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 |
---|---|
2425 | What family''ll you go into? |
2425 | A type that has lost itself before it has been fixed-- what can you look for from this? |
2425 | Do n''t you remember when Clara Barnard went to visit New York, three years ago, how much attention she received? |
2425 | Do you remember the_ pension bourgeoise_ of Madame Vauquer_ nee_ de Conflans? |
2425 | Does n''t Matthew Arnold say that somewhere-- or is it Swinburne, or Pater? |
2425 | I suppose they will think I am not sincere; but is n''t it more sincere to come out with things than to conceal them? |
2425 | I wonder if she does n''t think me refined-- or if she had ever heard anything against Bangor? |
2425 | Is the situation sufficiently indicated, and do you apprehend the motives of my felicity? |
2425 | Madame de Maisonrouge reminds me of Madame Hulot-- do you remember"la belle Madame Hulot?" |
2425 | Shall I help thee a little? |
2425 | They were too didactic; art should never be didactic; and what is life but an art? |
2425 | Would you believe that at the end of exactly twelve minutes she gave me a rendezvous? |
2425 | _ De l''an passe, vous voulez dire_? |
2425 | _ Que voulez- vous_? |
11990 | And now, my sweet Will, whom my soul loveth, why comest thou not as of yore to the"Mermaid,"that I may have speech with thee? |
11990 | How hast thou put to use this talent entrusted thee by the Master of the vineyard? |
11990 | May I pray thee that this collection compass not the two sonnets written by thee for me in laud of our Queen Elizabeth, and the one of this morning? |
11990 | O thou dull god, why liest thou with the vile In loathsome beds, and leav''st the kingly couch A watch- case, or a common''larum- bell? |
11990 | Tell me, sweet lord, what is''t that takes from thee Thy stomach, pleasure, and thy golden sleep?" |
11990 | Thinkest thou to touch pitch and remain undefiled? |
11990 | Who knoweth into what vessels the All- seeing One may elect to pour his spirit? |
2445 | But how is it possible for you,said I, with some warmth,"to know whether your discourse is really inspired by the Almighty?" |
2445 | My dear sir,said I,"were you ever baptised?" |
2445 | Well,said I to him,"what sort of a communion have you?" |
2445 | What have you, then, taught us? |
2445 | You have, then, no priests? |
2445 | *** And who is there, say you, that dares deny So owned a truth? |
2445 | After this, shall people quarrel with me about the name I give it?" |
2445 | And are the several ideas of which thy soul receives the impression formed by thyself? |
2445 | And how is this reflection performed? |
2445 | And in case its influence reaches so far, is it not very probable that this power retains it in its orbit, and determines its motion? |
2445 | And was not France very happy, when the power and authority of those petty robbers was abolished by the lawful authority of kings and of the people? |
2445 | As you can not comprehend either matter or spirit, why will you presume to assert anything? |
2445 | But are not the French fond of life, and is beauty so inconsiderable an advantage as to be disregarded by the ladies? |
2445 | But are they less obliged to him because he did not know the reason why the muscles contract? |
2445 | But art thou circumcised?" |
2445 | But by what are they impelled? |
2445 | But in case the moon obeys this principle( whatever it be) may we not conclude very naturally that the rest of the planets are equally subject to it? |
2445 | But what do I say? |
2445 | But what would these people say should they themselves be proved irreligious? |
2445 | Ce maitre pretendu qui leur donne des loix, Ce roi des animaux, combien a- t''il de rois?" |
2445 | De tous les animaux il est ici le maitre; Qui pourroit le nier, poursuis tu? |
2445 | Faut- il vieillir courbe sous la main qui m''outrage, Supporter, ou finir mon malheur et mon sort? |
2445 | From what cause, therefore, do colours arise in Nature? |
2445 | I have made choice of part of the celebrated soliloquy in_ Hamlet_, which you may remember is as follows:--"To be, or not to be? |
