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 |
---|---|
56331 | Also why, in some examples, is there a hook, as though for a hanging lamp, in the soffit of the window- head? |
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? |
29759 | As Byron says:"Temples, baths, or halls? |
29759 | N, Temple(?). |
29759 | Temple of Poseidon, at Pæstum, in South of Italy(? |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Zeus, at Selinus, in Sicily(? |
29759 | [ 15]? |
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? |
29077 | ''What are these things?'' |
29077 | ''What is the latest news?'' |
29077 | ( Come we will go?) |
29077 | Balaban Mesjedi? |
29077 | Bogdan Serai? |
29077 | But have we not here the fancy- bred tales which Oriental imagination weaves to veil its ignorance of real facts? |
29077 | Can the difficulty thus presented be removed by the supposition that Gerlach refers to the Chora under the name of Aetius? |
29077 | Engraphus(? |
29077 | F. W. H.[ 1] S. Romani? |
29077 | For what form of virtue did he not possess Such as the fitting occasion demanded each? |
29077 | Had the city indeed fallen? |
29077 | Is he speaking of two or of three churches? |
29077 | It has also three or four high crepidines[451] or vaulted compartments(?) |
29077 | John, it is said, turned to Leo V., and whispered the significant comment,''Hearest thou, my lord, the words of the prophet? |
29077 | Refectory of the monastery of Manuel? |
29077 | Sanjakdar Mesjedi( Gastria)? |
29077 | Sergius and Bacchus? |
29077 | The oracle had spoken:''Wretched Romans, whither have ye strayed, and gone far from hope in God to put your trust in the Franks? |
29077 | [ 513] Was that monastery identical with the Chora? |
29077 | [ 79] With the kind help of Professor Cossio of Madrid, the Spanish text may be roughly translated as follows:-- And the first part( door?) |
29077 | c. 4:--Inter palatium Constantini et portam urbis Adrianopolitanam extat ædes in septimo(?) |
29077 | equo sedens,_ Vat._[ 8] Porta antiquissima pulcra,_ Par._[ 9] St. Ma[=m]( as?) |
29077 | poion gar ouk ên aretês eidos pherôn, hôs ho prepôn hekaston ezêtei chronos? |
29077 | typo for 1860?] |
43319 | ''For who knoweth the ordinances of heaven, or can explain the reasons of them upon earth? |
43319 | ''The revered and great and only altar, what could this be but the spotlessness of soul and holiness of holies of the common Priest of us all?'' |
43319 | ''When the cedars of Paradise shall tremble, what shall the bush of the desert do?'' |
43319 | 1841) asks( p. 17),''Do men and women sit together in those seats indifferently and promiscuously? |
43319 | A single instance may suffice:--S. Augustine, writing on that passage of S. Paul''s,''What? |
43319 | According to that saying,''How shall they preach, except they be sent?'' |
43319 | Again, is the pulpit of the Brownist symbolical; and shall not our font and altar be so at least as much? |
43319 | Again, the question of the deacon shut up within answering in the character of the people,''Who is the King of glory?'' |
43319 | And Abraham saith,"Shall I speak unto the Lord, who am but dust and ashes?" |
43319 | And does not the building then in turn emblem the purpose for which it was planned? |
43319 | And what besides is there that does not tell of our Blessed Saviour? |
43319 | And why? |
43319 | But if a consecrated chalice be regilt, is it therefore to be reconsecrated? |
43319 | But if it were parabolic, figurative, descriptive, allegorical-- why should not the Church imitate her Master? |
43319 | But is it asked why sacraments are appointed, when without them God could have given eternal life and His Grace unto mankind? |
43319 | But is it asked why the sick and the catechumens are anointed with oil? |
43319 | But what if mechanical convenience suggested the arrangement? |
43319 | But why do they not look deeper into things? |
43319 | But why not take a circle or octagon at once, or the form which is always adopted for the lecture- rooms at Mechanics''Institutes? |
43319 | Called, and how? |
43319 | Carlisle and York have doubtless their appropriate meaning; but who will now pretend to expound it? |
43319 | Did the Paschal Lamb typify the Immaculate Victim in any thing more than its comparative purity and its bloody death? |
