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 |
---|---|
34818 | May not this very difference help to explain the second"completion"of the church? |
36552 | Another style of architecture was setting in, the Decorated, and where could it be better inaugurated than in such a church as this? |
36552 | Who built it? |
36552 | Who conceived this stately hall, with this elegant vestibule unique in the cloisters of Europe? |
36552 | Who furnished the funds by which it was founded and completed? |
29820 | How many have really noticed that none of the diagrams, which show the ground- plan of this cathedral, indicate the existence of any transepts? |
29820 | What, say you, can we praise? |
29820 | Who thinks to- day of Coutances as of being a"cathedral town?" |
21688 | And why beautiful? |
21688 | Of this Ruskin said in his lecture,[165]"Do you recollect the west window of your own Dunblane Cathedral? |
21688 | What has religion gained by it? |
21688 | What is the Church the better for their enrichment? |
43402 | Where is the archbishop? |
43402 | Where is the traitor? |
43402 | Did he build an earlier church, and that which stood over this crypt later? |
43402 | Earle, by Flaxman; Bishop John Blythe(?) |
43402 | In this chapel there are some interesting monuments-- Sir George Nowers( 1425)( with good example of armour); Prior Guymond(?) |
43402 | John Gay( buried?). |
43402 | There are monuments here of Dean Dawes( 1867); Bishop Godwin? |
43402 | What do ye in the House of God in warlike equipment?" |
43402 | Whither should they go? |
43402 | _ Who_ chose his epitaph? |
35212 | All had distinctly inconsistent details grafted upon them; how could it have been otherwise with the various fortunes of their houses? |
35212 | An ancient( pagan?) |
35212 | Antibes Transferred to Grasse Apt First century(?) |
35212 | But why not? |
35212 | III ST. REPARATA DE NICE"What would you, then? |
35212 | Says a willing but unknowing French writer:"Had Demetrius-- who came to Gap in the first century-- any immediate successors? |
35212 | Since the Concordat what have we had? |
35212 | St. Maxim(?) |
35212 | Who ever goes to Aix now? |
35212 | Width, 55 feet(?) |
35212 | feet Width of cathedral, 50(?) |
35212 | feet Width of nave, 88 feet Height of nave, 98 feet ST. PIERRE D''ALET Primitive cathedral, IXth century(?) |
35212 | he was met with the prompt and significant rejoinder,"Who made thee king?" |
22718 | And do you think it can be true,the traveller asked,"that Bishops held mysterious prisoners in that tower for most dreary lengths of time?" |
22718 | And what do you see? |
22718 | To Senez? |
22718 | What is it? |
22718 | Why,asks a mediæval text- book of science,"is the sun so red in the evening?" |
22718 | You ask me? |
22718 | And a hotel? |
22718 | And yet, in spite of some native peculiarities of structure, why should not the general idea have been imported? |
22718 | Are they greater than those of the North? |
22718 | Are they inferior to them? |
22718 | But who can tell when people talk so much? |
22718 | By what simple, superficial sign can this architecture be recognised by those who are to see it for the first time? |
22718 | Could one desire more on this earth?" |
22718 | Ho- là, thou whited sepulchre, thinkest thou I will get out and carry thee? |
22718 | If conceivable in the Oriental mind, why not in that of the West? |
22718 | Was he stepping where once had been a grand and busy Forum, was he looking at the Temple of some great Roman god? |
22718 | What would you have me do? |
22718 | Where should he find another thirty sous for his poor? |
22718 | Who can give a dead date, much less a living fact, concerning the life of that Gervais who conceived the great Gothic height of Narbonne? |
22718 | Who shall decide? |
22718 | You too, Monsieur, are coming perhaps? |
40356 | Are they really deserving of charity, or only lazy scoundrels? |
40356 | But what about_ Los Pobres_, the beggars? |
40356 | Tell me, sir, to whom does all the fine country of the Vega belong? |
40356 | What dost thou here? |
40356 | Why work, señor, when you have the sun? 40356 --and who can say that the Malagueno is far wrong? 40356 And Toledo''s churches? 40356 And Toledo''s convents? 40356 Arch of Santa Maria 242 CADIZ At one time the greatest port in the world--Where are thy glories now, oh, Cadiz?" |