2445 | In the remaining twentieth part how few are readers? |
2445 | L''homme est ne pour agir, et tu pretens penser?" |
2445 | Que peut il faire? |
2445 | Qui suis je? |
2445 | Shall I ascribe to an unknown cause, what I can so easily impute to the only second cause I am acquainted with? |
2445 | Shall he not be allowed to say? |
2445 | Shall we, after these words, cheapen, as it were, the Gospel, sell the Holy Ghost, and make of an assembly of Christians a mere shop of traders? |
2445 | This book was forbid in France, but do you believe that the English Ministry were pleased with it? |
2445 | What, then, is this secret disposition? |
2445 | Why should we abandon our babe to mercenary nurses, when we ourselves have milk enough for it? |
2445 | Would not one suppose that these sublime discoveries had been made by the greatest philosophers, and in ages much more enlightened than the present? |
2445 | Wouldst thou deprive us of so happy a distinction? |
2445 | baptism a Jewish ceremony?" |
2445 | et qu''est- ce que la mort? |
2445 | no communion?" |
2445 | will these people say further;"and to what purpose are so many calculations to tell us what you yourself do not comprehend?" |
4615 | A very good fellow,he said of Hughes,"but just a little-- what shall I say?--impracticable?" |
4615 | Do you mean to say you do n''t WANT to know? |
4615 | Have n''t you heard? |
4615 | Healing is well,says the poet,"but wherefore wounds to heal?" |
4615 | Is it not quite incredible? |
4615 | Oh, has she? |
4615 | Was there no one you could ask? |
4615 | Was there no one you could find to ask? |
4615 | What ails you? |
4615 | What has happened? |
4615 | ''Fairies?'' |
4615 | ''Puck?'' |
4615 | A perfectly sincere and direct point of view? |
4615 | After all, when it is done, what worth has it? |
4615 | All very beautiful and noble, no doubt; but is it real? |
4615 | And yet it ca n''t be unintentional, I suppose? |
4615 | Are they to be blamed? |
4615 | But if Olympus had refused to shake, even though I had nodded like a mandarin? |
4615 | But is it a part of loyalty that I must desire to see him, and even to be bored by him? |
4615 | But is it not possible to love discipline without being a pedant, and to be vigilant without being a sneak? |
4615 | But what if the old comrade is a bore? |
4615 | But, que faire? |
4615 | Can it be subdued, can it be concealed, can it be cured? |
4615 | Can we not rest in that? |
4615 | Could these fine things have been truthfully said of us? |
4615 | DEAR HERBERT,--So it is to be Madeira at present? |
4615 | Do you know anything about him? |
4615 | Do you remember, too, that night when we sate at tea, blissfully, wholesomely tired after a college match? |
4615 | Do you shudder with the fear that I am going to give you pages of description of scenery? |
4615 | Does he expect me to run races with the boy? |
4615 | Does that seem to you to be cynical? |
4615 | Does this all seem very dingy to you, my dear Herbert? |
4615 | Does this seem to you very unreal and fantastic? |
4615 | Dost thou sleep, and dream perchance of love and war, of the little life that seemed so long, and over which the slow waves of time have flowed? |
4615 | His own salvation--"Shall I be safe if I die to- night?" |
4615 | How far ought loyalty to old friends to go? |
4615 | How is this possible? |
4615 | How would I mend all this? |
4615 | I ask myself what is the use of anything? |
4615 | I found myself murmuring over those perfect lines of Marvell-- you know them?--"Might a soul bathe there and be clean, And slake its drought?" |
4615 | I have a good many old friends in all parts of England-- ought I to use my holidays in touring about to see them? |
4615 | I said,"Yes, and do n''t you think that there is also something of the pleasure of saying''Bo''to a goose?" |
4615 | I wonder if you ever get disagreeable letters? |
4615 | I wonder why this is? |
4615 | If we resist it, what is it but a resultant of many forces? |
4615 | Is it a mere matter of temperament, of inner happiness, of physical well- being; or has it an absolute existence? |
