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 |
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6369 | And who, he asked, but the heir of the Prince of the Apostles could presume to claim a power so tremendous? |
6369 | How, then, are we to account for her triumphant progress? |
6369 | What then were his practical duties? |
12745 | But is this all? |
12745 | But what is this progress? |
12745 | Have we exhausted the natural and usual sense of the word? |
12745 | His mournful exclamation was heard,"Can not there be found a Christian to cut off my head?" |
12745 | How manie nose gaies did her grace receive at poore women''s hands? |
12745 | How oftentimes staid she her chariot, when she saw anie simple bodie offer to speake to her grace? |
12745 | Is it the Blue Nile, which seems to come down from the distant mountains? |
12745 | Or is it the White Nile, which has traversed the immense plains of equatorial Africa? |
12745 | The guardianship of the crowns almost approached the dignity of a priesthood, for was not the urseus, which adorned each one, a living goddess? |
12745 | What is this development? |
12745 | What were the causes of this depression from which Babylon suffered at almost regular intervals, as though stricken with some periodic malady? |
12745 | What, then, is civilisation-- this grave, far- reaching precious reality that seems the expression of the entire life of a people? |
12745 | Which is the true Nile? |
19468 | And what can they show, and what reason give, why they should be more the masters than ourselves? |
19468 | Are we not all descended from the same parents-- Adam and Eve? |
19468 | Basil says:''If you admit that God gave these temporal goods to you, is God unjust in thus unequally distributing His favours? |
19468 | But on what foundation could his declaratory act be based? |
19468 | By what standard are"superfluities"themselves to be judged? |
19468 | How much"need"must first be endured before a man has a just claim on another''s superfluity? |
19468 | How was it possible to determine whether such a one was in real need or not? |
19468 | How, then, was this paradox to be explained? |
19468 | If all were equal, what justification would there be for civil authority? |
19468 | If civil authority was to be upheld, wherein lay the meaning of St. Paul''s many boasts of the new levelling spirit of the Christian religion? |
19468 | Should we say, then, that in this way they had failed? |
19468 | What else is this really but the teaching of Aristotle that there should be"private property and common use"? |
19468 | What is to be done for them? |
19468 | What was to be the Christian attitude towards them? |
19468 | What, then, is to be done, for"they be commonly mighty, and no man dare take from them"? |
19468 | Why should you abound, and another be forced to beg, unless it is intended thereby that you should merit by your generosity, and he by his patience? |
19468 | and for what reason do they thus hold us in bondage? |
10940 | Am I not fit to be your master? 10940 And that one,"I asked,"with the large Milanese cap on his head, who holds an old book?" |
10940 | Eh, but, my son,they said,"have you dispensation from fasting on a Friday?" |
10940 | How did our fathers live? |
10940 | Of what use are these cloaks? |
10940 | That one,I replied,"and who has turned towards us?" |
10940 | That one,he answered,"who is scratching the end of his nose with one hand and his beard with the other?" |
10940 | What do you think of that? |
10940 | What institutions had they? 10940 Whose garments are the more valuable and the more useful? |
10940 | Can there be a greater_ miracle_ than is to be seen in this court, where the maimed walk upright?" |
10940 | Can you not place before us their pastimes, their hunting parties, their meals, and all sorts of scenes, sad or gay, which composed their home life? |
10940 | Frédégonde said one day to Rigouthe,''Why do you continually trouble me? |
10940 | One respectable lady approached her and said,''My friend, what do you call that fashion?'' |
10940 | What were their political rights? |
10940 | Where, then, did the gipsies obtain interpreters? |
10940 | Who is there who could thoroughly describe or even appreciate all the happy or unhappy vicissitudes relating to the establishment of the Communes? |
10940 | mine, for which I have only paid a sou( about twenty- two francs of present money), or yours, which have cost so much?" |
10940 | they answered,"if He had appeared on earth should we still be miserable?" |
10940 | what will the Duke Francis and his Bretons do? |
40371 | And who is your Lord? |
40371 | But,said Tostig,"what shall be given to the King of Norway for his trouble?" |
40371 | Consider I am old and unfit for work, how can I bear the charge of all this church? 40371 From which Pope?" |
40371 | Is my son dead or hurt or felled to the ground? |
40371 | What time is it now? |
40371 | Ye doubt? 40371 ''Are you a Lombard?'' 40371 ''What do you want?'' 40371 And this is his second year and what help has he found? 40371 Are they not mine? 40371 Damosel, said Arthur, what sword is that, that yonder the arm holdeth above the water? 40371 Have you a fish pond? 40371 Have you a mill? 40371 Have you paid them? 40371 How many cattle have you? 40371 How many people dwell upon your land? 40371 How many soldiers must you lend to the King if need be? 40371 Or of the halls and royal chambers wonderfully made of stone and wood by his command? 40371 Or of the work in gold and silver, incomparably made under his directions? 40371 Quoth Brother Masseo,I say, why doth all the world come after thee and why is it seen that all men long to see thee and hear thee and obey thee? |
40371 | Rufus was angry,"What good would come of this matter for you?" |
40371 | The Archbishop begged the King not to rob the Abbeys and the King answered,"What are the abbeys to you? |
40371 | The wise men begged Harold to burn the land, that the enemy might starve, but Harold would not, for he said,"How can I do harm to my own people?" |
40371 | Then Henry turned sorrowfully to his father,"And what, my father, do you give to me?" |
40371 | Then said Henry,"What shall I do with this money, having no corner of the earth I can call my own?" |
40371 | Then they threatened to burn and slay, and the citizens in their fear said,"Why do we not let these good people enter into the city? |
40371 | They were to ask of the lord and of the freemen in the villages and of the monks in the monasteries these questions: How much land have you? |
40371 | What can you discover about the Normans from the pictures of the Bayeux Tapestry? |
40371 | What damosel is that? |
40371 | What lack ye? |
40371 | What saw thou there? |
40371 | What saw thou there? |
40371 | What services do you owe the King for it? |
40371 | What shall I do?" |
40371 | What shall I say of the cities and towns which he restored, and of the others which he built, where before there had never been any? |
40371 | What will ye say?" |
40371 | Who gave you that land? |
40371 | Who would have weened that, thou that hast been to me so dear? |
40371 | Why do they not ask me for the Kingdom at once? |
40371 | Yet it is of us and our toil that these men hold their state,"and the people said When Adam delved and Eve span Who was then the gentleman? |
40371 | you do what you like with your farms and am I not to do what I like with my Abbeys?" |
33540 | Of what avail are statutes,says Walsingham,"since the king with his privy council is wo nt to abolish what parliament has just enacted? |
33540 | A feudal principle was surely the more ancient; and what could be more alien to this than a baron, a peer, an hereditary counsellor, without a fief? |
33540 | And therefore it was demanded of the said lords by way of question what aid would be sufficient and requisite in these circumstances? |
33540 | And was his son really illegitimate, as an usurping uncle pretended? |
33540 | But did any hold of the king in socage, except on his demesne lands? |
33540 | But is there sufficient evidence of their genuineness? |
33540 | But who were these, and how distinguished? |
33540 | But why is it asserted that this jurisdiction was inherent in the council? |
33540 | Can anything be lower than this, if nothing is omitted more valuable than what is mentioned? |
33540 | Et dato, quòd_ nullus omnino tortor inveniri valeat_ in Angliâ, utrum pro tortoribus mittendum sit ad partes transmarinas? |
33540 | Et si torquendi sunt, utrum per clericos vel laicos? |
33540 | Even if the book were Charlemagne''s own, might he not have dictated it? |
33540 | How could a villein in gross be lower than this? |
33540 | How, they said, can you procure them? |
33540 | Hæc[ etiam?] |
33540 | It has been observed, that Quid mores sine legibus? |
33540 | Or did the crime of Richard, though punished in him, enure to the benefit of Henry? |
33540 | The former epithet can not, I think, be possibly applicable in the face of statute law; for what else determines our constitution? |
33540 | These of course were Normans; but what inference can be drawn in favour of parliamentary representation in England from the behaviour of the rest? |
33540 | What way shall we make this commensurate to the present value of money? |
33540 | Who then was king after the death of Edward IV.? |
33540 | Why are we to interpret Magna Charta otherwise than according to the natural meaning of the words and the concurrent voice of parliament? |
33540 | [ 32] What can one who adopts this opinion of Dr. Brady say to the following record? |
33540 | and afterwards had been knighted at Crecy and Poictiers? |
33540 | and his successors, such means of enforcing the execution of law as left no sufficient pretext for recurring to an arbitrary tribunal? |
33540 | claim a book against Luther, which was not written by himself? |
33540 | de l''Italie, t. i. p. 55, would be more to the purpose: Quid dicamus columnarum junceam proceritatem? |
42707 | { 60} What then? 42707 ( 43) If a man enters suit against another, he shall make a deposit with the judge[ to cover expenses?]. 42707 2. Who shall choose other_ Schoeffen_? 42707 50:16, 17], orWhy beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother''s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?" |
42707 | And has his presumption been so boundless that he has dared to depose me from the empire, me, a great prince, who have no superior, indeed no equal? |
42707 | And how can the impure make others pure? |
42707 | Are they not made by hand of stones, timbers, straw, plaster, and lime? |
42707 | Benedict?" |
42707 | But how then could they judge of his fitness to rule? |
42707 | But if you fall short in your duty, how, it may be asked, can it be salted? |
42707 | Do you see now, emperor, the difference between the church and the empire? |
42707 | Do you see now, emperor, to what a pitch of impudence and inhumanity you have gone? |
42707 | Do you see, emperor, the difference between popes and emperors? |
42707 | For how can he rule who is himself under the rule of others? |
42707 | For how can the ignorant teach others? |
42707 | For if a mother loves and nourishes her child, how much more diligently should one nourish and love one''s spiritual brother? |
42707 | For thus it has been called, as may clearly be implied from the passage,"Can ye drink of the cup that I drink of? |
42707 | For what are our churches? |
42707 | For what difference does it make whether this coming danger is foretold to the human race by man or angel or star? |
42707 | For[ it may be said to the new claimant]:"If you were the heir, why did you go away? |
42707 | How can he protect the Christian people who is himself under the tutelage of others? |
42707 | How can the licentious make others modest? |
42707 | How far shall a guest live from the city? |
42707 | If anyone hates peace, how can he make others peaceable? |
42707 | If the archbishop asks,"Who did this?" |
42707 | May aldermen be deposed? |
42707 | May the aldermen make laws? |
42707 | Might he not turn out to be so foolish and simple as to be utterly unworthy even less honor? |
42707 | Or if anyone has soiled his hands with baseness, how can he cleanse the impurities of another? |
42707 | So, very properly, the bishops of Rome deserted the apostate Greeks-- for what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
42707 | The abbot:"Do you promise conversion of life?" |
42707 | Then Chlodovech said:"Why have you disgraced our family, by allowing yourself to be taken? |
42707 | Was there ever such audacity; was there ever such presumption? |
42707 | What can I send back that will be worthy of him who has so honored me? |
42707 | What if a man refuses to pay a fine? |
42707 | Where are the chests that contain my treasure?" |
42707 | Who can doubt that he who is exalted to the height of apostolic dignity is holy?" |
42707 | Who that knows the scriptures does not perceive the madness of this claim? |
42707 | Whose duty is it to avenge this and recover that land, if not yours? |
42707 | Why did you not stay at home and look after your inheritance?" |
42707 | Why is not my race worthy of producing an emperor, since emperors have been chosen from among the Spaniards and Isaurians and Khazars? |
42707 | Why should not men unanimously agree upon him whom the incomparable and never failing providence of God had foreordained to this office? |
42707 | You are the instigator of this business, and do you so soon repent?" |
42707 | You ask:"How was it that nothing was said about images in six councils? |
42707 | and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?" |
39227 | Again: What shall teach thee what is the Day of Judgment? |
39227 | And all the devil''s service? |
39227 | And all the devil''s works? |
39227 | And of how many more has all remembrance perished through the want of records? |
39227 | And they asked him,"What were you thinking about, that you did not come along with us? |