40356 | But Cordova like her world- famed sons, sleeps-- and who can say that it would be better now if her sleep were broken? |
40356 | Do you wonder at the tears that suffused the eyes of Boabdil as he turned for a last look at this incomparable spot? |
40356 | Is there anywhere so grand and varied an outline of plain and mountain? |
40356 | Over three hundred feet above the ground, the wonder is-- how did it get there? |
40356 | Seville suffered terribly from the horrors of those dark times; even now-- when a ring at the bell calls forth:"Who is there?" |
40356 | THE ALHAMBRA] How is it possible to describe the Alhambra? |
40356 | The beautiful cloisters proper are filled with modern opaque glass--"Muy frio"answered the verger to my question,"Por que?" |
40356 | To- morrow? |
40356 | VIEW FROM THE HARBOUR] If you ask me,"What is Malaga to- day?" |
40356 | What do you think his lunacy was? |
40356 | What more could woman want? |
40356 | Yet Salamanca still remains the Spain of my imagination, for was not all this part and parcel of my dream? |
40356 | [ Illustration: SEGOVIA AT SUNSET] One often hears the question asked-- why are there no trees in Spain? |
40356 | and how has it preserved its equipoise these last three hundred years? |
46069 | ''Danger?'' 46069 ''How so?'' |
46069 | ''No, sir,''retorted the officer frowningly,''nothing of the sort; do you not realize that you are in great danger?'' 46069 ''You are the Mayor Odent?'' |
46069 | ''You have fired on our men?'' 46069 Did your teeth ache badly?" |
46069 | Do these people never rest? |
46069 | In God''s name,answered Joan,"are you making a mock of me, Captain? |
46069 | Must the King be driven from his kingdom and we become English? |
46069 | What do you here, my dear? |
46069 | What is to be thought of her? 46069 Who is thy Lord?" |
46069 | Who is your Lord? |
46069 | A strange story; but then these are strange times, and who shall say that this is unworthy of credence? |
46069 | And for what good was all this, one asks? |
46069 | And how to repay such kindness? |
46069 | And now what is left in place of the gray old churches, the quiet monasteries, the fruitful farms and flocks and the dense forests? |
46069 | But the treasures which it contained, now either destroyed or carried off to Berlin, who shall say if they can ever be replaced? |
46069 | Gentle dauphin, she said one day,"why do you not believe me? |
46069 | Had John of Luxembourg come out of sheer curiosity, or to relieve himself of certain scruples by offering Joan a chance for her life? |
46069 | How could the people who dwell in this terrible spot be other than debased? |
46069 | Ransom me? |
46069 | The reader will probably exclaim:"Well, if this is Ruskin''s idea of a''happy walk,''what then would be his description of a gloomy one?" |
46069 | There were twin brothers who did the same, in some remote period, after refusing to open the gates to Wenceslaus, or was it Baldwin of the Iron Arm*? |
46069 | What could be expected from the dreams of a young peasant girl of nineteen? |
46069 | What of it? |
46069 | What vituperation did she not address to us? |
46069 | When will you set out?" |
46069 | Where shall the artist seek the matchless châteaux gardens, which took centuries in the making? |
46069 | Why should we priests not give our blood?'' |
10120 | Il Santissimo does not suppose they all come in by the gate? 10120 ''Well, then,''quod Maister More,''how say you in this matter? 10120 Alas, whence do they come who begat them, from what have they issued out? 10120 All these she may well boast of, for what other land can match them quite? 10120 And if a man would know the truth, let us say, of the thirteenth century here in England, where else will he find any answer? 10120 And sicke that they assured bee Ehche toe another in harte That nothinge shall them seperate Untylle deathe doe them parte? 10120 And what remains of the College of St Elizabeth, and, but for a Norman doorway, now in Catholic hands, of the Hospital of St Mary Magdalen? 10120 But what a glorious church it is, and if the rest were like it, what idea must we have of the splendour of New Romney in the thirteenth century? 