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 |
---|---|
12455 | ''Never yet have we done homage-- Shall we to a stranger bow? 12455 ''What men are ye, War gear wearing, Host in harness, Who thus the brown keel Over the water street Leading, come Hither over the sea?''" |
12455 | ''What whisper you of Balder''s ire? 12455 He said:''Why would you drown her who is to be my wife, The fair and charming Gudrun? |
12455 | Said he,''Why question further? 12455 Should not the master his pupil Sometimes chastise when he will not observe, and is stubborn in evil? |
12455 | So he went and asked the lady,''What price is the filly? 12455 And Veillintif, had I the heart to die forgetting thee? 12455 Could any one outweigh The joy they felt together, with any wealth or treasure? 12455 Great the honor God hath given us-- Shall we lose that honor now? 12455 How can I refuse her who my heart has won? 12455 If boys were never punished, were thoughtlessness always passed over, Were bad behavior allowed, how would our juveniles grow up? |
12455 | Like Camelot, what place was ever yet renown''d? |
12455 | The god with true and steadfast heart, The sun upon his glittering form, Is not his love for Nanna part Of his own nature, pure and warm? |
12455 | To leave thy mighty heart to break, in slavery to the foe? |
12455 | Who carried here this weapon dread, By which mine uncle was struck dead? |
12455 | Who gave it to this minstrel knight?''" |
12455 | what has now come to pass? |
21600 | ; Bonaventura, 1221- 1274; Albertus Magnus, 1195- 1280; Thomas Aquinas, 1225?-1274; Duns Scotus, 1270?-1308? |
21600 | ; William of Occam,?-1347; Roger Bacon, 1214- 1292; Petrus Hispanus,?-1277; Raymond Lully, 1235- 1315.] |
21600 | And for original audacity few things surpass Aucassin''s equally famous inquiry,"En Paradis qu''ai- je à faire?" |
21600 | And if to dog- Latin, why not to genuine French, or English, or German? |
21600 | BALLADS? |
21600 | Ballads? |
21600 | Can you match me Virgil in that?" |
21600 | Did not Heinrich von Veldeke"imp the first shoot on Teutish tongues"( graft French on German poetry)? |
21600 | Do they, on the other hand, owe something to models still farther East? |
21600 | Had the still ingenious, though hopelessly effeminate, Byzantine mind caught up the literary style of the visitors it feared but could not keep out? |
21600 | Is there a better song of May and maidens than"So diu bluomen uz dem grase dringent"? |
21600 | Next to the questions of authorship and of origin in point of difficulty come two others--"Which are the older: the prose or the verse romances?" |
21600 | Or are they, as has sometimes been hinted, copies of Western romance itself? |
21600 | Or was it from deliberate invention? |
21600 | PROSE OR VERSE FIRST? |
21600 | Prose or verse first? |
21600 | This heroine exclaims in reference to her father,"He is an old devil, why do you not kill him? |
21600 | Was it from the uncertain"Albinus"? |
21600 | Was it, as Celtic enthusiasts hold, that, living as he did on Severn bank, he was a neighbour of Wales, and gathered Welsh tradition? |
21600 | When one reads Chrestien or another earlier contemporary, Benoît de Sainte- More, the question is,"What can come after this?" |
21600 | When one reads Layamon the happier question is,"What will come after this?" |
21600 | Where did he get these additions? |
21600 | Why do you couple these?" |
21600 | [ Sidenote:_ Ballads?_] As to the ballads, what has been said about those in Portuguese must be repeated at somewhat greater length. |
21600 | and,"Was there a Latin original of the Graal story?" |
21600 | pfligt s''iht ander varwe? |
20406 | Here you sit, Sivard, my foster- brother; will you lend me your good sword for your honour? 20406 Hold your tongue,"said Thorkell;"does the fool think he can give life to a man when his doom is set? |
20406 | Signild, my sister, where got you the golden rings on your hand? |
20406 | What counsel shall we now take? |
20406 | What will you do? |
20406 | Which of you was it that thought it convenient to burn me in my house? |
20406 | Will you promise me quarter? |
20406 | ); the luck of Hermelin(? |
20406 | --"And how shall I bring to your hands the head of Sivard? |
20406 | At last Bolli said:"Mother, will you tell me one thing? |
20406 | Do you not remember how I was assailed and beset at our home- coming? |
20406 | Hedin confesses his vanity to Helgi, and is forgiven, Helgi saying,"Who knows but the oath may be fulfilled? |
20406 | Hogni begs them to let the creature go,--"Why should we have to put up with his squalling?" |