39227 | And what shall teach thee what the Day of Judgment is? |
39227 | Believest thou in Christ the Son of God? |
39227 | Believest thou in God the Almighty Father? |
39227 | Believest thou in the Holy Ghost? |
39227 | But how shall information, accurate and trustworthy, be obtained? |
39227 | But what is to be done? |
39227 | For our belief teaches us that our blessed God suffers us not to be tempted more than we may; how should a man ask such service? |
39227 | Forsakest thou the devil? |
39227 | How could the great duke endure that a woman of the low rank of vassal should become queen and rule over him? |
39227 | How much more then oughtest thou to have done it for the King of Kings and Lord of all?" |
39227 | Indeed, his mother, when gossip arose among the neighbors concerning his prodigal ways, made answer:"What think ye of my son? |
39227 | Martin?" |
39227 | One soldier, having come across some hay which belonged to a poor man said,"Has, then, the king given us permission to take only grass? |
39227 | Then Clovis said:"Why have you disgraced our family by allowing yourself to be taken prisoner? |
39227 | Then he asked them with his own lips:"Is there any one here who has a cause? |
39227 | Upon which the monks said,"What didst thou ask of the Lord?" |
39227 | What more can we say? |
39227 | What more shall I say? |
39227 | What shall I say of the multitudes of bishops, hermits, and abbots? |
39227 | When the horses were in, our sailing- master called out to his mariners who were at the prow:"Are you all ready?" |
39227 | When will our meeting be? |
39227 | Whence arises such great audacity? |
39227 | Whence proceeds such rash presumption? |
39227 | Where are my chests which contain my treasures?" |
39227 | Who has ever fled to him for protection without receiving it? |
39227 | Who is he that shall intercede with Him, unless by His permission? |
39227 | Who that has been deserted by his friends has he ever failed to restore to his rights?" |
39227 | Who were these Wandering Students? |
39227 | Why do I say"of those who remained"? |
39227 | [ 252][ Sidenote: Objections to Charles of Lorraine][ Sidenote: Election of Hugh Capet urged]"What dignity shall we gain by making Charles king? |
39227 | [ 401] What shall I add? |
39227 | [ Sidenote: The value of sources to the student] But why should the younger student trouble himself, or be troubled, with any of these things? |
39227 | what hath seduced thee from thy generous Lord, Who created thee and fashioned thee and disposed thee aright? |
39227 | what is thy mind? |
9663 | And so you do not any longer either love or hate me, Perion? |
9663 | And what do you hold now, my wife? 9663 Ay?" |
9663 | Come, come, will you not even help me into the boat? |
9663 | Do you not find it droll that Euthyclos here should have loved me sufficiently to hazard his life in order to come in search of me? 9663 Do you remember, Melicent, that night at Fomor Beach when you snatched a lantern from my hand? |
9663 | Ey?--oh, the emeralds? 9663 Is the dog hurt that has driven a cat into a tree? |
9663 | My poor, bruised, puzzled boy,thought Melicent, as she had done so long ago,"how came you to be blundering about this miry world of ours? |
9663 | Nay, should I then be bold? 9663 What harm have I ever done you, Messire de la Forêt, that you should shame me in this fashion? |
9663 | What is your opinion concerning this other Jew, Ahasuerus? |
9663 | Who is among you? 9663 Why, but who spoke of fighting? |
9663 | You do not value my poor chrysoberyl? 9663 You would bribe me as you once bribed Demetrios? |
9663 | Am I not right, Ayrart? |
9663 | And how may I be worthy?" |
9663 | And to the same purpose? |
9663 | Bracciolini said, idly:"So you served under him? |
9663 | Bracciolini said,"There were eighteen of them, you tell me? |
9663 | But can you throw knives into the air and catch them without cutting your fingers? |
9663 | But the mood passed, and he said only:"Who forbids it? |
9663 | Can you balance chairs and do tricks with string? |
9663 | Demetrios asked,"Is this true speech?" |
9663 | Do I echo madness? |
9663 | Do you bid me return?" |
9663 | Eh, am I not a seasoned rascal?" |
9663 | For what is better than to have a pleasant companion to sing and tell merry tales, songs and facetious histories?" |
9663 | Have I not paid the price, fair Melicent? |
9663 | Have I not won God''s masterpiece through a small wire, a purse, and a big key?" |
9663 | He said:"You will hold to your bargain? |
9663 | How may I help it if Love recompenses my hospitality by afflicting me with a desire which can neither subdue the world nor be subdued by it?" |
9663 | I concede your beauty, yet what will it matter a hundred years from now? |
9663 | Is that not strange? |
9663 | Now Ahasuerus reports that even before you came to tempt me with your paltry emeralds you once held the life of Perion in your hands?" |
9663 | Ohé, and why should I not lay an open and frank springe for you? |
9663 | Only be very good for my sake and forget the bitterness; what does it matter when there is happiness, too?" |
9663 | Said Demetrios,"Do you console yourself with dreams?" |
9663 | Said Demetrios,"Do you console yourself with madness?" |
9663 | Said Melicent,"And by which door?" |
9663 | She asked,"What of the day, Ahasuerus?" |
9663 | She said,"Is Perion hurt?" |
9663 | She said,"So you have purchased me, Ahasuerus?" |
9663 | Then,"At what price?" |
9663 | To what avail do I deny a crime which every circumstance imputed to me and my own confession has publicly acknowledged? |
9663 | To what end, she reflected, need she pray, when there was no hope for Perion? |
9663 | Well, who forbids it?" |
9663 | What am I that I am called upon to have prejudices concerning the universe? |
9663 | What home have you, a landless man, to offer Melicent? |
9663 | What place is there for Melicent among your Free Companions?" |
9663 | What would it avail me to live in however lofty estate when I can not daily see the treasure of my life?" |
9663 | Where are the giants and tyrants, and stalwart single- hearted champions of yesterday? |
9663 | Who else was a king''s bride- to- be, young, beautiful, and blessed with wealth and honour and every other comfort which the world affords?" |
9663 | Who forbids it? |
9663 | Who forbids it?" |
9663 | Who forbids it?" |
9663 | Who forbids it?" |
9663 | Yet why, in reality, do you think I have in my own person come to tell you of it?" |
9663 | You desire to purchase one of my belongings? |
9663 | You need not frown, for what will it matter a hundred years from now? |
9663 | You value your friend more? |
9663 | and all fine stones?" |
9663 | or imitate the cries of birds? |
9663 | or throw a somersault and walk on your head? |
9663 | the bishop answered, with a laugh;"and what poor gull am I to adore an attested wanton?" |
9663 | will you compel me to desert you here-- quite penniless?" |
42824 | ''Did he offend the priest?'' 42824 ''Have you made no trial of the powers of your wood?'' |
42824 | ''What was in it?'' 42824 ''What was she afraid of?'' |
42824 | I will not, because what would my labour profit me? 42824 Knowest thou?" |
42824 | ''Now, master,''quoth the wife,''ere that I go, What will ye dine? |
42824 | ''Sir,''said Sir Epinogris,''is that the rule of your arrant knights, for to make a knight to just whether he will or not?'' |
42824 | ''Why should I not prove adventures,''said Sir Launcelot,''as for that cause came I hither?''" |
42824 | 108(? |
42824 | 1:--"Well, there be guests to meat now; how shall we do for music?" |
42824 | And first, what sort of houses did they live in? |
42824 | Canst thou aught weten[210] us the way where that wight dwelleth?''" |
42824 | Did the broken heart find repose? |
42824 | Did the wild spirit grow tame? |
42824 | Hold ye then me, or elles our convent, To pray for you is insufficient? |
42824 | How shall the world be served? |
42824 | How was her cell furnished? |
42824 | May we not also infer that there were superior orders, as knight- minstrels, over whom was the king- minstrel? |
42824 | No man having less than this, or his wife or daughter, shall wear any fur of martrons( martin''s?) |
42824 | Of what house be ye by your father kin? |
42824 | One askede hym onys resun why He hadde delyte in mynstralsy? |
42824 | Or did the one pine away and die like a flower in a dungeon, and the other beat itself to death against the bars of its self- made cage? |
42824 | Out of the gospel he the wordes caught, And this figure he added yet thereto, That if gold rusté what should iren do? |
42824 | Presently the joint of a man''s finger is exhibited to us, the largest of three; I kiss it; and then I ask whose relics were these? |
42824 | Said Sir Tristram,''Yonder lieth a fair knight, what is best to do?'' |
42824 | Saide this wife;''how fare ye heartily?'' |
42824 | Silly[118] old man, that lives in hidden cell, Bidding his beades all day for his trespas, Tidings of war and worldly trouble tell? |
42824 | Sir Tor asks the dwarf who is his guide,"''Know ye any lodging?'' |
42824 | The Apostle? |
42824 | The Queen has just arrived at the gate of the city; through the open door may be seen a bishop(? |
42824 | The frere answered,''O Thomas, dost thou so? |
42824 | The king asked,"Thou harper, how durst thou be so bold to sing this song before me?" |
42824 | The question,"What do you bring us?" |
42824 | These folk prayed[207] hym first fro whence he came? |
42824 | Upon which the monks said,''What didst thou ask of the Lord?'' |
42824 | Was it some frail woman, with all the affections of her heart and the hopes of her earthly life shattered, who sought the refuge of this living tomb? |
42824 | What need have you diverse friars to seche? |
42824 | What needeth him that hath a perfect leech[50] To seeken other leches in the town? |
42824 | What wonder is? |
42824 | When, in our endeavour to realise the life of these secular clergymen of the Middle Ages, we come to inquire, What sort of houses did they live in? |
42824 | Whether shall I call you my Lord Dan John, Or Dan Thomas, or elles Dan Albon? |
42824 | Who has not, at some time, been deeply impressed by the solemn stillness, the holy calm, of an empty church? |
42824 | Why should he study, and make himselven wood, Upon a book in cloister alway to pore, Or swinkin with his handis, and labour, As Austin bid? |
42824 | Yet, after all, why should the merchant be"a rather common- looking man,"and the alderman a"portly citizen"? |
42824 | [ 146] In the"Ancren Riewle,"p. 129, we read,"Who can with more facility commit sin than the false recluse?" |
42824 | [ 215] Surely he should have excepted St. Thomas''s shrine? |
42824 | [ 43] The good man also said he had not seen the friar"this fourteen nights:"--Did a limitour go round once a fortnight? |
42824 | a Carthusian); another in a black cloak and hood over a white frock(? |
42824 | a hermit); another in a white scapular and hood(? |
42824 | asks the Ploughman--"''Kondest thou aught a cor- saint[209] that men calle Truthe? |
42824 | how were these furnished? |
42824 | or was it some enthusiast, with the over- excited religious sensibility, of which we have instances enough in these days? |
42824 | was it some man of strong passions, wild and fierce in his crimes, as wild and fierce in his penitence? |
42824 | what kind of men were they? |
42824 | what manner of world is this? |
42824 | what sort of life did their occupants lead? |
42824 | where is she?'' |
42824 | who may trust this world?'' |
17973 | Ah, sharp one,thought I, the author,"where are you at last? |
17973 | So they spake thus in a quiet tone:''Body and soul together again, Ella, love; how long will it be now before the last time of all?'' 17973 ''Are you going to the queen then?'' 17973 ''Can they, Cissela?'' 17973 ''Dearest, what? 17973 ''Did I?'' 17973 ''Did he, Svend, this man with brown hair, grizzled as you say it is now? 17973 ''For duty? 17973 ''Is it so cold, love?'' 17973 ''It is a surcoat, Mother; for me?'' 17973 ''Lawrence,''she said, speaking quickly and in jerks,''dare you, for my sake, sleep this night in the cavern of the red pike? 17973 ''Well, for what?'' 17973 ''What, War?'' 17973 ''Why should you go away?'' 17973 ''Will not somebody weep for my darling?'' 17973 And even now, could I not hear the wind going through those trees, as it never went through any trees before or since? 17973 And so you, son Robert, are getting to be quite a cunning smith; but do you think you will ever beat Siur?'' 17973 And they said nothing; what could they say? 17973 Cissela, what is it?'' 17973 Could I not hear, moreover, the slow trickling of the land- springs through the clay banks? 17973 Did I say above that one of the faces of the twelve Apostles was the most beautiful in the tympanum? 17973 Did you not tell me that his words led you, whether you would or no, into dreamland? 17973 Do they want deaths? 17973 Do they want happiness? 17973 Do you know any word for what they meant? 17973 Ella, Ella, why do you look so at me? 17973 Good sir, how is your lady?'' 17973 He said,''Well, then, take them, what are they?'' 17973 How came it over the sea? 17973 I am_ riding_!--on a mule; a bell tinkles somewhere on him; the wind blows something about with a flapping sound: something? 17973 I shall go mad-- I am mad-- I am gone to the devil-- I have lost my identity; who knows in what place, in what age of the world I am living now? 17973 I walked there pondering till a noise from over the sea made me turn and look that way; what was that coming over the sea? 17973 Is his hair soft then, this Siur, going down on to his shoulders in waves? 17973 Know you not how long a time remains yet? 17973 Moreover it increased my horror that there was no appearance of a woman in all these rooms; and yet was there not? 17973 Now do n''t you think it strange that this face should be the same, actually the same as the face of my enemy, slain that very day ten years ago? 17973 Once more-- which choose you-- Peace or War?'' 17973 Quis dabit ex Sion salutare Israel? |
