The same as in men? |
55841 | The sergeant gazed at me and, seeing that I was yet so young, said kindly:"What is the matter with you, conscript?" |
55841 | The surgeon unwound the bandage, and asked:"Have you the cross?" |
55841 | The world demands liberty, but what avails a false and impracticable liberty? |
55841 | The writer will be told, You forsake us; you are a Catholic in spirit and intention, why not be wholly a Catholic? |
55841 | Their heroes are never wrong; for what hero in biography or romance can ever be wrong? |
55841 | Then I said:"Do you think, Aunt Grédel, that I would be capable of giving a gilt watch to one whom I love better than my own life? |
55841 | Then it is nothing, is unreal, a nullity, and how then can it ever be a force, or even an instrument of force? |
55841 | Then still again, what are you who make the denial? |
55841 | Then the story was true?" |
55841 | Then they would ask themselves, What motive can these Catholics have to wish us so fervently to become as they are? |
55841 | Then we may suppose her rhapsodies referred to the new sect?" |
55841 | Then what excuse could she frame for intruding? |
55841 | Then who will do the work?" |
55841 | Then, as if awakening from a horrible dream, I cried:"But shall I not see Catharine again?" |
55841 | There was the church, too, with its altars and flowers; who would tend them? |
55841 | They replied at once, Eh, Monsieur Goulden, the young man is lame; why speak of him? |
55841 | Think you that at once you will change them into thoroughly faithful Christians? |
55841 | Think you that there is on earth another place so blessed and joyful as this? |
55841 | Third question:"What relations are there between the men to whom we owe the megalithic monuments, and those who formed the lake dwellings?" |
55841 | This miserable existence, so full of pain and suffering? |
55841 | This sight roused the quartermaster''s indignation, and he cried:{ 741}"On what authority do you commit this pillage?" |
55841 | To attack the vices, meannesses, and misdeeds of the time, must they not know them, and by their own knowledge? |
55841 | To please the libertines? |
55841 | To what end? |
55841 | To whom are we to look for the realization of the good Abbé''s plan in our country? |
55841 | Turning his eyes suddenly upon? |
55841 | Two or three of the soldiers rose and left the room, and the fat landlord said:"You do not perhaps know that the large hall is on the Rue de Tilly?" |
55841 | Undeniably she violates the holiest of obligations; but have you not yourselves been blind and guilty? |
55841 | Undoubtedly, every man has the right to interrogate"every accredited_ opinion_"and to demand of it,"Have you any right to exist? |
55841 | Was England, then, in error? |
55841 | Was he afraid of ridicule or was he really convinced in making this concession? |
55841 | Was he not a liberal in politics, a friend of liberty, an admirer of American republicanism? |
55841 | Was it aware of the cause of this unusual kindliness of feeling? |
55841 | Was it his precipitancy of action in the measure? |
55841 | Was it marked by a buoy? |
55841 | Was it not Miriam, the sister of Moses, who taught music and sacred canticles to the young Israelites? |
55841 | Was it not most opportune, then, to enlighten still more and at once a public whose_ furore_ had but just died away? |
55841 | Was it not possible to bridge across that chasm? |
55841 | Was it not rather the traditions of Charlemagne it proposed to conform with, and was it not to prove a veritable Eldorado for Christian beliefs? |
55841 | Was it not she who inspired his wondrous creations with their irresistible charm? |
55841 | Was it not the mother of Samuel who proclaimed God the Lord of knowledge and the Giver of understanding? |
55841 | Was it pre- Lutheran? |
55841 | Was it quicker or slower in a heavy sea? |
55841 | Was it to follow the example set by its predecessor, and was the world to behold for the second time the papacy closely guarded by_ gens d''armes_? |
55841 | Was n''t it an excellent pun? |
55841 | Was not the government of the church, in the early ages, the result of the free choice of the faithful? |
55841 | Was not this enough? |
55841 | Was she not his soul of all other performers in the operas? |