20406 | It has been in my mind to ask you, who was the man you loved best?" |
20406 | Kjartan says to Bolli:"Will you try your swimming against this townsman?" |
20406 | Kjartan spoke, and said to Bolli:"Kinsman, are you willing to take this faith of the king''s?" |
20406 | Says Kjartan:"Seemed the king to you to have no threats for those that refused to accept his will?" |
20406 | Skapti said:"That is something for a man to be proud of; but what do you think of the three, and how are they each of them in courage?" |
20406 | The Duke saw them and began to sigh, and his lady questioned him:--"Ah, my Lord Duke, why do you ponder thus? |
20406 | The authors of that romantic school, if ever they talked shop, may have asked one another,"Where do you put your Felon Red Knight? |
20406 | The creed of Maldon is that of Achilles:[5]"Xanthus, what need is there to prophesy of death? |
20406 | The townsman said:"It may make some difference to know with whom you have been matched; why do you not ask?" |
20406 | The townsman said:"You are a good swimmer; are you as good at other sports as at this?" |
20406 | The_ Teseide_ is the first of the solemn row of modern epics;"reverend and divine, abiding without motion, shall we say that they have being?" |
20406 | Then said Kolbein:"Is there no man here remembers Snorri Sturluson? |
20406 | Then says the stranger:"Who may this man be?" |
20406 | They may be epic in character, in a general way, but how many of them have a claim to the title in its eminent and special sense? |
20406 | What was an author to do when his hero died in his bed, or survived all his feuds and enmities? |
20406 | Where do you put your doing away of the Ill Custom? |
20406 | Where else is there anything like it, for sincerity and for thinness? |
20406 | Will you prefer a paltry legal quibble to the plain open justice of the case?" |
20406 | [ Footnote 76: Li cuens Guillaumes li comença à dire:--Diva, vilain, par la loi do nt tu vives Fus- tu a Nymes, la fort cité garnie? |
20406 | _ Maldon_, l. 45_ sq._,"Hearest thou what this people answer? |
20406 | it is not like a gentleman to try to take in an old man like me; how could you be beaten?" |
20406 | or when a feud could not be wound up in one generation? |
20406 | or your tournaments?" |
20406 | por quoi ne te repenz De ces simples lasses destruire? |
20406 | where are your oaths that you swore? |
20406 | why have I not a little habergeon of my own? |
20406 | why is your head shaved?" |
37865 | Dear mother, with such burning After my love he''s yearning, Ungrateful can I be? 37865 For what harmony is there,"she asks,"between a scholar and a nurse, a writing- desk and a cradle, books and spinning- wheels? |
37865 | How is it that you lived, and what is it that you did? |
37865 | Nay, I trust to rule a knight in armor; How then should I listen to a farmer? 37865 Nay, mother, what is God?" |
37865 | Sire,he replied,"how could I sing unless I loved?" |
37865 | What harm can happen to me, since my lady is gracious? 37865 What if she refuses me?" |
37865 | Who gave you the right to lock up my gown? |
37865 | Who, when you walked abroad, did not hurry to look at you, rising on tiptoe and with straining eyes? |
37865 | Why should I not be angry at his insolence? 37865 You little grasshopper, whither wilt thou hop away from the nest? |
37865 | A cry of exultant renunciation of the wilds of life''s ocean, and of contentment at the holy calm in the bosom of the church? |
37865 | And again:"Did you ever see so gay a peasant as he is? |
37865 | And still a third, while eating at a bishop''s table, loosened his girdle? |
37865 | And what has this old German gallant to say of himself? |
37865 | At this last moment is she hesitating? |
37865 | Can it have been the increase in the culture of the Virgin, that beautiful and beneficent phase of mediæval religion? |
37865 | Compare an earlier lover''s cry in the loveliest of French romances:"What is there in heaven for me? |
37865 | Did they step forward to meet him? |
37865 | Does he believe she feels herself disgraced by this relation? |
37865 | Does he no longer attract her? |
37865 | Fated to make thee wretched, why did I Become thy wife? |
37865 | Fie, who brought him here? |
37865 | God? |
37865 | Has he made a mistake? |
37865 | Has not a rich man ridden over the field of his god- father? |
37865 | Has not another rich man eaten bread with crullers? |
37865 | Has the world renewed its hold upon her? |
37865 | He is haunted by the secret of life:"How is the soul made? |