43319 | Does not Flamboyant express this? |
43319 | Does not the ground plan of such a church symbolise minutely the then state of church discipline and the{ lviii} conditions of church worship? |
43319 | For if this be said elsewhere only because the work was made, why ought it not also to be said here since it was made? |
43319 | For what else is the pastoral rod than the divine Word? |
43319 | How will they account for the cross form? |
43319 | In what particulars, we may again ask? |
43319 | Is not each act in itself figurative and full of meaning? |
43319 | Is there anything which will dictate any general form rather than another? |
43319 | It bore all other sins, but is it fit That it should bear the sin of scorning it? |
43319 | It may be asked, Do we mean to imply then that a church architect ought never{ xxiv} to undertake any secular building? |
43319 | Just as Abraham saith in the xviii chapter of Genesis,''Shall I speak to my Lord, who am but dust and ashes?'' |
43319 | Lucifer was thrown down from Heaven, and Adam cast out of Paradise; and what places be better than these? |
43319 | Now could there be a more fitting expression of this than the Perpendicular style? |
43319 | Now, if we ask, why was this? |
43319 | Of the first, the Apostle S. James saith,''Is any sick among you? |
43319 | Quomodo vocatur? |
43319 | Shall God have denied this symbolism to the latter, while He has bestowed it on the former? |
43319 | Shall we then wonder that the Catholic Church is in all her art and splendour sacramental of the Blessed Trinity, when Nature herself is so? |
43319 | The deacon answereth,''Who is the King of Glory?'' |
43319 | The deacon from within answereth,''Who is the King of Glory?'' |
43319 | The following lines from Donne are much to the purpose:{ xli} Since Christ embraced the Cross itself, dare I His Image, th''Image of His Cross, deny? |
43319 | The material Sun indeed typifies the Sun of Righteousness: but in what particulars? |
43319 | The ruins of Roman theatres are not uncommon: do we fail to be recalled by them to the idea of the Roman stage? |
43319 | The solution of the problem,--What is it that causes this difference? |
43319 | To deny intended symbolism, in the case of such a person, would{ lxii} clearly be absurd: shall it be less obvious to us? |
43319 | What can be more_ real_ than a pyramid, yet what less Christian? |
43319 | What could this be but the finger of that God Who will have His works rather entertained with wonder and trembling than with curious scanning? |
43319 | What idea can such a person have formed of the reality of church architecture? |
43319 | What is understood by the alphabet save the beginnings and rudiments of sacred doctrine? |
43319 | What mechanical reasons could produce Westminster from even the Parthenon? |
43319 | Whence the Prophet,''Wherefore is thine apparel red, as one that treadeth out the wine vat?'' |
43319 | Wherefore then is it not said here as elsewhere"God saw that it was good?" |
43319 | Who can blot out the Cross, which th''instrument Of God dewed on him in the Sacrament? |
43319 | Who can deny me power and liberty''To stretch mine arms, and mine own Cross to be? |
43319 | Who can estimate the effect of such pictorial representations on the minds of our ancestors? |
43319 | Who from the picture would avert his eye, How should he fly His pains, Who there did die? |
43319 | Why do not such writers argue that the cross form is not symbolical, because many barns are cruciform? |
43319 | Why does the Mussulman take off his shoes, kneel on his carpet towards Mecca, and perform his stated ablutions? |
43319 | Why does the heartless Quaker go with covered head into his bare conventicle, and sit in enforced silence? |
43319 | Why have the cross at all? |
43319 | Why not have an amphitheatre, an octagon, an accoustically designed Mechanic''s Institute Lecture Room? |
43319 | Why, again, in every case does a screen separate one part of the church from the other? |
43319 | Would I have profit by the Sacrifice, And dare the chosen Altar to despise? |
43319 | [ Footnote 337] Again, in the Gospel:''Are ye able to drink the chalice that I shall drink?'' |