55841 | Was the Median pea- fowl, we wonder, a more costly luxury than woodcock, or the Sicilian lamprey worse than Spanish mackerel? |
55841 | Was the archdeacon quite sure that low- churchmen were the real or sole offenders? |
55841 | Was this the real aim of the Paris Congress? |
55841 | We complain of the vanity of women, of their luxury and coquetry; but for what else do we prepare them, what else do we inculcate in their education? |
55841 | We hear it sometimes asked,"Why does the Catholic Church have so many canonizations, jubilees, and religious displays?" |
55841 | We may have some great trials together-- who knows? |
55841 | We wonder what learned and sincere Protestants, such as M. Guizot, think in their hearts of these bloody pages of their ancestors? |
55841 | Well, are you God? |
55841 | Well, what has geology done? |
55841 | Were all the monks in pursuit of a purely contemplative life? |
55841 | Were not respect for human liberty, love of justice, and opposition to tyranny and barbarity, the glory and actual essence of Christian belief? |
55841 | Were there no founders of cities, no evangelizers of savages? |
55841 | Were there no teachers, no benefactors of the poor, no cultivators of deserts, and woods, and wildernesses amongst them? |
55841 | Were they to sacrifice to their religious faith that political faith just born within them? |
55841 | What answer will the two hundred millions of Roman Catholics return? |
55841 | What are the facts in their established order? |
55841 | What are the friends of religion to do, when its enemies are so active? |
55841 | What are the thrones of the universe compared to that last place?" |
55841 | What are the words with which the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries achieved their success? |
55841 | What are we thinking of? |
55841 | What are you, then, I ask once more? |
55841 | What are you, then? |
55841 | What better could he do than seek refuge from detraction in the very bosom of the church? |
55841 | What better spot for a convent of_ expiation_ than that consecrated by such memories-- that in which such innocent victims had suffered? |
55841 | What can have made him think that our Episcopal Church is not true? |
55841 | What can he mean?" |
55841 | What can it mean?" |
55841 | What can make a book more attractive than fine engravings? |
55841 | What care I for the seasons now? |
55841 | What contradiction and surprise but can be looked for nowadays? |
55841 | What could the colonel do? |
55841 | What defects does she blame? |
55841 | What did Las Casas admit? |
55841 | What did it mean? |
55841 | What did it originally mean, and what does it mean now? |
55841 | What did these fervent and sincere Christians, animated by a firm resolve, propose to do? |
55841 | What directions are given for dress? |
55841 | What do I say? |
55841 | What do we gain by rejecting this definition, and defining it to be the word in a sentence that asserts? |
55841 | What do we see before us but ruin? |
55841 | What do we see in the first? |
55841 | What do you say to that? |
55841 | What do you say? |
55841 | What do you take me for, sir?" |
55841 | What do you think of that as a specimen of argument? |
55841 | What does it mean now? |
55841 | What facts has it observed and analyzed that warrant this conclusion against the Adamic origin of all men? |
55841 | What general view of religion or of science does he seek to bring out, illustrate, or establish? |
55841 | What harm, then, does the church do us when she presents us infallibly that truth which the mind needs for its support? |
55841 | What has taken place in this dark workshop, in this hell, precocious but not the less hopeless? |
55841 | What has the eighteenth century done? |
55841 | What have they on the other? |
55841 | What have you been doing since?" |
55841 | What have you proved yourself? |
55841 | What have you to do with who raised them or who destroyed them?" |
55841 | What if you are hungry? |
55841 | What is a well- appointed workshop? |
55841 | What is approaching? |
55841 | What is demanded of it not for its good, or that is not demanded by the very law of life itself? |
55841 | What is gained by calling adjectives and adverbs_ modifiers_, a name appropriate to adverbs only? |
55841 | What is here that does more than_ carry_, so to say, the great mystery round which they cluster? |
