Questions

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
207621,868 450?
207622,583 500?
20762Buford turned to him and said,"What are you doing here, sir?"
20762Full of enthusiasm and the memory of their past achievements they said to me proudly,_"If we ca n''t hold it, where will you find men who can?
20762He said quickly,''Why not?''
20762Kress said,"Why, what is the matter, general?"
20762Meade expressed surprise at the information and said,"Why, where is Sedgwick?"
33585***** It has been asked, what could have been Haskell''s object in so perverting the facts of history relative to the Battle of Gettysburg?
33585As he arrived near me he asked,''How is it going here?''
33585Call you this"running like rabbits?"
33585Do they call these militia?''
33585Does the country know any better than the President that Meade, Hancock and Gibbon were entitled to some little share of such credit?"
33585Had he not just received the information from First Lieutenant Haskell that the enemy had been"entirely repulsed?"
33585How do the Survivors of these Regiments regard the statement of the History Commission of Wisconsin, that"they sought to hide like rabbits?"
33585IS THE ASSAULT ENTIRELY REPULSED?''
33585If the object was to prove that they were just as vainglorious as Haskell, has not this fact been fully established by their published books?
33585Is it anywhere upon record that General Meade sent such an order?
33585Is it not clear that if such an order had been sent and obeyed, the enemy would not have been repulsed?
33585Was not that a fit occasion and those fugitives the men on whom to try the temper of the Solingen steel?
33585What can be the reason?
33585and that the loss usually sustained by the Eleventh Corps was in prisoners?
33121Did not Old Greece, or some tribe from about the sources of the Nile win it?
33121Here, what are these men falling back for?
33121How is it going?
33121Shall we attack the Rebel?
33121Then why tell me what I do not ask or care to know?
33121Will he attack us?
33121Will there be a battle to- day?
33121Will you see your color storm the wall alone?
33121And how look these fields?
33121And my horse can hardly move-- the spur will not start him-- what can be the reason?
33121And what if that invasion should be successful, and in the coming battle, the Army of the Potomac should be overpowered?
33121As he arrived near me, coming up the hill, he asked, in a sharp, eager voice:"How is it going here?"
33121At four o''clock on the morning of the Third, I was awakened by Gen. Gibbon''s pulling me by the foot and saying:"Come, do n''t you hear that?"
33121But where is the infantry?
33121Can you assist him?"
33121Did they not charge him personally, with the defeat at Chancellorsville?
33121Do these thick mounds cover the fiery hearts that in the battle rage swept the crest and stormed the wall?
33121Do you not think that by this time we began to feel a personal interest in this fight?
33121Does the country know any better than the President that Meade, Hancock and Gibbon were entitled to some little share of such credit?
33121Has it vanished in smoke?
33121How?
33121I would ask of a man I met,"Do you know, sir, where the 2d corps hospitals are?"
33121Is it strange?
33121Is the assault already repulsed?_"his voice quicker and more eager than before.
33121Is this a nightmare or a juggler''s devilish trick?
33121Might not the enemy fall upon and destroy the First Corps before succor could arrive?
33121Oh, where is Gibbon?
33121That Corps gone, what is there between the Second Corps, and these yelling masses of the enemy?
33121The artillery fight over, men began to breathe more freely, and to ask, What next, I wonder?
33121Then I would ask sharply,"Did you understand me to ask for the 12th corps hospital?"
33121Thought we, what could this mean?
33121To the question asked the men,"What do you think of this?"
33121Was ever a more absurd supposition?
33121Was ever claim so absurd?
33121Was ever princely couch or softest down so soft as those rough blankets, there upon the unroofed sod?
33121Was ever such a chorus of sound before?
33121Was not that a fit occasion, and these fugitives the men on whom to try the temper of the Solinzen steel?
33121Was there ever anything so fine before?
33121Were they not still burning with indignation against him for that disgrace?
33121What other expression had we that was not mean, for such an awful universe of battle?
33121What sound was that?
33121What was it ever put there for?
33121What would be the result?
33121Where was I?
33121Who can describe such a conflict as is raging around us?
33121Who could sketch the changes, the constant shifting of the bloody panorama?
33121Who of us could tell but that he would be the first to need them?
33121Why does the Western Army suppose that the Army of the Potomac does not fight?
33121Why not go to your regiment and be a man?"
33121Will the country remember them?
33121With his not greatly superior numbers, under such circumstances had Gen. Meade attacked, would he have been victorious?
33121Would it not be?
33121or if stately history fill as she list her arbitrary tablet, the sounding record of this fight?
33121were my senses mad?
33121where is Hancock?--some general-- anybody with the power and the will to support that wasting, melting line?
55627''Bout time to begin, ai n''t it?
