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 |
---|---|
36756 | What became of them? |
36756 | What was their individual lot and fate subsequent to the landing on Plymouth Rock on December 26? |
7252 | The magic words of romance,"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
7252 | What did these Pilgrim women wear? |
44165 | ''Tis you come back, Miles? |
44165 | A public flogging? |
44165 | A''miles gloriosus,''eh? |
44165 | Am I always so severe that you look for naught but chiding from me, Miles? |
44165 | Am I to decide now, sir? |
44165 | And after I''ve seen him, then--And then some one took him firmly by the shoulder, and right beside him spoke the Captain''s voice,"Well, Miles?" |
44165 | And the Frenchmen will find him, and can you not send some one to help him, sir? |
44165 | And what do you think to do with the lions and savages, Miles Rigdale? |
44165 | And who is it shall prepare the food but we ten poor women and maids of the colony? |
44165 | And you''re still good friends with that valiant duellist, Edward Lister? |
44165 | Another exploration? 44165 Are n''t you coming with me, Francis?" |
44165 | Are we to go with you? |
44165 | Are you hurt? 44165 But-- but if I go, what will you do?" |
44165 | Come, come, Miley, are you asleep? |
44165 | D''ye think they would confer without the great Master Hopkins? 44165 Did he do so much, sir?" |
44165 | Did they take it from you? |
44165 | Did you see a goose, all roasted, flying for your mouth? |
44165 | Did you see him? |
44165 | Did you steal down here to fire the magazine and finish the work? |
44165 | Did you take one, Miles? |
44165 | Did your father truly bring it from the Indians? |
44165 | Do Indians talk English? |
44165 | Do you grow saucy to contradict me? |
44165 | Do you just tread''em out with your feet, Squanto? |
44165 | Do you not realize, Elizabeth, that we have this afternoon made a peace with our heathen neighbors that, by the will of Heaven, shall prove lasting? 44165 Do you not think the men from Plymouth will come to seek us soon and take us home?" |
44165 | Do you not think-- perhaps we could walk back home? 44165 Do you not wish to?" |
44165 | Do you see him, too? |
44165 | Do you think surely some of our men will be slain? |
44165 | Do you think there will be fighting yet? |
44165 | Dolly, she isn''t-- dead? |
44165 | Francis,he cried, before the flame died down,"is this safe, think you? |
44165 | Give me the fowling piece near to me, and now run your briskest, d''ye hear? 44165 Had them? |
44165 | Hang who? |
44165 | Has anything gone wrong with my mother? 44165 Has the conference broken off?" |
44165 | Have n''t you been well enough looked to, Miley? |
44165 | Here, lad,he said, as Miles ran to him,"can you fetch us a pail of water hither to drink?" |
44165 | Hold your tongue, will you? |
44165 | How can I tell, when''tis four league off shore? |
44165 | How did you get hither, Lister? |
44165 | How do you know? |
44165 | How else? |
44165 | How heavily did he lam you? |
44165 | How late is it, Captain Standish? |
44165 | I be ready to give to your Captain''s wife, but not to fill the stomach of every knavish lad on shipboard; dost thou hear? |
44165 | I''m going to give mine away; I''m taking them to the Elder''s cottage--"Give them away there, eh? 44165 I''m still speaking to you, am I not?" |
44165 | Is he going to whip me, Ned? |
44165 | Is it you, Captain Standish? |
44165 | Is it you, John Alden? |
44165 | Is it? |
44165 | Is she ill? |
44165 | Is this little maid your sister? |
44165 | Is this the way you would work, Miles? |
44165 | It''s good there is one person in the house whom the dame can not rattle off as she list, eh? |
44165 | It''s naught but you, is it? |
44165 | It''s you, my lad? |
44165 | Look you, Dolly, why should I not build us a little wigwam? 44165 Master Hopkins, I want to tell you--""What is it, Miles?" |
44165 | May I come too, sir? |
44165 | May I wash the dishes, sir? |
44165 | Miles,whispered Dolly,"are n''t you lonely?" |
44165 | Mistress Standish,he blurted out, with sudden resolution,"would you not rather have beer than water?" |
44165 | Mother will soon come too, will she not? 44165 Mother, is the shallop in sight?" |
44165 | My namesake, are you? 44165 My scalp is quite safe? |
44165 | O father,Miles broke out before he thought,"may I not go with you when we begin our farm? |
44165 | Or-- or perhaps they will hang us? |
44165 | Right generous of him, is''t not? |
44165 | Say we march home, then? |
44165 | Shall you go far before you build your house, Miles? |
44165 | So Master Hopkins whips you often? |