55841 | What is it in itself, apart from its application, or the manner of its use? |
55841 | What is it that is to come hereafter that makes us shudder at the mere thought of death? |
55841 | What is passing here? |
55841 | What is that Word Chione has offended? |
55841 | What is that something? |
55841 | What is that sound of hymns coming down the street? |
55841 | What is that you are saying to relieve your mind? |
55841 | What is that you say? |
55841 | What is the character of the life born of this communion in God? |
55841 | What is the chief end of one aspiring to be a queen in American society? |
55841 | What is the effect, then, of this false estimate of men and things? |
55841 | What is the meaning of this altered tone? |
55841 | What is the mind without truth, or intelligence in which nothing real is grasped? |
55841 | What is the natural consequence of this state of things? |
55841 | What is the_ differentia_ of that faith which really justifies? |
55841 | What is there to substitute in its stead? |
55841 | What is this but the absolute egoism of Fichte? |
55841 | What is this life to which we attach so great a price? |
55841 | What is your name?" |
55841 | What more do you want, Josephel?" |
55841 | What more was desired? |
55841 | What need was there to smash it? |
55841 | What parish would miss fifty dollars? |
55841 | What pleasure will you find in such reading? |
55841 | What possessed you to come out here to a city of the past? |
55841 | What priest or people begrudge it for so good a purpose? |
55841 | What relation do they bear to purpose, to the fulfilment of intention, to the discharge of function?" |
55841 | What right has the Italian kingdom to the Roman territory? |
55841 | What science brings so much out of so little? |
55841 | What sense can be given them? |
55841 | What should I do? |
55841 | What sort of man can he be who will persuade his fellow- creatures to enter into an engagement of this kind? |
55841 | What thence? |
55841 | What think you? |
55841 | What thinks the world of the high Anglican position at the present day? |
55841 | What was that probation? |
55841 | What was that?" |
55841 | What was the first thing you did with it?" |
55841 | What was to prevent them from being both Catholic and liberals? |
55841 | What were they? |
55841 | What will happen when the boundaries are broken through? |
55841 | What would appear on the other side? |
55841 | What would he have said of the female writers of our own day? |
55841 | What would you have them do? |
55841 | What, in fact, is a nation but a great community of sufferings, miseries, weaknesses, and maladies of mind and body? |
55841 | What, then, does he to whom belongs the wisdom and the power think on this subject? |
55841 | What, then, does it lack? |
55841 | What? |
55841 | Whatever has turned his head to Papacy? |
55841 | When I had knelt above an hour, she turned fiercely round, and said"Are you still there? |
55841 | When I remember all my days, And note what blessings each displays, What words can speak my grateful praise? |
55841 | When did it arise? |
55841 | When he had departed to do so, she turned to Lotis, and said earnestly:{ 812}"Lotis, when you return to Athens, will you do me a favor?" |
55841 | When or where did a Catholic ever"understand"the works of a Protestant in a Catholic sense? |
55841 | When people ask_ me_ for anything, do you know, I do not even dare to refuse them? |
55841 | When will I obtain the strength to look at thy earnest work? |
55841 | Whence came the idea of inducing any one to sign this infernal compact? |
55841 | Where and how begin life again under a new aspect? |
55841 | Where are they to- day for the people of our great cities? |
55841 | Where did Dr. Lord learn that patricians and nobles are synonymous terms? |
55841 | Where do you see peace, order, or prosperity? |
55841 | Where does she live?" |
55841 | Where has he lived, and how, until now?" |
55841 | Where has science done this? |
55841 | Where in the world are you taking us, conductor? |
55841 | Where shall a woman find consolation? |
55841 | Where shall we find them and how shall we recognize them? |
55841 | Where should she rest her weary head? |
55841 | Where was I? |
55841 | Where, then, is the evil, and in what consists the damage done to our nature by original sin? |