10120 But what after all if he should be right in part at least? 10120 But who are those that now begin to fill their places? 10120 Do we not there see the truth; can stones lie or an answer be demanded of them according to folly? 10120 Do you climb up through the Hanger and admire the beeches there? 10120 Do you linger in the Plestor? 10120 Do you think they could endure? 10120 I say nothing of the rivers, for who could number them? 10120 If he were right why should he forego his claim, to satisfy De Warenne who was wrong? 10120 In such a situation, before the railways revolutionised travel in England, how could Ashford have had any importance? 10120 Is it not they who now sit in Becket''s place? 10120 Is there another font in England more wonderful than that square black marble basin sculptured in the twelfth century with the story of St Nicholas? 10120 Must one regret their loss? 10120 No relic do I say? 10120 Of all this what remains? 10120 Of these, what remains? 10120 On that my friend was angered and turning to me he said,''What, do these brutes imagine that we must kiss every good man''s shoe? 10120 Said I not well that it was as the foundation of England? 10120 They say all this coast has strong attractions for the geologist; but what of the poet and painter? 10120 This surely was within the Saxon building as it must have been within any church that may have stood here in Roman times? 10120 Those seventeen miles of richest pasture which lie in an infinite peace between Appledore and Dungeness, to whom do we owe them and their blessedness? 10120 Was it the Romans? 10120 We may well ask why not to Malwood Castle, which was close by? 10120 What ancient claim Hast thou to that right pleasant name? 10120 What can have been the thoughts of the greatest of men, helpless in the midst of this treacherous and unknown sea? 10120 What comforte reste them then To ease them of ther smarte But for to thincke and myndful bee Of them they love in harte? 10120 What could Harold do? 10120 What do you mean? |
10120 | What is Berlin but a brutalised village, or Paris now but cosmopolis, or Rome but a universe? |
10120 | What more can a man want or at least expect from England of my heart? |
10120 | What of Glastonbury and Amesbury, older far, and of those many hundred others which stood up strong before God for our souls-- without avail? |
10120 | What thinke ye to be the cause of these shelves and flattes that stop up Sandwiche haven?'' |
10120 | Where did it stand? |
10120 | Which of these ways was I to follow? |
10120 | Who knows? |
10120 | Who may know what is in the heart of God? |
10120 | Why? |
10120 | Wite ye nat wher ther stant a litel town Which that y- cleped is Bop- up- and- down Under the Blee in Caunterbury weye? |
10120 | Yet did Caesar sleep? |
10120 | You think that nothing at all, the most ordinary sight in modern England? |
10120 | had brought into England as part of his penance for the murder of St Thomas? |
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? |
43170 | Alack, why could n''t the master keep me on as a prentice? |
43170 | Already? 43170 And Hugh a brave prentice, what thinkest thou of that, goodwife?" |
43170 | And hast thou friends in Gascony, too, Dick- o''-the- Hill? |
43170 | And how came you idle? |
43170 | And how fell it out? |
43170 | And is that thy beast? |
43170 | And may be thy son in good earnest? |
43170 | And so thy father is sick to death in there? |
43170 | And that would content thee? |
43170 | And the queen was fair, goodman? |
43170 | And thou hast seen and spoken with him? 43170 And thou thinkest I might catch the trick of it?" |
43170 | And thou wouldst sooner chip stones than be in my household? 43170 And thou, too?" |
43170 | And what brought thy father here? |
43170 | And what knowest thou of King Edward? |
43170 | And what part wilt thou choose for thy share? |
43170 | And when does the king ask for aid except in case of need? 43170 And where,"inquired the Franciscan,"where dost thou purpose going when the fair is ended?" |
43170 | And which is that? |
43170 | And which shalt thou choose? |