4615 | Is it not possible to encourage something of this feeling in a school? |
4615 | Is it that one grows confident and careless? |
4615 | Is not the one thing which, after all, one demands in art, PERSONALITY? |
4615 | MY DEAR HERBERT,--I am going back to the subject of ambition-- do you mind? |
4615 | MY DEAR HERBERT,--You ask if I have read anything lately? |
4615 | Need I add that he was practical enough to take the pieces of the letter away with him? |
4615 | Now he lives in a suburb, on a pension: why do I never go to see him? |
4615 | Of course we have our drawbacks-- what society has not? |
4615 | Perhaps you have not been able to write? |
4615 | Perhaps you or Nelly can find time to let me have a few lines about it all? |
4615 | Sleepest thou, son of Atreus? |
4615 | The ordinary person says to himself,"Who am I that I should set up a standard? |
4615 | The question is not whether we can provide a motive for the unsuccessful; but whether we ought not to discourage ambition in every form? |
4615 | To have him thrust into teams of cricket and football from which his incapacity for all games naturally excludes him? |
4615 | To introduce him to the captain of the eleven? |
4615 | Was FitzGerald''s life an unworthy one? |
4615 | We have established by law and custom a certain personal security nowadays; is our sense of beauty born of that security? |
4615 | Well, if he DOES feel thus, is he right and am I wrong? |
4615 | Well, what does he want me to do? |
4615 | What DID we talk about? |
4615 | What are the claims of friendship on busy men? |
4615 | What class of the community does it, nay, can it, benefit? |
4615 | What is it that we do that is like that? |
4615 | What is it that_ I_ do? |
4615 | What is one to hold on to in such a swift flux of things? |
4615 | What is one''s duty in these matters? |
4615 | What is the best way to deal with it? |
4615 | What is there in one''s conduct which needs the check? |
4615 | What of them now? |
4615 | What there is that makes boys interesting and attractive to deal with? |
4615 | What was the power that raised these great places as so essential and vital a part of life? |
4615 | What were his thoughts, his aims, his views of himself and of the world? |
4615 | What, I ask myself, is, after all, the use of this practice of erudition? |
4615 | When shall I welcome you back? |
4615 | Where was the mistake he made? |
4615 | Who can co- ordinate or reconcile these things? |
4615 | Who, when all is said and done, was this extraordinary man? |
4615 | Why do I not do this? |
4615 | Why should we feel that the future somehow belongs to us, while we have no claim upon the past? |
4615 | Would they not think and say that it was all a terrible mistake? |
4615 | Yet have we any choice at all? |
4615 | You will ask what there is left? |
4615 | You will understand me; but read the story to your wife and daughters, and they will say,"Was there no one he could have asked?" |
4615 | or was it prudent and wise to refuse to attempt what I, knowing my own temperament better, felt I could not attempt successfully? |
4615 | que penser? |
4615 | was I, were you, creatures of this make? |
28303 | Telegraph what, madame? |
28303 | What''s this, Clara? |
28303 | (_ Eagerly._) Could you get them? |
28303 | (_ Eagerly._) Yes; which is it? |
28303 | (_ Equally charming, as magnificently jeweled, and as exquisitely gowned; also a chapeau of wonderful birds, such as never sang in any wood._) He? |
28303 | (_ Jealously._) Do you know him? |
28303 | (_ Raising her eyebrows and regarding the banker affectionately._) Really? |
28303 | (_ Red in the face._) No; do you? |
28303 | (_ She plays again with a note from the banker''s pile._) III MRS. HENRY B. GORDING,_ of Rochester, New York._ Do you play? |
28303 | (_ She smiles hysterically._) Dear me, I wonder what my husband would say if he could see me? |
28303 | (_ Smiling nervously and fumbling in her glove where she has concealed the money to have it conveniently ready._) Put one down for me, too; will you? |
28303 | (_ Suddenly noticing that Mr. Sternwall is not with them._) But where is Mr. Sternwall? |