55841 | Where, then, will you find the fire of charity?" |
55841 | Where? |
55841 | Which are they? |
55841 | Which is to gain the day, science or the soul? |
55841 | Which is yours? |
55841 | Which shall win the victory? |
55841 | Who believes, or has believed, that Demosthenes''Philippics are more brilliant than his De Corona? |
55841 | Who brought those flowers?" |
55841 | Who can read these spoken thoughts, spoken rather to God than to man, and doubt him still? |
55841 | Who do you think it was?" |
55841 | Who does not know that Elpicia( the wife of Boëthius) composed hymns adopted by the Roman liturgy? |
55841 | Who does not see that we verge on socialism at present? |
55841 | Who else could have lifted these immense stones? |
55841 | Who ever said it did?" |
55841 | Who has not, in fancy, at least, sat down to rest under the shadow of her forests and her laws? |
55841 | Who is the painter who executed the picture of which you have spoken?" |
55841 | Who knows? |
55841 | Who objects to give it? |
55841 | Who raised these walls, Magas?" |
55841 | Who wanted it? |
55841 | Who was its author? |
55841 | Who will offer to her intelligence the rightful satisfaction it demands, and prevent her from feeling that she is a mere domestic drudge? |
55841 | Who will trouble themselves about them?" |
55841 | Who would complain of such a change? |
55841 | Whom can it terrify by its temerity? |
55841 | Whom does he bless? |
55841 | Whom shall we have to work for us, when the slave thinks himself as good as his master?" |
55841 | Why are there so many corrupt publications? |
55841 | Why are you here alone, and miserable?'' |
55841 | Why attempt to wrest from the Catholic Church the rights to which she lays claim? |
55841 | Why be so dishonest to yourselves as to refuse to see that which is quite evident to every one else? |
55841 | Why beset her with invidious questions and excite captious quarrels? |
55841 | Why cling to that fiction? |
55841 | Why did Magas turn pale as he said so? |
55841 | Why did her thoughts perpetually dwell on Magas as the only one who understood her, the sole being on earth who could appreciate her? |
55841 | Why did you leave without telling me you were going?" |
55841 | Why do n''t they make soldiers go on foot?" |
55841 | Why do n''t you answer me, conductor? |
55841 | Why do we so cling to it, and fear more to lose it than aught else in the world? |
55841 | Why does not Mr. Alger ask himself the reason of this increasing immorality, and the diminution of the number of marriages? |
55841 | Why else did she send me to you?" |
55841 | Why have those causes been so combined? |
55841 | Why have you called the human soul the divine image, if it is not capable of happiness?" |
55841 | Why have you fired all hearts, in speaking to them of an indwelling God, who is to restore all things to more than primitive order and happiness? |
55841 | Why instruct through the ear and not through the eye? |
55841 | Why is this? |
55841 | Why not write a tract, or a good article for a Catholic paper? |
55841 | Why not, then, conclude that all the languages of mankind, extinct or extant, have sprung from one common original? |
55841 | Why overtly batter its walls? |
55841 | Why seek to change that which has always been? |
55841 | Why shall the terrible accuser, who has the misery of thousands on his soul, return?" |
55841 | Why should a reconciliation be at present peculiarly difficult and embarrassing? |
55841 | Why should the church not be so? |
55841 | Why then should we not leave to these missionaries the task in which they have made such satisfactory progress? |
55841 | Why these onslaughts on Christianity? |
55841 | Why thus retard our journey? |
55841 | Why was it given to them? |
55841 | Why wonder at all I have implied? |
55841 | Why, he asks, should the church be so unswerving under one aspect, yet so pliant under another? |
55841 | Why, if the deliverer is here, is he not announced?" |
55841 | Why, then, did she hover around her destruction, as a moth hovers around the candle? |
55841 | Why? |
55841 | Why? |
55841 | Will he say this is all philosophy can give? |
55841 | Will it do for us to sit down and express our longings for the good old times when there were no printed books? |
55841 | Will you let me put this around you?" |