43319 | [ Footnote 389] And again,''Ye are the salt of the earth; but if the salt have lost its savour wherewithal shall it be salted?'' |
43319 | [ Footnote 392] For what are the gates of the daughter of Sion but the ears and hearing of the faithful? |
43319 | [ Footnote 421] Hence also Abraham saith,''Shall I speak to my Lord, who am but dust and ashes?'' |
43319 | [ Footnote 629] But Esaias, when he had heard the voice of the Lord, saying,''Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?'' |
43319 | [ Footnote 690][ Footnote 689: Whether there be any superstitious fasting on S. Mark''s Day?'' |
43319 | [ Footnote 79] But who''knoweth the ordinances of heaven, or can fix the reasons thereof upon the earth?'' |
43319 | _ Quem quaeritis_? |
43319 | _ The deacon within answereth_, and saith: Who is the King of Glory? |
43319 | are not the several parts of the material building highly figurative and suggestive of the rules and orders of the abstract drama? |
43319 | in its being_ created_, in its rising on the dark world_ every_ day, in its being matter? |
43319 | know ye not that the saints shall judge the world?'' |
43319 | or( as the fashion was of old), do men sit together upon one side of the church, and women upon the other?'' |
43319 | shall tribulation?'' |
43319 | { 190}''Where wast thou.... when the morning stars sang together?'' |
43319 | { cxxv} Above all, do not the reintroduction of Horizontality, the Tudor arch, the depressed pier, speak of her want of spirituality? |
43319 | { lxiii} The contrast must then be admitted: but how must we explain it? |
43319 | { xlvii} Is not, again, the doctrine of the Resurrection wonderfully set forth by Nature? |
22943 | A letter from Lord Blandamer? |
22943 | Ah, you are speaking of the organist? |
22943 | Anstice, will you let me make you my wife? |
22943 | Are you stopping in Cullerne? |
22943 | Are you waiting for the London train, sir? |
22943 | Are you_ always_ at the Dorcas meeting on Saturday afternoons? |
22943 | At what do you estimate the cost of the transept repairs? |
22943 | But is it necessary, my dear,she demurred,"to bring the ringers over from Carisbury? |
22943 | Could he have gone out with Lord Blandamer? 22943 Could n''t it be done quicker than that?" |
22943 | Could n''t you come down to- night? |
22943 | Dear aunt, what would you have me do? 22943 Did Martin Joliffe keep on the farm after his father''s death?" |
22943 | Did Sir George Farquhar know all this? |
22943 | Did he leave no message for me? |
22943 | Did they strengthen the tower afterwards? |
22943 | Did you not find this coat after he was gone? |
22943 | Do n''t you wish you may get it? |
22943 | Do you find any excessive motion when the peal is rung now? |
22943 | Do you know why I really put it like that? |
22943 | Do you mean it may go off accidentally in my pocket? |
22943 | Do you think you can clean off the top part without damaging the painting underneath? |
22943 | Do you think,he said,"that this is the picture mentioned? |
22943 | Does the architect in charge of the works at the church lodge here? 22943 Eh, what? |
22943 | Even by a heavy stick? |
22943 | Good- morning,he said to the gunsmith, who stood behind the counter;"have you any pistols? |
22943 | Has Lord Blandamer been here? |
22943 | Have I read the message right, dearest? 22943 Have we any evidence as to Mr Sharnall''s state on the evening of his death?" |
22943 | He was drunk enough to leave his top- coat behind him, was he not? |
22943 | He was quite mad, I suppose? |
22943 | How do_ I_ come to be here? 22943 How will you write? |
22943 | I fancy it was he who was talking with you in the minster this afternoon, was it not? |
22943 | I have something I should like to say to you; may I come in? |
22943 | I suppose you have verified these certificates? |
22943 | Is he? |
22943 | Is n''t it rather late to- night? |
22943 | Is the water boiling, my dear? |
22943 | It is a striking scene, is it not? |
22943 | It is n''t only seven thousand pounds; do n''t you see he gives carte- blanche for repairs in general? 22943 It is not bad, is it?" |
22943 | It seems a curious arrangement,Westray criticised;"is it better acoustically?" |
22943 | It''s poor stuff; why should I expect anyone to listen to it? |
