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 |
---|---|
16542 | And when your children shall say unto you, What mean you by this service? 16542 After a century and a half of that Britishtutelage,"what progress has India made towards fitness for self- government? |
16542 | And with what results? |
16542 | And, if so, how is such an apparent anomaly accounted for? |
16542 | Are we not of the same blood, and the same speech? |
16542 | Do they indicate an historic continuity? |
16542 | Has the government of Venezuela ever been"stable"? |
16542 | Have we found it necessary or thought it best to establish a governmental protectorate in any of those immediately adjacent regions? |
16542 | How long has it existed in Hayti? |
16542 | If we formerly on some occasion swallowed a gnat, why now, is it asked, strain at a camel? |
16542 | In dealing with those cases, we did not find a great standing army or an enormous navy necessary; and, if not then, why now? |
16542 | Is Cuba larger or nearer to us than Mexico? |
16542 | Is the end in sight? |
16542 | Is there any better use to which the Passover anniversary can be put than to retrospection? |
16542 | It is the mandate of duty, we are told,--the nations of Europe obey it, and can we do less than they? |
16542 | Now what was meant here by the phrase"all men are created equal?" |
16542 | Our precedents are close at hand, and satisfactory-- why look away from them to follow those of Great Britain? |
16542 | What has been our course heretofore under similar circumstances? |
16542 | When did our word fail to carry all desired weight? |
16542 | Why can not we, too, in the language of Burke, be content to set our feet"in the tracks of our forefathers, where we can neither wander nor stumble?" |
16542 | Why need we, all of a sudden, be so very English and so altogether French, even borrowing their nomenclature of"imperialism?" |
16542 | Why such a difference between the Philippines and Hayti? |
16542 | Why, then, make almost indecent haste to abandon it in 1898? |
16542 | With what result? |
16542 | Yet how long, I would ask, did that condition exist in Mexico? |
33153 | Have you,he might ask,"always been peaceful? |
33153 | Shall we,asked Pitt,"give up our maritime consequence and expose ourselves to scorn, to derision, and contempt? |
33153 | Where were you when the world was divided? |
33153 | Whom does it pay? 33153 251- 2(?). 33153 Against such an organised body what can a single manufacturer avail? 33153 Are we to mete out justice even- handed to the Poles, Finns and Jews of Russia, the Czechs and Southern Slavs of Austria, the Armenians and Alsatians? 33153 Are we, for instance, to become the defenders of small nationalities, ready to go to war whenever one is invaded? 33153 As for the heroic warriors of the Scotch border, would they not to- day be{ 25} jailed as cattle- thieves? 33153 But if nations will not gladly accept arbitration where supposedly vital interests are concerned, can they not be coerced? 33153 But to whom do the dividends go? 33153 Can we change in human nature that desire for material things, which has always been the great survival virtue of the race? 33153 Did you not fight England, Mexico and Spain? 33153 Even if war does not cease, however, may we not at least be exempt from the scourge on this safe side of the broad Atlantic? 33153 Has a small nation a right to hold its present territory when that right conflicts with the economic advance, let us say, of a whole continent? 33153 Have we not here an alternative to war? 33153 Have you not taken advantage of your neighbours''necessities? |
33153 | How could she solve the problem of a dwindling supply of iron ore? |
33153 | How does the English workman prosper when English capital employs cheap Indian labour to undersell British factories? |
33153 | How is France ahead of us? |
33153 | How is he to secure this support? |
33153 | How then will Germany compete? |
33153 | If England( with Wales) could in 1821 barely support twelve millions, how could she maintain thirty- six millions in 1911? |
33153 | If Europe did not solve the Balkan problem in peace, did Americans end slavery without resort to arms? |
33153 | If Germany violates Belgium''s neutrality, why should England surrender her power to put the maximum pressure upon her unscrupulous enemy? |
33153 | If there is to be neither war nor an effective international regulation, what limits can a nation set to non- military aggression by its neighbour? |
33153 | If therefore the foreign field is to be extended, why is the German eternally to be left out in the division? |
33153 | If two hundred thousand volunteer for a war when we are not obviously attacked, will not the whole country go to war for the sake of"honour"? |
33153 | Is Russia to control the Yellow Sea or is Japan? |
33153 | Is it amity or enmity? |
33153 | Is it impossible to allay hatred of the foreigner by concentrating interest on home concerns? |
33153 | Is such a development probable? |
33153 | Is the Persian Gulf to be British, Russian or German? |
33153 | Make your profits at home"? |
33153 | May we not be simply undermining Germany and Austria? |
33153 | Moreover, what advantage is it to the wage- earner to have his country''s wealth exported beyond his reach? |
33153 | Not immediately, not inopportunely, but in the right season? |
33153 | On what broad general principle shall we decide the urgent questions which arise day by day in most unexpected conjunctions? |
33153 | Should we compel Russia to treat her Poles and Jews fairly and concede to Russia the right to compel us to treat our Negroes fairly? |
33153 | Should we fight Japan to aid China? |
33153 | Should we have interposed to save Persia from benevolent absorption by Russia and England? |
33153 | Should we respect Canada''s right to keep New York, had that city originally been settled by Canadians? |
33153 | Should we war against Germany because of Belgium, and against France and England because of Greece? |
33153 | Though it rains outside, may we not keep dry beneath our big umbrella? |
33153 | We should be richer to- morrow if we took Mexico, but would it pay in the end? |
33153 | What are we willing to fight for rather than forego? |
33153 | What could Germany do if foreign nations shut her off from access to ores, foods and textiles? |
33153 | What do we already have or claim, the retention of which would justify us in fighting? |
33153 | What is the probable, or at least possible, policy of Russia in such circumstances? |
33153 | What is to decide what colonies shall belong to what nation or what share each nation shall have in the profits of exploitations? |
33153 | What is''in it''for the nations or for classes or individuals within the nations?" |
33153 | What profit has the French artisan or peasant in all these grand concessions from the illustrious Sultan of Morocco? |
33153 | What, after all, do the hundred million Americans want beyond their borders? |
33153 | While we work for these ideals, are we to allow Germany to sink our liners and Japan to swallow up China, or are we to fight? |
33153 | Why is France''s colonial empire more than two and a half times as large as that of Germany? |
33153 | Why should we alone, among the nations be exempt from economic forces, which drive peace- loving nations into war? |
33153 | Why, then, is Germany''s course so bitterly resented? |
33153 | Will the nations in this generation or in five generations agree to make sacrifices to permit their rivals to live? |
33153 | Would not the threat of it and the knowledge that it could be used form a potent restraint upon the law- breaker? |
33153 | Would such a conquest accord with our larger policies and our true ambitions in the world? |
526 | ''Do you understand this?'' 526 I was on the point of crying at her,''Do n''t you hear them?'' |
526 | ''After all,''said the boiler- maker in a reasonable tone,''why should n''t we get the rivets?'' |
526 | ''And when they come back, too?'' |
526 | ''And with that?'' |
526 | ''And, ever since, you have been with him, of course?'' |
526 | ''Anything since then?'' |
526 | ''Are we in time?'' |
526 | ''Are you an alienist?'' |
526 | ''Are you?'' |
526 | ''Been living there?'' |
526 | ''But quiet-- eh?'' |
526 | ''Can you steer?'' |
526 | ''Did they want to kill you?'' |
526 | ''Did you ever see anything like it-- eh? |
526 | ''Do I not?'' |
526 | ''Do n''t they?'' |
526 | ''Do n''t you?'' |
526 | ''Do you know what you are doing?'' |
526 | ''Do you read the Company''s confidential correspondence?'' |
526 | ''Do you,''said I, looking at the shore,''call it"unsound method"?'' |
526 | ''Ever any madness in your family?'' |
526 | ''Fine lot these government chaps-- are they not?'' |
526 | ''How did that ivory come all this way?'' |
526 | ''Is that question in the interests of science too?'' |
526 | ''Kurtz got the tribe to follow him, did he?'' |
526 | ''No, no; how can you? |
526 | ''To you, eh?'' |
526 | ''We have done all we could for him-- haven''t we? |
526 | ''Well, and you?'' |
526 | ''What can you expect?'' |
526 | ''What for?'' |
526 | ''What party?'' |
526 | ''What was he doing? |
526 | ''What''s this?'' |
526 | ''Who knows? |
526 | ''Who says that?'' |
526 | ''Who? |
526 | ''Why did they attack us?'' |
526 | ''Why ought I to know?'' |
526 | ''Will they attack, do you think?'' |
526 | ''Will they attack?'' |
526 | ''You English?'' |
526 | ''You have been well since you came out this time?'' |
526 | ''You made notes in Russian?'' |
526 | .?'' |
526 | Absurd? |
526 | Am I the manager-- or am I not? |
526 | An appeal to me in this fiendish row-- is there? |
526 | And indeed what does the price matter, if the trick be well done? |
526 | And there, do n''t you see? |
526 | And why not? |
526 | And why? |
526 | Another snag? |
526 | As I maneuvered to get alongside, I was asking myself,''What does this fellow look like?'' |
526 | At the door of the pilot- house he turned round--''I say, have n''t you a pair of shoes you could spare?'' |
526 | Below me there was a great scuffle of feet on the iron deck; confused exclamations; a voice screamed,''Can you turn back?'' |
526 | But what of that? |
526 | But what-- and how much? |
526 | Could we handle that dumb thing, or would it handle us? |
526 | Could you give me a few Martini- Henry cartridges?'' |
526 | Curiosity? |
526 | Dead?'' |
526 | Did I know, he asked, with a sudden flash of curiosity,''what it was that had induced him to go out there?'' |
526 | Did I mention a girl? |
526 | Did I not think so? |
526 | Did I see it? |
526 | Did he live his life again in every detail of desire, temptation, and surrender during that supreme moment of complete knowledge? |
526 | Did you see?'' |
526 | Do n''t you know the devilry of lingering starvation, its exasperating torment, its black thoughts, its somber and brooding ferocity? |
526 | Do you see anything? |
526 | Do you see him? |
526 | Do you see the story? |
526 | Do you understand? |
526 | Eh? |
526 | Eh? |
526 | Fine sentiments, you say? |
526 | Four boxes did you say? |
526 | Had n''t he said he wanted only justice? |
526 | He forgot I had n''t heard any of these splendid monologues on, what was it? |
526 | He had tied a bit of white worsted round his neck-- Why? |
526 | His position had come to him-- why? |
526 | How do you English say, eh? |
526 | How long would it last? |
526 | I asked;''what would you do with them?'' |
526 | I wonder what becomes of that kind when it goes up country?'' |
526 | I''ve been telling you what we said-- repeating the phrases we pronounced,--but what''s the good? |
526 | I? |
526 | Is he alone there?'' |
526 | Is it not frightful?'' |
526 | Ivory? |
526 | Keep a look- out? |
526 | Kurtz-- Kurtz-- that means short in German-- don''t it? |
526 | Kurtz?'' |
526 | Kurtz?'' |
526 | Light came out of this river since-- you say Knights? |
526 | No one may know of it, but you never forget the thump-- eh? |
526 | Principles? |
526 | Say?'' |
526 | Smoke? |
526 | Suppose he began to shout? |
526 | The prehistoric man was cursing us, praying to us, welcoming us-- who could tell? |
526 | Up the river? |
526 | Was he rehearsing some speech in his sleep, or was it a fragment of a phrase from some newspaper article? |
526 | Was it a badge-- an ornament-- a charm-- a propitiatory act? |
526 | Was it superstition, disgust, patience, fear-- or some kind of primitive honor? |
526 | Was it?'' |
526 | Was there any idea at all connected with it? |
526 | We must save it, at all events-- but look how precarious the position is-- and why? |
526 | What did it matter what anyone knew or ignored? |
526 | What did it matter who was manager? |
526 | What do you think I ought to do-- resist? |
526 | What do you think? |
526 | What do you think?'' |
526 | What else had been there? |