55627Ach, Emmy,cried Mrs. Schmidt,"will we ever get to your gran''pop and my brother?"
55627And who,drawled the tall man,"who may Emmyline Willing be?"
55627Are n''t you afraid that there biscuit''ll p''isen you?
55627Are we going to give them water?
55627Are you going away?
55627Are you going to give we- all some of them real biscuit?
55627Are you really going away from me?
55627Can I ask?
55627Can I go down to the woods to find my brother?
55627Can you bake?
55627Can you see up there some mounted officers?
55627Could n''t she be got out of this?
55627Did n''t we win?
55627Did you find Willing?
55627Did you have wounded rebels here?
55627Did you see this?
55627Do men like to fight?
55627Do you see the white horse?
55627Does this end the war?
55627Emmyline,he said gently, when she brought him the things for which he had asked,"do you suppose you could help me?"
55627Emmyline,said he, in his pleasant drawl,"how about them biscuit?"
55627Goin''to pull out?
55627Got a man here by the name of Willing?
55627Grandmother, where are you?
55627Has blood been shed here?
55627How are they at home?
55627How did_ you_ get here?
55627I wonder what they are gunning?
55627Is Bertha safe, mother?
55627Is n''t the battle over?
55627Is the battle over?
55627Is there going to be_ more_?
55627Is there to be a battle?
55627Leetle Emmyline,he shouted,"you get some warm water in a basin and some old cloths, will you, Emmyline?"
55627Like to fight, Emmyline? 55627 Like to fight?"
55627Little Emmeline, is it you?
55627May I go down to the square now, mother?
55627Sissy, do you know any way to get this door open short of breaking it in?
55627Well, sissy,he drawled,"and who may you be?"
55627Well, you find out for me, will you, Sam? 55627 Were you in the battle, Emmeline?"
55627What are they doing?
55627What can it be?
55627What in the world is the matter?
55627What is it?
55627What is that noise over there, say?
55627What is that noise?
55627What shall I do, then?
55627What shall we do?
55627What will become of them?
55627What will they do to him?
55627What will they do with them?
55627What''s the matter?
55627When did you come out here?
55627Where are you going, Emmyline?
55627Where are you?
55627Where are you?
55627Where have they gone?
55627Where have you been?
55627Where is your baby? 55627 Where will they get them?"
55627Where''s the colonel?
55627Where,--Henry looked about, startled,--"where are grandfather and grandmother?"
55627Why do n''t they take them, too?
55627Why not?
55627Will it last after to- morrow?
55627Will there be more wounds to- morrow?
55627Will they get them?
55627Will they take him away?
55627Will you let me go if I bake you some?
55627Without_ me_? 55627 You wo n''t go out of the kitchen, will you, sissy?"
55627A battle?
55627Above all, where was Henry?
55627And where may the owner of this place be?"
55627And where was Emmeline, her darling, her little girl, whom she had un- wittingly sent into greater danger?
55627Are you going to miss_ me_?"
55627Could she bake?
55627Could you leave her brother here?
55627Do you hear me?"
55627Emmyline, would you"--Private Christy blushed like a boy--"would you give me a kiss?"
55627Had Bertha been taken into the cellar as the soldier advised?
55627Had there been fighting in quiet, peaceful Gettysburg?
55627Henry had seen the object toward which his sister''s erratic steps were turned and had finished his sentence,"Is it mine, mother?"
55627How had she got to bed?
55627How had these men come up so quietly?
55627How was poor Bertha?
55627I suppose she could n''t come down and talk to him?"
55627Illustration:_ Page 93_"EMMELINE,"HE SAID GENTLY,"DO YOU SUPPOSE YOU COULD HELP ME?"]
55627Like layin''up there with arms and legs ruined?
55627Like livin''their days without half a body?
55627Noise ca n''t hurt ye, do n''t ye know that?
55627Not one of those sick men could even raise his head-- who was it who came upon her so stealthily and suddenly?
55627THE TERROR PAST 130 ILLUSTRATIONS"EMMELINE,"HE SAID GENTLY,"DO YOU SUPPOSE YOU COULD HELP ME?"
55627Was he lying wounded, bleeding, alone?
55627Was the army still here?
55627What shall we do?"
55627What would she see to- morrow?
55627Where had they taken him?
55627Where was Emmeline, Emmeline who was forever getting into mischief of some kind?
55627Where was Mary?
55627Where was her mother?
55627Where was she?
55627Where were the elder Willings?
55627Where were they?
55627Where were those thousands of blue- coated soldiers?
55627Why did not the blue- coated soldiers come and drive them away?
55627Why did they permit this great army to camp on these hills, to occupy her grandfather''s house, and his fields, and the other fields round about?
55627Why was she still dressed?
55627Would she bake?
55627You would n''t bake me a real biscuit, I suppose?"