55841 | Will you lose the prize fame holds out? |
55841 | Will you sacrifice my love, my hope, my happiness, for a scruple?'' |
55841 | Will you spend your life whining out loverlike complaints, like some silly Damon of his cruel Doris or Phillis? |
55841 | Will you take some tea, ma''am? |
55841 | Wilt thou now forsake him, to follow thy own passion?" |
55841 | With a curious mixture of hardness, astonishment, and anger, he finally broke out into the words:"Whom do I see here? |
55841 | Without religion, and above all, without Christianity, where is the remedy for all these evils, the consolation for all these misfortunes? |
55841 | Would Magas give it her? |
55841 | Would not intellectual progress pave the way for moral progress? |
55841 | Would the old endeavors to form an alliance between the throne and the altar now recommence? |
55841 | Would they give us an armistice if they had beaten us? |
55841 | Would they not exercise a new and salutary influence at home and in the world? |
55841 | Would you be kind enough to send me some?'' |
55841 | Would you be_ so_ cruel? |
55841 | Would you master that task? |
55841 | Would your learned critics change Gluck''s_ Armida_ into a nun''s hymn, or have his wild motets of_ Tauris_ sung in the style of Palestrina?" |
55841 | Yes, you would, would n''t you, you dear old fellow? |
55841 | Yet can any honest man say that he does not know what they mean to attack, or that he can not explain what"ritualism"is? |
55841 | Yet have they gained any? |
55841 | Yet why should I detain him? |
55841 | You can sit there twiddling your thumbs as if you did not agree with me; but I do n''t mind you; for what do you know about babies? |
55841 | You defend seven sacraments: how so when there are only two?" |
55841 | You do not believe me? |
55841 | You hate and slander him, then, because he honestly advised you to desist from useless efforts?" |
55841 | You have brought it with you?" |
55841 | You have loved her well, my poor Aimée; will you not give her up to His keeping who hath loved her best of all?" |
55841 | You here again, old fellow?" |
55841 | You know that pretty spot at the end of the lane, how smooth the sward is, and how gently the ground slopes down to the sudden brink of the Palisades? |
55841 | You know the Lady Damaris?" |
55841 | You recollect that hot Thursday in July? |
55841 | You say he comes again? |
55841 | You see very clearly that it is found on the chest, and you put it on the knee; why not on the heel? |
55841 | You still disbelieve me? |
55841 | You think my heart was beating fast? |
55841 | You would not part with it now, Mr. Basher, would you, even for a lady''s smile?" |
55841 | You, sir; perhaps his son?" |
55841 | Your whole inner life claims expansion and sympathy? |
55841 | Zunnier was wild with wrath, and wished to pursue him to Counewitz; but how could we find him among four or five hundred houses? |
55841 | [ Footnote 18] Liberty for whom and liberty for what? |
55841 | [ Footnote 22: Is it possible that_ waterfalls_ were worn in those days?] |
55841 | [ Footnote 43] Did it disappear, this city of God, which was to be placed on the mountain and seen by all people? |
55841 | [ Footnote 4][ Footnote 4: Does the reader believe these warnings uncalled for in American society? |
55841 | _ Amico mio!_ will you be checked midway in your glorious career? |
55841 | _ Did I agree with him?_ Of course I did. |
55841 | _ Fact_ is something done, and implies a doer; what or who, then, is the doer? |
55841 | _ Good gracious?_ Well, I do n''t mind your saying it now, after what I have told you. |
55841 | _ Have I a black woman for a wet- nurse?_ No, I have''nt a black woman for a wet- nurse, nor a white woman either. |
55841 | _ I am malicious?_ Not I; but a poor, dear baby that can not protect itself must not be abused with impunity. |
55841 | _ I sprang up and ran after him? |
55841 | _ Num quid Christianus factus es ut in hoc saeculo floreres?_"Let us look more closely into this great question. |
55841 | _ Ought to be very careful of him?_ The idea! |
55841 | _ People have wet- nurses?_ Yes, just as they have the cholera or the typhoid fever, I suppose, because they can not help it. |
55841 | _ Si Deus pro nob is, quis contra nos?_"The necessity of a Sunday- school library no one disputes. |
