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 |
---|---|
39030 | Are not the wares vended in these places proverbially_ bad_? |
39030 | Do not all manner of imposters from these places deluge the country with their spurious goods, and impose them upon the unwary part of the public? |
39030 | [ 146] State Papers, Domestic, 1566? |
39030 | [ 147] State Papers, Domestic, 1619, Oct.? |
39030 | [ 148]_ Ibid._, 1620, Jan.? |
39030 | [ 149]_ Ibid._, 1620, Jan.? |
39030 | [ 150]_ Ibid._, 1620, Jan.? |
39030 | wool- comber corvisarius, gorwicer, cordewaner, sutor-- shoemaker coupere, hoppere(?) |
45425 | According to the first theory they were the persistence of earlier institutions; but what were these institutions? |
45425 | But first, on what principle were the guilds classified? |
45425 | How could the guilds hope to escape from the consequences of misfortunes which struck at their very roots? |
45425 | How could they be expected to go in search of improvements, when they were so slow in adopting them? |
45425 | Is it to be wondered at that mastership in many crafts gradually became hereditary? |
45425 | Should it aim only at mutual assistance, or should it be competent to act in disputes between members? |
45425 | Should the guild be optional or compulsory, open or closed? |
45425 | Was it according to the vital importance of the needs they existed to supply? |
45425 | What became, then, of the intimate and cordial relations between masters, journeymen, and apprentices? |
45425 | What share should masters and workmen take in it? |
45425 | What was the motive of this limitation? |
45425 | What weight had the old regulations in view of this transformation of methods and appliances? |
45425 | What, then, were the relations of these Craft Guilds to the municipalities and to the State? |
45425 | Who could uphold them? |
45425 | Why so many deaths followed by so many resurrections? |
45425 | [ 116] How, thus mutilated, could they stand against the foreign competition of which their own members had become the most formidable allies? |
36934 | A bag that was too heavy to have silver in it would have gold? |
36934 | Alan, my son,he said presently,"do you know what lead is?" |
36934 | Alone? |
36934 | And are you going to be a goldsmith in Chepe too? |
36934 | And if it is all to vanish in a few years, why do we paint? |
36934 | And so thy mother makes her living weaving wool, does she? |
36934 | And what do you in London? |
36934 | And who taught David? |
36934 | And why are you wasting time on them? |
36934 | And you want to learn my trade-- eh? |
36934 | Are not these the red roses of Provence? |
36934 | Are ye wantin''a stone- mason just now? |
36934 | Are you spying on me again? |
36934 | Aye, I''ll warrant,grunted Simon,"an Eyre would be a born shoemaker, and name him Crispin---- Eh, lad, what be you after with that leather?" |
36934 | Barbara,he said to the girl,"art anxious to get home? |
36934 | Basil Ossorin, an Irish monk from England? |
36934 | Be you wanting the job? |
36934 | But are you going to leave your looms for them to burn? |
36934 | But suppose that a way could be found to make the colors lasting? |
36934 | But what are these prescriptions? |
36934 | But why not come to the Abbey and learn to do the work yourself-- if you can leave your own workshop? 36934 But, father,"said Nicholas, rather puzzled,"what else could I do?" |
36934 | Can not you tell? |
36934 | Can you make it again? |
36934 | Did you find it in Spain? |
36934 | Did you hear him? 36934 Did you see him?" |
36934 | Did you take any red- rose cuttings? |
36934 | Do you know a certain clerk named Simon Gastard? |
36934 | Do you mean to say that you play like that-- on that? |
36934 | Do you see-- there? |
36934 | Do you think it will? |
36934 | Do you think that the man with the dancing bear was a friend of his? |
36934 | Do you want it? |
36934 | Does Master Gerard do his work with elves? 36934 Does the trade like him?" |
36934 | For me? |
36934 | Forest-- no; but why? 36934 Guy,"he said one day,"what''s the heaviest metal you ever handled?" |
36934 | Has Vanni caught anything yet? |
36934 | Have you a share in that ship that you watch her so sharply? |
36934 | Have you any physic for a wasted soul? |
36934 | Have you been here all this time? |
36934 | Have you the world on your shoulders, or only some new undertaking? |