17973 | See, am I not kind to you?'' |
17973 | Should not then their king be proud of them? |
17973 | Should not then their king be proud of them? |
17973 | So I said,''Who is he, mother? |
17973 | So when the knight saw us he said,''What, are you come to pay tribute in person, old man, and is this another fair son? |
17973 | Then I thought I could win glory, and I was much rejoiced thereat, and said to the old man,''Would you love to be revenged?'' |
17973 | Then Svend said:''And, mother, do n''t be angry with Siur, will you? |
17973 | Then he took from off his finger a thin golden ring, and broke it in two, and gave her the one half, saying:''When will they come together?'' |
17973 | Think you that the shouting curses of the trumpet broke off our love, or in any ways lessened it? |
17973 | Well, again,--what would you have? |
17973 | Well,--what would you have? |
17973 | What was it sent a sharp pang of bitterest suspicion through the very heart of the poor old man? |
17973 | When was it that I heard that old tale, that sounded even then true to my ears? |
17973 | and his eyes, do they glow steadily, as if lighted up from his heart? |
17973 | and how does he speak? |
17973 | and where will she go now? |
17973 | are you afraid that I shall hesitate to promise to perform that which is the only thing I could do? |
17973 | but as to the matter of a witness, some one we must have, and why not this man?'' |
17973 | could I not hear those reeds just taken by the wind, knocking against each other, the flat ones scraping all along the round ones? |
17973 | could I not see gleams of the dismal moor? |
17973 | have you brought the pyx, eh?" |
17973 | he seems to be some Lord; am I a Lord then?'' |
17973 | hear you, father and brother?'' |
17973 | in heaven''s name, what? |
17973 | war? |
17973 | what ails you? |
17973 | what then, I am not there after all; where am I then? |
17973 | who is he?'' |
17973 | whose face will she see always? |
14245 | And didst thou escape his hands? |
14245 | And has my lord vicomte seen my father since? 14245 And how acts he in this trouble? |
14245 | And how was that? |
14245 | And my lord was pleasing to thy taste? |
14245 | And the monks are shut in by the Moors? |
14245 | And thou art but sixteen,she said,"and art about so noble an enterprise? |
14245 | And thou art my nephew? |
14245 | And thou wouldst stay here ever? |
14245 | And what sent he in return? |
14245 | And who is your captain? |
14245 | At Coutances? |
14245 | Audience of the holy father-- and to- night? |
14245 | Ay, Father, was he not like St. John of old, who said,''Thou shalt not have her:''to King Herod? |
14245 | Ay, I knew him-- I knew him,said he;"but what do they tell thee of him?" |
14245 | Ay, lad, sure,he said;"none but a pirate so hails peaceable fisher craft""Simon,"I said,"why not give in? |
14245 | Ay, was he moved? 14245 But how camest thou in such good hour?" |
14245 | But the monks, brother, are they not safe? 14245 Did my lord detain you?" |
14245 | Does he? |
14245 | Have not the Brethren taught thee a word called''Duty,''lad? |
14245 | Hist, good lad, what is thy name? |
14245 | How may I, holy Father,answered I,"speak aught but well of him, who did me no ill, but good only? |
14245 | How now, sir page,said he,"must we teach you manners?" |
14245 | How old art thou, my son? |
14245 | Is it well that it should enter into men''s mouths and minds? |
14245 | Is not my Lord Maugher still in Guernsey? |
14245 | May I return with your grace''s greeting or other message to my lord? |
14245 | Nay-- wilt thou swear this? |
14245 | Now, hast thou seen two runaways by thy gate this morning, master priest-- one a stalwart, dangerous fellow, the other a measly, monkish lad? 14245 Of what race came she, lady?" |
14245 | See you them? |
14245 | Shall we strike at once? |
14245 | Should they come our way? |
14245 | Son,said he,"thou hast been happy here?" |
14245 | Stay, Simon,said I,"art sure she is a pirate?" |
14245 | Then how darest thou,said he, hotly,"to come hither in this habit?" |
14245 | Then it is thy duty thus to do? |
14245 | Thou feelest no calling to the cloister and the cowl, the book and the pen, the priesthood, and the life of prayer? |
14245 | Thou knowest naught of these papers, lad? |
14245 | Thou knowest who this was? |
14245 | Thou still art minded to journey to Normandy? 14245 What ails thee, O my son?" |
14245 | What have I done, holy father,I replied,"that any knightly youth would not be proud to do?" |
14245 | What is thy name? |
14245 | What make you here at this hour of night? |
14245 | What meanest thou? |
14245 | What shall God do to men that rob their brothers of His noblest gift-- the gift of reason? |
14245 | What then, lad? |
14245 | What then? |
14245 | What villain hath done this? |
14245 | Whence hast thou this? 14245 Wherefore such haste?" |
14245 | Whither art thou bound? |
14245 | Whither art thou journeying? |
14245 | Whither, Father? |
14245 | Who is this, brought by our brother of Bec? |
14245 | Whom seek you, good gentlemen? |
14245 | Wilt thou keep silence? |
14245 | Wouldst thou have proof of this that I say, and know how even to- day this serpent in our island- grass bites at the heel of princely authority? |
14245 | And first, how came I to write it in such clerkly wise? |
14245 | And now, wouldst thou know, Nigel de Bessin, why I was led to save thee?" |
14245 | And what said he when he perceived that inner scroll?" |
14245 | But how oft have they attempted an attack?" |
14245 | But what did the convent at its prayers, as the Moorish host drew near? |
14245 | But what of Le Grand Geoffroy? |
14245 | But who is yonder gentleman?" |
14245 | Can I ere forget his look as he took it from me, or wrung it rather from my fingers? |
14245 | Could I enter in such stately wise with trumpet- blare and step of dignity into that place on that day as a young prince or saviour from afar? |
14245 | Did they see us lying in now close by the rock? |
14245 | Dost thou see them yet?" |
14245 | Father Augustine smiled his assent to the scheme, as I asked hastily--"But, even so, how will the knaves yonder let me pass?" |
14245 | Had all our struggle been for naught, and would the arch- villain escape us thus? |
14245 | Has he inquired of me?" |
14245 | Have many brethren died in the siege?" |
14245 | He learned( for how could I keep back even my own doings, so peremptory he was?) |
14245 | He would have cut his way with it-- dost thou know whither, son?" |
14245 | His step is heard already--""And who is he-- this friend who will aid them best?" |
14245 | I broke in;"but how may it be done?" |
14245 | I longed in my heart to break through that encircling line and reach Duke William; but how could I go? |
14245 | I said when we were passed,"dost know who stood at yon window in a sailor''s dress?" |
14245 | Is he besieged with the brethren, or goes he free?" |
14245 | Now it came into my heart to ask him of my father, since he knew my grandsire and my uncle; so I said boldly--"And didst thou know my father?" |
14245 | Son, dost thou know why this Maugher lies here in exile?" |
14245 | Tell me, whose son is he?" |
14245 | There was but one gate by Cherbourg''s design, and that a small one for so great a place, and yet, what need of greater? |
14245 | Thou art soon for Normandy?" |
14245 | Thou knowest all this?" |
14245 | Thou seest what straits the brethren are in by this blockade and siege?" |
14245 | What could men so bidden do? |
14245 | What didst thou in that matter of Sir Hubert? |
14245 | Whence came it?" |
14245 | Where were the other men I had seen? |
14245 | Where, then, was Le Grand Sarrasin? |
14245 | Why should you and the lad die for me?" |
14245 | Wilt thou do this?" |
44703 | And why do you come into this land, and what are you going to do? |
44703 | Do you think,said the sensible grammarian,"I am going to enter into disputes with a man who commands thirty legions?" |
44703 | Does not your law command you,he said,"to submit to injury, and to renounce your worldly goods? |
44703 | Have you no wish, then,said Hastings,"to submit yourselves to King Charles, who offers you land and honours on condition of fealty and service?" |
44703 | Is it a prisoner you have brought us? |
44703 | When do you think you shall die? |
44703 | You have three or four cardinals,he says,"of learning and faith; but what are these three or four in so vast a crowd of infidels and reprobates? |
44703 | All men equal before the dread tribunal of the imperial judge? |
44703 | And in a third, how did the golden ring of sovereignty lose its controlling power, and republics take their rise? |
44703 | And who can pretend to be qualified for so great a work? |
44703 | And who could hesitate? |
44703 | But of the two loudest of these declaimers, John, who said,--"What earthly power to interrogatory Can tax the free breath of a Christian king?" |
44703 | But what was the use of all his genius? |
44703 | But when church and aristocracy were thus protected from the tyranny of the king, were the interests of the great mass of the people neglected? |
44703 | But who are you, who speak our language so well?" |
44703 | But who were the electors? |
44703 | Could he not go a step further, and convert a King of the Franks into an Emperor of the West? |
44703 | Could the gratitude of Church or State be too generous to the man who preserved both from the sword of the destroyer? |
44703 | Did the Senate receive a milder treatment? |
44703 | Else why do we find the faith of one generation the ridicule and laughing- stock of the next? |
44703 | Had he any patriotic pride in keeping the soil of Italy undivided? |
44703 | Had he no relentings at the visible approach of the end? |
44703 | He had already asked Pope Zachariah,"who had the best right to the name of king?--he who had merely the title, or he who had the power?" |
44703 | His friends said to him,"Why did n''t you answer the emperor''s objections?" |
44703 | How did aristocracy in one age concentrate into kingship in another? |
44703 | How did knighthood rise into the heroic regions of chivalry, and then sink in a succeeding period into the domain of burlesque? |
44703 | How did the reverence of Europe settle at one time on the sword of Edward the Third, and at another on the periwig of Louis the Fourteenth? |
44703 | How was it possible for any two scribes, or even for the same scribe, to produce so undeniable a fac- simile of his work? |
44703 | How was this done? |
44703 | How was this great change worked on the English mind? |
44703 | How, indeed, could the Church deprive itself of the organization which it saw so powerful and so successful in civil affairs? |
44703 | How, indeed, even without this incident, could the Papacy have retained its power? |
44703 | If the law guaranteed him the plough he held, the cart he drove, the spade he plied, why not the house he occupied, the little field he cultivated? |
44703 | If these were the habits of the rich, how were the poor treated? |
44703 | Inspired by the good cheer, the guests said,"Why do n''t you buy the empire? |
44703 | Is he a churchman? |
44703 | Is there no hope for Rome or for mankind? |
44703 | Is there to be a perpetual succession of monster after monster, with no cessation in the dreadful line? |
44703 | It might have been degrading to acknowledge the superiority of the son of Pepin-- but who could offer resistance to the successor of Augustus? |
44703 | Pardon, did I say? |
44703 | Tell me, my soul, can this be death? |
44703 | The count replied,"Did you never hear of Hastings the famous pirate, who had so many ships upon the sea, and did such evil to this realm?" |
44703 | Was Albinus still to live, and approach so near the throne as to have the rank of Cæsar? |
44703 | Was he to go to the grave untouched by all the calamities he had brought upon mankind? |
44703 | Was there no outcry from outraged piety?--no burst of indignation against the perpetrator of so foul a wrong? |
44703 | We had taken Canada: are they going to take New York? |
44703 | We turned them out of India: were they going to turn us out of America? |
44703 | Were people to be debarred from social meetings and merry- makings at Christmas, and junketings at fairs, by act of Parliament? |
44703 | Were the nobilissimi, the patricii, the egregii, to lose their salaries? |
44703 | Were they to have no cakes and ale because their elders were so prodigiously virtuous? |
44703 | What could be more enchanting than the position of their monastic homes? |
44703 | What is this absorbs me quite, Steals my senses, shuts my sight, Drowns my spirits, draws my breath? |
44703 | What more could the Church require? |
44703 | What should we call the present century, for instance? |
44703 | What was the effect upon the populace of these extraordinary shows? |
44703 | What was the use of going on? |
44703 | What were they doing at Rome during the thirty- three years of our Saviour''s sojourn upon earth? |
44703 | What, then, was to become of the warrior''s holding when he died? |
44703 | When there was any deficiency, was the emperor to suffer? |
44703 | Where is the fiery Henry of England, with his pen or sword? |
44703 | Where, indeed, could any element of security be found? |
44703 | Who was there in the Forty- Five, or Forty- Six, or for many years after that date, to write such charming verses? |
44703 | Who was to guide them in their future voyage? |
44703 | Who were those soldiers? |
44703 | Why, indeed, should not the first of those authorities exert his more than human powers in the production of the other? |
44703 | Would it not be possible to win over the cardinals to make your majesty his successor?" |
44703 | no more summary executions, nor forfeitures of fortunes, nor banishments to the Danube? |