526 | What is the meaning--?'' |
526 | What more did I want? |
526 | What possible restraint? |
526 | What was in there? |
526 | What was there after all? |
526 | What were we who had strayed in here? |
526 | What would be the next definition I was to hear? |
526 | What''s to stop them? |
526 | What, how, why? |
526 | What? |
526 | What? |
526 | What? |
526 | Where did he get it? |
526 | Where''s a sailor that does not smoke?'' |
526 | Where? |
526 | Who was it they were talking about now? |
526 | Who was not his friend who had heard him speak once?'' |
526 | Who''s that grunting? |
526 | Why do you sigh in this beastly way, somebody? |
526 | Why not? |
526 | Why should n''t I try to get charge of one? |
526 | Why, in God''s name?'' |
526 | Would they have fallen, I wonder, if I had rendered Kurtz that justice which was his due? |
526 | You were with him-- to the last? |
526 | You wonder I did n''t go ashore for a howl and a dance? |
526 | eh?'' |
526 | exploring or what?'' |
37792 | Could she hesitate for one single moment? |
37792 | 51 VII--CANADA IS NOT A SOVEREIGN STATE 55 VIII--GERMAN ILLUSIONS 67 IX--THE NATIONALIST ERROR 68 X--HAD CANADA THE RIGHT TO HELP ENGLAND? |
37792 | And was it not on account of this knowledge that Great Britain and France had exhausted all their efforts in favour of the maintenance of peace? |
37792 | And what about Belgium and France? |
37792 | And what are the terms of this astonishing proposal? |
37792 | And why? |
37792 | And why? |
37792 | And why? |
37792 | And why? |
37792 | Are not such abominable teachings a curse to all those of the race to which they are addressed with an unsurpassed cynicism? |
37792 | Are the days we live so fraught with the dangers of Imperialism as to justify the fears of the alarmist? |
37792 | But can it be said that the admirable and heroic resistance Belgium has opposed to her tyrannical invaders was a dastardly crime? |
37792 | But what can logic, reason, good sense, too often do against inveterate prejudices? |
37792 | But when will that very important event take place? |
37792 | CONTENTS Chapter Page--INTRODUCTION 1 I--WHO ARE THE GUILTY PARTIES? |
37792 | Can we really hope to behold the dawn of such a glorious day? |
37792 | Could they, or can they be carried out? |
37792 | Could we have pretended that she was violating neutral territory? |
37792 | Do we not see, almost daily, desolated homes often the sad result of senseless misunderstandings, or of guilty outbursts of intemperate passions? |
37792 | Does he not know that, in the days prior to England''s creation of her mighty fleet, she has been easily conquered by invaders? |
37792 | Does he not understand that any French- Canadian doing what he wishes and recommends would deliberately perjure himself? |
37792 | Does the victim of the highway man lose the right to claim his property from the ruffian who has stolen it by brutal force? |
37792 | During the diplomatic correspondence that led to the hostilities, what reason would have justified England to break her neutrality? |
37792 | For God''s sake, whence and where has such an outrageous outburst originated? |
37792 | From what dark corner has the electric current been poured out with such infernal fury? |
37792 | HAD CANADA THE RIGHT TO HELP ENGLAND? |
37792 | Has he never read anything about panic stricken England until she was relieved from the dangers of the projected invasion? |
37792 | Has he utterly forgotten the Reichstag resolutions of the 19th of July, or does he deliberately ignore them? |
37792 | Has not Germany only herself to blame? |
37792 | Has she proved any sympathy for treacherously crushed Belgium? |
37792 | How did it deserve such an hysterical reprobation? |
37792 | How is it that at that time she was not moved by the sympathetic feelings expressed in her recent appeal for peace negotiations? |
37792 | How is it that the hand that wrote it was not instantly dried up at the impudent falsehood it expresses? |
37792 | How is it that the voice who dictated the following sentence was not silenced and choked by the abominable lie it contains? |
37792 | How, and under what circumstances, was British Sovereignty established in South Africa? |
37792 | I now summarize them as follows:-- Would it be advisable to have the Colonies represented in the present Imperial Parliament? |
37792 | If armaments are either abolished, or merely reduced, will they be so on sea as well as on land? |
37792 | If ever complete Imperial Federation becomes an accomplished fact, how will it be organized? |
37792 | In a word, what has permitted England to rule the roost in Europe and to accumulate the frightful storm let loose in 1914? |
37792 | In conformity with this great British constitutional principle, what happened in London, in August, 1914? |
37792 | Is he aware of the great British historical fact called the Norman Conquest? |
37792 | Is it not Germany herself? |
37792 | Is it possible that Count von Hertling does not see that, does not grasp it, is in fact living in his thought in a world dead and gone? |
37792 | It reads thus:--"_ What has allowed England to bring Portugal into vassalage? |
37792 | Quite so, and why not? |
37792 | So far as Imperialism is concerned, all those great historical facts considered, how best can it be defined? |
37792 | Very true, and why? |
37792 | WHAT DO WE OWE ENGLAND? |
37792 | WHO ARE THE GUILTY PARTIES? |
37792 | Was it not proved beyond reasonable controversy, that the Canadian people heartily approved the decision of their Parliament to help in the great war? |
37792 | Was it on this account less ambitious and troublesome for its neighbours? |
37792 | Were they, in this particular instance, destined to be powerless? |
37792 | What are the true causes, humanly speaking, of the cataclysm so violently shaking the world? |
37792 | What are the true historical facts? |
37792 | What are we to get in return? |
37792 | What did it mean as regards Belgium? |
37792 | What did that mean? |
37792 | What did that proposal amount to? |
37792 | What does it say? |
37792 | What has been the achievement of England on that score? |
37792 | What is it we are fighting for? |
37792 | What reply should we have given to that Belgian appeal? |
37792 | What then will the continental powers do? |
37792 | What was the true object of Germany in making such a proposition? |
37792 | What were her expectations when she adopted that threatening naval policy? |
37792 | What will they be? |
37792 | What would be the real meaning of such a radical change? |
37792 | What would have been the position of Great Britain to- day in the face of that spectacle if we had assented to this infamous proposal? |
37792 | What would the present critics of her course have said if she had sided with Prussia? |
37792 | What? |
37792 | When has the Imperial Parliament adopted the above mentioned"_ Resolution_"? |
37792 | Who has reopened the closed question of Alsace and Lorraine? |
37792 | Who? |
37792 | Will our"Nationalists"accuse them of having unduly saved the New World from the secular Indian barbarism? |
37792 | Will she be cowardly in defeat? |
37792 | Will the new Imperial Parliament consist of one Sovereign, one House of Lords-- or Senate-- one House of Commons? |
37792 | Would Canada, Australia, South Africa, India, New Zealand be called Kingdoms, like Prussia, Bavaria, Saxony, Wurtemberg, of the German Empire? |
37792 | Would the Colonies be represented according to their population in the British House of Commons? |
37792 | Would the Sovereign be King or Emperor? |
37792 | Would they have pretended that she would have used Prussia as a shield against France? |
37792 | Yes, and what are we to get in return for the betrayal of our friends and the dishonour of our obligations? |
37792 | to deprive Greece of the Ionians and Cyprus Islands? |
37792 | to dominate Spain and keep Gibraltar, Spanish land? |
37792 | to foment Revolution in the Kingdom of Naples and the Papal States? |
37792 | to run, during thirty years, the foreign policy of Italy and to throw her in Austria''s execrated arms? |
37792 | to steal Malta? |
37792 | to take possession of Suez and to make her own thing of it? |
30710 | ; but the question answered, satisfactorily or unsatisfactorily, was,Is there a remedy?" |
30710 | Whither shall I go from Thy spirit? 30710 --is this a mockery? 30710 A mockery? 30710 And if the question were asked-- When does monarchical or constitutional England first distinctively pass into Imperial Britain? 30710 And in their effect upon the national consciousness of Britain have these incidents followed any law traceable in other nations or empires? 30710 And in what cause have we died? |
30710 | And knowledge-- of what avail is knowledge?--or to scan the abysses of space and search the depths of time? |
30710 | And that army of ours which day by day advances not less irresistibly across the veldt of Africa, what does that army portend? |
30710 | And that steed, is it not nearing England now? |
30710 | And the campaigns of Napoleon, republican, consular, imperial? |
30710 | And those moments of serenest peace, when the desire of the heart is one with the desire of the world- soul, are not these attained by conflict? |
30710 | And to the Netherlands what does that army bring? |
30710 | And what is its place in the life- history of a State considered as an entity, an organic unity, distinct from the unities which compose it? |
30710 | And what is the faith of Algernon Sidney? |
30710 | And who shall affirm from what branch of the stock the architects of the sky- searching cathedrals sprang? |
30710 | Both ponder the question,"How could the disaster have been averted? |
30710 | But another aspect of the question concerns us here-- What is War in itself and by itself? |
30710 | But of England and the Teutonic race what shall one say? |
30710 | But to arraign the fountain and the end of the high action because of this baser alloy? |
30710 | CONTENTS PART I THE TESTIMONY OF THE PAST LECTURE I SECTION WHAT IS IMPERIALISM? |
30710 | Consider in contrast with these empires the question-- What is the distinction in this phase of human life of the Empire of Britain, of its history? |
30710 | Does not this vault then, arching above us, appear but as a vast amphitheatre? |
30710 | Doubt, contrition of soul, and the other modes of spiritual_ agonia_, are not these equivalent with the life, not death, of the soul? |
30710 | Even a partial solution of this problem requires a consideration of the question"What is War?" |
30710 | Fixed in her resolve, the will of God behind her, whither is her immediate course? |
30710 | For the sake of such emotional excitement or parade as are now by smokeless powder, maxims, long- range rifles, and machine guns abolished? |
30710 | For what does the fall of Rome mean, and what are its relations to this Empire of Britain? |
30710 | From what causes and by the operation of what laws has the great disillusion fallen upon the heart of Europe? |
30710 | Given that death is nothing, and the decline of empires but a change of form, will this empire of Imperial Britain also decline and fall? |
30710 | Has Count Tolstoi a campaign to narrate, or a battle, say the Borodino, to describe? |
30710 | Has all the blood from Lodi and Arcola to Austerlitz and the Borodino been shed in vain? |
30710 | Has he the enigma of modern times to solve, Napoleon I? |
30710 | Has not the present war given a harvest of instances? |
30710 | How could the decline of Rome have been stayed?" |
30710 | How is it related to the Divine? |
30710 | How is this ideal of the Imperialistic State related to that from which all States originally derive? |
30710 | How many Franks, one asks, followed the red banner of the Bastard to Senlac, or, leaning on their shields, watched the coronation at Westminster? |
30710 | How shall England, conqueror of those monarchs at Creçy and on other fields, reverence Rome, the dependent of a defeated antagonist? |
30710 | How shall it cease? |
30710 | How shall its bounds be made secure against encroachment, its own shores from coalesced foes? |
30710 | How shall the Eternal come or the Infinite be far off? |
30710 | How shall the justice of God be reconciled with the destiny He assigns to the souls of men? |
30710 | How then does Tolstoi regard War? |
30710 | I now spoke with myself thus--''O my soul, how long wilt thou continue to take pleasure in sin? |
30710 | If our forefathers found in this the true path, why should we seek another? |
30710 | In religion itself have we not similar variety of expression? |
30710 | In that final solitude what are pomp and circumstance to the heart? |
30710 | Is it not the procession of the gladiators and the amphitheatre of Rome? |
30710 | Is it possible to trace the process by which it has emerged? |