22943 | Look,he said;"do you see nothing in the last recess?" |
22943 | My dear,Miss Joliffe exclaimed deprecatingly,"how could you let anyone in when I was not at home? |
22943 | No, it is n''t; of course, how could it be with a brown velvet coat and waistcoat? 22943 Oh, Lord Blandamer was here, was he?" |
22943 | She took no note that I were glum, but` Whose hosses is these?'' 22943 She will be in now in a few minutes; have you your ticket?" |
22943 | Sit down,he said, offering her a chair;"did you say you had brought the picture with you?" |
22943 | So I was flattered like, and thought if they made so much o''one banknote, what''d they say to know I''d got a pocket full of them? 22943 So sublime the simplicity of the Norman style, is it not? |
22943 | So they do,he said;"but how did they know anything about it?" |
22943 | Stilton? |
22943 | Thank you,he said;"can I write here? |
22943 | The Bishop is a friend of yours? |
22943 | There was nothing in his fancies, I suppose? |
22943 | These long evenings are so lonely, are they not? 22943 To London to- night,"she began--"this very night?" |
22943 | Was he driving? |
22943 | Well, what do you mean? 22943 Well,"he said, without looking at her as she came in--"well, what does my lord want with my lady? |
22943 | Well,he said,"there were n''t no int''rupted peal this time, were there? |
22943 | What are we to do for you, who neither smoke nor drink, and yet want to talk about poverty? 22943 What do you think of_ that_ for a_ Magnificat_?" |
22943 | What happened when you got back? 22943 What have you been doing now?" |
22943 | What made Martin Joliffe think he was so near success? |
22943 | What was his connection with the nebuly coat? 22943 What,_ you_ think them a little shaky?" |
22943 | What_ are_ you doing? |
22943 | What_ do_ you think, Anastasia? |
22943 | Where is Mr Westray? |
22943 | Who is the organist? 22943 Why did he think he was a Blandamer? |
22943 | Why in the world is n''t the fire lit? |
22943 | Why what''s the matter? 22943 Will you marry me, Anastasia-- will you marry me, dear Anstice?" |
22943 | Will you not give me something to drink? |
22943 | Will your lordship not step in and warm yourself for a moment? |
22943 | Would n''t it be better to do it to- morrow morning? |
22943 | Yes,Westray said dubitatively;"I suppose it could n''t be construed into attempting to outwit her, could it? |
22943 | Yes,said the would- be indifferent Westray;"where did Lord Blandamer come from?" |
22943 | You all drink; why should not I? |
22943 | You can not beat it,Lord Blandamer assented--"you can not beat it"--and then went on suggestively:"Have you ever tried a sprig of mace with it?" |
22943 | You do n''t see what concern I have in it,said the reformer impetuously;"you do n''t know what business it is of mine? |
22943 | You have refused him? |
22943 | You said you would like to hear my service in D flat--`Sharnall in D flat,''did you not? 22943 You''ll have a drop,"he asked Westray,"wo n''t you?" |
22943 | You''ve got your own key, sir, no doubt? |
22943 | _ Is_ it quite certain? |
22943 | ` Bain''t you Tom Janaway,''says she,` what used to work up to Wydcombe Farm?'' 22943 ` How much do you want for the four of''em, young man?'' |
22943 | ` Missis?'' 22943 A day or two later Miss Joliffe said to Anastasia:I think you had a letter from Mr Westray this morning, my dear, had you not? |
22943 | Against whom did the dead man urge him to be on guard lest Martin''s papers should be spirited away? |
22943 | Am I God, to kill and make alive?" |
22943 | And Sharnall, too, had he not almost grasped the Will- of- the- wisp when fate tripped_ him_ on that windy night? |
22943 | And how could she write fiction with such a one for mentor and company? |
22943 | And if a murderer, whose was the face into which the victim looked? |
22943 | And if she sold furniture, what lodger would take half- empty rooms? |
22943 | And mid I ask what he''s been doing to set_ your_ back up? |
22943 | And was she, Anastasia, to fall short in such a simple craft? |
22943 | And was that all? |
22943 | And what have you to say to_ that_? |
22943 | And what_ do_ you think he answered, my dear? |
22943 | Are you ready for your tea? |
22943 | Art thou dumb? |
22943 | But did not the result recompense all? |
