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 |
---|---|
1146 | And what, it may be said, are these men- of- war which seem so delightful an object to our eyes? |
1146 | Can I say then I had no fear? |
1146 | Can gentlefolks lie a whole night at a public- house for less? |
1146 | Did you think I sold you the command of my ship for that pitiful thirty pounds? |
1146 | How shall we account for this depravity in taste? |
1146 | Is it--? |
1146 | What then is to be done in this case? |
1146 | What then ought in general to be so plentiful, what so cheap, as fish? |
1146 | What then so properly the food of the poor? |
1146 | Why then should not the voyage- writer be inflamed with the glory of having seen what no man ever did or will see but himself? |
1146 | or, why should the lowest of the people be permitted to exact ten times the value of their work? |
1146 | why yes, to be sure; why should not travelers pay for candles? |
6689 | What is the matter, Garrick? |
6689 | Will I leave you to Captain Booth? |
6689 | And a Kept Fellow, the Lowest of all Fellows, yet in Love with a Young Creature who was traping[ trapesing?] |
6689 | But who shall condemn the man of whom such a story can be told? |
6689 | C. S._ Will they, my Lord? |
6689 | Did he good service? |
6689 | Did you fair_ Bennet''s_ Breast importune? |
6689 | Do Men expect Grapes of Thorns, or Figs of Thistles? |
6689 | Here is one of them as good as any:--"_ Bookweight._ So, Mr._ Index_, what News with you? |
6689 | In default of the always deferred allowance, his father''s house at Salisbury(?) |
6689 | Mr. Keightley also ingeniously attempts to connect Fielding''s subsequent residence at Leyden( 1726- 28?) |
6689 | Well, Sir, said he, how many Translations have these few last Years produced of my_ AEneid_? |
6689 | What Mysteries? |
6689 | What Reason had he to make his Tom illegitimate, in an Age where Keeping is become a Fashion? |
6689 | What, then, is his cardinal defect? |
6689 | What, would you have every Thing brought upon the Stage? |
6689 | Why did he make him a common-- What shall I call it? |
6689 | Why, Sir, wou''d you guess that I had alter''d_ Shakespear_? |
6689 | _ Witmore._ Alterations, Sir? |
6689 | answered the author, with an oath,"they HAVE found it out, have they?" |
6689 | do you doubt it? |
6689 | jun._ Did you ever write, Sir? |
6689 | said he to the flustered actor;"what are they hissing now?" |
6689 | say''st thou, Priest? |
8136 | Harry felt the enthusiasm of friendship; an hundred interrogatives were put to him in a moment as where had he been? 8136 A gentleman ofa meagre aspect"( is he the lean Lyttelton?) |
8136 | Celia, it seems, had apprehended robbery, and her poet''s rest is troubled:"For how should I Repose enjoy, While any fears your Breast annoy? |
8136 | Do n''t you think the Pen that writ_ Pasquin, Joseph Andrews_, and the_ Champion_ could have answered the Apology if he had had the Will?" |
8136 | If a Man that wants Bread can establish a Paper by the P-- t Off-- e[ Post Office?] |
8136 | Or is it such a Triumph to destroy? |
8136 | What then were the limits which Fielding imposed on himself in treating this, his declared subject matter of the ridiculous? |
8136 | Why fiction? |
8136 | Why not history? |
8136 | Why not history? |
8136 | Your Taste in Architect, you know, Hath been admir''d by Friend and Foe; But can your earthly Domes compare With all my Castles-- in the Air? |
8136 | how did he do? |
8136 | where was he going? |
43520 | And for what reason? |
43520 | And pray, madam,said the same spirit to the sixth passenger,"How came you to leave the other world?" |
43520 | Have you so? |
43520 | How did you come to your end, sir? |
43520 | Sir,said I,"you tell me wonders: but if his bank be to decrease only a shilling a day, how can he furnish all passengers?" |
43520 | Well, sir,said he,"how many translations have these few last years produced of my à � neid?" |
43520 | What mysteries? |
43520 | What works? |
43520 | ''How dost thou mean?'' |
43520 | ''Why, how now?'' |
43520 | And what, it may be said, are these men- of- war which seem so delightful an object to our eyes? |
43520 | At last, with a kind of forced smile, she said,"I suppose the pill and drop go on swimmingly?" |
43520 | Can I say then I had no fear? |
43520 | Can gentlefolks lie a whole night at a public- house for less? |
43520 | Can you believe I would not give this man his own wine? |
43520 | Did you think I sold you the command of my ship for that pitiful thirty pounds? |
43520 | For, in reality, who constitutes the different degrees between men but the taylor? |
43520 | Hath he not more merit to me who doth my business and obeys my commands, without any of these qualities?'' |
43520 | Have I not fifty left?'' |
43520 | He answered sullenly,"Doth Mr Leibnitz know my mind better than myself?" |
43520 | He then asked me if I should not be much pleased to be a queen? |
43520 | He then replied, with a frown,''Can such a wretch conceive any hopes of entering Elysium?'' |
43520 | How shall we account for this depravity in taste? |
43520 | I immediately repaired to Mr Powney, and inquired very eagerly whether he had not more of the same manuscript? |
43520 | I then importuned him to acquaint me in which of the cities which contended for the honour of his birth he was really born? |
43520 | In which she so greatly succeeded( for what can not a favourite woman do with one who deserves the surname of Simple?) |
43520 | Is it----? |
43520 | My curiosity would not refrain asking him one question,_ i.e._, whether in reality he had any desire to obtain the crown? |
43520 | The Simple, who would still speak to me, cried out,''So, fool, what''s the matter now?'' |
43520 | The consequence to him, I suppose you know, was ruin; but what was it to me? |
43520 | To whom is he to apply? |
43520 | What then is to be done in this case? |
43520 | What then ought in general to be so plentiful, what so cheap, as fish? |
43520 | What then so properly the food of the poor? |
43520 | Why then should not the voyage- writer be inflamed with the glory of having seen what no man ever did or will see but himself? |
43520 | Will you please, before you move any farther forwards, to give me a short account of your transactions below?'' |
43520 | Would it not serve the purpose as well if he parted only with the single shilling, which it seems is all he is really to lose?" |
43520 | answered the Simple;''what can make them commoner now than usual?'' |
43520 | do you give me the lie?" |
43520 | or, why should the lowest of the people be permitted to exact ten times the value of their work? |
43520 | says the king;''are you ashamed of being a king?'' |
43520 | to S---- house?" |
43520 | what comfort did my long journey bring me? |
43520 | why yes, to be sure; why should not travellers pay for candles? |