30710 | Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? |
30710 | Is there in human history a document more blasting to the reputation for political wisdom or foresight of him who penned it? |
30710 | It is the star of the future and the memory of Vergniaud''s phrase,"Posterity? |
30710 | LECTURE V WHAT IS WAR? |
30710 | Lodi, Arcola, Marengo, Austerlitz, Eyiau, Friedland, Wagram, Borodino, Leipzig, Champaubert, and Montmirail? |
30710 | MILITARISM LECTURE V WHAT IS WAR? |
30710 | Now what is Cosmopolitanism? |
30710 | Passing to the second point-- at what epoch do we now stand as compared with Rome or Islam? |
30710 | THE IDEALS OF A NEW AGE PART I THE TESTIMONY OF THE PAST REFLECTIONS ON THE ORIGINS AND DESTINY OF IMPERIAL BRITAIN LECTURE I WHAT IS IMPERIALISM? |
30710 | THE PLACE OF WAR IN WORLD- HISTORY The question"What is War?" |
30710 | THE UNCONSCIOUS AND THE CONSCIOUS IN HISTORY What is the nature of this Consciousness? |
30710 | The Girondinist queen climbing the scaffold, not less a lover of love and of life than Marie Antoinette-- what nerves her? |
30710 | The narrow space of the path in front of her that is discernible even dimly-- whither does it tend or appear to tend? |
30710 | The question asked was,"Is there a law regulating the fall of empires? |
30710 | The question resolves itself into two parts-- in what does the youth of a race or of an empire consist? |
30710 | The question,"What is History?" |
30710 | The second drama is named_ Ignatius Loyola_; the theme is not less absorbing--"Art thou then so sure of the truth and of thy sincerity, O my brother?" |
30710 | These are the forces contending against each other on the sterile veldt; this is the first act of the drama whose_ dénouement_--who dare foretell? |
30710 | Thus if the question were asked, With what period in the history of Rome does the present age correspond? |
30710 | To impeach on this account all the valour, all the wisdom long approved? |
30710 | To the brooding soul of the hermit, as to that of the warrior of Jehovah, what is earth, what are the shapes of time? |
30710 | WHAT IS MEANT BY THE"FALL OF AN EMPIRE"? |
30710 | WHAT IS MEANT BY THE"FALL OF AN EMPIRE"? |
30710 | War may change its shape, the struggle here intensifying, there abating; it may be uplifted by ever loftier purposes and nobler causes-- but cease? |
30710 | Was machst du an der Welt? |
30710 | Was there then no"zone of death"between the armies at Eyiau or at Gravelotte? |
30710 | We are in the thick of the deed-- how are we to judge it? |
30710 | Well might men ask themselves: Has then Voltaire lived in vain, and the Girondins died in vain? |
30710 | What characteristic, then, common to the whole Teutonic race, does this Empire of Britain represent? |
30710 | What distant generation shall behold_ that_ curtain? |
30710 | What have we to do with posterity? |
30710 | What is its historical basis? |
30710 | What is its historical significance compared with the wars of the past, what is the presage of this great war-- if it be a great war-- for the future? |
30710 | What is the ideal powerful enough to make the hazard of a nation''s death preferable to the abandonment of that ideal? |
30710 | What to me are Mondays and Tuesdays? |
30710 | What tragedy of a lost leader equals this of Napoleon? |
30710 | What were the armies of Napoleon and the ruin of Europe''s dream to Háfiz and Sádi, and to the calm of the trackless centuries far behind? |
30710 | What, then, are the principles at issue in the present war? |
30710 | Where in the history of England, in the life of England as a State, does this energy, exalted by the hour of tragic vision, manifest itself? |
30710 | Which of the multifarious kingdoms and duchies could form the centre of a new union, federal or imperial? |
30710 | Whither are vanished the glorious hopes with which the century opened? |
30710 | Whither is this impulse to be directed? |
30710 | Whither then shall we turn for an explanation of his arraignment of war? |
30710 | Who are the founders of England, of Imperial Britain? |
30710 | Who can confront this unappalled? |
30710 | Who founded the Roman State? |
30710 | Who that has read the historian of Alva can forget the march of his army through the summer months some three hundred and thirty years ago? |
30710 | Why shapest thou the world? |
30710 | Will War then never cease? |
30710 | Will the form it now enshrines pass away, as the forms of Persia, Rome, the Empire of Akbar, have passed away? |
30710 | Will universal peace be for ever but a dream? |
30710 | Wondrous indeed is man''s course across the earth, and with what shall the works of his soul be compared? |
30710 | Would one discover the secret at the close of the century of the alliance of Russia and France, freedom''s forlorn hope when the century began? |
30710 | Would you see the end of Rome as in a figure darkly? |
30710 | Yet what is Carlyle''s judgment upon war? |
30710 | [ 2] Was machst du an der Welt? |
30710 | [ 5] Napoleon was fighting for a dead ideal with the strength of the men who had overthrown that ideal-- how should he prosper? |
30710 | [ 8] France has given the world the Revolution; Germany, the Reformation; Italy, modern Art; but Russia? |
30710 | and the"Whither?" |
30710 | is but the question,"What is Life?" |
30710 | or whither shall I flee from Thy presence? |
30710 | who was there any longer to remember Marengo and Austerlitz, Wagram, and Schönbrunn? |
41405 | ''Does not this prove that capitalist production creates a surplus product for which there is no room on the internal market? |
41405 | ''How can the entire capitalist class accumulate money under such circumstances? |
41405 | ''Is n''t there a chance to make a little profit? |
41405 | ''Would saving be able to produce this stick?'' |
41405 | ''[ 173] If this is true, how can there be any accumulation of capital? |
41405 | ''[ 190] What would MacCulloch have to advise in view of such an agrarian crisis in Southern Europe? |
41405 | ''[ 393] Where could the ruined American farmer turn? |
41405 | ( 2) Q.: Where do the capitalists get the money for the realisation of capitalised surplus value? |
41405 | ( 3) Q.: How did the money come into the country in the first place? |
41405 | And of what does this surplus- product consist? |
41405 | And of what does this surplus- value consist? |
41405 | And who requires these additional means of production? |
41405 | And why? |
41405 | And why? |
41405 | Aside from this, where does the money come from? |
41405 | But could anyone increase his consumption as rapidly and indefinitely as the progress of labour productivity makes the surplus value increase? |
41405 | But does this diagram show a surplus product to come into being? |
41405 | But how large a family? |
41405 | But if this great public is essentially characterised as consuming the surplus value, whence does it obtain the means to buy? |
41405 | But if we ask:''What are these wages for the workers who have received them?'' |
41405 | But now the question arises: who is to get these indigestible items in the course of general distribution? |
41405 | But what about the consumption of society? |
41405 | But what is the position in real life? |
41405 | But what of the remaining surplus value, the part that is accumulated? |
41405 | But who can buy the products incorporating the other, the capitalised part of the surplus value? |
41405 | But who could have bought their surplus product? |
41405 | But who else could provide the demand for the commodities incorporating the capitalised surplus value? |
41405 | Can one actually talk of total social capital of society as an entity, and if so, what is the real meaning of this concept? |
41405 | Could it be that there is too much of one kind of produce and too little of another, as Say and Ricardo would have it? |
41405 | First and foremost where do the B''s get the cash to buy an additional product from the A''s? |
41405 | For whom can it be destined? |
41405 | Has it any real bearing on the problems of actual life? |
41405 | Has not England, by forgetting men for things, sacrificed the end to the means? |
41405 | Have they had any other effect than to make every class partake of care, privation and the danger of complete ruin? |
41405 | He exclaims:''Whose demand? |
41405 | Here we must ask first of all: what is the starting point of accumulation? |
41405 | How can it be assured that every one of these factors increases in the right proportion? |
41405 | How can it be possible under these circumstances to construct anything in the nature of a total capital of society? |
41405 | How can this take place, leaving cycles and crises out of consideration? |
41405 | How can we overcome this blatant contradiction? |
41405 | How could production-- so divided and yet so powerful-- conceivably estimate in good time what will be enough? |
41405 | How could the entrepreneurs of the world recognise the limits beyond which the market would cease to be healthy? |
41405 | How does he himself monetise this surplus- portion of his product? |
41405 | How does this affect the process of reproduction? |
41405 | How is it done? |
41405 | How then is it that capitalist expansion had not yet( in 1912) shown any sign of slackening? |
41405 | How will the material relations of reproduction be adjusted? |
41405 | How, in terms of capitalism, does society create out of its annual labour a_ greater_ amount of capital than it formerly possessed? |
41405 | How, then, could their labour power provide them with a living? |
41405 | I ask: Do the capitalists perhaps give away their products to foreigners for nothing, throw it into the sea, maybe? |
41405 | If Sismondi exclaims in the face of Ricardo''s doctrine:''What, is wealth to be all, and man a mere nothing? |
41405 | If accumulation does take place, demand will absorb output, as the model shows, but what is it that makes accumulation take place? |
41405 | If we ask a capitalist:''What are the wages you pay your workers?'' |
41405 | Is it explained just because we can put the mathematical proportions of accumulation on paper? |
41405 | May not this sum suffice to monetise the surplus- value? |
41405 | On this new conception[ of Mac''s] there is a surplus of products, an advantage from labour-- to whom will it accrue? |
41405 | Rodbertus is ready with this answer:''What were the workers to do after their emancipation other than to agree to these regulations? |
41405 | So the surplus product of Departments I and II must be bought-- by whom? |
41405 | The masters or the workers in town or country? |
41405 | The production of what products? |
41405 | The question is: How does he maintain his surplus- value, not, how does he divide the money later after he has secured it? |
41405 | The question still remains: Where does the money come from, which the various B''s( I) withdrew from the circulation and accumulated? |
41405 | This brings us back to the old question: How, and by whom, is the accumulated surplus value to be realised? |
41405 | Ultimately, the exorbitant interest had to be paid somehow, but how-- where were the means to come from? |
41405 | We should not ask, accordingly: Where does the money required for realising the surplus value come from? |
41405 | Well then, who requires these additional consumer goods? |
41405 | Were they simply to grab some of the capital existing in the society for their maintenance? |
41405 | What buyers, then, does he advance for this new luxury production? |
41405 | What does he think about, then? |
41405 | What does this mean? |
41405 | What had provided the capital for these enterprises? |
41405 | What happens to the products of Department II which are then left over? |
41405 | What has gone wrong? |
41405 | What is income, and what is capital? |
41405 | What is it precisely that constitutes this problem of the reproduction of total capital? |
41405 | What is the fruit of this immense accumulation of wealth? |
41405 | What is the nature of the total capital of a society? |
41405 | What kind of people are we thinking of when we speak of an increase in the population? |
41405 | What motive have the capitalists for enlarging their stock of real capital? |
41405 | What will become of the capitalised surplus value? |
41405 | What, then, could the workers have done? |
41405 | What, then, has thrown a spanner into the works, why the crisis? |
41405 | What, then, is this surplus value that it should interest the capitalist for its own sake? |
41405 | Whence the demand for the accumulated surplus value? |
41405 | Where can this additional labour be found? |
41405 | Where does II get the money for this? |
41405 | Where does the additional money come from, by which the additional surplus- value now contained in the form of commodities is to be realised? |