22943 | But how was he to tell this to the man who was walking beside him, and silently waiting for his sentence? |
22943 | But what then? |
22943 | But what was we to do?" |
22943 | But why sever his connection with a leading firm? |
22943 | By the way,"he said, turning back as he left the vestry,"what_ was_ the piece which you played after the service just now?" |
22943 | Can anything be more monstrous than that the dead should be allowed to poison the living? |
22943 | Can anything, I say, be more insanitary?" |
22943 | Can man''s deepest love be deepened? |
22943 | Could Miss Joliffe have dropped it? |
22943 | Could Mr Westray be thinking of falling in love with her? |
22943 | Could anything that she had ever done be wrested into predilection or even into appreciation? |
22943 | Could he have been so foolish as to leave those half- finished lines on his desk for Lord Blandamer or anyone else to see? |
22943 | Could it be that Mr Sharnall had motives other than mere kindness? |
22943 | Could it be that the Bishop had some idea of making Mr Sharnall organist in his private chapel, for there was no vacancy in the Cathedral? |
22943 | Could it be that the picture_ was_ valuable after all? |
22943 | Could natural kindness or courtesy have been so utterly misunderstood? |
22943 | Could the offer refer to some other picture? |
22943 | Could you kindly load it for me now?" |
22943 | D''ye hear''em?" |
22943 | D''you mean that fellow Blandamer?" |
22943 | Did he exist, was he himself, was he in the body or out of the body? |
22943 | Did he not know who his father was?" |
22943 | Did he say anything about his return? |
22943 | Did he say he would wait till Mr Westray came back?" |
22943 | Did he say when he was coming back?" |
22943 | Did it so stand naked before him too? |
22943 | Did n''t you know it was to this very man? |
22943 | Did they never approach my grandfather, the late Lord Blandamer, on the question of funds for these restorations?" |
22943 | Did you catch the effect of that point? |
22943 | Did''ee know her? |
22943 | Do n''t you know how late it is?" |
22943 | Do n''t you remember how fond poor daddy was of it, and how dear Martin treasured it?'' |
22943 | Do you believe in certain things or places being bound up with certain men''s destinies? |
22943 | Do you know, it is I, Willis, who am your new Bishop? |
22943 | Do you mean has Mr Sharnall money enough to purchase a proper repast? |
22943 | Do you remember the darkness and the driving rain, and how scared I was when we passed the Old Bonding- house? |
22943 | Do you remember the lesson about the prophet sending his servant up to the top of a hill, to look at the sea? |
22943 | Do you remember the very first night you and I walked home to this house together? |
22943 | Do you think Lord Blandamer could have asked him to Fording?" |
22943 | Do you understand an organ?" |
22943 | Do you want me to fall flat on my face because he is a lord? |
22943 | Does it still exist? |
22943 | Eh, eh?" |
22943 | Had some dreadful scene been really enacted in the loneliness of the great church that night? |
22943 | Had the organist been taken unawares, or heard some movement in the silence, and, turning round, found himself alone with his murderer? |
22943 | Had there, in fact, existed a reason why the organist should think that someone had a grudge against him, that he was likely to be attacked? |
22943 | Have n''t you seen what they call a religious woman damn the whole world for evil- doers? |
22943 | Have you no other pictures?" |
22943 | He asked himself had he any right to examine this piece of paper? |
22943 | He grunted testily, and, saying"Where is your aunt? |
22943 | He looked as if his thoughts were a thousand miles away, and the organist broke off:"Do you play the organ? |
22943 | He must make his intention clear, but how? |
22943 | He stopped for a moment to listen; what was it? |
22943 | He would go straight to them-- straight into Westray''s room; he would-- And then he paused; he would do, what? |
22943 | Home-- what_ home_ had he? |
22943 | How could any girl under the circumstances do less than take with thanks a few lilies of the valley? |
22943 | How could she have refused them? |