44165 | So if your father catch you with Master Billington here, he''ll swinge you soundly, eh, Miles Rigdale? |
44165 | So that''s why you ran away from me day before yesterday, is it? |
44165 | So you''re hale again, Miles Rigdale? 44165 So you''re well recovered, Miles?" |
44165 | So you''ve a mind to share the floor with us, Miles? |
44165 | So you''ve come to visit me, little Indian? |
44165 | So, after all, you''re content to be named''Soldier''Rigdale? |
44165 | Tell me, Ned, how greatly does it hurt to be tied neck and heels? |
44165 | That was brave, was n''t it? |
44165 | That''s for punishment, too, I take it? |
44165 | The Frenchman? |
44165 | Then they did n''t hang you? |
44165 | They have left us alone, have n''t they, Dolly? |
44165 | Those are brave big logs in our house, are they not, sir? |
44165 | Though I take it no one of us was afraid; eh, boys? |
44165 | Tonokete naum? |
44165 | Truly? |
44165 | Vile creature, mistress? |
44165 | We can walk thither, can we not, along the shore? |
44165 | Well, Miles? |
44165 | Well, now thou art up, what is it thou wouldst have? |
44165 | Well, what do_ you_ want of them, Miles? |
44165 | Well, you''re a man yourself, and want only men to look to you, eh? |
44165 | Well,he greeted his fellow- colonists civilly,"did you think I meant to sit there in the bushes till you chose to come seek me?" |
44165 | Wh-- what are they going to do to them? |
44165 | What are you doing there? |
44165 | What are you falling on the fire in that fashion for, eh? |
44165 | What d''ye see? |
44165 | What do you mean? |
44165 | What has Francis done? |
44165 | What have you been doing, Miles? |
44165 | What is it has happened, Miles? |
44165 | What is it has happened? |
44165 | What made you stay so long? |
44165 | What might that be? |
44165 | What need to carry such a face for it, Miles? 44165 What say if I shoot her off?" |
44165 | What set such a mad fancy in your head? |
44165 | What song is that, Ned? |
44165 | What sort o''luggage be ye travelling with? |
44165 | What think you, Miles? |
44165 | What was it they did to you, then? |
44165 | What will you do? |
44165 | What''s amiss, Miles? |
44165 | What''s amiss? |
44165 | What-- what do you think they will do to us, Ned? |
44165 | Where are your manners, child, that you can not say''God be wi''you''? |
44165 | Where have they put the vile creature now? |
44165 | Where''s my mother, my mother? |
44165 | Where''s the old red poppet? |
44165 | Wherefore, pray you? |
44165 | Which is it that is the North Star, sir? |
44165 | Whither are you going? |
44165 | Whither go you? |
44165 | Whither, Miles? |
44165 | Who does he think is going with him? 44165 Whose place, lad?" |
44165 | Why did you ever come hither, if you hate it so? |
44165 | Why did you run away and frighten me? |
44165 | Why do you not put on your cloak, if you be cold, Ned Lister? |
44165 | Why not? |
44165 | Why, Miles, are you ill? |
44165 | Why, Ned, ha''you cheated the Doctor himself? |
44165 | Why, deary, you''re not ill? |
44165 | Why, mine and Dolly''s and Priscilla''s and--"Do you think I should dare plunder the holding of so many proprietors? 44165 Why,''twas--''twas-- Captain Standish, is it true you think me the worst lad in the settlement?" |
44165 | Will you not take the tackle, after all? |
44165 | Will you so? |
44165 | Will you take me away from him, sir? |
44165 | Wilt thou kill the poor babe? 44165 With a hedge round the dooryard?" |
44165 | With you? |
44165 | Wo n''t that be brave? 44165 Wo n''t you come in and bear me company, sweetheart, while Miles fetches the water?" |
44165 | Yon is Mistress Standish, is it not? |
44165 | You and Love found them, Dolly? 44165 You are all come back safe, sir?" |
44165 | You have come back, then, since''tis suppertime? |
44165 | You saw no one? |
44165 | You waited here for me? |
44165 | You wish to dwell among those shameless idolaters? |
44165 | You''ll build houses, Miles? |
44165 | You''ll fight''em, eh? 44165 You''re here, Dolly?" |
44165 | You''re journeying back to the brook, Miles? |
44165 | You''re not afeard to go back along the trail alone, Miley? |
44165 | You''re not yet as strong as you thought, Miles Rigdale? |
44165 | You''re one of the knaves who tried to blow up the_ Mayflower_, are you not? |
44165 | You''re safe, you and Trug? |
44165 | You, Miles? 44165 Alden it was who spoke first:We are not heading for home the quickest way, are we, sir? |
44165 | Among us, where my children are?" |
44165 | And no one else knows?" |
44165 | And then, with a sudden, overwhelming hope,"To Patuxet?" |
44165 | And you do not mind going supperless now?" |