44703 | sly: a Presbyterian? |
44703 | sour: A smart free- thinker? |
44703 | the blood he had shed, the multitudes he had beguiled? |
44703 | then he''s fond of power: A Quaker? |
44703 | to purity of life? |
44703 | to reform of abuses? |
44703 | what crime have they committed? |
44703 | where is thy sting?" |
44703 | where is thy victory? |
11752 | And what have I to do with all this? |
11752 | And what was your errand in Figgis Wood? |
11752 | And yield you Ellinor? |
11752 | Are ye tired so soon? |
11752 | Are you not afraid? |
11752 | At Heaven''s Gate was Heaven''s Queen,''And have ye sinned?'' 11752 At last you come for me, messieurs?" |
11752 | But you, madame? |
11752 | Do I not know men? 11752 Do you acknowledge my quarrel just?" |
11752 | Do you design to murder me? |
11752 | Do you plan,said Richard,"to disfigure the stage of our quiet pastorals with murder?" |
11752 | Eh, and who purchased the woman first? |
11752 | Father, will you not go into your chamber? 11752 Has God no thunders remaining in His armory that this vile thief still goes unblasted? |
11752 | Have I not told you,Sire Edward wearily said,"that one may never trust a Capet? |
11752 | Have we indeed wasted a whole half- hour in squabbling over a woman? |
11752 | Have you any orders concerning women? |
11752 | Ho, madame,he returned,"is it on that account the less true?" |
11752 | Is it madness? 11752 Is it so?" |
11752 | Is it true that in him, the devil blood of Oriander has gone mad, and that he eats children-- like Agrapard and Angoulaffre of the Broken Teeth? |
11752 | Is it, indeed, your will, my sister,he said,"that I should sing-- this song?" |
11752 | Is that, then, the King of Scots? |
11752 | Jehane, do you remember that August twilight in Pampeluna when last I kissed you? 11752 Ma belle,"said this Camoys, in friendly condescension,"n''estez vous pas jongleurs?" |
11752 | Messieurs,said Queen Philippa,"who commands here? |
11752 | Mon bel esper,said Osmund Heleigh, gently,"what is there in all this worthy of your sorrow? |
11752 | My friend, must I not love you any longer? 11752 O Madam Destiny, omnipotent, Why need our elders trouble us at play? |
11752 | She does not love me? |
11752 | Should Queen Ysabeau be angry or vexed or very cruel now, my Rosamund? 11752 So at peril of your life you rode for Ordish, then, messire?" |
11752 | So that is the tale you will deliver to the world? |
11752 | So you are in his pay, Malise? 11752 Suppose Queen Ysabeau, who is not as the run of women, had said this much, my brother?" |
11752 | The King of England-- a tall, fair man? 11752 The dappled one?" |
11752 | Then the trap was yours? 11752 They do not want me to sign another treaty, do they?" |
11752 | We have ridden far to- day, and to- morrow we must travel a deal farther-- eh, my brother? 11752 What choice have I?" |
11752 | What now avail my riches? |
11752 | Why should she? 11752 Yet I am two years his junior-- Did you hear nothing, Rosamund?" |
11752 | You came alone? |
11752 | You have, then, seen the King of England? |
11752 | You prefer to remain, my sister? |
11752 | You understand nothing,said Ysabeau;"how should you understand whose breasts are yet so tiny? |
11752 | You? 11752 ''Do not the spires show you, O son of darkness''they clamored,''that the place is holy?'' 11752 Am I not King of France, and is it not blasphemy for a King of France to be mocked? 11752 Am I, then, some woman of the town? |
11752 | And now, my man, what have you done with Davie?" |
11752 | And of course she worships you?" |
11752 | And therefore-- Ha, most beautiful, what have you and I to do with all this chaffering over Guienne?" |
11752 | And what am I to deduce from this?" |
11752 | And who, madame, is this? |
11752 | And why does this carnal prison so impede the soul? |
11752 | Are you all cowards here?" |
11752 | Because-- as anciently Propertius demanded, though not, to speak the truth, of any woman-- Quo fugis? |
11752 | But Meregrett only said,"You bid me go?" |
11752 | But do you indeed love this Rosamund Eastney? |
11752 | But how do I know that I can trust you? |
11752 | But once I was in heart and soul and body all that you are to- day; and now I am Queen Ysabeau-- Did you in truth hear nothing, Rosamund?" |
11752 | Can I, then, fail to love the King of England, who chooses the blood of my countrymen as a judicious garb to come a- wooing in? |
11752 | Can you alone contend against them? |
11752 | Cloth of fine gold--""Would you have me go unclothed?" |
11752 | Do I sign here, Mother?" |
11752 | Do you not think that, in returning good for evil, this fox was a true Christian, my Princess?" |
11752 | Do you not understand that there can be between us no question of expediency? |
11752 | Eh? |
11752 | Have I bagged a brace of monarchs?" |
11752 | Have you by any chance brought pious Lewis from oversea? |
11752 | He said:"Jehane, do you not love me any longer? |
11752 | He wheeled upon Gloucester and spoke with singular irrelevance,"And what is to be done with the present Queen?" |
11752 | Hey, son- in- law?" |
11752 | How else might I conquer you?" |
11752 | I had dreamed certain dreams, indeed-- but what had I to do with all this strife between the devil and the tiger? |
11752 | I put it to you, is that the contrivance of a sane man? |
11752 | If Christ Himself achieved so little that seemed great and admirable, how should we two hope to do any more?" |
11752 | Is it not a notable conquest to overcome so wise a king? |
11752 | Is it wicked to think of that? |
11752 | Is it worth while, think you, that our blood flow like this flagon''s contents?" |
11752 | Lord,"she demanded shyly,"how would you sing of love?" |
11752 | Need you have dragged my soul, too, in the dust? |
11752 | Now shall I fetch my mother, sire? |
11752 | Philippa said, half hopefully,"Do you forsake Sire Edward, Catherine?" |
11752 | Richard demanded;"like two children in a worldwide toyshop over any one particular toy? |
11752 | Sang the peasant:"King Jesus hung upon the Cross,''And have ye sinned?'' |
11752 | Shall one herring, then, blame his fellow if his fellow jostle him? |
11752 | Shall we begin the practise of our new profession with the Sestina of Spring?" |
11752 | Singly?" |
11752 | The King said more lately:"And so she is at Stirling now? |
11752 | The Queen demanded:"Why have they not slain me? |
11752 | The boy demanded,"And to what end?" |
11752 | The page then said,"What is her name?" |
11752 | Then Exton fretted, as if with a little trace of shame:"Who would have thought the rascal had remembered that first wife of his so long? |
11752 | Then why do you not speak that word? |
11752 | Was the King in treaty for the hand of the Infanta of Aragon? |
11752 | Was there no man in England to strangle the proud wanton? |
11752 | Was there no method of establishing him in another cottage? |
11752 | We trammelled kings can never go free of policy-- ey, my compère of England? |
11752 | What Sire Edward said was,"Dame Blanch, then, knew of this?" |
11752 | What are this England and this France to me, who crave the real kingdom?" |
11752 | What matter, then, if the dead receive me?" |
11752 | When he had ended, King Edward said,"And where is Madame de Salisbury now?" |
11752 | When the Queen asked him the same morning,"And what will you sing, my Osmund? |
11752 | Who am I to forbid him entrance?" |
11752 | Why did you not do so in the beginning, you dolt?" |
11752 | Will he not love me a little now, John Copeland?" |
11752 | Will you always talk and talk and talk? |
11752 | Would you steal love as well as kingdoms?" |
11752 | Yet have you quite forgotten the Englishman who made so many songs of you? |
11752 | Yet listen: I, too, must ride with you to Ordish-- as your sister, say-- Gregory, did I not hang, last April, the husband of your sister? |
11752 | You baby, is the Hammer of the Scots the man to trust for one half moment a Capet? |
11752 | You tell me the King of Scots has an arrow- wound in his nose? |
11752 | You would be content with happiness? |
11752 | Your Highness may remember the pony you admired yesterday?" |
11752 | _"Am I not afraid?_ You grimacing baby, do you think to ensnare a lion with such a flimsy rat- trap? |
11752 | _"Am I not afraid?_ You grimacing baby, do you think to ensnare a lion with such a flimsy rat- trap? |
11752 | a tiny wen upon his neck-- here-- and with his left cheek scarred? |
11752 | and conquer them? |
11752 | and why have you converted this forest into a shambles?" |
11752 | and will the worms of Ermenoueïl, then, pause to- morrow to consider through what a glorious turmoil their dinner came to them?" |
11752 | are not we of Valois so contemptible that in conquering us it is the victor who is shamed?" |
11752 | are there no English lords, then, left alive of his, army?" |
11752 | can aught prevent this?" |
11752 | cried Dame Blanch, and in a voice which thrilled him,"shall ye not, then, dare to be but man and woman?" |
11752 | dare you to bid me live?" |
11752 | do you not think, madame, that once within my very persuasive Tower of London, your brother and I may come to some agreement over Guienne?" |
11752 | have I not slain your escort? |
11752 | he presently said,"will you not beg for mercy? |
11752 | he spat at her;"dare you rebel against me? |
11752 | hobnob with my armed enemies, and cajoling that red lecher Robert Stewart?" |
11752 | or stupendously to play the fool and swear even to himself( while his own judgment shrieks and proves a flat denial), that he is at will omnipotent? |
11752 | said Antoine Riczi, in a while,"have you, then, forgotten, O Jehane?" |
11752 | said the Regent;"and all for making a little mark?" |
11752 | she demanded--"or are you mad, then, Gregory Darrell, that you dare ride past my gates alone?" |
11752 | the commander of that great army which you overcame? |
11752 | this Maudelain cried, with a great voice,"wilt Thou dare bid a man die patiently, having aforetime filled his veins with such a venom? |
11752 | to pilfer renown from an idiot? |
11752 | what do these so- little persons matter? |
11752 | wilt Thou dare bid a man live stainless, having aforetime filled his veins with such a venom? |
11752 | with big teeth? |
11752 | with blue eyes, very bright, bright as tapers?" |
11752 | your brother has cheated me of Guienne, and was I to waste eternity in begging him to give me back my province? |
22463 | And what have I to do with all this? |
22463 | And what was your errand in Figgis Wood? |
22463 | And yield you Ellinor? |
22463 | Are ye tired so soon? |
22463 | Are you not afraid? |
22463 | At last you come for me, messieurs? |
22463 | But you, madame? |
22463 | Concerning women? |
22463 | Do you acknowledge my quarrel just? |
22463 | Eh, and who purchased the woman first? |
22463 | Father, will you not go into your chamber? 22463 Has God no thunder in His armory that this vile thief should go unblasted? |
22463 | Have I not told you,Sire Edward wearily said,"that one may never trust a Capet? |
22463 | Have we indeed wasted a whole half- hour in squabbling over a woman? |
22463 | Ho, madame,he returned,"is it on that account the less true?" |
22463 | How should she? 22463 IN THE LIKENESS OF A FAIR WOMAN""''YOU DESIGN MURDER?'' |
22463 | Is He less pitiful than we? |
22463 | Is it madness? 22463 Is it so?" |
22463 | Is it true that he is an ogre-- like Agrapard and Angoulaffre of the Broken Teeth? |
22463 | Is it, indeed, your will, my sister,he said,"that I should sing-- this song?" |
22463 | Is that, then, the King of Scots? |
22463 | Jehane, do you remember that August twilight in Pampeluna when last I kissed you? 22463 Ma belle,"said this Camoys, in friendly condescension,"n''estez vous pas jongleurs?" |
22463 | Ma belle,the Queen answered, and laughed bitterly,"do I not know men? |
22463 | Messieurs,said Queen Philippa,"who commands here? |
22463 | Mon bel esper,said Osmund Heleigh, very gently,"what is there in all this worthy of your sorrow? |
22463 | My friend, must I not love you any longer? 22463 She does not love me?" |
22463 | Should Queen Ysabeau be angry or vexed or very cruel now, my Rosamund? 22463 So at peril of your life you rode for Ordish, then, messire?" |
22463 | So that is the tale you will deliver to the world? |
22463 | So you are in his pay, Malise? 22463 Suppose Queen Ysabeau had said this much, my brother?" |
22463 | The King of England-- a tall, fair man? 22463 The dappled one?" |
22463 | Then the trap was yours? 22463 They do not want me to sign another treaty, do they?" |
22463 | We have ridden far to- day, and to- morrow we must travel a deal farther-- eh, my brother? 22463 What choice have I?" |
22463 | What is her name? |
22463 | What now avail my riches? |
22463 | You came alone? |
22463 | You design murder, fair cousin? |
22463 | You design murder? |
22463 | You have, then, seen the King of England? |
22463 | You prefer to remain, my sister? |
22463 | You understand nothing,said Ysabeau;"how should you understand whose breasts are yet so tiny? |
22463 | You? 22463 _ Am I not afraid?_ You baby, would you ensnare a lion with a flimsy rat- trap? |
22463 | _ Am I not afraid?_ You baby, would you ensnare a lion with a flimsy rat- trap? 22463 ''Do not the spires show you, O son of darkness,''they clamored,''that the place is holy?'' 22463 ''__ At Heaven''s Gate was Heaven''s Queen,''And have ye sinned?'' |
22463 | A word get you my body? |
22463 | A word get you, in effect, all which you are capable of desiring? |
22463 | Am I not King of France, and is it not blasphemy a King of France should be thus mocked? |
22463 | Am I, then, some woman of the town?" |
22463 | And now, my man, what have you done with Davie?" |
22463 | And of course she worships you?" |
22463 | And therefore-- Ha, most beautiful, what have you and I to do with all this chaffering over Guienne?" |
22463 | And were I to fall as many fathoms deep in love as this Gwyllem has blundered without any astonishment I would perform-- I wonder, now, what miracle?" |