28303 | (_ They get down out of the big chair._) Do we go to school the next day after it? |
28303 | (_ They have moved on to another set._) Shall we stop here? |
28303 | (_ Thoughtfully._) Do you really think papa would like being an angel? |
28303 | (_ Together; each to her own coterie._) You know perfectly it is my louis; is n''t it? |
28303 | (_ Very pleasantly._) Have you won to- night, dearie? |
28303 | (_ Young, very beautiful, in an exquisite gown from Laferiere, with gorgeous jewels and a wonderful hat._) Who is the banker? |
28303 | ***** What do you think of that? |
28303 | A convenient husband for some women we know, would n''t he be? |
28303 | A good thing that will be for me, too, I''m sure-- What do you think? |
28303 | After all, do_ I_ look like the daughter of a washerwoman? |
28303 | And do you advise announcing the engagement before her presentation, or afterward? |
28303 | And is he rich or poor? |
28303 | And then we always have that terrible doubt,--has he chosen the right woman for him? |
28303 | And what if you make me a grandmother? |
28303 | Are n''t you surprised? |
28303 | Are they friends of yours? |
28303 | Are we going to be paid? |
28303 | Are you afraid of him now? |
28303 | Besides, papa wo n''t have any office there, and what''ll he do without an office? |
28303 | But I do n''t think servants mind; do you? |
28303 | But I do n''t think we are gossips nowadays here in America; do you? |
28303 | But why did n''t you come to see me yesterday? |
28303 | Can I do anything for you here? |
28303 | Can Lina be a wretch after all? |
28303 | Can you manage to keep out of the political set if you want to? |
28303 | Did you ever hear anything like it? |
28303 | Did you give him the letter? |
28303 | Do you believe it? |
28303 | Do you know the family? |
28303 | Do you know, Rob, that I bathed my baby every morning of your little life, so long as you took infant tubs? |
28303 | Do you like kissing games? |
28303 | Do you remember your favorite when a very small boy? |
28303 | Do you remember? |
28303 | Do you think we can go to the circus next week just the same? |
28303 | Do you understand what that means? |
28303 | Do you want to go up and see him? |
28303 | Does the butler sell tickets at the door, do you think? |
28303 | For you_ were_ happy with me before you met her; were n''t you? |
28303 | Had n''t we better throw up the sponge and take it? |
28303 | Have they any position whatever in Troy? |
28303 | He never struck you? |
28303 | How about that girl you were running after? |
28303 | How do you like him? |
28303 | How is the dear child? |
28303 | How rude people are; and what did they expect my mother to be like? |
28303 | However, what can you expect? |
28303 | I adore young Englishmen, and why does n''t yours come to see me? |
28303 | I believe there are some good pictures, but I think one sees so many pictures in Europe; do n''t you? |
28303 | I do n''t care for the new woman; do you? |
28303 | I do n''t know a single thing about the game; do you? |
28303 | I suppose you will come on for the Makeway Ball; wo n''t you? |
28303 | I wonder how many couples in New York who have been married nineteen years are as happy as Will and I are? |
28303 | I''m sure it is n''t my fault if I do n''t know which is Schumann and which is Schubert; and what''s the difference? |
28303 | I_ hate_ snobs; do n''t you? |
28303 | If you want a house in Washington next winter why not rent ours? |
28303 | It is n''t true, is it? |
28303 | Look at the American duchesses-- don''t they grace even the parties at Marlborough House? |
28303 | Monsieur, if you please, will you have the kindness to place my four louis on the table? |
28303 | My Darling Dick: What is the meaning of this letter from a lawyer? |
28303 | My dear Miss Stone: So you are going to take my boy away from me? |
28303 | My dear Mrs. Joslyn: Where is your young Englishman? |
28303 | Of course you wo n''t stay in mourning long; will you? |
28303 | Oh, were ever arms so empty as when they hold the dead body of someone loved? |