41405 | Where does the demand come from which keeps accumulation going? |
41405 | Where does the money for this purpose come from? |
41405 | Where is this continually increasing demand to come from, which in Marx''s diagram forms the basis of reproduction on an ever rising scale? |
41405 | Where, for instance, are the organisations, the up- to- date statistical bureaux and the like to help them in this task? |
41405 | Where, then, could we find this new capital which may perhaps be much more considerable than that required by agriculture?... |
41405 | Where, then, does the accumulation of wealth make itself felt as a public benefit? |
41405 | Where, then, does the additional money come from?--the £ 100 the capitalists need to realise their own surplus value? |
41405 | Who will buy the commodities in which it is hidden? |
41405 | Who, then, realises the permanently increasing surplus value? |
41405 | Whose satisfaction? |
41405 | Why is this? |
41405 | Why, come to that, does England require an external market? |
41405 | Why? |
41405 | Will the others be able to keep it from them? |
41405 | Will what they want be the grave of modern civilisation? |
41405 | With what object? |
41405 | Yet Bulgakov overlooks the principal problem: who exactly is to profit by an expansion such as that whose mechanism he examines? |
41405 | Yet would it not be very easy to make good this loss in means of production which results from our example? |
41405 | [ 294] But then, is it not beyond any doubt that some such''third persons''exist in every capitalist society? |
41405 | [ 90] Two questions now arise:( 1) by whom should the money be owned, and( 2) how much of it should there be? |
41405 | _ Suum cuique_--had this not been the motto of Rodbertus? |
41405 | accumulate, for whose sake do they produce? |
41405 | and what does he want to exchange his hops for? |
41405 | but: Where are the consumers for this surplus value? |
41405 | can we trace income, wholly or in part, back to the stick as its_ cause_, may we consider it, wholly or in parts, as a_ product_ of the stick? |
41405 | into it? |
41405 | into it? |
41405 | not consumption but capitalisation of part of the surplus value? |
41405 | or, as Marx would have it: Whence the money to pay for the accumulated surplus value? |
41405 | the workers as wages, or the capitalists as profits of enterprise? |
41405 | to expand production, instead of squandering it altogether? |
720 | Am I a fool to show this thing in a house with three women in it? |
720 | Am I a wild beast that you should try to kill me suddenly and in the dark, Tuan Almayer? |
720 | And save myself? |
720 | And the other man, he that was found in the river? |
720 | And what did he want, father? |
720 | And what will you do with me? |
720 | And when you get this-- this scoundrel will you go? |
720 | And where are they, the men of your youth? 720 And where did you say he is hiding now?" |
720 | And will you be long away, Dain? |
720 | And you go when the sun is overhead? |
720 | And you saw her go? |
720 | Are the men ready? |
720 | Are the officers very angry? |
720 | Are they? 720 Are you all there? |
720 | Are you content to live in this misery and die in this wretched hole? 720 Are you crying?" |
720 | Are you dumb, O ruler of Sambir, or is the son of a great Rajah unworthy of your notice? 720 Are you inclined to bargain?" |
720 | Are you mute? 720 Before the day comes?" |
720 | But of my daughter you are not afraid? |
720 | But what will you do? |
720 | But where are all your men? 720 By the feet I dragged him in, and there was no head,"exclaimed Mahmat,"and how could the white man''s wife know who it was? |
720 | Ca n''t you? |
720 | Can I believe what you tell me? 720 Can I not live my own life as you have lived yours? |
720 | Could you give me happiness without life? 720 Dain, you are not going to abandon me now, when all is ready?" |
720 | Did Dain go? |
720 | Did I not tell you that I saw the witchwoman push the canoe? 720 Did I not tell you?" |
720 | Did you ask him to come here, father? |
720 | Did you hear a boat pass about half an hour ago Nina? |
720 | Did you hear it too? |
720 | Did you hear that? |
720 | Do you hear anything? |
720 | Do you hear? 720 Do you know what you are doing? |
720 | Do you know who this is? |
720 | Do you mean my wife? |
720 | Do you think all this is true? |
720 | Do you think he would dare? |
720 | Have I done well, Mem Putih? |
720 | Have I not returned? 720 Have I not spoken for a long time when you lay there with eyes half open? |
720 | Have you lived without hope? |
720 | Have you no feeling? |
720 | Have you not heard me? |
720 | Have you seen them, mother? |
720 | Hear what? |
720 | How can you tell? |
720 | How did you hear about the brig? |
720 | How do you know this? |
720 | I shall always remember,returned Nina, earnestly;"but where is my power, and what can I do?" |
720 | If he has the wish but not the strength, then what do we fear? |
720 | If the Orang Blanda come here, Babalatchi, and take Almayer to Batavia to punish him for smuggling gunpowder, what will he do, you think? |
720 | If you catch this Dain what will you do with him? |
720 | Is everybody asleep or dead? |
720 | Is he dead? |
720 | Is it Dain? 720 Is it not time for the Rajah war- canoe to go to the clearing?" |
720 | Is it not time to deliver to us your prisoner? 720 Is she gone?" |
720 | Is that the Arab trader? |
720 | Mrs. Almayer, you mean? |
720 | Nina,he said sadly,"will you have no pity for me?" |
720 | No,he said quickly;"have n''t you seen him? |
720 | Shall I ever see you again, mother? |
720 | So you have seen it? |
720 | Tell me,he said--"tell me, what have they done to you, your mother and that man? |
720 | Then why do you talk to me about scruples? 720 There is nothing wrong with the brig, I hope?" |
720 | To- morrow? |
720 | Tuan,he said,"you remember the girl that man Bulangi had? |
720 | Well, Mr. Almayer, will you answer my question as frankly as it is put to you? |
720 | Well, and then? |
720 | Well, and what? |
720 | What are the white men doing? 720 What are they up to now? |
720 | What are you doing here? |
720 | What are you doing here? |
720 | What did you hear? |
720 | What do we fear? |
720 | What do you know of men''s anger and of men''s love? 720 What do you think I am?" |
720 | What does he say? |
720 | What has happened? 720 What has happened?" |
720 | What is it, mother? |
720 | What is it? |
720 | What is the promise you speak of? |
720 | What is the ring you are talking about? 720 What is there to forgive?" |
720 | What is your hate or your revenge to me? |
720 | What news? |
720 | What of her? |
720 | What was all that noise just now? |
720 | What woman? |
720 | What''s that to you, to her, to anybody? 720 What''s that?" |
720 | What? 720 What? |
720 | What? |
720 | Where are the white men? |
720 | Where are you going to? 720 Where are you, Nina?" |
720 | Where is he now? |
720 | Where''s Mem Almayer? |
720 | Who did that, or tried to do it? |
720 | Who is there here for me to deceive, O Rajah? |
720 | Who is there? |
720 | Who is there? |
720 | Who is there? |
720 | Who sent you here to torment me? |
720 | Who''s that hiding? |
720 | Why do n''t you go to the Rajah? |
720 | Why do you go back to those Dyaks in the great forest? 720 Why do you say this? |
720 | Why should you return here where it is my fate to die? 720 Will you depart without that woman who is my daughter?" |
720 | Would a man willingly remain long in a dark place? 720 Yes,"said Babalatchi,"I am going over at once; and as to Dain?" |
720 | You Abdulla? |
720 | You will allow me to have this put upon the table? |
720 | Alive yet?" |
720 | Am I a Dyak that you should hide at my sight?" |
720 | Am I? |
720 | And all for what? |
720 | And did you see how the white man himself ran away at the sight of the body? |
720 | And if he did return to Sambir, disturbing thereby Lakamba''s peace of mind, what then? |
720 | And if you had to come, why not go behind the curtain where the women sleep?" |
720 | And now again I heard--""Where?" |
720 | And what were the voices saying? |
720 | And what will be my recompense? |
720 | Are our hammocks slung?" |
720 | Are you a slave?" |
720 | Are you glad, little girl?" |
720 | Are you pleased, O Tuan Almayer? |
720 | Are you?" |
720 | Bali, eh? |
720 | Believe me, Rajah,"he went on, with sudden energy,"the Orang Blanda have good friends in Sambir, or else how did they know I was coming thence?" |
720 | But how? |
720 | But if it is n''t true what can we do? |
720 | Can you go?" |
720 | Can you not tell when a man is sleeping and when awake?" |
720 | Could anything be more appalling? |
720 | Could his ears hear only one woman''s voice? |
720 | Could his eyes see only one woman''s image? |
720 | Did he not pour a stream of silver into Mrs. Almayer''s greedy lap? |
720 | Did he not say himself is that she was the light of his life? |
720 | Did he not speak wisdom? |
720 | Did they wish to kill him? |
720 | Did you not see me struggling before your eyes? |
720 | Do n''t you understand? |
720 | Do you believe now?" |
720 | Do you hear me?" |
720 | Do you know that you shall be at first his plaything and then a scorned slave, a drudge, and a servant of some new fancy of that man?" |
720 | Do you know what is waiting for you if you follow that man? |
720 | Do you know where he is? |
720 | Do you see those lights in the big house? |
720 | Do you understand? |
720 | Eh?" |
720 | Girl, why do you want to remember the past when there is a warrior and a chief ready to give many lives-- his own life-- for one of your smiles?" |
720 | Good, is it not?" |
720 | Got bonies? |
720 | Had he given any presents? |
720 | Had he seen the Sultan? |
720 | Have I not lived many years with that man? |
720 | Have we not enough ghosts about this place?" |
720 | Have you felt about you the strong arm that could drive a kriss deep into a beating heart? |
720 | Have you forgotten the teaching of so many years?" |
720 | Have you no pity for yourself? |
720 | Have you no word of comfort for me? |
720 | Have you not heard, then, and do you know nothing?" |
720 | Have you watched the sleep of men weary of dealing death? |
720 | Have you?" |
720 | He waited for a while, and then added meaningly--"Shall I call out to Ali?" |
720 | Hear it?" |
720 | Her that caused all the trouble?" |
720 | Here,"he went on, shaking him slightly,"do we want the boats?" |
720 | How can I? |
720 | How could I know that some of your wretched men were going to be blown up? |
720 | How could he tell what an incomprehensible creature of that sort would or would not do? |
720 | How could she make an outward and visible sign of all she felt for the man who had filled her heart with so much joy and so much pride? |
720 | I am old-- that is true-- but why should I not like the sight of a young face and the sound of a young voice in my house?" |
720 | I am waiting; why does he not come?" |
720 | I bore the memory of my humiliation alone, and why should I tell you that it came to me because I am your daughter? |
720 | If I was white would I stand here, ready to go? |
720 | If dead, had he left any papers, documents; any indications or hints as to his great enterprise? |
720 | In his ears there still lingered the sound of entreating whisper.--"Am I awake?--Why do I hear the voices?" |
720 | Is everybody asleep in this house?" |
720 | Is he not with the Rajah? |
720 | Is it true?" |
720 | Is that your cook? |
720 | Is this not true also? |
720 | It is easy to send out death, but can your wisdom recall the life? |
720 | Master, see? |
720 | No man can bear this; and is this the last, or will the next one be the last?--How much longer? |
720 | Now, when the danger was past, why should she grieve? |
720 | Of her who was the regret and shame of your life? |
720 | One day he noticed her and asked,"Who is that girl?" |
720 | Opium, you mean?" |
720 | Reshid looked at her a while before he asked--"Are you going to Almayer''s house? |
720 | Say something, Nina; have you no sympathy? |
720 | See?" |
720 | Shall I live long enough to see? |
720 | Shall I not believe my eyes sooner than the tongues of women and idle men?" |
720 | She turned her head slightly towards her father, and, speaking, to his great surprise, in English, asked--"Was that Abdulla here?" |
720 | The white men want with Dain? |
720 | Then I saw that you could not understand me; for was I not part of that woman? |
720 | There was a slight rustle behind the curtained doorway, and a soft voice asked in Malay,"Is it you, father?" |
720 | Tuan Almayer,"he went on, lowering his voice,"have you seen Dain this morning?" |
720 | Was he a wild man to hide in the woods and perhaps be killed there-- in the darkness-- where there was no room to breathe? |
720 | Was he alive or dead? |
720 | Was he going mad? |