22463 | And what am I to deduce from this?" |
22463 | And who, madame, is this? |
22463 | And why does this carnal prison so impede the soul? |
22463 | Are you all cowards here?" |
22463 | Because-- as of old Horatius Flaccus demanded, though not, to speak the truth, of any woman,--_ Quo fugis? |
22463 | But Meregrett only said,"You bid me go?" |
22463 | But how do I know that I can trust you? |
22463 | But you indeed do love this Rosamund Eastney? |
22463 | Can I, then, fail to love the King of England, who chooses the blood of my countrymen as a judicious garb to come a- wooing in? |
22463 | Can you alone contend against them? |
22463 | Cloth of fine gold--""Would you have me go unclothed?" |
22463 | Did you in truth hear nothing, Rosamund?" |
22463 | Do I sign here, mother?" |
22463 | Do you not think this fox was a true Christian, my Princess?" |
22463 | Do you not understand that there can be between us no question of expediency? |
22463 | Eh, what is God about when He enthrones these cowards, Osmund? |
22463 | Eh? |
22463 | Have I bagged a brace of monarchs?" |
22463 | Have you by any chance brought pious Lewis from oversea? |
22463 | He said more lately:"And so she is at Stirling now? |
22463 | He said:"Jehane, do you not love me any longer? |
22463 | He wheeled upon Gloucester and spoke with singular irrelevance:"And the titular Queen?" |
22463 | Hey, son- in- law?" |
22463 | Ho, messire, will there be bloodshed?" |
22463 | I had dreamed certain dreams, indeed-- but what had I to do with all this strife between the devil and the tiger? |
22463 | I know well enough how women have these notions: and carefully I weighed the issue-- Meregrett and Guienne to boot? |
22463 | I put it to you, is that the contrivance of a sane man? |
22463 | Is it not a notable conquest to overcome so sapient a king? |
22463 | Is it wicked to think of that? |
22463 | Is it worth while, think you, that our blood flow like this flagon''s contents?" |
22463 | Lord,"she demanded shyly,"how would you sing of love?" |
22463 | Need you have dragged my soul, too, in the dust? |
22463 | Now shall I fetch my mother, sire? |
22463 | Or a woman, say-- a woman''s twisted and naked body, the breasts yet horribly heaving, in the red ashes of some village? |
22463 | Philippa said, half hopefully,"Do you forsake Sire Edward, Catherine?" |
22463 | Richard demanded;"like two children in a worldwide toyshop over any one particular toy? |
22463 | SHE SAID""''DO YOU FORSAKE SIRE EDWARD, CATHERINE?''" |
22463 | Sang the peasant:"_ King Jesus hung upon the Cross,''And have ye sinned?'' |
22463 | Shall one herring, then, blame his fellow if his fellow jostle him? |
22463 | Shall we begin with the Sestina of Spring"? |
22463 | The Queen demanded:"Why have they not slain me? |
22463 | The boy demanded,"And to what end?" |
22463 | Then Exton fretted, as with a little trace of shame:"Who would have thought the rascal had remembered that first wife of his so long? |
22463 | Then why do you not speak that word?" |
22463 | Three or four lackeys were about-- some exalted person''s retinue? |
22463 | Was the King in treaty for the hand of the Infanta of Aragon? |
22463 | Was there no man in England to strangle the proud wanton? |
22463 | Was there no method of establishing him in another cottage? |
22463 | We trammelled kings can never go free of policy-- ey, my compere of England? |
22463 | Were the considerate persons of His day moved at all by the death of this fanatic? |
22463 | What Sire Edward said was,"Dame Blanch, then, knew of this?" |
22463 | What matter, then, if the dead receive me?" |
22463 | When he had ended, King Edward said,"And where is Madame de Salisbury now?" |
22463 | When the Queen asked him the same morning:"And what will you sing, my Osmund? |
22463 | Who am I to forbid him entrance?" |
22463 | Why did you not do so in the beginning, you dolt?" |
22463 | Will he not love me a little now, John Copeland?" |
22463 | Will you always talk and talk and talk? |
22463 | Would you filch love as well as kingdoms?" |
22463 | Yet have you quite forgotten the Englishman who made so many songs of you? |
22463 | Yet listen: I, too, must ride with you to Ordish-- as your sister, say-- Gregory, did I not hang last April the husband of your sister? |
22463 | You baby, is the Hammer of the Scots the man to trust a Capet? |
22463 | You tell me the King of Scots has an arrow- wound in his nose? |
22463 | You would be content with happiness? |
22463 | Your Highness may remember the pony you admired yesterday?" |
22463 | [ Illustration:"DO YOU FORSAKE SIRE EDWARD, CATHERINE?" |
22463 | [ Illustration:"YOU DESIGN MURDER? |
22463 | _ Et quid Pandoniae_--thus, little book, I charge you poultice your more- merited oblivion--_quid Pandoniae restat nisi nomen Athenae_? |
22463 | a tiny wen upon his neck-- here-- and with his left cheek scarred? |
22463 | and conquer them? |
22463 | and the armament of great- jowled emperors that were distraught by it?" |
22463 | and why have you converted this forest into a shambles?" |
22463 | and will the worms of Ermenoueil, then, pause to- morrow to consider through what a glorious turmoil their dinner came to them?" |
22463 | are not we of Valois so contemptible that in conquering us it is the victor who is shamed?" |
22463 | are there no English lords, then, left alive of all his army?" |
22463 | can aught prevent this?" |
22463 | cried Dame Blanch, and in a voice which thrilled him,"shall ye not, then, dare to be but man and woman?" |
22463 | dare you to bid me live?" |
22463 | do you not think, madame, that within the Tower your brother and I may more quickly come to some agreement over Guienne?" |
22463 | have I not slain your escort? |
22463 | he presently said,"will you not beg for mercy? |
22463 | he spat at her;"dare you rebel against me? |
22463 | how else might I conquer you?" |
22463 | or stupendously to play the fool and swear even to himself( while his own judgment shrieks and proves a flat denial), that he is at will omnipotent? |
22463 | or the already dripping hoofs which will presently crush this body? |
22463 | said Antoine Riczi,"have you, then, forgotten, O Jehane?" |
22463 | said the Regent;"and all for making a little mark?" |
22463 | she demanded in the ultimate--"or are you mad, then, Gregory Darrell, that you dare ride past my gates alone?" |
22463 | singly?" |
22463 | the commander of that great army which you overcame? |
22463 | to pilfer renown from an idiot? |
22463 | what do these so- little persons matter? |
22463 | wilt Thou dare bid a man live stainless, having aforetime filled his veins with such a venom? |
22463 | with Robert Stewart?" |
22463 | with big teeth? |
22463 | with blue eyes, very bright, bright as tapers?" |
22463 | your brother has cheated me of Guienne, and was I to waste an eternity in begging him to restore it? |
36934 | A bag that was too heavy to have silver in it would have gold? |
36934 | Alan, my son,he said presently,"do you know what lead is?" |
36934 | Alone? |
36934 | And are you going to be a goldsmith in Chepe too? |
36934 | And if it is all to vanish in a few years, why do we paint? |
36934 | And so thy mother makes her living weaving wool, does she? |
36934 | And what do you in London? |
36934 | And who taught David? |
36934 | And why are you wasting time on them? |
36934 | And you want to learn my trade-- eh? |
36934 | Are not these the red roses of Provence? |
36934 | Are ye wantin''a stone- mason just now? |
36934 | Are you spying on me again? |
36934 | Aye, I''ll warrant,grunted Simon,"an Eyre would be a born shoemaker, and name him Crispin---- Eh, lad, what be you after with that leather?" |
36934 | Barbara,he said to the girl,"art anxious to get home? |
36934 | Basil Ossorin, an Irish monk from England? |
36934 | Be you wanting the job? |
36934 | But are you going to leave your looms for them to burn? |
36934 | But suppose that a way could be found to make the colors lasting? |
36934 | But what are these prescriptions? |
36934 | But why not come to the Abbey and learn to do the work yourself-- if you can leave your own workshop? 36934 But, father,"said Nicholas, rather puzzled,"what else could I do?" |
36934 | Can not you tell? |
36934 | Can you make it again? |
36934 | Did you find it in Spain? |
36934 | Did you hear him? 36934 Did you see him?" |
36934 | Did you take any red- rose cuttings? |
36934 | Do you know a certain clerk named Simon Gastard? |
36934 | Do you mean to say that you play like that-- on that? |
36934 | Do you see-- there? |
36934 | Do you think it will? |
36934 | Do you think that the man with the dancing bear was a friend of his? |
36934 | Do you want it? |
36934 | Does Master Gerard do his work with elves? 36934 Does the trade like him?" |
36934 | For me? |
36934 | Forest-- no; but why? 36934 Guy,"he said one day,"what''s the heaviest metal you ever handled?" |
36934 | Has Vanni caught anything yet? |
36934 | Have you a share in that ship that you watch her so sharply? |
36934 | Have you any physic for a wasted soul? |
36934 | Have you been here all this time? |
36934 | Have you the world on your shoulders, or only some new undertaking? |
36934 | He likes the trade, does he? |
36934 | Ho there, little one-- what is the trouble? |
36934 | How could they? |
36934 | How do these weavers come here, so far from any town? |
36934 | How does he make his design? |
36934 | How have your father''s ships prospered? |
36934 | How many loads of stone will it take for this wall? |
36934 | How much mortar? |
36934 | How, exactly, does it happen? |
36934 | Is it hard to learn? |
36934 | Is it-- is it thou indeed, master? |
36934 | Is there a boy here named Crispin Eyre? |
36934 | Is there a forest near by? |
36934 | Is this anything like? |
36934 | Like this? |
36934 | Look at the shoes, father, are n''t they pretty? |
36934 | Mary,she queried, as the still- room maid came through the bower,"where is Master Tomaso?" |
36934 | Master Gerard is but absent for an hour or two,he said;"shall I run to the Cathedral and fetch him?" |
36934 | May she keep it? |
36934 | Mistress Mary, will you ask Master Tomaso for some of the spice that he gave to your mother, for me? |
36934 | My boy,he said kindly,"you are Quentin, from Peronne? |
36934 | My venture? |
36934 | My venture? |
36934 | None of your friends live there, I suppose? |
36934 | Ought I to know him? |
36934 | Rebuilt? |
36934 | Shall I call him? |
36934 | Shall we burn the parchment then? |
36934 | Shall we write then of the doings of binds and swinkers? |
36934 | So you believe that, my son? |
36934 | So you changed the ancient course of the flood into that culvert, did you? |
36934 | So you hold it folly to pull down a wall? 36934 That''s like your other dishes, is n''t it?" |
36934 | The Provence rose, is it? |
36934 | Then you like not the plan? |
36934 | There is courtesy, then, among Londoners? 36934 This-- is the cathedral?" |
36934 | Vanni,he said,"you know that thief that they caught?" |
36934 | Vanni,said Mary laughing as she passed through the kitchen on the morning of the great day,"do you always scour your dishes as carefully as this?" |
36934 | Vanni,she said,"will you make some of your lozenges for the banquet? |
36934 | Was that all? |
36934 | Well, my boy,said Brother Basil in his quaintly spoken French,"what is it?" |
36934 | What are you doing away from your tapestry- frame, wench? |
36934 | What are you going to do with the penny? |
36934 | What art doing, lad? |
36934 | What can you do? |
36934 | What do you think they will do to the one that they caught? |
36934 | What do you think will happen in Lombardy? |
36934 | What have you done? |
36934 | What have you found? |
36934 | What is all this? |
36934 | What is wrong with the picture? 36934 What seemed to be the hitch?" |
36934 | What shall we do with these mysteries? |
36934 | What was the name of him who told you the tale, Simon? |
36934 | What wey is it better? |
36934 | What''s ailin''ye, lad? |
36934 | What''s all that, Ranulph? |
36934 | What''s the trouble here? |
36934 | What''s thy name, by the way? |
36934 | What''s yer name? |
36934 | What''s your price? |
36934 | What? 36934 What?" |
36934 | Where are my spices? |
36934 | Where did tha find him, and what''s his name? |
36934 | Where did they put those ashes? |
36934 | Where did this come from? |
36934 | Where did this shoe come from, now? |
36934 | Where did you get the color for this? |
36934 | Where did you get the pattern? |
36934 | Where did you learn to draw? |
36934 | Which did you lose, Genevieve, child? |
36934 | Who are you, and why are you so fond to go to London, young sheep- dog? |
36934 | Who ever saw a lad like that who cared about weaving? |
36934 | Who gave you that, my boy? |
36934 | Who might she be? |
36934 | Who taught you to build walls, my boy? |
36934 | Why do you stay in this dull sodden England-- you who are free? |
36934 | Why not take turns watching the chest? |
36934 | Will that content you? |
36934 | Will you not tell me,he said hesitatingly at last,"to whom I may offer my thanks-- and service-- if I may not serve you in some way?" |
36934 | Will you sell it? |
36934 | Will you teach me the properties of plants? |
36934 | Work it out as he goes along-- like iron- work? |
36934 | Ye do n''t know who that was, do you? |
36934 | You did not use my spices? 36934 You have no father?" |
36934 | You kept the rule, I hope? |
36934 | You meant to steal them? |
36934 | You''ve been in England some time? |
36934 | Your father has ships, then? |
36934 | And how are they all at home?" |
36934 | And some day, would he find that his dreams had vanished forever? |
36934 | Are we to spread ruin over the world?" |
36934 | As they came abreast of the gate the foremost called out,"Ho, Wilfrid, is there any tavern hereabouts? |
36934 | But what happened this time?" |
36934 | But would it always be so? |