28303 | One thing awfully interesting about a picture gallery is to see the absurd difference in women''s dress now and in former times; do n''t you think so? |
28303 | Really, is n''t it trying? |
28303 | Say, if that''s true, how did his soul get out? |
28303 | Shall we stop here in this set? |
28303 | That''s a wig of course; is n''t it? |
28303 | The knocks and bruises I''ve healed by kissing them!--do you remember one- third? |
28303 | To ruin my happiness? |
28303 | Well, I''m going down to tell the others my_ good_ news( you understand that_ good_, do n''t you? |
28303 | What about the ball? |
28303 | What did I come so early for? |
28303 | What do girls do with themselves all the time? |
28303 | What is the opera? |
28303 | What kind? |
28303 | What shall I do without you-- without my blessed son? |
28303 | What was that? |
28303 | What''s it for-- I mean why is it? |
28303 | What''s that about Eames? |
28303 | When people buy their way into other people''s houses like that, how do they do it do you suppose? |
28303 | Where did they come from? |
28303 | Where did they learn how not to behave? |
28303 | Where did they learn how not to dress? |
28303 | Which one? |
28303 | Which was it, a boy or a girl? |
28303 | Who do you suppose is down stairs? |
28303 | Who has been trying to damage my character? |
28303 | Who hates me? |
28303 | Why do n''t you give it all up? |
28303 | Why does n''t she take something? |
28303 | Would you like to sit this dance out on the stairs? |
28303 | Yes; but then who''ll be a father to my children? |
28303 | You are n''t strict about your mourning, are you? |
28303 | You do n''t play? |
28303 | You have won? |
28303 | You never go home, do you? |
28303 | You''d have told a good friend like me; would n''t you? |
28303 | You''ve got a new father, have n''t you? |
28303 | are you putting one down? |
28303 | or do you suppose it is your man? |
2049 | Ca n''t you be friends with me as of old? |
2049 | Do they then require concealing? |
2049 | Do you allow anyone else to do so? |
2049 | H. Could you not come and live with me as a friend? 2049 Had she any tie?" |
2049 | How could she accuse me of a want of regard to her? 2049 If there was any one else who had been so fortunate as to gain her favourable opinion?" |
2049 | She defied anyone to read her thoughts? |
2049 | Was the man waiting? |
2049 | What is this world? 2049 What was it then? |
2049 | Where does your grandmother live now? |
2049 | Where is she gone? |
2049 | Why can you not go on as we have done, and say nothing about the word, FOREVER? |
2049 | Would she go and leave me so? 2049 Would she live with me in her own house-- to be with me all day as dear friends, if nothing more, to sit and read and talk with me?" |
2049 | Would she make her own terms? |
2049 | You are not going to be married soon? |
2049 | ''Why should I go?'' |
2049 | *** What had I better do in these circumstances? |
2049 | --"And the figure?" |
2049 | --"Would she go to the play with me sometimes, and let it be understood that I was paying my addresses to her?" |
2049 | ----?" |
2049 | --Now what am I to think of all this? |
2049 | .What do you think of all this? |
2049 | After all, what is there in her but a pretty figure, and that you ca n''t get a word out of her? |
2049 | Am I mad or a fool? |
2049 | Am I not hated, repulsed, derided by her whom alone I love or ever did love? |
2049 | Am I to believe her or you? |
2049 | And another time, when you were in the same posture, and I reproached you with indifference, you replied in these words,"Do I SEEM INDIFFERENT?" |
2049 | And did you not say since I came back,''YOUR FEELINGS TO ME WERE THE SAME AS EVER?'' |
2049 | And what do you guess was her answer--"Do you think it would be prudent?" |
2049 | And why am I thus treated? |
2049 | And why? |
2049 | But can not you forgive the agony of the moment? |
2049 | But did not you boast you were"very persevering in your resistance to gay young men,"and had been"several times obliged to ring the bell?" |
2049 | But do I love her the less dearly for it? |
2049 | But tell me, there was not a likeness between me and your old lover that struck you at first sight? |