720 | Was he going to be tormented for ever, sleeping or waking, and have no peace either night or day? |
720 | Was he not now her master? |
720 | Was her revenge to fail her? |
720 | Was it ready? |
720 | Was there a paddle in her canoe? |
720 | What am I to protect great princes? |
720 | What are they? |
720 | What bewitched you? |
720 | What can you do? |
720 | What could a girl want more?" |
720 | What did it matter? |
720 | What did it matter? |
720 | What did she care for all that? |
720 | What did she want? |
720 | What did the Arabs want to know about the white men? |
720 | What did the Sultan say? |
720 | What did you come out for?" |
720 | What do you call my mother, your wife?" |
720 | What do you care? |
720 | What do you want from me, Tuan? |
720 | What do you want now? |
720 | What do you want with Lakamba?" |
720 | What have I been? |
720 | What have you been telling her? |
720 | What have you ever done to make me loyal? |
720 | What if he should let the memory of his love for her weaken the sense of his dignity? |
720 | What if that man should take umbrage at some fancied slight to his honour or disregard of his affections and suddenly"amok"? |
720 | What is it? |
720 | What is life to me without light?" |
720 | What is the bravery of the greatest warrior before the firearms in the hand of a slave? |
720 | What is the matter?" |
720 | What is this sudden madness? |
720 | What is your business with me, after all?" |
720 | What made you give yourself up to that savage? |
720 | What was the matter with her? |
720 | What was the meaning of this? |
720 | What was there in her? |
720 | What was there in that being to make a man speak as Dain had spoken, to make him blind to all other faces, deaf to all other voices? |
720 | What would he buy? |
720 | What would he sell? |
720 | What would she think of him? |
720 | What''s that?" |
720 | What? |
720 | What?" |
720 | When did you leave them?" |
720 | When will you come? |
720 | Where is this Dain?" |
720 | Where was the key? |
720 | Where was the use to wonder at the decrees of Fate, especially if they were propitious to the True Believers? |
720 | Which of you is the man?" |
720 | Who can tell in the fitful light of a camp fire? |
720 | Who ever gave anything for me? |
720 | Who ever heard of a corpse appearing during the night amongst the logs with gold anklets on its legs? |
720 | Who ran away? |
720 | Who spoke the Malay words? |
720 | Why are you angry with me? |
720 | Why count? |
720 | Why did Dain remain so long absent? |
720 | Why did she not help? |
720 | Why do n''t you hang me?" |
720 | Why do you come to my house in the night? |
720 | Why do you speak bad words? |
720 | Why does he not die and end this suffering? |
720 | Why does n''t he cut his throat? |
720 | Why not? |
720 | Why should there be strife? |
720 | Why should we bury a stranger in the midst of our houses for his ghost to frighten our women and children? |
720 | Why too late-- and too late for what? |
720 | Why was she so late? |
720 | Why were you so blind? |
720 | Why? |
720 | Why? |
720 | Why?" |
720 | Will Tuan Dain go to Bulangi''s house till the danger is over, go at once? |
720 | Will he be displeased? |
720 | Will you obey?" |
720 | Would he not allay their fears for his safety, not for themselves? |
720 | Would n''t that be worse than death itself? |
720 | Would she come? |
720 | Would the Rajah see that trusty men manned the canoe? |
720 | Would the current carry it north or south? |
720 | You hear me? |
720 | You shall live a life of lies and deception till some other vagabond comes along to sing; how did you say that? |
720 | You think there is one dead man here? |
720 | You understand? |
720 | Your eyes that for me were like truth itself lied to me in every glance-- for how long? |
720 | can you see?" |
720 | he argued to himself, hazily.--"I can not get rid of the horrible nightmare yet.--I have been very drunk.--What is that shaking me? |
720 | he called out;"what is the matter there? |
720 | how much longer? |
720 | ver''you gome vrom? |
720 | what about the dinner? |
38535 | Is there a German culture to- day? |
38535 | [ 25] Could a foreign nation say more? 38535 A British critic once put to me what he evidently deemed a poser:Do you urge that we shall be stronger than our enemy, or weaker?" |
38535 | A further illustration: Why should Germany have been sorely disappointed at France''s rapid recovery? |
38535 | Again the question arises: Could a foreign country do more? |
38535 | Again, how would the disappearance of the German navy affect the problem one way or the other? |
38535 | Again, what would be the inevitable result? |
38535 | And by what sort of miracle is she to be able to consume the wheat, because if she can not take the wheat the Canadian can not buy her products? |
38535 | And has Germany escaped a like condemnation? |
38535 | And have not the English, of all people of the world, a most direct interest in aiding the general realization of these truths in Europe? |
38535 | And if they did know, would it be quite a simple matter for the German Government to keep up the game? |
38535 | And the smaller Power says:"What are you going to give us for that tribute?" |
38535 | And were they war? |
38535 | And what avails it to conquer them if they can not be made amenable to force? |
38535 | Are all these factors to leave the national relationship unaffected? |
38535 | Are men less disposed to change their political than their religious opinions? |
38535 | Are not the numberless facts of national interdependence, which I have indicated here, pushing inevitably to that result? |
38535 | Are the axioms set out in the last chapter unchallengeable? |
38535 | Are theories and logic of the slightest use, since force alone can determine the issue? |
38535 | Are you quite sure the other is free? |
38535 | As she passed to the stake she cried to the Queen:"Great Queen, is not your presence able to bring me some comfort under my misery? |
38535 | But did a nation, group, tribe, family, or individual ever yet enter into a war which he did not think just? |
38535 | But does this mean that if one threatens to take my purse, I am not allowed to use force to prevent it? |
38535 | But if we must leave their wealth alone, how can we take it? |
38535 | But is the same in any sense true, despite Admiral Mahan, of the individual of a big State as compared to the individual of a small one? |
38535 | But is this a cause for deprecating the importance of clear understanding? |
38535 | But what do even its defenders say? |
38535 | But what is a further corollary of this situation? |
38535 | But what is the superior armament but the result of superior thought and work? |
38535 | But why should Admiral Fisher suppose that he has a monopoly of courage, and that a German Admiral would act otherwise than he? |
38535 | But why should she want to do so? |
38535 | By enforcing another Frankfurt treaty, by which English ports should be kept open to German goods? |
38535 | By impoverishing its component parts? |
38535 | By the mutual jealousies of those guaranteeing their neutrality? |
38535 | By what sort of miracle is she suddenly to be able to double her industrial population? |
38535 | By what sort of miracle is she suddenly to be able to supply products which have kept forty million people busy? |
38535 | CHAPTER III IS THE POLITICAL REFORMATION POSSIBLE? |
38535 | CHAPTER IV DO THE WARLIKE NATIONS INHERIT THE EARTH? |
38535 | Can one civilized nation gain moral or material advantage by the military conquest of another? |
38535 | Can you preserve your self- respect by summoning him to the police- court?" |
38535 | Could Germany"take"English trade and Colonies by military force? |
38535 | Could any remedy have been devised on the whole as conclusive and complete as that used by the Balkan peoples? |
38535 | Could one imagine such a householder in his right mind committing burglary and murder in order to economize a dollar a week? |
38535 | Could she turn English Colonies into German ones, and win an overseas empire by the sword, as England won hers in the past? |
38535 | DO THE WARLIKE NATIONS INHERIT THE EARTH? |
38535 | Did not someone once say that the war had made Germany great and Germans small? |
38535 | Do not, in short, all the factors show that sheer physical force is losing its prestige as much in the national as in the personal relationship? |
38535 | Do we not here get an illustration of the fact that intangible economic forces are setting at nought the force of arms? |
38535 | Do we not inevitably arrive at the destination to which every road in this discussion leads? |
38535 | Do we place national vanity, for instance, on the same plane as individual vanity? |
38535 | Does Mr. Churchill suppose that these millions know, or think, this struggle one for a mere luxury, or whim? |
38535 | Does a modern nation need to expand its political boundaries in order to provide for increasing population? |
38535 | Does anyone seriously contend that the conditions of modern life have not modified psychology in these matters? |
38535 | Does anyone seriously pretend that the present system of British Colony- holding is due to British philanthropy or high- mindedness? |
38535 | Does anyone think of paying deference to the Russian_ mujik_ because he happens to belong to one of the biggest empires territorially? |
38535 | Does conquered territory add to the wealth of the conquering nation? |
38535 | Does it inspire Europe with any especial respect? |
38535 | Does it mean that Britain shall slay in cold blood sixty or seventy millions of men, women, and children? |
38535 | Does not my critic really see that this whole notion of national possessions benefiting the individual is founded on mystification, upon an illusion? |
38535 | Does that mean that the inferior race is replaced by the superior? |
38535 | Does the Catholic or the Protestant really stand in danger of such things from his religious rival? |
38535 | Does the military prowess of Russia or of Turkey inspire any particular satisfaction in the minds of the individual Russian or of the individual Turk? |
38535 | Does this mean that the nature of these populations has fundamentally altered in less than a generation? |
38535 | Face to face with this manifestation, who is the man bold enough to say that force is never a remedy? |
38535 | Failing such effort and such response, what are we to look for? |
38535 | For what has happened to all attempts to live on extorted tribute? |
38535 | For what is the effect of this increase on the minds of Germans possibly disposed to disagree with Bernhardi? |
38535 | Had we yet arrived at the point at which it was possible to make the matter plain to general opinion? |
38535 | Has not the day gone by when educated men can calmly assume that any Englishman is worth three foreigners? |
38535 | Has such a thing ever happened in the past, when our impulses and"sporting"instincts came into conflict with our larger social and economic interests? |
38535 | Have not the Balkan peoples redeemed War from the charges too readily brought against it as simply an instrument of barbarism? |
38535 | Have not these forces begun already to affect the psychological domain with which we are now especially dealing? |
38535 | Have not we in America the same doctrinal struggle which is going on in France and Germany and Great Britain? |
38535 | Have questions of profit and loss, economic considerations, anything whatever to do with this war? |
38535 | Have they left it unaffected? |
38535 | Have we not already realized the absurdity involved? |
38535 | Have we not had about enough of this ignorant chatter, which is persistently blind to the simplest and most elementary facts of the case? |
38535 | Have we the power to do it?" |
38535 | Having decided on that aim, what utility is there in showing that it is an undesirable one? |
38535 | He adds: Are thieving, and lying, and looting, and bestial talk very bad things? |
38535 | He will ask in triumph,"What will you do if one of your own order openly insults you? |
38535 | How can you have these things if energy is wasted in military adventure? |
38535 | How do we know that these difficulties are doctrinaire ones? |
38535 | How does this distinction affect the practical problem under discussion? |
38535 | How far does such a conception correspond to the reality-- to the German conception? |
38535 | How has it become impossible for one nation to take by conquest the wealth of another for the benefit of the people of the conqueror? |
38535 | How is war going to affect the question one way or another? |
38535 | How long separates us from that scene? |
38535 | How many mines have been transferred from their then owners to the British Government, as the result of British victory? |