36934 | Can you carve a head on the top-- or two heads, facing one another, man and woman?" |
36934 | Come and see the new- born lambs, Robert, will''ee?" |
36934 | Did ye not know?" |
36934 | Did you grow out of the ground, and have you roots like the rest of them, bumpkin?" |
36934 | Did you use the spice I gave you?" |
36934 | Didst ever hear of sweating gold?" |
36934 | Do your stars tell you foolish tales like that, Master Tomaso?" |
36934 | For the hunting of dragons?" |
36934 | Have you found treasure?" |
36934 | Hear ye that, my lords and councilors?" |
36934 | How didst know the true line for that handle?" |
36934 | How would that be?" |
36934 | How, after all, was he better than Gastard? |
36934 | I suppose you do n''t expect him to steal it, chest and all?" |
36934 | I wonder now what became of that lead?" |
36934 | If men were to write chronicles, why not make them vivid as legends, true, stirring, magnificent stories of the men who moved the world? |
36934 | If the leather should be blue in place o''red, would that matter?" |
36934 | Is he the youth of whom you told me when we met at Canterbury?" |
36934 | Is it for that gate- latch? |
36934 | It shall be a picture-- of what, my son?" |
36934 | It''d never do for the hinges and handles on this coffer to spoil the looks o''the carving, and that''s to be done in London, d''ye see? |
36934 | Latch done, Dickon? |
36934 | Masters, what do ye lack? |
36934 | Might he not grow to be like Brother Peter, who had kept the porter''s lodge for forty years and hated to see a new face? |
36934 | Now then, you lummox, are you going to pick up your goods and go, or do I have to throw them after you?" |
36934 | Now, what next? |
36934 | Or have the fairies taken him and left a changeling?" |
36934 | Saw you ever the like?" |
36934 | Shall we give the Plantagenets to eat of the Tree of Knowledge?" |
36934 | So, is that the end? |
36934 | Suppose we nail it up by the market- cross for a warning to others? |
36934 | The figure of Our Lady would be more impressive if you were to add a gold border to the mantle, would it not?" |
36934 | The new man smiled at the boy with his big roll of cloth, and said,"What have you there, my fine lad?" |
36934 | The river ca n''t get our apples now, can it?" |
36934 | There must be a child in trouble, but what child could there be in this wild place, and neither Norman nor Saxon? |
36934 | Was there no more need for such work as theirs? |
36934 | Were you asking him the day of my death?" |
36934 | What do you want for it?" |
36934 | What hast been doing to make it shine so?" |
36934 | What if Audrey should want the bowl? |
36934 | What if I find thee a liar and send thee back from the inn, hey?" |
36934 | What if we let him and his mother live in the little cottage beyond the sheepfold? |
36934 | What sort of folk are you?" |
36934 | What would he do? |
36934 | What?" |
36934 | Where did you get it?" |
36934 | Where have you been all this time?" |
36934 | Who would care, in a thousand years, what rent was paid by the tenant farmers of the Abbey, or who received a certain benefice from the King? |
36934 | Who''s your father, lad?" |
36934 | Why hold we here these demons in the light Of the High Altar, by God''s candles cast? |
36934 | Will you sell the cloth to me? |
36934 | Will your father let you stay?" |
36934 | Would Giovanni come? |
36934 | Would Mary undertake to go there and make herself useful, either in ways that might aid the cook, or in any other duties that she saw? |
36934 | Would he at last obey the Church, or not? |
36934 | Would you?" |
36934 | Yes? |
36934 | You are one of us, are you not?" |
36934 | You have been thinking yourself a writer, have you? |
36934 | You have heard of Archiater''s apples? |
36934 | You take them and do not use them?" |
36934 | You tell me you did it?" |
36934 | [ Illustration:"''HAVE YOU BEEN HERE ALL THIS TIME?''"] |
10882 | Ah, indeed? |
10882 | And Kennaston? |
10882 | And now,she went on, quickly,"you''re trying to make me think you a devil of a fellow, are n''t you? |
10882 | And why not? |
10882 | And will love one another----? |
10882 | And you were actually prepared to marry me? |
10882 | And you''re quite sure you''ve forgiven me for doubting you? |
10882 | And you''ve forgiven_ me?_"Bless you, Peggy, I never doubted you! 10882 Anxious to do good in the world, too-- philanthropic set, eh?" |
10882 | Beautiful child,spoke the poet''s voice, sadly,"you aren''t-- surely, you are n''t saying this in mistaken kindness to me? |
10882 | Beautiful,she presently queried,"would you be very, very much shocked if I descended to slang?" |
10882 | But why, Peggy?--in Heaven''s name, what''s the meaning of all this? |
10882 | But why, attractive? |
10882 | But why? |
10882 | Ca n''t you understand, Billy? |
10882 | Cultured lot, they seem? |
10882 | Dear me, Mr. Woods, what is the use of explaining things? 10882 Dear, do you know that is the nicest little compliment I''ve had for a long time?" |
10882 | Did n''t I? |
10882 | Did n''t you see that poor girl''s face? 10882 Did you know that Billy was dead?" |
10882 | Do n''t you know this is private property? |
10882 | Do you know,said he,"I''ve just been telling the roses in the gardens yonder the same thing about women? |
10882 | Eh, well, why not? 10882 Eh? |
10882 | Eh? |
10882 | Eh? |
10882 | Eh? |
10882 | Ever read any of Ouida''s books? |
10882 | Hello, Jukesbury,said Billy Woods,"where''s my armour?" |
10882 | Hey, what''s this? |
10882 | How dare you suggest such a thing, sir? |
10882 | How do you suppose I''m going to do anything for Philanthropy or any other cause when I have n''t a penny in the world? 10882 I beg your pardon?" |
10882 | I wonder now,said he, in meditative wise,"if Billy will consider that a drawback?" |
10882 | Is it any cause for wonder, that under this cheerless influence our poetry is either silent or unsold? 10882 Is it?" |
10882 | It-- why, it''s----"It''s what? |
10882 | Lady,said he, with humbleness,"you would n''t be hard on a poor workingman, would you? |
10882 | Love in a cottage?--is it thus the poet turns his lay? 10882 Mr. Kennaston, are you ready for our walk? |
10882 | My dear,said he,"are there no mirrors at Selwoode to remove your doubts?" |
10882 | My lady,he asked, very softly,"have n''t you any good news for me on this wonderful morning?" |
10882 | Now, I wonder how you''re going to help yourself? |
10882 | Oh, no, no, it is n''t that,she cried;"it is n''t that, is it? |
10882 | Oh, where have you been, Billy boy? |
10882 | Oh--? 10882 Peggy, do you-- care?" |
10882 | Peggy,he demanded of her, in the semi- privacy of the vestibule,"will you kindly elucidate the meaning of this da-- this idiotic foolishness?" |
10882 | Peggy,said he, plunging at the heart of things,"where''s that will?" |
10882 | Pirates? |
10882 | She_ is_ skinny, is n''t she, Billy? |
10882 | Sir,said the Colonel,"what-- do-- you-- mean?" |
10882 | That fellow Kennaston said anything to you yet? |
10882 | That is so, is n''t it, Felix? 10882 That would be rather unfortunate, would n''t it?" |
10882 | The painter chap, eh? |
10882 | Was she very beautiful? |
10882 | Well, I know she''s a friend of yours, but that does n''t prevent her being skinny, does it? |
10882 | What are you doing here? |
10882 | What is it, beautiful? |
10882 | What''s the matter with your foot? |
10882 | What''s the matter, boy? |
10882 | What-- do you-- mean? |
10882 | Who? |
10882 | Why ai n''t you in bed? |
10882 | Why are you going to burn it, Billy? |
10882 | Why have you done this? |
10882 | Why, dear me, Mr. Woods,she retorted, carelessly,"what else could I think?" |
10882 | Why, did n''t we love one another in Carthage, Peggy? |
10882 | Why, have you thought of a plausible lie so soon? |
10882 | Why? |
10882 | Why? |
10882 | Yes? |
10882 | Yes? |
10882 | Yes? |
10882 | You are thinking, perhaps, what an unutterable cad I have been? |
10882 | You bid me go? |
10882 | You bid me hope? |
10882 | You do n''t make a very noble figure, just now, do you? |
10882 | You see this match, do n''t you, Peggy? 10882 You were ready to sell yourself for Miss Hugonin''s money, were n''t you? |
10882 | You-- you do n''t mean that you care for_ him_, Peggy? |
10882 | Ah, have n''t you schemed hard for that? |
10882 | Ah, yes, that gave you a beautiful opportunity, did n''t it? |
10882 | And Billy? |
10882 | And I''ll cook a cherry pie-- quick as a cat can wink her eye-- won''t I, Billy? |
10882 | And Margaret? |
10882 | And are you quite certain, Felix, that you never cared so much for any one else?" |
10882 | And besides, it''s only right he should have Selwoode-- wasn''t he brought up to expect it? |
10882 | And do you think I''d trust you with it, Billy Woods?" |
10882 | And in the name of Heaven, what am I to say to this poor, old man here? |
10882 | And in the name of Heaven, why could n''t she have put off her_ tête- à- tête_ with Kennaston long enough to explain? |
10882 | And now,"the old gentleman demanded, after an awkward pause,"are you or are you not going to tell me what all this mystery is about?" |
10882 | And what value, pray, has this Truth that we should lust after it?" |
10882 | And while we are speaking of farces, do n''t you think it time to drop that one of your not knowing about that last will?" |
10882 | And you do care for me, do n''t you? |
10882 | And you''re hinting that I''ve accepted Billy because of his money, are n''t you? |
10882 | And, really, I ca n''t compliment you on your methods, Mr. Woods; they are a little vague, a little abrupt, a little transparent, do n''t you think?" |
10882 | And, then, why should he have made another will just like the first?" |
10882 | And-- and you do n''t mind, do you, if I leave you now?" |
10882 | Are n''t there, Peggy?--_aren''t_ there?" |
10882 | Are n''t you pleased, Billy? |
10882 | Are n''t you? |
10882 | Are n''t you_ proud_ of making me cry? |
10882 | Billy was forced to be polite to his uncle''s guest; and Margaret could n''t well be discourteous to her host''s nephew, could she? |
10882 | But I wonder who is responsible for that tatter of rhyme and melody that had come to them from nowhere in particular? |
10882 | But ca n''t you understand how much it must hurt me to think I ever loved you?" |
10882 | But he is dead, is n''t he? |
10882 | But if you had been a bit more daring, do n''t you see, you could have suppressed the last one and taken the money without being encumbered by me? |
10882 | But it''s a bit awkward, is n''t it, that the poor girl will be practically penniless? |
10882 | But was n''t it stupid of me to make such a mistake, Billy?" |
10882 | But why not tell me that is the real reason?" |
10882 | But,"Is n''t that exactly like her?" |
10882 | Ca n''t you do a little better than that by a poor workingman, lady?" |
10882 | Can you remember that, attractive?" |
10882 | Depend upon it, she had; for was she not already past thirteen? |
10882 | Did n''t Mr. Kennaston tell me just now that he was dead?--or was it the whisper, attractive?" |
10882 | Do n''t you think that, Billy?" |
10882 | Do n''t you think you''re losing every chance of me by burning that will? |
10882 | Do n''t you understand, Kathleen?" |
10882 | Do you know, I rather fancy he classes himself under that head? |
10882 | Do you know,"Mr. Kenneston continued gaily, as he trifled with a bunch of grapes,"I feel horribly out- of- place among you? |
10882 | Eh?" |
10882 | Felix, are you sure you care for me-- quite sure? |
10882 | For you do hoodwink yourself, do n''t you, Felix?" |
10882 | Getting better, is he? |
10882 | Had n''t he rhymed of it often enough to know? |
10882 | Had she ever known happiness before? |
10882 | Have n''t you a rag of honour left? |
10882 | Have n''t you a vestige of shame? |
10882 | How could any one ever possibly fancy a brown- eyed man? |
10882 | How did she do this? |
10882 | However,"Can you ask-- dear?" |
10882 | However,"Yes?" |
10882 | I could n''t very well ask you to marry me, could I, under those circumstances?" |
10882 | I do n''t care if Uncle Fred did leave it to me-- I did n''t ask him to, did I? |
10882 | I say, what Shakespeare observes as to this very Eagle?" |
10882 | I told you I did n''t wish to hear a word you had to say, did n''t I? |
10882 | I was well enough for a summer flirtation, was n''t I, Billy? |
10882 | I''m only sorry for you, Billy Woods--_sorry_ because Kathleen has thrown you over-- sorry, do you understand? |
10882 | If he had lost all sense of shame, why could he not lie to her? |
10882 | In God''s name, why ca n''t you talk like a sensible woman, Peggy?" |
10882 | Is that why you rail at me so, Peggy? |
10882 | It is quite affecting, is it not, Kathleen?" |
10882 | It is very ridiculous, is it not?" |
10882 | It''s-- eh? |
10882 | Margaret, will you be my blushing bride?" |
10882 | Mr. Woods demanded of his soul,"what_ possible_ reason could she have had for this new insanity? |
10882 | My dear Mrs. Grundy, may one point the somewhat obvious moral? |
10882 | Nice sort of message to send a sick man, ai n''t it? |
10882 | No, beautiful, the one with the black satin stripes on the bodice-- because I do n''t want my hair cast completely in the shade, do I? |
10882 | No, it is n''t a bit tight-- are you perfectly certain there''s no powder behind my ears, Célestine? |
10882 | Now, is n''t that perfectly unreasonable, and fantastic, and magnificent, and incredible?--in short, is n''t that Peggy all over? |
10882 | Of course, he''d forgiven Billy; who would n''t? |
10882 | Oh, Billy, Billy, why_ ca n''t_ they let me alone?" |
10882 | Oh, Kathleen, Kathleen, how_ could_ you help loving Billy? |
10882 | Oh, Margaret, Margaret-- you do n''t mind if I call you that, do you? |
10882 | Oh, beautiful, are n''t I ever to have any real friends?" |
10882 | Oh, where have you been, charming Billy?" |
10882 | Oh, where have you been, charming Billy?" |