36934 | He likes the trade, does he? |
36934 | Ho there, little one-- what is the trouble? |
36934 | How could they? |
36934 | How do these weavers come here, so far from any town? |
36934 | How does he make his design? |
36934 | How have your father''s ships prospered? |
36934 | How many loads of stone will it take for this wall? |
36934 | How much mortar? |
36934 | How, exactly, does it happen? |
36934 | Is it hard to learn? |
36934 | Is it-- is it thou indeed, master? |
36934 | Is there a boy here named Crispin Eyre? |
36934 | Is there a forest near by? |
36934 | Is this anything like? |
36934 | Like this? |
36934 | Look at the shoes, father, are n''t they pretty? |
36934 | Mary,she queried, as the still- room maid came through the bower,"where is Master Tomaso?" |
36934 | Master Gerard is but absent for an hour or two,he said;"shall I run to the Cathedral and fetch him?" |
36934 | May she keep it? |
36934 | Mistress Mary, will you ask Master Tomaso for some of the spice that he gave to your mother, for me? |
36934 | My boy,he said kindly,"you are Quentin, from Peronne? |
36934 | My venture? |
36934 | My venture? |
36934 | None of your friends live there, I suppose? |
36934 | Ought I to know him? |
36934 | Rebuilt? |
36934 | Shall I call him? |
36934 | Shall we burn the parchment then? |
36934 | Shall we write then of the doings of binds and swinkers? |
36934 | So you believe that, my son? |
36934 | So you changed the ancient course of the flood into that culvert, did you? |
36934 | So you hold it folly to pull down a wall? 36934 That''s like your other dishes, is n''t it?" |
36934 | The Provence rose, is it? |
36934 | Then you like not the plan? |
36934 | There is courtesy, then, among Londoners? 36934 This-- is the cathedral?" |
36934 | Vanni,he said,"you know that thief that they caught?" |
36934 | Vanni,said Mary laughing as she passed through the kitchen on the morning of the great day,"do you always scour your dishes as carefully as this?" |
36934 | Vanni,she said,"will you make some of your lozenges for the banquet? |
36934 | Was that all? |
36934 | Well, my boy,said Brother Basil in his quaintly spoken French,"what is it?" |
36934 | What are you doing away from your tapestry- frame, wench? |
36934 | What are you going to do with the penny? |
36934 | What art doing, lad? |
36934 | What can you do? |
36934 | What do you think they will do to the one that they caught? |
36934 | What do you think will happen in Lombardy? |
36934 | What have you done? |
36934 | What have you found? |
36934 | What is all this? |
36934 | What is wrong with the picture? 36934 What seemed to be the hitch?" |
36934 | What shall we do with these mysteries? |
36934 | What was the name of him who told you the tale, Simon? |
36934 | What wey is it better? |
36934 | What''s ailin''ye, lad? |
36934 | What''s all that, Ranulph? |
36934 | What''s the trouble here? |
36934 | What''s thy name, by the way? |
36934 | What''s yer name? |
36934 | What''s your price? |
36934 | What? 36934 What?" |
36934 | Where are my spices? |
36934 | Where did tha find him, and what''s his name? |
36934 | Where did they put those ashes? |
36934 | Where did this come from? |
36934 | Where did this shoe come from, now? |
36934 | Where did you get the color for this? |
36934 | Where did you get the pattern? |
36934 | Where did you learn to draw? |
36934 | Which did you lose, Genevieve, child? |
36934 | Who are you, and why are you so fond to go to London, young sheep- dog? |
36934 | Who ever saw a lad like that who cared about weaving? |
36934 | Who gave you that, my boy? |
36934 | Who might she be? |
36934 | Who taught you to build walls, my boy? |
36934 | Why do you stay in this dull sodden England-- you who are free? |
36934 | Why not take turns watching the chest? |
36934 | Will that content you? |
36934 | Will you not tell me,he said hesitatingly at last,"to whom I may offer my thanks-- and service-- if I may not serve you in some way?" |
36934 | Will you sell it? |
36934 | Will you teach me the properties of plants? |
36934 | Work it out as he goes along-- like iron- work? |
36934 | Ye do n''t know who that was, do you? |
36934 | You did not use my spices? 36934 You have no father?" |
36934 | You kept the rule, I hope? |
36934 | You meant to steal them? |