2049 | C----?" |
2049 | C----?" |
2049 | Ca n''t you bring up your own to shew me? |
2049 | Can I live without her? |
2049 | Can I witness such perfection, and bear to think I have lost you for ever? |
2049 | Can you account for it, except on the admission of my worst doubts concerning her? |
2049 | Can you not forget and forgive the past, and judge of me by my conduct in future? |
2049 | Can you not take all my follies in the lump, and say like a good, generous girl,"Well, I''ll think no more of them?" |
2049 | Can you turn it to any thing but good-- comparative good? |
2049 | Could I have thought I should ever live to believe them an inhuman mockery of one who had the sincerest regard for you? |
2049 | Could I see that which you have? |
2049 | Did I not adore her every grace? |
2049 | Did I not live on her smile? |
2049 | Did M---- know of the intimacy that had subsisted between us? |
2049 | Did she think it right and becoming to be free with strangers, and strange to old friends?" |
2049 | Did you always ring it? |
2049 | Did you not love another? |
2049 | Do I not adore you-- and have I merited this return? |
2049 | Do I not love thee, when I can feel such an interest in thy love for another? |
2049 | Do n''t you thank me for that? |
2049 | Do n''t you think it worth that to be made happy? |
2049 | Do you know I think I should like this? |
2049 | Do you know I''m going to write to that sweet rogue presently, having a whole evening to myself in advance of my work? |
2049 | Do you know any one it''s like? |
2049 | Do you know, you would have been delighted with the effect of the Northern twilight on this romantic country as I rode along last night? |
2049 | Do you think if she knew how I love her, my depressions and my altitudes, my wanderings and my constancy, it would not move her? |
2049 | Do you think they will not now turn to rank poison in my veins, and kill me, soul and body? |
2049 | Does not my heart yearn to be with her; and shall I not follow its bidding? |
2049 | Does she bend less enchantingly, because she has turned from me to another? |
2049 | For this picture, this ecstatic vision, what have I of late instead as the image of the reality? |
2049 | H. And can you return them? |
2049 | H. And did he never attempt to persuade you to any other step? |
2049 | H. And did he return your regard? |
2049 | H. And did your mother and family know of it? |
2049 | H. And do you correspond? |
2049 | H. And do you think the impression will never wear out? |
2049 | H. And has time made no alteration? |
2049 | H. And nothing more? |
2049 | H. And was his figure the same? |
2049 | H. And yet you have no hope of ever being his? |
2049 | H. Did I not overhear the conversation down- stairs last night, to which you were a party? |
2049 | H. Do n''t you think it like yourself? |
2049 | H. Do you mean on account of its liberty? |
2049 | H. Have you not told me your spirits grow worse every year? |
2049 | H. Higher than of the maiden state? |
2049 | H. Is that what you thought I meant by SACRIFICES last night? |
2049 | H. Or had it been your old friend, what do you think he would have said in my case? |
2049 | H. Or what am I to think of this story of the footman? |
2049 | H. Tell me, my angel, how was it? |
2049 | H. To whom? |
2049 | H. Was he a young man of rank, then? |
2049 | H. What then broke off your intimacy? |
2049 | H. What, do you mean to Buonaparte? |
2049 | H. Why did he go at last? |
2049 | H. Will you go and leave me so? |
2049 | H."That was all forgiven when we last parted, and your last words were,''I should find you the same as ever''when I came home? |
2049 | Has Mr. P---- called? |
2049 | Has any one called? |
2049 | Has she not murdered me under the mask of the tenderest friendship? |
2049 | Have you read Sardanapalus? |
2049 | How can I thank you for your condescension in letting me know your sweet sentiments? |
2049 | How could I doubt it, looking in her face, and hearing her words, like sighs breathed from the gentlest of all bosoms? |
2049 | How different was the idea I once had of her? |
2049 | How ought I to behave when I go back? |