10882 | Oh, you think you''re awfully smooth, do n''t you, Billy Woods? |
10882 | Peggy, why wo n''t you marry me? |
10882 | Pray you, what was there to prevent Juliet from admiring So- and- so''s dancing? |
10882 | Ready, Peggy?" |
10882 | Ready, Peggy?" |
10882 | Shark, eh?" |
10882 | So give me the will, Peggy?" |
10882 | Such a little price to pay, is n''t it, Billy?" |
10882 | Surely, he could at least lie? |
10882 | Surely, you are n''t saying this because of what has happened in regard to your money affairs? |
10882 | Surely, you remember, dear?" |
10882 | That makes a difference, does n''t it, Billy? |
10882 | That makes a difference, does n''t it? |
10882 | That was rather clumsy of you, was n''t it?" |
10882 | That-- that was queer, was n''t it?" |
10882 | The question is-- do you?" |
10882 | Then,"Billy,"she asked, almost inaudibly,"do-- do you still want-- your answer?" |
10882 | To Billy it seemed just now quite proper that every one should be in love; was n''t it-- after all-- the most pleasant condition in the world? |
10882 | Uncle Fred should not have left so many wills-- who would have thought the old man had so much ink in him? |
10882 | Was it worth while, think you, to arch the firmament above our rogueries, and light the ageless stars as candles to display our antics? |
10882 | Was n''t it the strangest thing in the world--?" |
10882 | Was n''t it too bad? |
10882 | What has she got to do with Juvenile Courts and child- labour in the South, I''d like to know? |
10882 | What_ is_ green cheese, I wonder?--it sounds horribly indigestible and unattractive, does n''t it?" |
10882 | Who wants to be told that impropriety is the spice of life and that a roving eye gathers remorse? |
10882 | Who was he, forsooth, to keep her from Billy? |
10882 | Why could n''t it have been I that ai n''t wanted any longer? |
10882 | Why should n''t she be glad? |
10882 | Why, dear me, you actually managed to propose before breakfast, did n''t you? |
10882 | Why_ ca n''t_ you let me alone? |
10882 | Woods?" |
10882 | Would n''t you be glad if I did, Billy? |
10882 | Would n''t you be glad to marry the rich Margaret Hugonin, Billy? |
10882 | Would they have been? |
10882 | You did n''t think of me in quite that way, did you? |
10882 | You do n''t like people to disagree with you, do you, attractive? |
10882 | You do n''t mind very much, do you-- darling?" |
10882 | You do not object? |
10882 | You do want the money, and when you say you do n''t you''re lying-- lying--_lying_, do you understand? |
10882 | You refused point- blank-- refused in this very room-- didn''t you, Billy? |
10882 | You think me a very hopeless cad-- that''s about your real opinion, is n''t it, Peggy? |
10882 | You''d be glad to do it, would n''t you? |
10882 | You''d give your dirty little soul for that, would n''t you, Billy? |
10882 | You-- you needn''t-- lean back-- any longer, Billy... Oh, Billy, why_ did n''t_ you shave?" |
10882 | You-- you would care just as much about me if I were poor, would n''t you, beautiful? |
10882 | [ Illustration:"''My lady,''he asked, very softly,''have n''t you any good news for me on this wonderful morning?''"] |
10882 | _ Are n''t_ you proud? |
10882 | groaned the poor Colonel;"why could n''t it have been I? |
10882 | he echoed--"yes, that describes what I''ve been pretty well, does n''t it, Peggy? |
10882 | or from observing that Signor Such- an- one had remarkably expressive eyes? |
10882 | or from thinking of Tybalt as a dear, reckless fellow whom it was the duty of some good woman to rescue from perdition? |
10882 | queried Margaret''s wonderful contralto,"Oh, where have you been, Billy boy, Billy boy? |
10882 | she asked--"even after you knew I was poor?" |
3821 | ''Dog,''cries Totila''s page,''wilt thou strike thy lord?'' |
3821 | ''Perjured boy, madman, betrayer of your race-- do you not see that the Roman plan is as always to destroy Goths by Goths? |
3821 | ''What then will you leave us?'' |
3821 | ''Why are you killing your kinsmen? |
3821 | ''Why do you tell us,''is said,''of nothing but the marriages, successions, wars, characters, of a few Royal Races? |
3821 | ( 1) Did they all go? |
3821 | ( 3) But were there not more causes than mere want, which sent them south? |
3821 | ( 4) But more, had they never heard of Rome? |
3821 | --the more inclined to ask,''Could it have been done better?'' |
3821 | 1688 after Christ? |
3821 | Am I not wiser, stronger, more virtuous, more beautiful than you? |
3821 | And all the fairy treasure-- what has become of it? |
3821 | And are we to suppose that the dialects did not alter during the long journeyings through many nations? |
3821 | And do we wonder if we are surpassed in power, by an enemy who surpasses us in decency? |
3821 | And how, pray, can we talk of the inevitable, in the face of that one miserable fact of human folly, whether of ignorance or of passion, folly still? |
3821 | And if such be the history of not one nation only, but of the average, how, I ask, are we to make calculations about such a species as man? |
3821 | And now, gentlemen, was this vast campaign fought without a general? |
3821 | And on the third day they came to the place which is called Hersfelt( the hart''s down? |
3821 | And that that was their answer to his three and thirty years of unexampled religious liberty? |
3821 | And what became of the masses all the while? |
3821 | And what had they gained by changing Dietrich for Justinian? |
3821 | And what was his end? |
3821 | And what was left? |
3821 | And what was the original sin of them? |
3821 | And who could that be, if not the Pope of Rome? |
3821 | And who was St. Boniface? |
3821 | And who were these Franks, the ancestors of that magnificent, but profligate aristocracy whose destruction our grandfathers beheld in 1793? |
3821 | And why did he enter into secret negotiations with the Franks to come and invade Italy? |
3821 | And why did not Hadrian''s wall keep them back? |
3821 | And why did the Teutons_ not_ do it? |
3821 | And why did these Goths perish, in spite of all their valour and patriotism, at the hands of mercenaries? |
3821 | And why should he not undertake this great task? |
3821 | And why when he died, did the Goths lose all plan, and wander wildly up Italy, and out into Spain? |
3821 | And why? |
3821 | And why? |
3821 | And why? |
3821 | Are they powerless? |
3821 | Are you aware that those who carelessly do so, blink the whole of the world- old arguments between necessity and free- will? |
3821 | As to Theodoric himself, Kingsley surely knew his real status, for he says:''Why did he not set himself up as Caesar of Rome? |
3821 | Be it so: but in what sense are the laws of matter inevitable? |
3821 | But has he not overstated his case on some points? |
3821 | But if they had not done what they did, where would have been now our gospel, and our Bible? |
3821 | But is the Frank''s perfidy as blameable as ours? |
3821 | But one would hardly blame them for that, surely? |
3821 | But were not these poor monks heroes? |
3821 | But what has this to do with what I said at first, as to the masses having no history? |
3821 | But what of the Christian who does the same? |
3821 | Can we devise any better method of doing it? |
3821 | Christ was coming to put an end to all these horrors: but why did he delay his coming? |
3821 | Could they see the saint, and make it up with him somewhat? |
3821 | Did he felicitate himself like a simple Teuton, on the wonderful learning and eloquence of his Greek- Roman secretary? |
3821 | Did no one marshal them in that impregnable convex front, from the Euxine to the North Sea? |
3821 | Do you not see it? |
3821 | Do you not see the effect of that new thought? |
3821 | Does not Dr. Latham''s theory proceed too much on an assumption that the Sclavonians dispossest the Teutons by force? |
3821 | Each envies the youth before him, each cries-- Why had I not the luck to enter first? |
3821 | Else why did he not set himself up as Caesar of Rome? |
3821 | Even in the seemingly most uniform and universal law, where do we find the inevitable or the irresistible? |
3821 | For no dates are given, and how can they be? |
3821 | For out of those monasteries sprang-- what did not spring? |
3821 | For what is all human invention, but the transcending and conquering one natural law by another? |
3821 | Had the peculiar restlessness of the race nothing to do with it? |
3821 | Had they destroyed Rome sooner, what would not they have lost? |
3821 | Has not Italy proved it likewise, for centuries past? |
3821 | Have they even been always a minority, and not at times a terrible majority, doing each that which was right in the sight of his own eyes? |
3821 | Have they had no influence on History? |
3821 | Have they spoilt it themselves? |
3821 | Have they thrown it away in their quarrel? |
3821 | He says that the letters in which he hoped for the liberty of Rome were forged; how could he hope for the impossible? |
3821 | Hold what natural science teaches? |
3821 | How can a man draw a picture of that which has no shape; or tell the order of absolute disorder? |
3821 | How had these things escaped the Goths forty years before? |
3821 | How is it that these liberties have been lost throughout almost all Europe? |
3821 | If a Hun or a Gepid deceives you, what wonder? |
3821 | If it was, why should not wisdom be justified of all her children? |
3821 | If so, may they not have commenced before the different Teutonic dialects were as distinct as they were in the historic period? |
3821 | If such were the morals of the Empire, what was its political state? |
3821 | If the Church derived her rights from the extinct Roman Caesars, how could the Teuton conquerors interfere with those rights? |
3821 | If the once populous Campagna of Rome be now uninhabitable from malaria, what must it have been in Paul Warnefrid''s time? |
3821 | If there was, as M. Thierry truly says, another nature struggling within him-- is there not such in every man? |
3821 | If these were the old Teutonic laws, this the old Teutonic liberty, the respect for man as man, for woman as woman, whence came the opposite element? |
3821 | In return, Agilwulf had restored the church- property which he had plundered, had reinstated the bishops; and why did not all go well? |
3821 | Is it a myth, a falsehood? |
3821 | Is it not a strange story? |
3821 | Is it not true? |
3821 | Is it possible that the Thervings and Grutungs could have retained the same tongue on the Danube, as their forefathers spoke in their native land? |
3821 | Is it the language of prophecy as well as of personal experience?'' |
3821 | Is the Alman''s drunkenness, or the Alan''s rapacity, as damnable as a Christian''s? |
3821 | Is there not in nature a perpetual competition of law against law, force against force, producing the most endless and unexpected variety of results? |
3821 | It is childish to repeat that, when the question is, was it right then-- or, at least, as right as was possible then? |
3821 | Justified of her children she may be, after we have settled which are to be her children and which not: but of all her children? |
3821 | King over them there in Italy? |
3821 | Many a gem which hangs now on an English lady''s wrist saw Alaric sack Rome-- and saw before and since-- What not? |
3821 | May I be permitted to enlarge somewhat on this topic? |
3821 | Must not that wild fighting Bertrand have gone away from that place a wiser and a better man? |
3821 | Native courage and strength? |
3821 | Need the migrations necessary for this theory have been of''unparalleled magnitude and rapidity''? |
3821 | No one guide them to the two great strategic centres, of the Black Forest and Trieste? |
3821 | One would not blame them as selfish and sordid if they had gone out on a commercial speculation? |
3821 | People began to question the virtues of the bones, and to ask, We can believe that the bones may have worked miracles for good men, but for bad men? |
3821 | Potentially, or actually? |
3821 | Rome taken? |
3821 | Should I have altered this? |
3821 | So it should be( or why was man created a rational being?) |
3821 | Taking one''s stand at Rome, and looking toward the north, what does one see for nearly one hundred years? |
3821 | The Bible was not forbidden to the laity till centuries afterwards-- and forbidden then, why? |
3821 | The Goths inside, tired of the slow Vitigis, send out to the great Belisarius, Will he be their king? |
3821 | The Ostrogoths( East- goths) lay from the Volga to the Borysthenes, the Visigoths( West- goths?) |
3821 | The crown of philosophy? |
3821 | The law of gravity is immutable enough: but do all stones inevitably fall to the ground? |
3821 | The more one studies the facts, the less one is inclined to ask,''Why was it not done better?'' |
3821 | Then, why should he have adopted this High- German name for the great Theodoric, and why should he speak of Attila too as Etzel? |
3821 | They can face flesh and blood: but who can face the quite infinite terrors of an unseen world? |
3821 | Unanimity? |
3821 | Was it needed then-- or, at least, the nearest thing to that which was needed? |
3821 | Was it not true? |
3821 | Was it that the awe of the place, the prestige of the Roman name, cowed him? |
3821 | Was not that wise? |
3821 | Was not the surplus population driven off by famine toward warmer and more hopeful climes? |
3821 | Was that not wise? |
3821 | Was that not wise? |
3821 | Was there a stain on Odoacer from his early connexion with Attila? |
3821 | Were there no causes sufficient to excite so desperate a resolve? |
3821 | Were they not doing the same in pre- historic times, by fits and starts, no doubt with periods of excitement, periods of collapse and rest? |
3821 | What better for them than to seek in convents that peace which this world could not give? |
3821 | What could a man do more meritorious in the eyes of the Pope? |
3821 | What did it all mean? |