43170 | And who has given you burgesses to speak for you, ay, and passed laws putting the ay and the nay into your own hands? |
43170 | And without a mother, who will mend thy clothes? 43170 And you would throw away his advancement for a dream?" |
43170 | And''twas there you learnt the French? |
43170 | And,continued Matthew, unheeding,"thou wottest that the licence to all foreigners expires to- day, and that they must leave the fair? |
43170 | Art thou hurt, my Moll, and where? |
43170 | Art thou the new boy? 43170 Ay, didst thou so? |
43170 | Ay,said Gervase, hesitatingly,"and thou wilt follow his craft?" |
43170 | Ay? 43170 Ay?" |
43170 | But you think he knows? |
43170 | Come to the great Stourbridge fair with thy father and mother? |
43170 | Couldst not carve a Saint Margaret as well as a Saint Cecilia? 43170 Didst see his posy?" |
43170 | Didst thou so, my popinjay? 43170 Do they want him?" |
43170 | Does the knight come here then to see me? |
43170 | Doth he bite? |
43170 | Edgar, dost thou hear? |
43170 | Father, father,cried Joan, running in,"mother bids me ask whether thou hast told Nicholas Harding to come and help her with the tables? |
43170 | Father,said the boy, sitting up and rubbing his eyes,"are we safe?" |
43170 | Father? |
43170 | For Roger? |
43170 | Friar Luke, tell me truly, do you still dread for me this journey to Exeter? |
43170 | Goodman, where shall I be most likely to find Master Hamlyn? |
43170 | Goodman,said Hugh, hesitatingly,"hast thou heard aught of Roger?" |
43170 | Goodwife, you understand it as I do? 43170 Hanging?" |
43170 | Hath he not? |
43170 | Hath he really stuck Spot up there? |
43170 | Hath he set anyone on fire? |
43170 | Hath it aught to do with thy spiritual condition? |
43170 | Have you thought of his taking the habit? |
43170 | Hearken, master,--to Bassett--"who is likely to buy such a beast?" |
43170 | How long will he live, sir leech? |
43170 | How now, my masters? |
43170 | How then? |
43170 | How was it? |
43170 | How wilt thou catch him? 43170 How, master?" |
43170 | How? 43170 Hugh Bassett,"said the bishop, pointing to the board,"is that thy work?" |
43170 | Hugh, when will it be finished-- truly? 43170 I always heard he was an easy man, and so he suffers his apprentices to sleep in working hours? |
43170 | I may get the block ready for you, sir? |
43170 | I shall? |
43170 | If he would be a stone- cutter? |
43170 | If it goes on, we may get in to- morrow night? |
43170 | If you stand in need of a witness,began Matthew, but the sailor interrupted him--"Witnesses? |
43170 | In good sooth? 43170 Is anyone else drowned?" |
43170 | Is aught the matter? |
43170 | Is he hurt? |
43170 | Is it a dream? |
43170 | Is it new to thee? |
43170 | Is it really then to be to- morrow? |
43170 | Is that what makes him so thin? |
43170 | Is that you, Dick Simpkins? |
43170 | Is the child hurt? |
43170 | Is the poor monkey at your house? |
43170 | It is bad work? |
43170 | It is the monkey, Friar Nicholas-- might he not bring it for madam, our mother, to see? 43170 Joan, hast thou heard where Roger''s is to be?" |
43170 | Little, like me? 43170 May n''t I go?" |
43170 | May we not be going back, sir? |
43170 | Might I speak for him? 43170 Might he not have escaped?" |
43170 | My Lord the King,he stammered,"is it not?" |
43170 | Nay, but why? |
43170 | Nay, father, but--"But what? |
43170 | Nay, goodman, when did Roger ask thy counsel? 43170 Nay?" |
43170 | Nor fear robbers? |
43170 | Not I. I am going to try to shape something like Mistress Thomasin-- well, why dost thou laugh? |
43170 | Not a demon? 43170 Not that traitor?" |
43170 | Not? 43170 Now, Wat, what tool is that thou art using?" |
43170 | Now, in good sooth, was ever anything so foolish as that he should have hidden himself as he hath done? |
43170 | Now, is aught wanted? |
43170 | One day,whispered his father,"Master Gervase will take thee as apprentice; thou wilt serve faithfully, my Hugh?" |
43170 | Or thy worldly matters? 43170 Our Wolf?" |
43170 | Perhaps also thou hast learnt to read? |
43170 | Prithee, dost thou suppose I should leave thee here to drown? 43170 Prithee, goodwife, hast thou any place where thou canst bestow this safely?" |
43170 | Prithee, how? |