38535 | How much tribute does the Government of Westminster exact as the result of investing two hundred and fifty millions in the enterprise? |
38535 | How would Germany impose upon a vanquished England commercial arrangements which would impoverish the vanquished and enrich the victor? |
38535 | How would it benefit her people to do so? |
38535 | How would she treat such a European empire? |
38535 | How, indeed, could it be otherwise? |
38535 | How, therefore, would England''s final crushing of Germany in the military sense change anything? |
38535 | IS THE POLITICAL REFORMATION POSSIBLE? |
38535 | If Germany could conquer England, would any ordinary German subject be the better for it? |
38535 | If it costs England a billion and a quarter to conquer Dutch South Africa, what would it cost Germany to conquer Anglo- Dutch South Africa? |
38535 | If it is asked,"Why does invasion threaten more terrible consequences to us than it does to our neighbors?" |
38535 | If means other than force give the same result more easily, with less effort to ourselves, why discuss the abstract right? |
38535 | If that could be said of the Kotze affair, what shall be said of the state of things which has been revealed by Maximilien Harden among others? |
38535 | If the traders of little nations can snap their fingers at the great war lords, why do British traders need_ Dreadnoughts_? |
38535 | If we can not carry a principle to its logical conclusion, at what point are we to stop? |
38535 | If we have not faith in our own principles, to whom shall we look? |
38535 | In other words, how many shares in the gold- mines does the British Government hold? |
38535 | In that case, what, in the name of all that is muddleheaded, becomes of the"unchanging tendency towards warfare"? |
38535 | In the book to which I have just referred( Mr. Steevens''"With Kitchener to Khartoum") one may read the following: And the Dervishes? |
38535 | In what way are the two attitudes contradictory? |
38535 | In what way can her carrying trade or any other trade be said to depend upon military power? |
38535 | Is England going to protect herself against the commercial"aggression"of Switzerland by building a dozen more_ Dreadnoughts_? |
38535 | Is War impossible? |
38535 | Is it astonishing that the labor of twenty million souls makes some stir in the industrial world? |
38535 | Is it futile? |
38535 | Is it likely that such a process would have the stamp and touch of closeness to real things? |
38535 | Is it not a commonplace that in India, quite as much as in the New World, the trader and the settler drove out the soldier and the conqueror? |
38535 | Is it not a little childish? |
38535 | Is it not time that we shook off the influence of those disastrous words? |
38535 | Is it possible for a nation to"own"the territory of another in the way that a person or corporation would"own"an estate? |
38535 | Is it unlikely? |
38535 | Is it worthy of the_ Spectator_? |
38535 | Is not force a remedy, and at times the only remedy? |
38535 | Is not precisely the same thing taking place with reference to the conflicting conceptions of life which now separate men in Christendom? |
38535 | Is not the failure of Spain explicable by the fact that she failed to realize this truth? |
38535 | Is not war therefore inevitable and must we not prepare diligently for it? |
38535 | Is that the way efficient Germany would set about the development of her newly- acquired Empire? |
38535 | Is there anything in European history-- Cambronne, the Light Brigade, anything you like-- more magnificent than this? |
38535 | Is this serious criticism? |
38535 | It is not a question of Englishmen saying,"Let the German come,"but of the German saying,"Why should we go?" |
38535 | Men are little disposed to listen to reason,"therefore we should not talk reason"--Are men''s ideas immutable? |
38535 | Men are little disposed to listen to reason,"therefore we should not talk reason"--Are men''s ideas immutable? |
38535 | More and more is religious effort being subjected to this test: Does it make for the improvement of society? |
38535 | Moreover, if what"we"write in reviews and books does not touch men''s reasons, does not affect their conduct, why do we write at all? |
38535 | Must they not fight for 1250 million dollars of yearly commerce?" |
38535 | Need it be said that I have not the least desire to deprecate sincere emotion as a factor in progress? |
38535 | Need it be said that the writer of these lines does not desire to represent Germans as a whole as more corrupt than their neighbors? |
38535 | Now the question arises: What more can a navy do that it has not done for England in Canada? |
38535 | Now, do these things constitute, as a national policy, an inspiring aim, or not? |
38535 | Now, how does such hostility as that indicated in this passage differ from the hostility which marks international differences in our day? |
38535 | Of what use is domination unless there be individual capacity, social training, industrial resources, to profit thereby? |
38535 | Or would we urge that to do so is the way to carry on a trade or to govern a nation or that it could be the basis of human relationship? |
38535 | Or, do those who talk of"unchanging human nature"and"thousands of years"really plead that we are in danger of a repetition of such a scene? |
38535 | SYNOPSIS What are the fundamental motives that explain the present rivalry of armaments in Europe, notably the Anglo- German? |
38535 | Suppose she could conquer Switzerland and Belgium with her_ Dreadnoughts_, would not the trade of Switzerland and Belgium go on all the same? |
38535 | Suppose the others reply by increasing their military force? |
38535 | That if he threatens to kill me, I am not to defend myself, because"the individual citizens are not allowed to settle their differences by force"? |
38535 | The reader deems these platitudes beside the mark? |
38535 | Then, when he realizes this truth, shall we not at least have made some progress towards laying the foundations for a sane international polity? |
38535 | Was it the mere hazards of war which gave to Great Britain the domination of India and half of the New World? |
38535 | Was there any doubt as to the reality of the material facts involved? |
38535 | Well, now that England has won the war, how many gold- mines has she captured? |
38535 | Well, what is the result? |
38535 | Were they, and the rank and file, still too enslaved by the hypnotism of an obsolete terminology to accept a new view? |
38535 | What are the facts? |
38535 | What are the facts? |
38535 | What are the facts? |
38535 | What are the motives which each State thus fears its neighbors may obey? |
38535 | What created the police and made them possible, if it was not the general recognition of the fact that disorder and aggression make trade impossible? |
38535 | What do I mean by this sense of collective responsibility? |
38535 | What do we mean when we speak of the money of a nation, or the self- interest of a community? |
38535 | What does the"extinction"of Germany mean? |
38535 | What does this sort of thing mean? |
38535 | What has Pacifism, Old or New, to say now? |
38535 | What has a particularly competent German to say to Mr. Blatchford''s generalization? |
38535 | What has been the precise effect on French prosperity? |
38535 | What has effected this change? |
38535 | What has happened? |
38535 | What interest have we in attempting to prevent her? |
38535 | What is a career of unwarlike ease, in Mr. Roosevelt''s phrase? |
38535 | What is a leader or a ruler in a modern parliamentary sense? |
38535 | What is a market? |
38535 | What is it that France desires in her Colonies? |
38535 | What is it to be"moderately"peaceful, or"moderately"warlike? |
38535 | What is the meaning of this? |
38535 | What is the practical outcome of the situation which the facts detailed in the last chapter make plain? |
38535 | What is the real guarantee of the good behavior of one State to another? |
38535 | What is the real process of war? |
38535 | What is the result? |
38535 | What must inevitably happen if the nations take the line of the"practical man,"and limit their energies simply and purely to piling up armaments? |
38535 | What of the abominable scandals that have marked German military life of late years? |
38535 | What other means have succeeded? |
38535 | What result does this carry? |
38535 | What sort of nature should we expect those savage heroes to display? |
38535 | What then? |
38535 | What was one of the reasons leading to the cessation of religious wars between States? |
38535 | What was the problem confronting the merchant adventurer of the sixteenth century? |
38535 | What was the real origin of the bank crisis of 1907 in the United States, which had for American business men such disastrous consequences? |
38535 | What were the larger motives that pushed England into war with the Dutch Republics? |
38535 | What will become of the strenuous life if you introduce police? |
38535 | What would be its condition if practically not a single ship could leave or enter it? |
38535 | What would be the result of such an action on the part of a German army in London? |
38535 | What would be the situation in Britain, therefore, on the morrow of a conflict in which that country was successful? |
38535 | What would she get, and what would be the result? |
38535 | What would you have had me reply to those Germans?" |
38535 | What, however, is the outcome of spending a billion and a quarter of dollars upon the accomplishment of these objects? |
38535 | What, in short, does the argument of my critics amount to? |
38535 | What, indeed, is modern warfare in its highest phases but this? |
38535 | What, then, is the principle determining the advantageous and the disadvantageous employment of force? |
38535 | What_ do_ these phrases mean? |
38535 | When one nation, say England, occupies a territory, does it mean that that territory is"lost"to Germans? |
38535 | Where would her big industrial population find their markets? |
38535 | Which are the military nations? |
38535 | Which fact constitutes the severer condemnation of the ethical atmosphere of militarism and military training? |
38535 | Which is the more convincing testimony to the corrupting influences of war? |
38535 | Who is the man who is foolish enough to say that martial virtues do not play a vital part in the health and honor of every people? |
38535 | Who realized that in the simple invention of printing there was the liberation of a force greater than the power of kings? |
38535 | Who shall foretell the developments of a generation? |
38535 | Who would invest money in the Transvaal at all if property were to be subject to that sort of shock? |
38535 | Whoever composed epics on typhoid fever or cancer? |
38535 | Why do we overlook the fact that, if Germany has done well in certain social organizations, Scandinavia and Switzerland have done better? |
38535 | Why have I presented the facts in this order, and dealt with the psychological result involved in this change before the change itself? |
38535 | Why is it not given?" |
38535 | Why is the employment of force by the police justified? |
38535 | Why should England forbid Germany to do in a small degree what she has done in a large degree? |
38535 | Why should Germany attack Britain? |
38535 | Why should it be impossible to change that mind on the political side in a generation, or half a generation, when things move so much more quickly? |
38535 | Why should we try to prevent Germany increasing our trade? |
38535 | Why, therefore, should we be asked to entertain for foreigners a sentiment we do not give to our own people? |
38535 | Why? |
38535 | Why? |
38535 | Will you leave everything severely alone, and leave wrong and dangerous ideas in undisturbed possession of the political field? |
38535 | Would Admiral Fisher refrain from taking a given line merely because, if he took it, someone would"hit him in the belly,"etc.? |
38535 | Would England submit tamely if a foreign Government should exercise permanently gross oppression on an important section of her citizens? |
38535 | Would Germany close her own markets to our goods? |
38535 | Would not most of us just as soon be a non- military American as a military Turk? |
38535 | Would not that general realization add immensely to the security of their so- called Empire? |
38535 | Would the demonstration of its economic futility have kept the peace? |
38535 | Would the schoolboy necessarily be more learned or more acute than those judges? |
38535 | Would they urge going to war unnecessarily or unjustly merely because it is good for us? |
38535 | Would those incendiaries be entitled to say that the town authorities were incendiaries also and"believed in setting fire to towns"? |