2049 | How then do I console myself for the loss of her? |
2049 | How? |
2049 | I am to hear from him again in a day or two.--Well, what do you say to all this? |
2049 | I ask you what you yourself would have felt or done, if loving her as I did, you had heard what I did, time after time? |
2049 | I asked her if she would do so at once-- the very next day? |
2049 | I asked what it could mean? |
2049 | I asked, to what? |
2049 | I can settle to nothing: what is the use of all I have done? |
2049 | I gave Betsey a twenty- shilling note which I happened to have in my hand, and on her asking"What''s this for, Sir?" |
2049 | I grant all you say about my self- tormenting folly: but has it been without cause? |
2049 | I have always some horrid dream about her, and wake wondering what is the matter that"she is no longer the same to me as ever?" |
2049 | I however found that C---- was gone, and no one else had been there, of whom I had cause to be jealous.--"Should I see her on the morrow?" |
2049 | I however sprang down stairs, and as they called out to me,"What is it?--What has she done to you?" |
2049 | I know all this; but what do I gain by it, unless I could find some one with her shape and air, to supply the place of the lovely apparition? |
2049 | I never could tire of her sweetness; I feel that I could grow to her, body and soul? |
2049 | I replied,"Why do you treat me thus? |
2049 | I said,"Are you sure of that?" |
2049 | I said,"Do you mean Buonaparte?" |
2049 | I said,"Yes, may I not speak to you? |
2049 | I shall perhaps see thee no more, but I shall still think of thee the same as ever-- I shall say to myself,"Where is she now?--what is she doing?" |
2049 | I went out to roam the desert streets, when, turning a corner, whom should I meet but her very lover? |
2049 | I will not go back there: yet how can I breathe away from her? |
2049 | If she could get THE LITTLE IMAGE mended? |
2049 | If she made a fool of me, what did she make of her lover? |
2049 | If she should be in misfortune, who will comfort her? |
2049 | If that was all, I did not care: but tell me true, is there not a new attachment that is the real cause of your estrangement? |
2049 | In a word, may I come back, and try to behave better? |
2049 | Is it a joke upon me that I make free with you? |
2049 | Is it less sweet because it is withdrawn from me? |
2049 | Is it long ago then? |
2049 | Is it not too true? |
2049 | Is my love then in the power of fortune, or of her caprice? |
2049 | Is she offended at my letting you know she wrote to me, or is it some new affair? |
2049 | Is there not a prior attachment in the case? |
2049 | It is not that you prefer flirting with"gay young men"to becoming a mere dull domestic wife? |
2049 | Not one five minutes''conversation, for the sake of old acquaintance? |
2049 | Or did you get into these dilemmas that made it necessary, merely by the demureness of your looks and ways? |
2049 | Or did you hint at it? |
2049 | Or do you deceive them as well as me? |
2049 | Or do you still see him sometimes? |
2049 | Or had I displeased her by letting Mr. P---- know she wrote to me?" |
2049 | Or had nothing else passed? |
2049 | Or is not the joke against HER sister, unless you make my courtship of you a jest to the whole house? |
2049 | Or shall I turn to the far- off Pentland Hills, with Craig- Crook nestling beneath them, where lives the prince of critics and the king of men? |
2049 | Or was it the fineness of his manners? |
2049 | Or what can I think? |
2049 | Or where have I been?] |
2049 | Or why do I not go and find out the truth at once? |
2049 | S. As you please.-- THE INVITATION H. But I am afraid I tire you with this prosing description of the French character and abuse of the English? |
2049 | S. Do you like the French women better than the English? |
2049 | S. Do you think there is no pleasure in a single life? |
2049 | S. Have I not reason? |
2049 | S."And how did you behave when you returned?" |
2049 | S."Is it nothing, your exposing me to the whole house in the way you did the other evening?" |