43170 | Reverend sir,he said,"who of all our guild would know best what I can or can not do?" |
43170 | Roger? |
43170 | Said I not so? 43170 Said I not, said I not,"--he began, and then,"no one can say aught against thy work now; but, Hugh--""Ay?" |
43170 | Saw you ever the king, goodman? |
43170 | Sayest thou so? |
43170 | Sayest thou so? |
43170 | Seest thou not the difference? 43170 Shall I get thee aught, father?" |
43170 | Shall we come and see him? |
43170 | So thou hast caught our words, and wilt bespeak the work thyself? 43170 The fatigue?" |
43170 | The king called her a fair maiden, what thinkest thou of that, goodman? |
43170 | Then, wherefore not? 43170 There is one thing thou hast all but forgotten,"said the friar;"the names of thy tormentors? |
43170 | There, is that better? 43170 Think? |
43170 | Thinkest thou so? |
43170 | Thinkest? 43170 Thou art a pale- faced urchin,"he said good- humouredly;"have thy friends left thee behind and forgotten thee?" |
43170 | Thou hast heard the relation of its keeping? |
43170 | Thou thinkest so? |
43170 | Thou thinkest well of thy Roger? 43170 Thou wilt take us to the fair, wilt thou not?" |
43170 | Thou wilt? 43170 To whom canst thou complain with the goodman ill? |
43170 | Two landsmen on board? 43170 Walter Bennet?" |
43170 | Wat? |
43170 | Well, why that doleful tone? |
43170 | What evidence hast thou against Roger? |
43170 | What for? |
43170 | What harm could it bring thee, goody? |
43170 | What has come to Wat? |
43170 | What has come to thee, Wat? 43170 What has come to thee? |
43170 | What has put that into thy head? 43170 What hast thou in thy mad head? |
43170 | What is it? |
43170 | What made thee take to the craft? |
43170 | What makes the master take another prentice? 43170 What means this brawling?" |
43170 | What need for that when the goodwife here could do it? |
43170 | What news? |
43170 | What now? 43170 What said he? |
43170 | What said the knight to thee? |
43170 | What think you, my lord, of the archbishop''s mandate? |
43170 | What thinkest thou the good friar hit upon? 43170 What to represent?" |
43170 | What will become of him when his father is dead? |
43170 | What wilt thou do with thy monkey? |
43170 | What, goodman? |
43170 | What, is that the poor beast which those young villains would have stoned? 43170 What?" |
43170 | When didst thou this? |
43170 | When wilt thou learn that brains are better than fists? 43170 When, since the days of Alfred, has there been an English king like our King Edward?" |
43170 | Where got ye the beast? |
43170 | Where is Hugh Bassett? |
43170 | Where is Hugh? |
43170 | Where is the use? 43170 Where will he go?" |
43170 | Where wilt thou live? |
43170 | Where''s the churl that pushed her off? 43170 Where? |
43170 | Where? |
43170 | Wherefore? |
43170 | Who could think of it then? |
43170 | Who thou wilt fight? |
43170 | Who was Edulf? |
43170 | Who''s this? |
43170 | Who? 43170 Why art thou in this dark corner by thyself?" |
43170 | Why does n''t he like me? |
43170 | Why dost thou not go and look for thy friend Hugh? |
43170 | Why? |
43170 | Why? |
43170 | Will the judges say whether this design is the same as that carved by Roger Brewer? |
43170 | Wilt thou come on a voyage to Dartmouth? |
43170 | Wilt thou, Hugh? |
43170 | With Master Gervase? |
43170 | Wouldst thou then have another take the work? 43170 And Agrippa? |
43170 | And Edgar-- where is Edgar? |
43170 | And Gervase? |
43170 | And Hugh? |
43170 | And art not glad?" |
43170 | And can he do tricks? |
43170 | And carry out thy designs? |
43170 | And did these fellows steal thy monkey?" |
43170 | And hast thou,"he added more cheerily,"hast thou forgotten the corbels thou hast to do for the bishop?" |
43170 | And he works fast, and will get the advantage of me, because the master will not spare me while he is so ill. Out on him, what can I do?" |
43170 | And how came it broken?" |
43170 | And so nothing will serve thee but hard blows? |
43170 | And so thou wouldst be a soldier?" |
43170 | And what said he?" |
43170 | And what sort of carving was this rebellion of thine?" |
43170 | And what will Mistress Thomasin say of thy caring to see a man pilloried?" |
43170 | And wherefore?" |
43170 | And who are the little varlets? |