38535 | Would we not, on the contrary, despise the man who should do so? |
38535 | [ 111] And here is the London_ Times_: No doubt the victor suffers, but who suffers most, he or the vanquished? |
38535 | [ 117] Here is the real English belief in this matter:"Why should Germany attack Britain? |
38535 | [ 117] Why should it be assumed that Germany will do it? |
38535 | [ 121] Does such an experience justify that universal rebelliousness to political rationalism on which my critics for the most part found their case? |
38535 | [ 80] What of the Dreyfus case? |
38535 | [ 92] Is not this a demonstration that in reality physical force is operative in only very narrow limits? |
38535 | [ 97] Do these war advocates urge that war itself is desirable? |
10755 | ''Why do you ask?'' 10755 A boy?" |
10755 | A curious piece of irony, is n''t it? |
10755 | A letter? |
10755 | And Rahat Mian? |
10755 | And how should I prevent them? |
10755 | And no one listened, I suppose? |
10755 | And she is in Mecca now? |
10755 | And the Road? |
10755 | And the road? |
10755 | And then? |
10755 | And to that you put down my embarrassment? |
10755 | And what are you going to do with yourself? |
10755 | And what have their lives been afterwards? |
10755 | And what is that? |
10755 | And what was the exception? |
10755 | And what will happen to Mir Ali, whom we have promised to protect? |
10755 | And where are they now? |
10755 | And where is he now? |
10755 | And you answered? |
10755 | And you will stay in Chiltistan until you come back to us? |
10755 | And you? |
10755 | And your horse? |
10755 | Any trouble on the Frontier? |
10755 | Any trouble? |
10755 | Are you married, Ahmed Ismail? |
10755 | Are you ready? |
10755 | Are you sure that it was bolted before? |
10755 | Are you sure? |
10755 | Are you sure? |
10755 | As a right? |
10755 | Before me, Futteh Ali Shah? 10755 Bless my soul, what on earth sends all you young fellows racing out to India? |
10755 | But how many others? 10755 But is n''t there a danger-- if I succeed? |
10755 | But surely that was unwise? |
10755 | But was I honest then? |
10755 | But why does he sit covered with the blanket? |
10755 | But why should it get about? |
10755 | But why? |
10755 | But why? |
10755 | But you know him? |
10755 | By the thief? |
10755 | Can I do anything to help? 10755 Can we countermine?" |
10755 | Can you? |
10755 | Can your Excellency interpret the message? 10755 Certain? |
10755 | Could I forget? 10755 Dick,"she said,"I have never said a word to dissuade you, have I? |
10755 | Did he ever come here with you? |
10755 | Did he ever dine with you there amongst the lights and the merry- makers and the music? |
10755 | Did he say that? |
10755 | Did he? |
10755 | Did n''t he get the Victoria Cross? |
10755 | Did no one see you? |
10755 | Did the girls themselves mind? |
10755 | Did you ever hear of a man named Luffe? |
10755 | Did you recognise him? |
10755 | Did you see anything? |
10755 | Did you think that I should be afraid? |
10755 | Did you? |
10755 | Do I belong here? |
10755 | Do I indeed speak follies? 10755 Do n''t you understand-- you who know him, you who grew up with him, you who were his friend? |
10755 | Do you carry your troubles to your wife? 10755 Do you hear anything, sir?" |
10755 | Do you know that boy? |
10755 | Do you know what I think? 10755 Do you play with me, Ahmed Ismail?" |
10755 | Do you remember Linforth''s letters? 10755 Do you see that man?" |
10755 | Do you see that sign there,''Bahadur Gobind, Barrister- at- Law, Cambridge B.A.,''on the first floor over the cookshop? 10755 Do you see this, Linforth?" |
10755 | Do you think there will be trouble up there in Chiltistan? |
10755 | Does Shere Ali know? |
10755 | Does this mark Shere Ali''s return to the ways of his fathers? |
10755 | Does your Highness know this spot? |
10755 | Does your Highness know whose bones are laid at the foot of that monument? |
10755 | Does your mistress know of this? |
10755 | Earned-- but did not get it? |
10755 | Eton, is n''t it? |
10755 | For Chiltistan? |
10755 | For more than an hour? |
10755 | From Calcutta? 10755 Had he no wife?" |
10755 | Has anything gone? 10755 Has he been waiting up there alone all this time?" |
10755 | Have I bored you? |
10755 | Have you any clue to the man? |
10755 | Have you any influence there? |
10755 | Have you any suspicion as to who the man is? |
10755 | Have you forgotten everything? |
10755 | Have you forgotten that night when we sat in the doorway of the hut under the Aiguilles d''Arve? 10755 Have you forgotten them? |
10755 | Have you got your revolver? |
10755 | Have you heard anything of a melon and a bag of grain? |
10755 | Have you never crossed your threshold for five years? |
10755 | He comes to your house? |
10755 | He has gone north, you say? |
10755 | He has them now, then? |
10755 | He said that? |
10755 | His Highness would like to know if his Excellency is still talking, and if so, why? |
10755 | How can I explain it? 10755 How can I tell you until you ask it?" |
10755 | How did it happen? |
10755 | How did you come to notice him in the Maidan? |
10755 | How did you come? |
10755 | How do you mean-- right? |
10755 | How long have you been back, Colonel Dewes? |
10755 | How long is it since you left your house in the Khyber Pass? |
10755 | How many men will you require? |
10755 | How should I know? 10755 How should I know?" |
10755 | How will you ever get to Mecca? 10755 How?" |
10755 | I am forgiven then? |
10755 | I am to hinder the making of that Road? |
10755 | I ought to be grateful? |
10755 | I said that? |
10755 | I suppose you know,said the Khan, tugging at his great grey beard,"that my grandfather married a fairy for one of his wives?" |
10755 | I told you of a supper I had one night at the Savoy-- do you remember? 10755 I wonder if there is anything up the valley which I ought to know about?" |
10755 | I? |
10755 | In Ajmere? |
10755 | In Calcutta? |
10755 | In Calcutta? |
10755 | In Chiltistan? 10755 In Chiltistan?" |
10755 | In Mr. Luffe''s case? |
10755 | In a week''s time, then? |
10755 | In what way am I concerned? |
10755 | In your thoughts? |
10755 | Is he ill? |
10755 | Is he in Calcutta now? |
10755 | Is it true? |
10755 | Is it, by George? 10755 Is n''t that a little ungrateful-- what?" |
10755 | Is she in India, Huzoor? |
10755 | Is that so? |
10755 | Is that the Delhi Gate? |
10755 | Is that the Prince? |
10755 | Is the road stopped? 10755 Is there trouble in Chiltistan?" |
10755 | Is this his renunciation of the White People? |
10755 | It was for that reason--? |
10755 | It was on purpose, too, that you left out all mention of your visit to India? |
10755 | It will be taken as a sign of faith? |
10755 | Long ago-- in Peshawur-- do you remember? 10755 Might we go home now?" |
10755 | No one in the city? |
10755 | No? 10755 No?" |
10755 | Not even the Road? |
10755 | Now who would you say was going to win this fight? |
10755 | Of what else should I be speaking? 10755 Of what other could I be thinking?" |
10755 | On the contrary? |
10755 | On what journey are you going? |
10755 | One what? |
10755 | Or do I belong to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Relief? |
10755 | Set up another Prince? |
10755 | Shall I tell you? 10755 Shall we dance?" |
10755 | Shall we go together? |
10755 | Shall we ride back together? |
10755 | Shall we walk a little way together? |
10755 | Shere Ali? |
10755 | Since we submit to it, since we cringe at their indignities and fawn upon them for their insults, are they not right? |
10755 | Sirdar Khan, your Highness? |
10755 | Sixty? |
10755 | So it''s all over, eh? |
10755 | So your Highness has returned? |
10755 | Some months ago, then? |
10755 | Surely you have not forgotten me, Shere Ali? |
10755 | The Prince Shere Ali, too? |
10755 | The Prince cried out in anger,''How long must we wait?'' |
10755 | The Prince? |
10755 | The man lying there said that? |
10755 | The road through Chiltistan? |
10755 | The shared ambitions, the concerted plans-- gone, and not even a regret for them left, eh? 10755 Then what is it?" |
10755 | Then why was I sent to Oxford? |
10755 | Then why? |
10755 | Then your Highness has exorcised the fairy? |
10755 | There are some of my people in Delhi? |
10755 | There was a great- uncle of yours in the days of the John Company, was n''t there? 10755 They were without water for all that time-- and in August?" |
10755 | Thus they understand my gift to the Mullah? |
10755 | To Kohara? |
10755 | To me? 10755 To- morrow?" |
10755 | Violet, why should it end at all? |
10755 | Was Captain Oliver rich? |
10755 | We can threaten-- but what is the use of threatening without troops? 10755 Well, what news do you bring?" |
10755 | Well? |
10755 | Well? |
10755 | Were they wrong, your Highness? |
10755 | Were they wrong? |
10755 | Were you ever in Mecca? |
10755 | What are you doing in Lahore? |
10755 | What can I do to help? |
10755 | What can we do? |
10755 | What change? |
10755 | What danger do you foresee? |
10755 | What did he say? |
10755 | What did they want? |
10755 | What did you do? |
10755 | What did you talk about? |
10755 | What do you mean? |
10755 | What do you think? |
10755 | What does he do upon this balcony? |
10755 | What does he say? |
10755 | What does it matter? |
10755 | What does it mean? |
10755 | What gift? |
10755 | What is he hiding? |
10755 | What is it? 10755 What is it? |
10755 | What is it? |
10755 | What is it? |
10755 | What is the matter? |
10755 | What message could they convey? 10755 What must I do?" |
10755 | What of Luffe? |
10755 | What right? |
10755 | What shall I do? |
10755 | What shall I do? |
10755 | What sort of secrets? |
10755 | What was it that the Prince said,he asked,"when the first of those water- carriers came down the steps and did not slip? |
10755 | What was that? |
10755 | What was the matter? |
10755 | What was the other brave deed you have seen fit to rank with this? |
10755 | What will you do, then? |
10755 | What''s the matter, Sybil? |
10755 | What''s the old rascal up to now? |
10755 | What''s the use of making this pretence? |
10755 | What''s your name? |
10755 | When did you land? |
10755 | When did you reach Kohara? |
10755 | When do I start? |
10755 | When you went to your room,he asked,"did you find the window again unbolted?" |
10755 | When,he asked,"will Chiltistan be ready?" |
10755 | When? |
10755 | When? |
10755 | Where had you seen him? |
10755 | Where is Shere Ali now? |
10755 | Where is she, Huzoor? |
10755 | Where is the Khan? |
10755 | Where shall I find you? |
10755 | Where should I live? |
10755 | Whither did the Prince go? |
10755 | Who am I, then? |
10755 | Who is he? |
10755 | Who is he? |
10755 | Who is it? |
10755 | Who is she? |
10755 | Who is she? |
10755 | Who is that walking up and down the drawingroom, Evans? |
10755 | Who was the soldier? |
10755 | Who''s Linforth? |
10755 | Who''s that? |
10755 | Whose house? |
10755 | Why back there does one forget the discomfort of India? |
10755 | Why did he not wish it? |
10755 | Why did n''t you listen to him? 10755 Why did n''t you speak?" |
10755 | Why did you stand waiting there for me to look your way? |
10755 | Why does the danger grow? |
10755 | Why in the world was n''t I told? |
10755 | Why not, Dadu? |
10755 | Why not? 10755 Why not?" |
10755 | Why should Shere Ali have relapsed? |
10755 | Why should it end at all? |
10755 | Why should they be respected? |
10755 | Why should we go down to La Grave to- night? |
10755 | Why should we remain outside? |
10755 | Why, then, should I break my word? 10755 Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Why? |
10755 | Will it? |
10755 | Will they give him up? |
10755 | Will you answer it? |
10755 | Will you come down? |
10755 | Will you fetch it? |
10755 | Will you find me a chair? |
10755 | Will you follow me? |
10755 | Will you join us at supper? |
10755 | Will your Highness deign to enter? |
10755 | With news of Sahib Linforth? |
10755 | Would Prince of Chiltistan like to utter some few welcome words to great Indian public on extraordinary skill of respective pugilists? 10755 Would he be in time?" |
10755 | Would it be fair? |
10755 | Would you introduce Dick to Mrs. Oliver now, if you had not done it before? |
10755 | Would you like to dance? |
10755 | Would you like to see Dick? 10755 Yet you had looked forward to retiring and going home?" |
10755 | You are a friend of his? |
10755 | You are despondent now? |
10755 | You are going to live here? |
10755 | You are looking rather far ahead, are n''t you, sir? |
10755 | You are married? |
10755 | You are of my country? |
10755 | You are sorry? |
10755 | You are sure? |
10755 | You are tired, Violet? |
10755 | You are willing to make peace? |
10755 | You come from Wafadar Nazim, and alone? |
10755 | You did n''t bring her back? |