37865 | He selected a master, but Fleur, when he was bidden to study, burst into tears and cried,"Sire, what will Blanchefleur do? |
37865 | Her lips part, and what will be her last words as a lady of the world? |
37865 | How does the soul deserve God''s wrath before it is born?" |
37865 | How may I her favors gain? |
37865 | If laymen and gentiles have lived thus continently, bound by no religious profession, what does it become a clerk and a canon to do? |
37865 | Indeed this was all the contentment which the blushing young knight desired:"Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams?" |
37865 | Is he sacrificing himself for her? |
37865 | Is it possible that the anonymous heroine heard of such trivial infidelities? |
37865 | May we go farther, and say that her spirit did adjust itself to its new conditions, and lose its pain in a submissive piety? |
37865 | Nothing? |
37865 | Or was it the Crusades? |
37865 | Poor clumsy louts, how can the girls endure them? |
37865 | Prithee, answer; Is it maid or is it man? |
37865 | Shall the birds lose their happiness because of me?" |
37865 | She kissed his lips:"Why am I opposing highest God? |
37865 | Sir, can love from care beguile us And our sorrowing distress? |
37865 | Sir, what is love? |
37865 | So when the guest appeared,"Did the woman and the man cry''Welcome back, Helmbrecht''? |
37865 | Some scriptural exhortation to her friends to follow her as she follows Christ? |
37865 | Sweet, love is so strong and mighty That all countries own her sway; Who can speak her power rightly? |
37865 | This happened three times; and yet, guileless Ulrich, you had no glimmering that perhaps it was a joke? |
37865 | This will cure you( I assure you) Of all sorrows, all alarms; What alloy In his joy On whom white and pretty arms Bestow their charms? |
37865 | Unwomanly does it appear, this unwillingness of Heloise to become her lover''s wife? |
37865 | Was it all for nothing these ceremonial disciplines? |
37865 | What did the child do? |
37865 | What if Wordsworth had tried to support himself and win fame by singing at castles? |
37865 | What if the rustic lad gives me a shove? |
37865 | What least joy may ye impart, She so dear and good denied me? |
37865 | What other love- letters equal the intensity, the tenderness, the womanliness of these final appeals for the broken love? |
37865 | What region is thy heritance?" |
37865 | What though this friend believed that the lady cared for him? |
37865 | What though wealth exalt thy name? |
37865 | What, not go back with so much to do? |
37865 | When life some pleasure gives, In tears my heart will scan My face, and tell its smart; How then can pleasure stay? |
37865 | Where''s the key? |
37865 | Who can doubt that he did-- that every deep nature always has? |
37865 | Who will teach her? |
37865 | Why is it worth while to introduce to English readers this peasant tale of the middle ages? |
37865 | Will she snatch herself from God? |
37865 | With fair living reconcile us, Gaiety and worthiness? |
37865 | Yet why should he manifest such reserve, at the same time that he mentions the subject so constantly, referring to it long after he has left Bavaria? |
37865 | [ 4] We recall his great countryman''s modern cry:"Wohin es geht, wer weiss es? |
42205 | ( 4) Between 1190 and 1200( but after Gautier?) |
42205 | ( 8) Hebron reports this to Joseph, who goes weeping and kneels before the vessel and asks why his followers suffer? |
42205 | = BLIHIS== PC=1= Blaise? |
42205 | = KLINSCHOR== W.== LABAN== Q=35( query variant of Lambar?). |
42205 | And the Grail? |
42205 | And why the insistence upon Avalon? |
42205 | Anonymous(? |
42205 | But if the fish had really the symbolic meaning ascribed to it would not a far greater stress be laid upon it? |
42205 | But then if the Grand St. Graal is the younger work, whence does it derive Brons, Alain, and Petrus, all of whom are introduced in such a casual way? |
42205 | But why should Joseph become the Grail- keeper? |
42205 | Can a parallel be found in Celtic tradition to this sufferer awaiting deliverance? |
42205 | Can these words be a reminiscence of Chrestien''s? |
42205 | Can, too, the"two nuns,"who bring in bread and wine, be due to the"Il Abéies,"which Perceval sees on entering Blanchefleur''s town? |
42205 | Could not this form of the myth be made to yield a human, practical conception of the Quest and Winning of the Holy Grail? |
42205 | Do the foregoing facts throw any light upon the question whether the two sections of the romance are originally independent, and which is the earlier? |