2049 | Shall I make a drawing of it, altering the dress a little, to shew you how like it is? |
2049 | Shall I not love her for herself alone, in spite of fickleness and folly? |
2049 | Shall I repeat it? |
2049 | Shall I tell you my opinion? |
2049 | Shall I tell you, but you will not mention it again? |
2049 | She has robbed me of herself: shall she also rob me of my love of her? |
2049 | She said,"Did you wish to speak to me, Sir?" |
2049 | Should I ever behold her again? |
2049 | Slighted by her, on whom my heart by its last fibre hung, where shall I turn? |
2049 | THE FLAGEOLET H. Where have you been, my love? |
2049 | THE QUARREL H. You are angry with me? |
2049 | THE RECONCILIATION H. I have then lost your friendship? |
2049 | Tell me why you have deceived me, and singled me out as your victim? |
2049 | Tell me, love, is there not, besides your attachment to him, a repugnance to me? |
2049 | That was one of the things for which I loved her-- shall I live to hate her for it? |
2049 | That was the question--"Would she have me, or would she not?" |
2049 | Then how can I bear to part with her? |
2049 | There was no abatement of my regard to her; why was she so changed? |
2049 | To what a state am I reduced, and for what? |
2049 | Was I to blame after this to indulge my passion for the loveliest of her sex? |
2049 | Was I to blame in taking you at your word, when every hope I had depended on your sincerity? |
2049 | Was he so very handsome? |
2049 | Was it any thing in my letters? |
2049 | Was it not plain from this that she even then meditated an escape from me to some less sentimental lover? |
2049 | Was it so or not? |
2049 | Was that all? |
2049 | Was there any one else that you did like? |
2049 | Was there? |
2049 | Were she dead, should I not wish to gaze once more upon her pallid features? |
2049 | Were you only afraid of being TAKEN for a light character? |
2049 | What am I? |
2049 | What art thou to me? |
2049 | What can be the reason? |
2049 | What could she find in me? |
2049 | What do you suppose she said the night before I left her? |
2049 | What do you think the little imp made answer? |
2049 | What do you think? |
2049 | What had I done in her absence to have incurred her displeasure? |
2049 | What has her character to rest upon but her attachment to me, which she now denies, not modestly, but impudently? |
2049 | What have I done to become thus hateful to you?" |
2049 | What idle sounds the common phrases, adorable creature, angel, divinity, are? |
2049 | What is to be done? |
2049 | What will you bet me that it was n''t all a trick? |
2049 | When I am dead, who will love her as I have done? |
2049 | When found out, she seemed to say,"Well, what if I am? |
2049 | Where go to live and die far from her? |
2049 | Where shall I be? |
2049 | Where shall I be? |
2049 | Who could ever feel that peace from the touch of her dear hand that I have done; and is it not torn from me for ever? |
2049 | Who is there so low as me? |
2049 | Why do you seem to avoid me as you do? |
2049 | Why had she not written to me? |
2049 | Why should he stay?" |
2049 | Why then is your behaviour so different?" |
2049 | Will you look in and see, about eight o''clock? |
2049 | Will you yourself say that if she had all along no particular regard for me, she will not do as much or more with other more likely men? |
2049 | You do not consider yourself OBLIGED to everyone who asks you for a kiss? |
2049 | can I bear after all to think of her so, or that I am scorned and made a sport of by the creature to whom I had given my whole heart? |
2049 | if such is thy sweetness where thou dost not love, what must thy love have been? |
2049 | is it even possible that she is chaste, and that she has bestowed her loved"endearments"on me( her own sweet word) out of true regard? |
2049 | is it you? |
2049 | ought I not to think myself the happiest of men? |
2049 | when I had followed you into the other room? |
2049 | when I look up? |
2049 | when she is old, who will look in her face, and bless her? |
2049 | you said,''Why could we not go on the same as we had done, and say nothing about the word FOREVER?''" |