55841 | _ The divinity of truth and good is their bond._"What is this"divinity of truth and good"? |
55841 | _ Which of course, I''m jealous of?_ Not the least. |
55841 | _ You wo n''t laugh any more?_ Very well; then do n''t. |
55841 | _ can_ you care for me; can you give me your heart for mine?" |
55841 | _ you are very glad we can not?_ Pray, what do you mean by that? |
55841 | _ you are very glad we can not?_ Pray, what do you mean by that? |
55841 | a monster, the Duke d''Alba an executioner, and that they are solely responsible for all the blood shed in the Low Countries? |
55841 | a soul without being? |
55841 | and Marie Antoinette superior to them in either public or private virtue? |
55841 | and a priest too, perhaps, who knows? |
55841 | and do the chosen few themselves always set generous examples only? |
55841 | and have you destroyed it?" |
55841 | and is that tear for me?" |
55841 | and what is the republic, but the natural government of a society that has lost all its former anchors and traditions?'' |
55841 | are we no longer veterans of the army of the Sambre and Meuse?" |
55841 | are you a reality or a sham? |
55841 | are you a reality or a sham?" |
55841 | are you a reality or a sham?" |
55841 | as witness this unmaidenly step of visiting these glades alone and unprotected? |
55841 | asked the queen, with wondering eyes;"does the hero, my husband, know the possibility of fear?" |
55841 | can I, dare I hope for it?" |
55841 | can it be possible that my liege lord has forgotten the duties of a valiant knight?" |
55841 | can it be possible? |
55841 | cried Ally, appealing to me,"is n''t it true? |
55841 | cried Mademoiselle de Locherais, who had just awakened with a start;"would monsieur by any chance ask any one to come in here?" |
55841 | cried Pinto indignantly,"will you be good enough to put back that pipe? |
55841 | cried the impresario, wringing his hands,"without a Geronimo or a Falerio?" |
55841 | do I consent to sit? |
55841 | do n''t you know that it is one of the dreams of my old age to have my portrait by you? |
55841 | do you say you are not God? |
55841 | exclaimed Ally,"what makes you afraid?" |
55841 | five years ago, and you repeat it now, word for word like a task,"said Magas;"did you hear it more than once?" |
55841 | for everybody?" |
55841 | had repented of his wicked attack upon the church, what would he have been obliged to do to reconcile himself with Rome? |
55841 | have I not promised you freedom if you but return my love? |
55841 | have you heard such an one tell you so to live, as that death might only remove you to a place where there is no dying? |
55841 | he said,"and how many have returned?" |
55841 | how can I smoke and talk? |
55841 | how did she offend? |
55841 | how gain mastery over them? |
55841 | how move their hearts? |
55841 | how? |
55841 | is he coming in here? |
55841 | is it possible? |
55841 | is n''t it?" |
55841 | is not mine so to you?" |
55841 | is not the Lady Damaris more a mother than a mistress to you? |
55841 | is now,"How soon do you think it will come to pass?" |
55841 | is thy justice? |
55841 | may I never, never love thee again? |
55841 | not forgotten that yet?" |
55841 | or buy it and give to your infidel or Protestant neighbors? |
55841 | or did an oracle speak? |
55841 | or did sea- sickness in any way affect its development? |
55841 | or science of the soul without science of being, that is, without ontology? |
55841 | or was the transformation a gradual process, like the changes of temperature? |
55841 | or, if she aims at accommodating and condescending in the latter, why remain inflexible in the former? |
55841 | said Lepré, who had asked the cattle- merchant, in his inventory,"my friend, what_ is_ your name?" |
55841 | said he,"Monsieur Goulden is not coming, then?" |
55841 | that is, all that can be known or proved by natural reason? |
55841 | that some divine hand is pressing down within her the word that is panting for expression? |
55841 | that you will instantly inspire them with a holy fervor? |
55841 | then why dally with the tempter? |
55841 | thought she;"the new Sappho, the Aspasia of the age? |
55841 | was it advising the importation of Africans, some of whom might have been captured in an unjust war, which incensed the Deity? |