44165 | And you, Miles, will you give me your parole not to attempt an escape, if I take my hand from your collar?" |
44165 | Before they were into the thick of the settlement, he spoke again, abruptly:"So you''re not happy at Master Hopkins''s?" |
44165 | But--"his voice grew suddenly anxious,"I am sure my mother would think it right now, do not you, sir?" |
44165 | Did you ever shoot with a musket, Francis?" |
44165 | Do you not have in mind, John, how kindly the people at our English Plymouth dealt by us when we had to put in at their harbor?" |
44165 | Do you not think, sirrah, you bear too good a name to drag it into a powder- burning matter such as this?" |
44165 | Do you think you could make shift to walk up the hill to my house?" |
44165 | Dolly, pressing up to him, whispered for her only reply:"Do you mind, Miles, how we came in on the ship, and mammy and daddy with us? |
44165 | Eh? |
44165 | For a time the two boys stared at each other gravely, then Miles, smiling affably, touched the bow, saying,"Cossaquot? |
44165 | Have you heard talk of what happened?" |
44165 | Have you no Latin?" |
44165 | He fell to whistling once more and half humming the words:--"''Fortune, my foe, Why dost thou frown on me?''" |
44165 | He gave a glance toward the bedroom, where he could hear Mistress Hopkins lulling Oceanus, then whispered Constance:"Wo n''t you mind Damaris? |
44165 | He knew the Captain had loosed his grasp on him, and then he heard him ask, in a different, serious tone:"Are you afraid of me?" |
44165 | He stopped, surprised at his own forwardness, and he was more surprised when his father, looking down at him gravely, said without chiding:"Our farm? |
44165 | He was sure of his guess when she hastened to change the subject:"Does it still rain upon deck, Edward?" |
44165 | Hush, will you, Dolly?" |
44165 | Is it that Stephen Hopkins hath flogged you?" |
44165 | Is it that the Elder rated you grievously?" |
44165 | Is my father to go on it, do you know?" |
44165 | Is not that smoke?" |
44165 | Is there no other song you know?" |
44165 | Mammy, can I not run about with them soon?" |
44165 | May I have your fowling piece to fight with?" |
44165 | Miles reddened a little; why would she speak as if he were a young boy, to need his father? |
44165 | Miles was silenced a moment, then insinuated,"John Alden, what do you want of posies? |
44165 | Miles, have you said your prayers o''nights?" |
44165 | Must I go to him, Captain Standish?" |
44165 | Must we lie in the woods, mammy?" |
44165 | No blanket? |
44165 | Oh, Miles, could we not all three go to- morrow?" |
44165 | Once, to be sure, Trevor growled:"How''re we heading, Ned?" |
44165 | Perhaps you found conies there, Francis? |
44165 | Say the powder in the keg took fire?" |
44165 | Setting his fingers to his lips, Miles gave a shrill whistle, and right upon it heard the Captain cry, in a terrible voice,"What work is this?" |
44165 | So earnest and busy did he seem about the undignified task that, before he thought, Miles blurted out:"Do you like to do it, Captain Standish?" |
44165 | Standish must have taken closer note of him, too, for he asked abruptly:"You''re John Rigdale''s lad, are you not?" |
44165 | Tell us, Squanto, can a white man take eels that way?" |
44165 | The rest must be fighting men, must they not, Miles?" |
44165 | Their voices had no meaning, and they must repeat the question when one asked:"What have you there, Miles? |
44165 | Then neither was killed?" |
44165 | To Mistress Mullins, now, perhaps?" |
44165 | What is it, Ned?" |
44165 | What is this, Miles, that she tells me you had to say to me?" |
44165 | What''s hindering thee?" |
44165 | Why are you here, Miles?" |
44165 | Why could not he be a man at once, a full- sized man with a musket, and go with the Captain to trade or fight with the savages? |
44165 | Why did she not come with you?" |
44165 | Why do you not like her?" |
44165 | Will you come?" |
44165 | Will you fight me like a gentleman, rapier and dagger?" |
44165 | Will you not do somewhat for me, Miles? |
44165 | Will you?" |
44165 | Wo n''t you beg him take me ashore first thing when we come thither, mother?" |
44165 | You are well assured you have no tomahawk about you?" |
44165 | You did yourself hurt?" |
44165 | You not know Squanto?" |
44165 | Your Excellency scarce will set them in the bilboes?" |
44165 | [ Illustration:"''Do you like to do it, Captain Standish?''"] |
44165 | he begged; and in the next breath,"Where''s Dolly? |
44165 | one asked, and the man who held him-- he had a vague notion it was Alden-- questioned,"What''s wrong, lad?" |