22943 | How could this commonplace woman guess that he was thinking of death and love? |
22943 | How do you come to be here? |
22943 | How do_ you_ come to be here? |
22943 | How does he know aunt is out? |
22943 | I am detained in London by business for some days more; but I shall await your answer here with overwhelming eagerness, yet, may I say it? |
22943 | I have refused him,_ of course_; how could you think that I should marry Mr Westray? |
22943 | I have to go to the Rectory, and I suppose you will be going to the church, will you not?" |
22943 | I mean what is right, and if I am doing wrong you will forgive me, will you not? |
22943 | I think your landlady is a relation of our worthy friend Joliffe, is she not, Mr Sharnall? |
22943 | I told him you lived in the house; would he not like to see you? |
22943 | I will just change, and put on my bonnet; you will not mind staying at home while I am away, will you?" |
22943 | I''ve seen that many a time, and many a time my heart has ached for them; but what could I do to help? |
22943 | If Mr Sharnall had scruples in the matter, ought not he, Westray, to have respected those scruples? |
22943 | If he thought that he would be alone, he would feel more secure; but might there not be someone else there, or something else? |
22943 | If he took a fancy to a pretty face, where was the harm? |
22943 | If it was a murder then who did it? |
22943 | If it were put up to auction, would it ever fetch enough to pay for what he had drunk? |
22943 | Is Mr Westray at home?" |
22943 | Is it not an awful thing to confess?" |
22943 | Is it not so?" |
22943 | Is there any depression so deep as this? |
22943 | Is this Mr Westray''s room?" |
22943 | Is your heart my own?" |
22943 | It is a sad state for a man to get into, is it not?" |
22943 | It is not I, but you, who overlook obstacles, for have you not overlooked all the years that lie between your age and mine? |
22943 | It so happens that we had spoken of it the very first day I met him in the church, though you know I_ never_ talk about my instrument, do I? |
22943 | It was finished at last, and if it was a little formal or high- flown, or stilted, is not a certain formality postulated on momentous occasions? |
22943 | Let me help you; is there nothing I can do to help?" |
22943 | Looks as if the neb''ly coat was losing a bit of his sting, do n''t it?" |
22943 | May I help you to repack this picture?" |
22943 | Message? |
22943 | Mr Westray, is it not, the architect at the minster?" |
22943 | No one cares a fig about me; what have I got to live for? |
22943 | No, it ai n''t a caterpillar; but if it ai n''t a caterpillar, what is it?" |
22943 | Of course, this head must have been painted when Lord Blandamer was young, but how could Sophia Flannery have ever seen it? |
22943 | Or did he have it taken away to prevent its being stolen? |
22943 | Or do you mean can he get things properly cooked? |
22943 | Or has he proper plates or forks or spoons, or a proper room in which to eat? |
22943 | Perhaps you know Lord Blandamer?" |
22943 | Shall I call him? |
22943 | Shall I tell''ee? |
22943 | She must sell some of the furniture, but who would buy such old stuff? |
22943 | She put down her tray, and, with a fateful gesture and an"Oh, Mr Westray, what do you think?" |
22943 | Should he call her"Dearest Anastasia,"or"Dear Miss Joliffe"? |
22943 | Should we not put up with a little inconvenience, and ask Sharnall to bring the Bishop here, and lunch himself? |
22943 | Stay, were there no other voices? |
22943 | Stay,_ should_ he go to the church-- the great church of Saint Sepulchre alone? |
22943 | That object could certainly not be marriage, and if it was not marriage, what was it? |
22943 | The girl was not being brought up as became a Blandamer, Martin had said; how was she to fill her position when she became the Honourable Anastasia? |
22943 | The subject did not interest Westray, and he flung back:"Is Miss Joliffe very badly off?" |
22943 | There was a refrain ringing in his ears, a verse that he had heard read a few Sundays before in Cullerne Church,"Am I God, to kill and make alive? |
22943 | Was he called to be the minister of justice? |
22943 | Was he chosen for the scourge of God? |
22943 | Was he fighting with dragon''s spawn? |