43170 | And whom have we here?" |
43170 | And, Hugh, thou hast heard thy mother speak of Exeter? |
43170 | And-- but I warrant me thou wilt say, ay-- is thy father a good craftsman?" |
43170 | Any of thy relations? |
43170 | Are we nearly at our journey''s end, Hugh? |
43170 | Are you well? |
43170 | Art thou coming out on Refreshment Sunday?" |
43170 | Art thou not hurt?" |
43170 | Ay? |
43170 | But first, before I hand thee over to Joan, who doth not yet feel she hath had her share, first tell me which corbel thou wilt choose? |
43170 | But for Hugh? |
43170 | But how did he fasten on you?" |
43170 | But now, see here, if I fasten a rope round the mast-- which will hold yet awhile-- and go ashore with the other end, canst thou find thy way?" |
43170 | But what good can he do thee?" |
43170 | But why did they not fight with thee at the time?" |
43170 | But, tell me, master, is it true, as thy boy relates, that you met King Edward yesterday and spoke with him?" |
43170 | Canst thou give a guess who that might be?" |
43170 | Come, now, Joan, what sayest thou to thy birthday-- Candlemas Day?" |
43170 | Could he disappoint him? |
43170 | Didst never see his like? |
43170 | Didst thou not know it? |
43170 | Does not that content thee?" |
43170 | Dost thou think King Edward takes little varlets of eleven years old to make his army? |
43170 | Dost thou think they have?" |
43170 | Doth anything there weigh on thee? |
43170 | Doth he like spice- bread or figs? |
43170 | Fled-- but where to flee? |
43170 | Goodman, were that not a pity? |
43170 | Has he a choice bit of his work that I can take back to my lady? |
43170 | Hast lost thy tongue?" |
43170 | Hast stuck it where he must needs see?" |
43170 | Hast thou answer to make, Roger Brewer?" |
43170 | Hast thou asked?" |
43170 | Hast thou learnt aught of the trick of it?" |
43170 | Hast thou looked at Roger''s corbel?" |
43170 | Hast thou seen his work?" |
43170 | Hast thou thought it out?" |
43170 | Have you friends in this fair town?" |
43170 | He hath a Joan of his own, what thinkest thou of that?" |
43170 | Heardest thou ever such injustice? |
43170 | How could he put up with our rough fare?" |
43170 | How couldst thou be such an oaf?" |
43170 | How far have you come?" |
43170 | How goes it with him? |
43170 | How is Moll?" |
43170 | How knowest thou? |
43170 | How like you your apples, my master?" |
43170 | How long have you been here? |
43170 | How now, Hugh, what work have they set thee to?" |
43170 | How old art thou now, Hugh?" |
43170 | How should he not know? |
43170 | Hugh crept closer to his father, and at last put his question--"Shall we be drowned?" |
43170 | Hugh, this on which I have set my heart-- is it to be snatched from me? |
43170 | Hugh?--what sayest thou should be done to him?" |
43170 | I have had a wish many a time to know how thou fared, and Friar Luke-- we are good friends, what thinkest thou of that? |
43170 | I have never failed before, how can I fail now? |
43170 | I wonder why Wat likes Thomasin so much? |
43170 | If I listened to the good brothers I should deem it perfect; but when Matthew says,` Hum-- I know not-- is there not something lacking?'' |
43170 | If-- if he could be thy apprentice?" |
43170 | Is it not so, holy friar?" |
43170 | Is it not the very place for a richly carved_ surs_( corbel)?" |
43170 | Is it your pleasure, Master Gervase, that I treat him differently from any other prentice?" |
43170 | Is n''t he beautiful?" |
43170 | Is that truly all thine own design?" |
43170 | Is that what thou desirest?" |
43170 | Is the pain great?" |
43170 | Is the subject quite decided?" |
43170 | It was only the beginning; nothing was there which might not be set right, but what if indeed his skill was failing? |
43170 | Joan, will one ever be satisfied?" |
43170 | Knowest thou aught of him, holy father?" |
43170 | Learn with all thy might, and, who knows, some day thy carving may help to decorate this our Church of St Peter''s?" |
43170 | Learnt you that in Flanders?" |
43170 | Master John, at what time came you back?" |
43170 | Maybe thou hast a thought of finding a son thyself and more quickly?" |
43170 | Maybe, sir, he might do better if he had another chance?" |