36934 | You''ve been in England some time? |
36934 | Your father has ships, then? |
36934 | And how are they all at home?" |
36934 | And some day, would he find that his dreams had vanished forever? |
36934 | Are we to spread ruin over the world?" |
36934 | As they came abreast of the gate the foremost called out,"Ho, Wilfrid, is there any tavern hereabouts? |
36934 | But what happened this time?" |
36934 | But would it always be so? |
36934 | Can you carve a head on the top-- or two heads, facing one another, man and woman?" |
36934 | Come and see the new- born lambs, Robert, will''ee?" |
36934 | Did ye not know?" |
36934 | Did you grow out of the ground, and have you roots like the rest of them, bumpkin?" |
36934 | Did you use the spice I gave you?" |
36934 | Didst ever hear of sweating gold?" |
36934 | Do your stars tell you foolish tales like that, Master Tomaso?" |
36934 | For the hunting of dragons?" |
36934 | Have you found treasure?" |
36934 | Hear ye that, my lords and councilors?" |
36934 | How didst know the true line for that handle?" |
36934 | How would that be?" |
36934 | How, after all, was he better than Gastard? |
36934 | I suppose you do n''t expect him to steal it, chest and all?" |
36934 | I wonder now what became of that lead?" |
36934 | If men were to write chronicles, why not make them vivid as legends, true, stirring, magnificent stories of the men who moved the world? |
36934 | If the leather should be blue in place o''red, would that matter?" |
36934 | Is he the youth of whom you told me when we met at Canterbury?" |
36934 | Is it for that gate- latch? |
36934 | It shall be a picture-- of what, my son?" |
36934 | It''d never do for the hinges and handles on this coffer to spoil the looks o''the carving, and that''s to be done in London, d''ye see? |
36934 | Latch done, Dickon? |
36934 | Masters, what do ye lack? |
36934 | Might he not grow to be like Brother Peter, who had kept the porter''s lodge for forty years and hated to see a new face? |
36934 | Now then, you lummox, are you going to pick up your goods and go, or do I have to throw them after you?" |
36934 | Now, what next? |
36934 | Or have the fairies taken him and left a changeling?" |
36934 | Saw you ever the like?" |
36934 | Shall we give the Plantagenets to eat of the Tree of Knowledge?" |
36934 | So, is that the end? |
36934 | Suppose we nail it up by the market- cross for a warning to others? |
36934 | The figure of Our Lady would be more impressive if you were to add a gold border to the mantle, would it not?" |
36934 | The new man smiled at the boy with his big roll of cloth, and said,"What have you there, my fine lad?" |
36934 | The river ca n''t get our apples now, can it?" |
36934 | There must be a child in trouble, but what child could there be in this wild place, and neither Norman nor Saxon? |
36934 | Was there no more need for such work as theirs? |
36934 | Were you asking him the day of my death?" |
36934 | What do you want for it?" |
36934 | What hast been doing to make it shine so?" |
36934 | What if Audrey should want the bowl? |
36934 | What if I find thee a liar and send thee back from the inn, hey?" |
36934 | What if we let him and his mother live in the little cottage beyond the sheepfold? |
36934 | What sort of folk are you?" |
36934 | What would he do? |
36934 | What?" |
36934 | Where did you get it?" |
36934 | Where have you been all this time?" |
36934 | Who would care, in a thousand years, what rent was paid by the tenant farmers of the Abbey, or who received a certain benefice from the King? |
36934 | Who''s your father, lad?" |
36934 | Why hold we here these demons in the light Of the High Altar, by God''s candles cast? |
36934 | Will you sell the cloth to me? |
36934 | Will your father let you stay?" |
36934 | Would Giovanni come? |
36934 | Would Mary undertake to go there and make herself useful, either in ways that might aid the cook, or in any other duties that she saw? |
36934 | Would he at last obey the Church, or not? |
36934 | Would you?" |
36934 | Yes? |
36934 | You are one of us, are you not?" |
36934 | You have been thinking yourself a writer, have you? |
36934 | You have heard of Archiater''s apples? |
36934 | You take them and do not use them?" |
36934 | You tell me you did it?" |
36934 | [ Illustration:"''HAVE YOU BEEN HERE ALL THIS TIME?''"] |