22943 | Was he right, was there any right or any wrong, was anything real, was not everything subjective-- the creation of his own brain? |
22943 | Was he to fight for land, and house, and title, to fight for everything, with a man like that? |
22943 | Was his own creature to turn and rend him? |
22943 | Was his the hand that must launch the bolt against the guilty? |
22943 | Was it a murder? |
22943 | Was it mere coincidence, was it some inexplicable presentiment, or was it more than either? |
22943 | Was it not tampering with rectitude to have overcome them by a too persuasive rhetoric? |
22943 | Was it possible that_ he_ was falling in love with her? |
22943 | Was it stolen? |
22943 | Was she to blame? |
22943 | Was there nothing else? |
22943 | We must show him how much stronger we have made our old tower, eh, Mr Westray? |
22943 | Westray stood a moment on the steps as he repeated his question:"Did Martin keep on the farm?" |
22943 | What account was he to give of it? |
22943 | What am I to do? |
22943 | What business can he have in Cullerne? |
22943 | What business could he have to occupy him all the week, and leave him free on Saturdays? |
22943 | What business is it of yours?" |
22943 | What business was it of his to ferret out these things? |
22943 | What can he be doing with himself for two mortal hours and a quarter?" |
22943 | What could any impression of Lord Blandamer''s matter to her? |
22943 | What could anyone be doing in the church at this hour of night? |
22943 | What could be the explanation? |
22943 | What could have possessed him, what madness was this? |
22943 | What could it be? |
22943 | What could this mean? |
22943 | What did_ he_ mean to do-- to fly, or kill himself, or stand his ground and take his trial on a last chance? |
22943 | What do people want to confirm these boys and girls for? |
22943 | What do you say, Mr Ennefer?" |
22943 | What do you think? |
22943 | What do_ you_ think?" |
22943 | What good would it do us if all dear Martin hoped should turn out true? |
22943 | What had he to do with them? |
22943 | What had such a mean man as this to do with lands, and titles, and coats of arms? |
22943 | What has he made you run up to the top of the house for now? |
22943 | What is he doing, Anastasia? |
22943 | What is the building?" |
22943 | What lordship? |
22943 | What made him think he was a Blandamer?" |
22943 | What man had any right to be talking to Anastasia? |
22943 | What message did he imagine she had wished to give_ him_ with her eyes? |
22943 | What message did he speak of? |
22943 | What motives could he have except the best? |
22943 | What reason was he to give for his refusal? |
22943 | What right had any man to be in Westray''s room? |
22943 | What right had he to advise before he knew whether she would listen to him? |
22943 | What right had he to call her"Dearest"? |
22943 | What right had he to express concern, even with a look, in matters which affected_ her_? |
22943 | What right had he to go there at all? |
22943 | What should he do? |
22943 | What was his name?" |
22943 | What was she to do, whither was she to turn? |
22943 | What was there for anyone to do? |
22943 | What were these dangers to which she was even now exposed, and from which Mr Westray was to shield her? |
22943 | Whence_ had_ it come? |
22943 | Where can he be lunching? |
22943 | Where could Anastasia be? |
22943 | Where should the Bishop of Carisbury lunch in Cullerne except at the Rectory?" |
22943 | Where was he? |
22943 | Where was the architect? |
22943 | Where was the noise? |
22943 | Where were new boots to come from now, whence was to come clothing to wear, and bread to eat? |
22943 | Whither should he turn? |
22943 | Who is there to write to?" |
22943 | Who is to do it? |
22943 | Who is to say this man nay, if he chooses to alter the organ? |
22943 | Who was the woman? |
22943 | Who was this Horatio Sebastian Fynes, son of Horatio Sebastian Fynes, gentleman? |
22943 | Who would go to a levee in a straw hat? |
22943 | Who would write that he was"delighted"to accept a bishopric? |
22943 | Who''s going to believe a woman''ud buy the team, and give a hundred and twenty pounds in notes for hosses that''ud be dear at seventy pounds? |
22943 | Why are you crying?" |