42205 | Had he not seen Grail and lance pass? |
42205 | How does this affect Amfortas and the Grail? |
42205 | How is it with the testimony of the MSS.? |
42205 | How is this leading conception worked out? |
42205 | If he only knew of the Grail from Chrestien, what gave him the idea of endowing it, as he did, with mystic properties? |
42205 | If the Mabinogi be a simple copy of the Conte du Graal, whence the altered significance of the talismans? |
42205 | If, then, one French version, that followed by Heinrich, who is obviously a translator, is lost, why not another? |
42205 | In Heinrich the father is named Leigamar, the eldest daughter Fursensephin,( Fleur sans epine? |
42205 | In so far Borron was led to his conception by the story as told in the canonical books; what help did he get from the Apocrypha? |
42205 | In this case, at least, Gautier must have had two sources, and if two why not more? |
42205 | Is Manessier any nearer than Gautier to the Mabinogi in the later portion of the tale? |
42205 | Is it merely an expedient to account for their sudden vanishing at daylight? |
42205 | Is it not evident that the Queste took over these features from Chrestien, compelled thereto by the celebrity of the latter''s presentment? |
42205 | Is such a punning explanation more consonant with the earliness or the lateness of the versions in which it is found? |
42205 | Is that of Perceval, pure and tempted, on the point of yielding, yet saved by the sight of the symbol of his Faith, to be of no avail to us? |
42205 | Is the example of Galahad and his unwavering pursuit of the highest spiritual object set before him, nothing to us? |
42205 | Is the model treated in this way by the Didot- Perceval Chrestien''s poem? |
42205 | Is this so? |
42205 | May it not be urged that Chrestien''s account is obviously at variance with the older story as he found it? |
42205 | Need Perceval''s question detain us? |
42205 | No; then what is his name? |
42205 | She asks, had Perceval seen the bleeding lance, the graal, and the silver dish? |
42205 | Sources: Christian legend( Acta, Pilati, Descensus Christi, Vindicta Salvatoris) and Breton sagas( Brut?). |
42205 | The question,"Whom serve they with the Grail?" |
42205 | Then enter two damsels bearing lights, followed by two knights with a spear, and two more damsels with a"toblier"(? |
42205 | Was no other course open? |
42205 | What are these? |
42205 | What is the author''s idea? |
42205 | What light is thrown upon the matter by the remaining versions, and which of these two accounts do they support? |
42205 | What then led Borron to connect the sacramental vessel with the Joseph legend? |
42205 | What, on the other hand, is the story as told in the Mabinogi? |
42205 | [ 102] Now how had Fionn obtained this sword originally? |
42205 | [ 126] But what means the death- in- life condition of the King and his men? |
42205 | [ 149] If the author''s way of carrying out his conception can not be praised, how does it stand with the conception itself? |
42205 | [ 22] B. H.:"When will the Holy Vessel come to still the pain I feel? |
42205 | had he asked their meaning? |
42205 | had supposed; would he in that case have brought the Grail to England, and left Joseph''s fate in uncertainty? |
42205 | may not the fact be accounted for by the introduction of a strange element into the thread of the romance? |
42205 | whence also the machinery by means of which the hero is at last brought to his goal, and which is, briefly, as follows? |
42205 | which he found in Chrestien, was necessarily meaningless to him, and he replaced it by his,"Uncle, what is it tortures thee?" |
28094 | A curse upon thee,cries the King,"who comest unbid to me; But what from traitor''s blood should spring, save traitors like to thee? |
28094 | And how much will you take for your maxims? |
28094 | And so,said the king,"if they are of no use to me I lose my money?" |
28094 | And what is it we are to believe of his resurrection? |
28094 | And what race are you of? |
28094 | And what remedy is there for this? |
28094 | And why eight pennies? |
28094 | But how,replied his friend,"is this to be brought about?" |
28094 | Did I not tell you,returned he,"that wild beasts had devoured them?" |
28094 | Do you,answered Orlando,"believe that God made Adam?" |
28094 | Dost thou know me? |
28094 | For what reason do you this? |
28094 | Good even, good fellow,said Faustus to the clown,"what shall I give thee to let me eat my bellyful of hay?" |
28094 | Hast thou,quoth Mephistophiles,"sworn thyself an enemy to God and to all creatures? |