43170 | Meanwhile, Eleanor could whisper to Hugh--"Hath Agrippa eaten all the nuts? |
43170 | My hearing is not so sharp as it was-- thy prentice? |
43170 | Nay, again!--Wat?--who remains, goodman? |
43170 | Not here? |
43170 | Now there is that man of thine, Wat-- he,"Hamlyn paused,"he is a likely fellow?" |
43170 | Now where''s thy work? |
43170 | Now, art ready for our game at chess?" |
43170 | Now, first, is there something thou wouldst say?" |
43170 | Now, where are we bound? |
43170 | Only--""What?" |
43170 | Part with Agrippa, his one friend? |
43170 | Perchance if I squinted?" |
43170 | SWORD OR CHISEL? |
43170 | Shake hands-- what, are thy hands so burned? |
43170 | Shall we take the boy back to thy father''s lodgings, Edgar, and persuade Mistress Judith to bestow some of her fair mending upon his garments?" |
43170 | Surely it was so?" |
43170 | The Grey Friars? |
43170 | The bishop and I are strong enough to carry the matter; beshrew me, am I not the one to judge who is the best workman?" |
43170 | Then as Hugh muttered something,"What, I am not to know? |
43170 | Then, as Hugh came rushing up with an eager"What is it?" |
43170 | They have the beast, but where?" |
43170 | Thinkest thou that seeing thee set to do the rough labour will dispose them to choose thee for the better? |
43170 | Thou and I may never see the fruit of our labours-- what of that? |
43170 | Thou rememberest the day the master was taken?" |
43170 | Thou wouldst fain be back in the drones''hive hearkening to book and bell, eh?" |
43170 | Thou, a new warden, wouldst not pay less than Richard Allen of the Tuckers?" |
43170 | Thou-- what is thy name-- Hugo? |
43170 | Thy child? |
43170 | Thy father? |
43170 | Thy guild?" |
43170 | Thy wife? |
43170 | To the Cathedral?" |
43170 | WILL ROGER SUCCEED? |
43170 | Was all this hope to end? |
43170 | Was it all to end in an unknown grave under the grey waters which leaped so wildly round their prey? |
43170 | Was not that really what he had said, and was it not strange that she should repeat it? |
43170 | Wat pondered long upon this, and at last, coming home with Hugh one evening, he asked--"The design which Roger filched, is it yet in thy head?" |
43170 | Well?" |
43170 | Wet to the skin, hungry, miserable, before he had got six miles on his way, what could he do? |
43170 | What age, think you, might Mistress Thomasin be?" |
43170 | What do I look like now?" |
43170 | What dost thou say? |
43170 | What doth he work at?" |
43170 | What had brought such a force of rascaille upon thee?" |
43170 | What is his name?" |
43170 | What is she doing?" |
43170 | What is thy name?" |
43170 | What know we of the awful regions that they might light upon, or whether the vessels might not be carried too close to the edge of the world? |
43170 | What next? |
43170 | What said he?" |
43170 | What say you now?" |
43170 | What thinkest thou of him?" |
43170 | What was thy mother''s name?" |
43170 | What was thy promise, boy?" |
43170 | What will the king say?" |
43170 | What will they be like, I wonder? |
43170 | What''s this?" |
43170 | What, the same as Hugh?" |
43170 | When does he sail?" |
43170 | When may we come again and see him? |
43170 | Where are the proofs?" |
43170 | Where art thou going? |
43170 | Where could we stow ye? |
43170 | Where do you think it will be placed? |
43170 | Where go you after the fair?" |
43170 | Where have I come from? |
43170 | Where is Warden Hamlyn?" |
43170 | Where should he go? |
43170 | Where''s Wat? |
43170 | Where?" |
43170 | Which wilt thou go to see, Hugh?" |
43170 | Who else? |
43170 | Who was mad yesterday at having to play Master Sobersides?" |
43170 | Why does n''t thou get up?" |
43170 | Why, thou silly lad, disappointed? |
43170 | Will a groat buy the knowledge? |
43170 | Will the boat hold?" |
43170 | Will you be back before curfew?" |
43170 | William Franklyn, thy head man?" |
43170 | Wilt come into the yard? |
43170 | Wilt come?" |
43170 | Wilt thou spare him to us? |
43170 | Would they hearken? |
43170 | he cried in delight,"where have you come from? |
43170 | said Bassett, unable himself to avoid a smile,"what coil have you got into?" |
43170 | what wouldst thou give, Hugh, to be a knight all in shining armour, and to slay the Dragon?" |