10755 | You forgot? |
10755 | You found life in England so dull? |
10755 | You have some control over him? |
10755 | You have special work for me? |
10755 | You know Shere Ali? |
10755 | You know her? |
10755 | You know him? |
10755 | You know that man? |
10755 | You promise? |
10755 | You see,Mrs. Linforth continued, as though Dewes had not interrupted,"it is not natural for a boy at his age to want to be alone, is it? |
10755 | You see? |
10755 | You take these boys, you give them Oxford, a season in London-- did you ever have a season in London when you were twenty- one, Dewes? 10755 You will dance no more?" |
10755 | You will give me a dance? |
10755 | You will not fail me? |
10755 | You will not tell that story? |
10755 | You will take me? |
10755 | You wish to speak to me? |
10755 | You wo n''t go down to Calcutta at Christmas, for instance? 10755 You?" |
10755 | You? |
10755 | Your Excellency rides up the valley? |
10755 | Your Highness has counted the cost? |
10755 | Your Highness has forgotten? 10755 Yours?" |
10755 | _ You_ want to help? 10755 --and,he said slowly,"I wonder what sort of fairyland it is actually to live and breathe in?" |
10755 | A strange story, eh?" |
10755 | After all, if you are going to be the governing race it''s not a good thing to let your women be insulted, eh?" |
10755 | And are they not right, Huzoor?" |
10755 | And at last in a whisper she said:"The Road?" |
10755 | And to whom?" |
10755 | And who sent them? |
10755 | Are the Mohammedans beyond the frontier such a very quiet people that you are anxious to add another to their number?" |
10755 | As they interpret it in Chiltistan?" |
10755 | Between the fulfilment of his hopes and the great failure what was there? |
10755 | But an advantage to whom? |
10755 | But could she keep it up? |
10755 | But oh, Dick, did I mean more?" |
10755 | But out of her self- knowledge sprang the insistent question:"Could I live it?" |
10755 | But we have been so much together, so much to each other-- how should I not know?" |
10755 | But what did the sign portend? |
10755 | But what did the tall stooping man care? |
10755 | But which of the pictures do you admire? |
10755 | But will you think gently of me-- always? |
10755 | Calcutta is the place to which people go at Christmas, is n''t it? |
10755 | Captain Lynes of the Sikhs broke the silence:"What''s this?" |
10755 | Could I forget?" |
10755 | Could she make them? |
10755 | Dick leaned his arms upon the sill and with his eyes on the Colonel''s face asked quietly:"How far does the Road reach now?" |
10755 | Did no memory of the short week during which she had longed to tread the road of fire and stones, the road of high endeavour, trouble her content? |
10755 | Did not that mean that she had at all events been thinking of him in some way? |
10755 | Did regret prompt it? |
10755 | Did the breaking of the pitcher mean that some definite thing had been done in Chiltistan, some breaking of the British power? |
10755 | Do ever white men act reasonably in India?" |
10755 | Do n''t you feel that your mind has broadened?" |
10755 | Do n''t you think so? |
10755 | Do you approve? |
10755 | Do you blame him? |
10755 | Do you know what was done that day in the Bibigarh at Cawnpore?" |
10755 | Do you know what would happen? |
10755 | Do you know why? |
10755 | Do you remember the unfinished letter which you brought home to me from Harry? |
10755 | Do you see that very respectable white- bearded gentleman on the balcony of his house? |
10755 | Do you see?" |
10755 | Do you think that good?" |
10755 | Do you think that is good for British rule in India? |
10755 | Do you think they will be content? |
10755 | Do you think they will have their heart in their work, in their humdrum life, in their elaborate ceremonies? |
10755 | Else how came it that Captain Phillips rode amidst that great and frenzied throng, unhurt and almost unthreatened? |
10755 | Else why should I be sent for? |
10755 | Finally she said:"I suppose you will not see your friend again before he starts?" |
10755 | For who else would dare to speak as he had spoken of the Mullahs? |
10755 | From the shelf Linforth spoke:"It is bad, Peter?" |
10755 | Had Violet Oliver arranged her visit so that it might coincide with his? |
10755 | Had it achieved more than he had wished to bring about? |
10755 | Had that party been too successful, he wondered? |
10755 | Had that story fired Shere Ali? |
10755 | Has anything been stolen? |
10755 | Has he talked?" |
10755 | Have I done it so often?" |
10755 | Have you forgotten the hills and valleys? |
10755 | Have you forgotten? |
10755 | Have you heard of that year, Ahmed Ismail, and of the month and of the day? |
10755 | Have you money?" |
10755 | He did not stop, but, after they had walked a few yards further, he said:"Was it pale blue that Violet Oliver was wearing? |
10755 | He had it in his thoughts to cry out:"Then what place have I in Chiltistan?" |
10755 | He merely glanced at his companion and asked:"What in the world were you doing in the Maldive Islands?" |
10755 | He opened it and read:"Dick, wo n''t you speak to me at all? |
10755 | He passed in well, did n''t he?" |
10755 | He pulled at his grey moustache thoughtfully, and asked:"Have the sons the Road in common, too?" |
10755 | He was of their faith himself, nominally at all events, but Mecca--? |
10755 | His chief friend?" |
10755 | How did the Englishwoman come to Mecca?" |
10755 | How do you think he received me? |
10755 | How does he use it, do you think? |
10755 | How in the world could there be an Englishwoman in Mecca-- above all, an Englishwoman who was in a position to ask me to tea? |
10755 | How is Travers?" |
10755 | How is he?" |
10755 | How long do you stay?" |
10755 | How much should he tell her, he asked himself? |
10755 | I am to go in pursuit?" |
10755 | I have heard a story, but whether it is true or not, who shall say?''" |
10755 | I reined in my horse and called sharply to one of the servants riding behind me,''Who is that?'' |
10755 | I saw that you cared-- I may say that, may n''t I?" |
10755 | I took the hand she held out to me and--"''But what are you doing here in Mecca?'' |
10755 | I used to see you at Eton, did n''t I? |
10755 | If Burton made one mistake, how many should I? |
10755 | If he did, would it trouble her? |
10755 | If they are alive-- well, could n''t they be evoked? |
10755 | Is Lahore more to you than Chiltistan?" |
10755 | Is she your companion as well as your wife? |
10755 | Is there anything I can do?" |
10755 | It is n''t comfortable in India, is it? |
10755 | It seemed that he was content, for he continued:''How should I know what the word means? |
10755 | Light of my life, hope of my race, who would dare?" |
10755 | Linforth recalled something that Violet Oliver had told to him in the garden at Peshawur--"Are you going to marry Linforth?" |
10755 | Linforth?" |
10755 | May I introduce my friend?" |
10755 | Nay, how can that be? |
10755 | Never a single word?" |
10755 | Never a word? |
10755 | Now when will your Excellency go shooting? |
10755 | Oh, why did I ever come here?" |
10755 | Oliver?" |
10755 | Oliver?" |
10755 | On Sunday, was n''t it?" |
10755 | Or was he beaten? |
10755 | Or was it the fat insignificant young man three seats away from her? |
10755 | Or were all these memories quite dead within his breast? |
10755 | Or, on the other hand, was she glad? |
10755 | Otherwise, why did n''t I see one?" |
10755 | Out of her dissatisfaction would there not grow disappointment in her husband? |
10755 | Poor old Luffe, a man with a bee in his bonnet, eh?" |
10755 | See, your Highness, is there a regiment in Peshawur whose rifles are safe, guard them howsoever carefully they will? |
10755 | Shall we look at the horses?" |
10755 | Shere Ali turned to Hatch again and said in a quiet voice which had some note of rather pathetic appeal:"Will you tell me what you thought of Mecca? |
10755 | The whole truth? |
10755 | Then I said to one of the workmen,''Would you like to earn your day''s wage and yet do no work?'' |
10755 | Then he asked of Sir John:"Your car was not seriously damaged, I suppose?" |
10755 | Then he said as he turned away:"What is Luffe to me? |
10755 | Then he said,"Are you going to marry-- Linforth?" |
10755 | Then he said:"And how was the gift interpreted?" |
10755 | They are Mahommedans all of them, and we hear a good deal about the loyalty of Mahommedans, do n''t we?" |
10755 | They walked on between the alleys of rose- trees and she asked:"Did you notice the book which Dick was reading?" |
10755 | Very likely you''ll believe me wrong yourself, eh? |
10755 | Was Russia at work? |
10755 | Was a single thing missing of all that the honourable lady possessed? |
10755 | Was he to be sent to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Was he to carry the Road no further than his father had done? |
10755 | Was it in this strange way the truth was to come to him? |
10755 | Was it of that country she was speaking? |
10755 | Was it the tall youth with the commonplace good looks opposite to her? |
10755 | Was it true that there was no change but the change from the young woman to the old one, from enthusiasm to acquiescence? |
10755 | Was she satisfied? |
10755 | What are twenty- one years to India? |
10755 | What can I do?" |
10755 | What could I do who a week ago was still a stranger to my people? |
10755 | What could it mean, he wondered? |
10755 | What did it matter whether he lived in unhappiness so long as that knowledge was the price of his unhappiness? |
10755 | What did it matter? |
10755 | What else was he waiting for from ten to eleven in the balcony above the well, except just for this news?" |
10755 | What in the world, he wondered, could Linforth have read in his letter, so to change him? |
10755 | What is it?" |
10755 | What life would there be there for me?" |
10755 | What of the others? |
10755 | What shall I do?" |
10755 | What should I know of Luffe?" |
10755 | What strange fate had cast her up there? |
10755 | What then? |
10755 | What was Shere Ali doing? |
10755 | What was it that was not"good for us"in the circus on the Maidan? |
10755 | What were they two and the two levies behind them against the throng? |
10755 | What would Linforth say when he knew that Shere Ali was lurking in Peshawur? |
10755 | What, then? |
10755 | When did I see you last? |
10755 | When he is told to go back to his State and settle down, what then? |
10755 | Where is he going to be during those twenty- one years?" |
10755 | Where is he?" |
10755 | Which of the two is the better man? |
10755 | Who knew but what the very leaves of the neem trees might whisper the words and bear witness against him? |
10755 | Why did not the attack begin? |
10755 | Why else should you say,''Ride forward and I will follow''?" |
10755 | Why has Shere Ali fled so quickly back to his country? |
10755 | Why should he and his not push on to Calcutta? |
10755 | Why should one respect those who take and do not give?" |
10755 | Why was the Residency left in peace? |
10755 | Why would n''t you speak to me?" |
10755 | Will he be content with a wife of his own people? |
10755 | Will it not go beyond Kohara?" |
10755 | Will you tell Poulteney Sahib that I would like to speak to him?" |
10755 | With what words and in what spirit would he have received Shere Ali''s summons to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Would another Linforth in another generation come to the tower in Peshawur with hopes as high as his and with the like futility? |
10755 | Would he meet her, he wondered, somewhere on the way to Chiltistan? |
10755 | Would he reach the door, pass in and be gone the next morning without another word to her except a formal goodnight in front of the others? |
10755 | Would he take the tips of those fingers from the floor, stand up again and face his man? |
10755 | Would not bitterness spring up between them and both their lives be marred? |
10755 | Would not dissatisfaction with herself follow very quickly upon her marriage? |
10755 | Would the soldier rise? |
10755 | Would you rather he sat down and grumbled and bragged of his successes, and took to drink, as more than one down south has done? |
10755 | Wrong definitely, undeniably wrong on the point of fact, was it not likely that Luffe was wrong too on the point of theory? |
10755 | Yet why should we grumble or complain? |
10755 | You have been going the pace a bit, eh? |
10755 | You knew him?" |
10755 | You know his history?" |
10755 | You remember it, no doubt?" |
10755 | You remember the night in Peshawur, the terrible night? |
10755 | You will sit down in my presence before I sit down? |
10755 | You will swear to divorce your wife, if you break your word?" |
10755 | Your friend as well as your mistress?" |
10755 | there''s a boy? |