55841 | was it not most important not to adjourn, even by a brief delay, a decisive refutation? |
55841 | was it philosophy? |
55841 | was it poetry? |
55841 | was so perfect, why did not the"cautiously conservative"movement stop with"that most perfect specimen of a_ reformed_ Catholic liturgy"? |
55841 | were you a dream of madness, or the voice of the living God?" |
55841 | were you good or evil angels? |
55841 | were you spirits of darkness? |
55841 | were you the envoys of the Lord? |
55841 | what are those which are in the present day so much abused? |
55841 | what are you doing?" |
55841 | what can we say to him? |
55841 | what did he say?" |
55841 | what do you think of her, father?" |
55841 | what do you want, old joker? |
55841 | what else could it be?" |
55841 | what if it has fallen into the hands of our enemies?" |
55841 | what matter, when a brilliant star appears in heaven above us, If the lamp burn dimly? |
55841 | what meets the eye and ear? |
55841 | what must she do to appease the divine wrath?" |
55841 | what shall we do? |
55841 | what was that? |
55841 | what was that?" |
55841 | where will we sup, then?" |
55841 | who will give a legitimate impulse to her sometimes over- excited imagination? |
55841 | whose gains are the most genuine? |
55841 | why are the poor Calvinists to be blamed for following their own consciences, and for asking for a revision of the liturgy? |
55841 | why seek again what thou hast once abjured? |
55841 | why so gloomy?" |
55841 | will you plead for the unfortunates who are hidden by Hergereita in the forest, and wait for a gleam of hope? |
55841 | would not one suffice? |
55841 | would you check the expansion of that fairest of divine works, a soul where God has implanted a germ of ideal life? |
55841 | you understand?" |
55841 | { 13} The whole question between Rome and the world, turn it as we will, comes back always to this: Is man God, or the creature of God? |
55841 | { 16} Society needs law, and how does the church harm it by teaching the law of God, without which it can not subsist? |
55841 | { 229}_ First thought always about baby?_ To be sure, bless his little heart, and the last too! |
55841 | { 230}_ Simply because Dan loves them?_ Simply because Dan loves them; and if that is not good enough reason, I do n''t know what is. |
55841 | { 283} Has not this manner of war, they say, ever raged between the lay spirit and the religious spirit? |
55841 | { 30} If all these names have been the names of saints whose aim and supreme inspiration was religion, why wonder? |
55841 | { 322} At last we gained the street, and Father Brainstein said:"You have heard of the great Russian disaster, Monsieur Joseph?" |
55841 | { 356}"She is not hurt, then?" |
55841 | { 363} Do you not observe, also, how many men mingle with the women? |
55841 | { 364} What were the intentions of the new empire? |
55841 | { 406} Is there any reason to expect improvement? |
55841 | { 420}"Why, that is your name?" |
55841 | { 435} The grace being given, constituting its subjects in the state of justice and sanctity, what was it? |
55841 | { 488}"''Why should we adjourn till another day what can be so well ended now?'' |
55841 | { 588} What has Protestantism done? |
55841 | { 613}"And what do we gain by it?" |
55841 | { 648}"To take care of Cremato''s daughters shall be my work, but perhaps his student has found his way to the heart of one of them?" |
55841 | { 655}"You have read my book, they tell me?" |
55841 | { 677}"What harm is there in sunning myself on the river- banks awhile?" |
55841 | { 679}"Is it possible to remove her from the path of that Magas?" |
55841 | { 717} Have you heard such an one, in bidding you farewell, whisper that it was not for ever? |
55841 | { 735}"Yes, yes,"said the surgeon kindly;"and now what is the matter with you?" |
55841 | { 756} Where has he learned that the Virgin has been made the object of absolute worship? |
55841 | { 787} Did I tell you, sister, that the first thing I heard when I came to England was that my mother was dead? |
55841 | { 809}"And what religion was that?" |
55841 | { 843} Besides this, why should the bishop feel remorse for what was done ignorantly, when engaged in the holy work to promote the salvation of souls? |
55841 | { 854} Why is it less womanly to prescribe as a physician than to tend as a nurse? |