28094 | How can I rejoice? |
28094 | How darest_ thou_,replied he,"molest the earth? |
28094 | How do you see now? |
28094 | I am the Emperor Jovinian,rejoined he;"canst thou have forgotten me? |
28094 | I sleep not,quoth Rodrigo;"but tell me who art thou, For, in the midst of darkness, much light is on thy brow?" |
28094 | Is there,he impiously asked,"is there any other god than me?" |
28094 | Madam,said the vexed soldier,"what have you done?" |
28094 | My dear brother,said the king,"what is the cause of your sorrow? |
28094 | My dear friend,exclaimed the operator,"how do things appear to you?" |
28094 | My dear friend,said he,"what do you perceive?" |
28094 | My friend,said the emperor,"what merchandise have you to dispose of?" |
28094 | Now, what is it, Lady Alda,( you may hear the words they say,)"Bringeth sorrow to thy pillow, and chaseth sleep away?" |
28094 | O heaven,said he to himself,"seest thou this deed? |
28094 | Show me the cause why? |
28094 | THE LION[4] that hath bathed his paws in seas of Libyan gore, Shall he not battle for the laws and liberties of yore? 28094 This is most true,"quoth Faustus;"but tell me, Mephistophiles, would thou be in my case as I am now?" |
28094 | What art thou? |
28094 | What is the second truth? |
28094 | What modern poet,says he,"would have dared to imagine that_ trait_, at once so natural and touching?" |
28094 | What news be these, Alarcos, that you your word did plight, To be a husband to my child, and love her day and night? 28094 Who are you?" |
28094 | Who art thou? |
28094 | Who is there? |
28094 | Who is this sinner,quoth the Pope,"that at my foot doth kneel?" |
28094 | Why was I born? |
28094 | Why would you waken the poor child? 28094 Why, thou most audacious scoundrel,"said the knight,"darest thou call thyself the emperor? |
28094 | Why,quoth the spirit,"mayst not thou instead of the emperor embrace these fair ladies? |
28094 | Woe is me,he cried,"for what strange doom am I reserved?" |
28094 | Wouldst thou, O Lord, that I tell what has befallen me to my wife and children, that they also may believe? |
28094 | -- V."Ask Count Alarcos, if of yore his word he did not plight To be my husband evermore, and love me day and night? |
28094 | --"Enough,"said Ferracute,"I clearly perceive all this; but how could he ascend into heaven?" |
28094 | --"I grant it,"replied the Giant;"he might be born of a virgin; but if he was the Son of God, how could he die, for God never dies?" |
28094 | --"What law do you follow?" |
28094 | --"Who is this Christ in whom you profess to believe?" |
28094 | --The Giant, hearing this, was greatly astonished, and exclaimed to Orlando,"Why do you talk so idly? |
28094 | A fair angel, that could not tarry two days in this place? |
28094 | After they had arrived, and delivered the emperors pleasure, the statue exclaimed:"Friends, look up; what see ye written upon my forehead?" |
28094 | And here it may be asked, why God permitted those to perish who in no wise had defiled themselves with women? |
28094 | And so, crossing the hermit''s path, he said to him,"Whither bound, my friend?" |
28094 | And thus, Faustus, hast thou heard my last sentence, and I pray thee, how dost thou like it? |
28094 | And when he was burnt, Fulgentius came to them and said,"Good sirs, have you done my lord''s commandment?" |
28094 | And when this was done, the emperor called unto him his steward, and said,"How may I rid this varlet from the world, that thus hath defamed me?" |
28094 | And when was it made?" |
28094 | And who rules them?" |
28094 | And why man was made after the image of God?" |
28094 | And within three days after he called his servant unto him, saying,"Art thou resolved? |
28094 | And, considering all these circumstances, how can_ I_ rejoice? |
28094 | Are not these Christians then types for us? |
28094 | Are not these fair ladies greatly to be pitied that thus consume their youth at the pleasure of one only man?" |
28094 | Are there not a thousand plays that pass with great success and applause, though they have many greater absurdities, and nonsense in abundance? |
28094 | Asia, Europe, and Africa, I had a sight of; and being so high, quoth I to my spirit,''Tell me how these kingdoms lie, and what they are called?'' |
28094 | At which Charles replied,"Who art thou, Lord?" |
28094 | Beginnest thou now to turn into a poor man''s house, where thou hast no power, and wert not able to keep thine own two days?" |
28094 | Bernard,"quoth Alphonso,"what means this warlike guise? |