22943 | Why do n''t you wait here for him, and talk to him about the organ? |
22943 | Why does he want to waste money on cementing the vaults? |
22943 | Why had he been so foolish as to meddle with the picture? |
22943 | Why had he read papers that did not belong to him? |
22943 | Why should he come?" |
22943 | Why should he think anything at all about a commonplace lodging- house, and its inmates? |
22943 | Why should you take such a gloomy view of things? |
22943 | Why was he not at hand when Lord Blandamer wanted him? |
22943 | Why, above all, had he come down to Fording to have his suspicions confirmed? |
22943 | Why, indeed, and what difference would it make to her if he never came again? |
22943 | Why_ had_ he been so sour? |
22943 | Will you kindly inform Sir George Farquhar of this, and ask him to review the scheme of restoration as modified by these considerations? |
22943 | Will you not join me in a cup of cocoa? |
22943 | Will you not take a biscuit and a glass of wine?" |
22943 | Will you walk up the street with me now? |
22943 | Would he be alone there? |
22943 | Would he take much longer in the restorations? |
22943 | Would n''t he, Mr Sharnall?" |
22943 | Would the thin bows of the tower arches live through such a night, with the weight of the great tower rocking over them? |
22943 | Would you like anything special to- night? |
22943 | Would you like to ask him about the organ?" |
22943 | Yet half a dozen times he went on, though with slow feet, thinking always, Was he right in what he was doing, was he right? |
22943 | Yet here he was at Cullerne Road at midnight, and if he had not come from Cullerne, whence had he come? |
22943 | You bain''t took bad, be you?" |
22943 | You did n''t know I could chaffer Latin with the best of''em, did you? |
22943 | You have heard about a portrait of your grandfather that was stolen from the gallery soon after your father''s birth? |
22943 | You have n''t a drop of whisky, I suppose?" |
22943 | You remember that, Mr Sharnall-- when the_ Corisande_ upset in Pallion Bay?" |
22943 | You see?" |
22943 | You will have your full complement of voices next time I come, no doubt, and I shall be able to listen more at my ease than to- day?" |
22943 | You wo n''t join me, of course?" |
22943 | You wo n''t let Miss Joliffe guess I have said anything, will you? |
22943 | You would not, darling, wish to be` my lady''even if you could, would you?" |
22943 | You would refuse in my position? |
22943 | You would write a strong letter of refusal at once, would you not?" |
22943 | Your head clerk is discreet, is he not?" |
22943 | ` Come,''she says,` how much? |
22943 | ` Look, Tom,''my mother said to me,` did''ee ever see such flowers? |
22943 | ` My lord,''I said,` may I be so bold as to offer your lordship a cup of tea? |
22943 | ` Shall I sell it, or shall I not?'' |
22943 | ` Sir George,''I said,` will you wait for your fees until my tower tumbles down?'' |
22943 | ` What for does Michael want to sell his hosses?'' |
22943 | he said to the clerk,"what makes_ you_ so late? |
22943 | he said, a little nettled in his turn,"do you suppose I have never written to a Bishop before?" |
22943 | he said, as she walked to the music- stand to play;"ca n''t you hear the A''s as flat as a pancake?" |
22943 | he said,"what have we here? |
22943 | he says;` what missis?'' |
22943 | he shouted--"Sharnall, what are you doing? |
22943 | how does he know she wo n''t let me answer the bell when she''s in? |
22943 | in a tone that implied compassion for the lack of mental balance which allowed Westray to be so easily astonished, and added"Ah, yes?" |
22943 | in what form of words? |
22943 | is there any night so dark as this first eclipse of the soul, this_ first_ conscious stilling of the instinct for right? |
22943 | says I to the horses,` what''ll''ee say when we get back again?'' |
22943 | she did n''t care a rush for that, but` Which o''my husbands?'' |
22943 | utrum vendetur an non_?'' |
22943 | was there nothing he heard-- nothing that spoke within him? |
22943 | we are old friends already; we met in the minster a week ago, did we not?" |
22943 | what can you be thinking of? |
22943 | why_ had_ he indulged his spleen? |
22943 | why_ had_ he taken such a jaundiced view of life? |