28094 | But Lucifer perceiving his thought, spake to him,"My Faustus, how likest thou this crew of mine?" |
28094 | But the empress became very sorrowful, and said:"Oh, my lord, what am I to think? |
28094 | But the porter, beholding a naked man, exclaimed in the greatest amaze,"Friend, who are you, and why come you here in such a guise?" |
28094 | But what think ye of my breath? |
28094 | Caitiffs, do ye fear? |
28094 | Can you not yourself come down from a mountain, and return thither? |
28094 | Did not the sun yesterday rise in the east and set in the west, and yet rise again in the east to- day? |
28094 | Do you not know they would have procured the pardon of my sins from God? |
28094 | Does not the bird in the air ascend and descend? |
28094 | Does not the wheel of the mill descend low, and return to its height again? |
28094 | Dost thou see how even irrational things have rendered him good for the service he performed? |
28094 | Faustus said,"I would gladly know of thee if thou wert a man in manner and form as I am, what wouldst thou do to please both God and man?" |
28094 | Full of admiration, he exclaimed,"Tell me where you procured this beautiful stone?" |
28094 | Have I not known thee more than thirty years, and borne thee many children? |
28094 | Have I not therefore cause for wretchedness?" |
28094 | He received him like the first, and said,"Do you believe me mad, that I should expose myself to such peril? |
28094 | Here Faustus said,"But how came lord and master Lucifer to have so great a fall from heaven?" |
28094 | Here are the greatest delicacies, the most enrapturing harmony; why do you not rejoice?" |
28094 | Hereat the spirit answered nothing, but Lucifer himself said,"Ho, ho, ho, Faustus, how likest thou the creation of the world?" |
28094 | How can I behold thee dead, and not die myself? |
28094 | How can this fellow have acquired so intimate a knowledge of what has passed between us?" |
28094 | How have we dealt by thee?" |
28094 | How likest thou this, my Faustus? |
28094 | How likest thou thy wedding? |
28094 | How many are there? |
28094 | How shall we think to look for grace, if this poor child we slay, When ranged before Christ Jesu''s face at the great judgment day?" |
28094 | How? |
28094 | If thus injustice triumph, why do I remain here? |
28094 | If you to- day feared me, who am mortal, how much more ought I to dread my Creator and my Redeemer, our Lord Jesus Christ? |
28094 | Immediately Focus was apprehended, and conducted to the emperor, who said,"Friend, what do I hear of thee? |
28094 | In the agony of his heart, he said:"What shall I do? |
28094 | In the middle of the night he heard a voice saying,"O duke, that liest here, what askest thou that I can do for thee?" |
28094 | In what place stands it? |
28094 | It appeared as if an angel came and addressed me in the following manner:''My friend, would you see what is become of your companions?'' |
28094 | It is a joyful city, it is a gallant day,''Tis the Campeador''s wedding, and who will bide away? |
28094 | Much moved at the recital, the emperor sent for the seneschal, and said,"What is this I hear of thee?" |
28094 | Much surprised at this, he called together his philosophers, and said,"My masters, how is this? |
28094 | My father is dead, and my mother is old, and may not travel; how should I then bring them with me? |
28094 | My house is large and broad, and made of stones and mortar, how should I bring then with me my house? |
28094 | No treason was in Sancho''s blood, no stain in mine doth lie-- Below the throne what knight will own the coward calumny? |
28094 | Now when the second son heard this, he came to him, saying,"My brother, by what law or title occupy you this tree?" |
28094 | Observing that he was an old man, the emperor said,"Have you not a wife?" |
28094 | Or is it that the day is come-- one of the hateful three, When they, with trumpet, fife, and drum, make heathen game of me?" |
28094 | Quoth Faustus,"I will know of thee if I might see hell, and take a view thereof?" |
28094 | Quoth Faustus,"Why came you not in another manner of shape?" |
28094 | Quoth he to Lucifer,"And how cometh it that so many filthy forms are in the world?" |
28094 | She answered:"My lord, how can you ask such a question? |
28094 | The Duke of Anhalt notwithstanding could not withhold to ask Faustus with what reason there were such young fruits to be had at that time of the year? |
28094 | The King leans from his chamber, from the balcony on high--"What means this furious clamour my palace- porch so nigh?" |
28094 | The devil said,"What wouldst thou have, Faustus? |
28094 | The gate was opened; and the porter, struck with the strange appearance he exhibited, replied,"In the name of all that is marvellous, what are you?" |
28094 | The innocent suffers for the guilty: why permittest thou such things? |
28094 | The judge, hearing this, said to the bystanders,"He says true?" |
28094 | The other, turning to the nobles who sat or stood at the table, continued:"Tell me, on your allegiance, which of us two is your lord and master?" |
28094 | The owner of the mansion, hearing the noise, and well knowing the reason, though he pretended ignorance, asked"What was the matter?" |
28094 | The pretended emperor made no reply, but addressing the real one, said:"Friend, how darest thou to call thyself emperor? |
28094 | The wife then said,"My lord, what has become of our children?" |
28094 | Then said Fulgentius,"For Christ''s love, tell me that commandment?" |
28094 | Then said the emperor,"What clothing had the knight on?" |
28094 | Then said the king,"I pray thee tell me by what place thou purposest to ride?" |
28094 | Then said the king,"What sayest thou? |
28094 | Then said the king:"Why speakest thou so? |
28094 | This much troubled him; and the devil, ever on the alert, met him in the likeness of a man, and said,"My son, what has made you so sorrowful?" |
28094 | Thought he,"How shall I now do? |
28094 | Thy time, Faustus, weareth away; then why wilt thou not take thy pleasure of the world? |
28094 | To this said Faustus:"Then thou didst also beguile me?" |
28094 | Upon this cross an image of Jesus Christ was suspended; and the stag thus addressed the hunter:"Why dost thou persecute me, Placidus? |
28094 | Upon what occasion hath heaven repaid me with this reward, by sufferance, to suffer me to perish? |
28094 | What dost thou merit? |
28094 | What evil had the poor man done that he should be drowned?" |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What have I done? |
28094 | What helpeth my wailing?" |
28094 | What helpeth the emperor, king, prince, duke, earl, baron, lord, knight, esquire, or gentleman, to cry for mercy being there? |
28094 | What mean I then to complain, where no help is? |
28094 | What mind art thou in now?" |
28094 | What more need I add? |
28094 | What more shall we say? |
28094 | What seizeth upon thy limbs, other than robbing of my life? |
28094 | What substance is it of? |
28094 | What they are called? |
28094 | What wonder, then, that God should after three days revive his Son? |
28094 | When he saw these he would needs know of his spirit what waters they were, and from whence they came? |
28094 | When the eldest son was letten blood, the king said unto them all three,"My dear friends, where is your father buried?" |
28094 | Wherefore was I created a man? |
28094 | Who are you? |
28094 | Why hast thou broken my law?" |
28094 | Why hast thou left me sorrowful and alone? |
28094 | Why then did you take possession of it?" |
28094 | You should have gone to Palestina, and Bethlehem in Judea; how came you hither? |
28094 | _ Archbishop Turpin''s Vision, and the King''s Lamentation for Orlando._ What more shall we say? |
28094 | _ Master._"My child, have you stolen your verses, or made them?" |
28094 | and what do you want?" |
28094 | for there is no help for me, no shield, no defence, no comfort; where is my help? |
28094 | friend Faustus, what have you done to conceal this matter so long from us? |
28094 | he said, when he had come within a little space,"How shall I brook the cheerful look of my kind lady''s face? |
28094 | his face before, There stood a man, all clothed in vesture shining white: Thus said the vision,"Sleepest thou, or wakest thou, Sir Knight?" |
28094 | how happy wert thou if, as an unreasonable beast, thou mightest die with a soul? |
28094 | is it that some Pagan gay doth Marlotes''daughter we d, And that they bear my scorned fair in triumph to his bed? |
28094 | is the Count of Saldaña indeed coming?'' |
28094 | must this be so? |
28094 | said the knight,"and what is your name?" |
28094 | the captive cries,"what means this din so loud? |
28094 | what barbarian cry is this? |
28094 | what can deliver me out of the fearful tormenting flame, the which I see prepared for me? |
28094 | what dost thou to me?" |
28094 | what foul music is this? |
28094 | what will be my destiny? |
28094 | whither is pity and mercy fled? |
28094 | who shall call thee master? |
28094 | wouldst thou verily have a spirit? |
28094 | you droop your head Tell, Count Alarcos, tell your wife, what makes your eyes so red?" |