3821 | What did they do but hand her over to Frankish tyrants instead? |
3821 | What had become of all the wealth of Rome? |
3821 | What is become, gentlemen, of the treasures of Rome? |
3821 | What matter to Burgunds and Herules who was who, provided they had any thing to be plundered of? |
3821 | What of all the pomp and glory, the spoils of the world, the millions of inhabitants? |
3821 | What put these Germanic peoples on going South? |
3821 | What terms would he take? |
3821 | What then were the causes of the Papal hatred of a race who were good and devout Catholics for the last 200 years of their rule? |
3821 | What then were the causes of the success of the Teutons? |
3821 | What was the essential fault of these Lombard laws-- indeed of all the Teutonic codes? |
3821 | What was there left for him now that he could not do? |
3821 | What will become of the forest children, unless some kind saint or hermit comes among them, to bind them in the holy bonds of brotherhood and law? |
3821 | What woke him from his dream? |
3821 | What would have been the fate of a force landed at the mouth of the Weser on the north, or at the mouth of the Dnieper at the west? |
3821 | What would not the world have lost? |
3821 | What, indeed, was not left to slaves? |
3821 | What, then, was the cause of their success? |
3821 | Where are they all now? |
3821 | Where could they find it, save at Rome? |
3821 | Where is all their wealth gone, they who set out to fight for you? |
3821 | Which was the child of wisdom, I ask again? |
3821 | Who can forget that funeral on the 28th Jan., 1875, and the large sad throng that gathered round his grave? |
3821 | Who can tell? |
3821 | Who can tell? |
3821 | Who could stand against them? |
3821 | Who will tell us why they have arisen when they did, and why they did what they did, and nothing else? |
3821 | Who would deny that man the name of saint? |
3821 | Why are these Lombards still the most wicked of men? |
3821 | Why did he always consider himself as son- in- arms, and quasi- vassal of the Caesar of Constantinople?'' |
3821 | Why did he always consider himself as son- in- arms, and quasi- vassal, of the Caesar of Constantinople? |
3821 | Why did he not set up as king of Italy? |
3821 | Why have you made so many widows? |
3821 | Why not? |
3821 | Why not? |
3821 | Why was Alaric more fortunate? |
3821 | Why, then, if on a religious one? |
3821 | Would not the Moeso- Gothic of Ulfilas have been all but unintelligible to the Goth who, upon the old theory, remained in Gothland of Sweden? |
3821 | Would not the end justify the means? |
3821 | Would not this theory agree at once tolerably with the old traditions and with Dr. Latham''s new facts? |
3821 | Would not those two facts( even the belief that they were facts) have been enough to drive many a wise man mad? |
3821 | You know the Nibelungen Lied? |
3821 | You know what an echellon means? |
3821 | You may ask, however, how these monasteries became so powerful, if they were merely refuges for the weak? |
3821 | You recollect Rosamund his Gepid bride? |
3821 | and that in spite of all their sins, the hosts of our forefathers were the hosts of God? |
3821 | contemporaneous), really''unrepresented in any tradition''? |
3821 | have the Trolls flown away with it, to the fairy land beyond the Eastern mountains? |
3821 | have the cunningest hidden it? |
3821 | of the men, slaves the greater part of them, if not all, who tilled the soil, and ground the corn-- for man must have eaten, then as now? |
3821 | or have the Trolls bewitched it? |
3821 | so utterly unlike anything which we see now;--so utterly unlike anything which we ought to see now? |
3821 | who can tell? |
3821 | { 109} Had he actually taken the name of Theodoric, Theuderic, Dietrich, which signifies much the same thing as''King of nations''? |
9488 | A ladder? |
9488 | Ah, love, is hanging, then, so sweet a death that I should choose it, rather than to die very peacefully in your arms? 9488 Ah, mistress, what news?--_And eke Sir Pellinore_.--Did I rage last night, Bardolph? |
9488 | Ah, my paladin, do you think I speak in pity? 9488 Ah, my sweet,"said he,"must I, whose grave is already digged, waste breath upon this idle talk of kingdoms and the squabbling men who rule them? |
9488 | Aha, so you think it not quite bad, eh, the conclusion of my_ Hero and Leander_? |
9488 | And Adeliza? |
9488 | And Arnaye--? |
9488 | And I wonder how much of these ardors,she thought,"is kindled by my praise of his verses?" |
9488 | And Mélite? |
9488 | And Ursula? |
9488 | And all our merry company? |
9488 | And are you sorry that I come again, in a worse body, John, strange and time- ruined? |
9488 | And do you not think so, mademoiselle? |
9488 | And does love change, Tiburce? 9488 And fools here-- and everywhere? |
9488 | And if the choice lay between Ursula and Katherine? |
9488 | And now that I am free to listen to your proposals, do you wish to marry me? |
9488 | And since one may sleep anywhere,I reasoned,"why not here?" |
9488 | And you for old memories''sake yet aid his widow? |
9488 | And you-- is it you that would enter into the Castle of Content? |
9488 | Are you Sir John? |
9488 | Are you come hither to seek that boy? |
9488 | Are you hurt so sorely, then? |
9488 | Be bold? |
9488 | Because I know that there are horses yonder? |
9488 | But do you in truth love Hugues? |
9488 | But how,asked Mélite,"was this lady fashioned that you commend so highly?--and how can you know of her beauty who have never seen her?" |
9488 | But what shall I do with Adelais? |
9488 | But what will you do now, my cousin? |
9488 | But, hey, young man, who are you that would seem to know my daughter so well? |
9488 | Dame Melicent? 9488 Dear Will,"said she,"if you have ever known aught of love, do you not understand how I love Stephen here?" |
9488 | Dear love,said Raoul,"do you not understand that you have brought about my death? |
9488 | Did I not say you knew nothing of love? |
9488 | Did I promise eternal fidelity? 9488 Did you carol, then, to the owls of Tiverton?" |
9488 | Do you not fear--? |
9488 | Do you not understand? |
9488 | Do you yet live at Winstead? |
9488 | Eh? |
9488 | Eh? |
9488 | Enné? |
9488 | Everywhere Death yawps at the frontier; will you, a d''Arnaye, bid him enter and surfeit? 9488 Fair friend, have you not bidden me--_be happy?_"He sighed. |
9488 | Florian, do you really love Adelaide de Nointel? |
9488 | For her? |
9488 | Friends, dame? |
9488 | Had you gladdened Greece, were not All the nymphs of Greece forgot? 9488 Has King Edward not sworn to hang you these eight years past? |
9488 | Has the world, think you, known lovers, long dead now, that were once as happy as we? |
9488 | Hey? |
9488 | How could it be possible, then, for me to live after you were dead? |
9488 | How should I know,she asked him,"as yet?" |
9488 | I wonder--? |
9488 | I would suggest,said the marquis,"that my name is Stephen;--but why, in the devil''s name, should you give up a quest so laudable?" |
9488 | Is Moll yet with you that did once carry our letters? |
9488 | Is it not the very puling speech of your true lover? |
9488 | Is love, then, nothing? |
9488 | Is this some jest to punish me, my dear? |
9488 | La, Mother,observed the stout lady,"but are you certain it was the last of April? |
9488 | Lord, Lord, what did I not write? |
9488 | Lord,Adelais quavered,"lord, have you killed him?" |
9488 | Mademoiselle,said Fulke d''Arnaye,"am I, indeed, so fortunate as to be of any service to you?" |
9488 | Madonna,I answered,"with whom else should the owls confer? |
9488 | Marian? 9488 Marry? |
9488 | My lord,I presently suggested,"it may be that your priest expects you?" |
9488 | My lord,said Adelais,"why will you not give your parole? |
9488 | She loved you? |
9488 | Sorry? |
9488 | Sweet,said Adhelmar,"do I not know you to the marrow? |
9488 | Tell me,said Florian then,"and is there no way in which we who are still alive may aid you to be happier yonder?" |
9488 | The boy that went mad and rhymed of you in those far- off dusty years? 9488 The match, then, is broken off, between you and the Lady Adeliza?" |
9488 | The son of old Sir Edward Falstaff, of Norfolk? |
9488 | The truth? |
9488 | The whip? |
9488 | There also be swords in the world, Master Mervale? |
9488 | Three, say you? |
9488 | To have you heal me, perchance? |
9488 | To- morrow--? |
9488 | Vanished? |
9488 | Was it Flint the mercer''s wife, think you? 9488 Well, and why should it matter to me if he does, after all that outrageous ranting? |
9488 | Were it not common kindness to tell him, since this old sleek fellow''s fine daughter is to we d the cuckoo that hath your nest? 9488 What do you care for my ideals? |
9488 | What harm have I done you? 9488 What is the name of this malady?" |
9488 | What lady? |
9488 | Why do you accost me thus angrily, Master Philippe? |
9488 | Why should I be afraid of you, Tiburce, who gave your life for mine? |
9488 | Why, look you,said the Frenchman,"what else may I conceivably do? |
9488 | Will I not? |
9488 | Will nothing move you? |
9488 | Will you never let that kite hang upon the wall? |
9488 | Will you not trust her to me? |
9488 | Yet is it the heart that cries to me, my poet? |
9488 | Yet, Master Mervale,pursued the marquis, equably, but without smiling,"there be lovers in the world that have eyes?" |
9488 | Yet,Master Mervale said, with courteous interest,"you did not marry?" |
9488 | Yet-- yet the milk was sweet, my lord? |
9488 | You are adamant? |
9488 | You are not sorry that I came? |
9488 | You gave me your name and I soiled it? 9488 You have heard of me?" |
9488 | You have kept them-- always? |
9488 | You have told him? |
9488 | You mentioned your maid''s name, I think? |
9488 | You said you had heard from her-- again? |
9488 | You will do this-- for me? |
9488 | You will save him? |
9488 | ***** 1905- 1919_"Tell me where is fancy bred Or in the heart or in the head? |
9488 | ***** MARCH 2, 1414"_ Jack, how agrees the devil and thee about thy soul, that thou soldest him for a cup of Madeira and a cold capon''s leg_?" |
9488 | A century hence what will he matter, this Pevensey? |
9488 | A wall!--and what is a wall to your true lover? |
9488 | And Adelais? |
9488 | And I told you that it was wrong to make such observations, did I not, mademoiselle? |
9488 | And I? |
9488 | And Phyllis? |
9488 | And Tom and little Osric? |
9488 | And all because a few pornographic old fellows thrust their ever- hopeful snouts into the man''s tenth( or was it eleventh or twelfth?) |
9488 | And shall I hazard her life''s happiness to get me a more comfortable sty? |
9488 | And was it I you were seeking, sir?" |
9488 | And while we speak of reappearances-- surely the Lady Ursula is strangely tardy in making hers?" |
9488 | And who knows if Guillaume de Villon, his foster- father, has one sou to rub against another? |
9488 | And why has it never bothered me? |
9488 | And with me?" |
9488 | And yet, what must I reasonably expect in marrying, sir, the famous Earl of Pevensey?" |
9488 | And you--""I would not have known you,"said Sir John; then asked, almost resentfully,"What do you here?" |
9488 | Are mine eyes too red? |
9488 | Are those tiny hands with which this child may not yet feed himself capable to wield a sceptre? |
9488 | Are those wondrous eyes not fashioned to surfeit themselves upon the homage and respect accorded the wife of a great lord? |
9488 | Are we friends, Master Mervale?" |
9488 | But are you not afraid of me who come from yonder?" |
9488 | But with me it is different, hein? |
9488 | But you do not object, mademoiselle?" |
9488 | But, ah, why fuddle that quaint little brain by trying to understand such matters as lie without your realm? |
9488 | Can I leave you here alone in this so tall forest? |
9488 | Can he who is yet beholden to nurses for milk distribute sustenance to the law and justice of a nation? |
9488 | Can his son hold that dear realm? |
9488 | Captain Gotiard,"he called, loudly,"will you ascertain who it is that warbles in the garden such queer aliases for our good Alys?" |
9488 | Could he have made a worthier choice? |
9488 | Do you not believe that I love you, Adelais?" |
9488 | Do you understand me, my lord?" |
9488 | Do you want money? |
9488 | For I did not know-- I could not know--""And now?" |
9488 | For example, do you think I wedded my late wife in any fervor of adoration? |
9488 | For, frankly, my niece, is not that golden hair of a shade that will set off a coronet extraordinarily well? |
9488 | François is inoffensive enough, I dare assert, but what does Catherine see in him? |
9488 | Hast thou no more to afford,-- Naught save laughter and tears,-- Love, my lord? |
9488 | Hast thou no more to give, Love, my lord? |
9488 | Have I carracks trading in the Indies? |
9488 | Have I no better cloak than this?" |
9488 | Have I robbed the exchequer of late? |
9488 | Have I the Golden Fleece for a cloak? |
9488 | Have you anything to eat? |
9488 | Have you forgotten, then, the lank, awkward child who used to stare at you so gravely?" |
9488 | He said,"You will be secret?" |
9488 | Heard you naught else?" |
9488 | Ho, death of my life, what is François? |
9488 | How begot, how nourished?... |
9488 | How old are you?" |
9488 | How, then, should Reinault hesitate between them? |
9488 | However,"It would surely be indelicate,"the marquis suggested,"to allow even truth to appear quite unclothed in the presence of a lady?" |
9488 | I did not kill him-- no!--but I wounded him, you conceive? |
9488 | I said,"And who is this new kinsman?" |
9488 | I said,"Eh, woman, and have you no heart?" |
9488 | I said,"Why have you done this?" |
9488 | I said:"Madonna, earlier in this crowded night, you told me of love''s nature: must my halting commentary prove the glose upon your text? |
9488 | Is he dead, too, dead in another gutter?" |
9488 | Is that his blood upon your sleeve?" |
9488 | Is the old rascal still living? |
9488 | Is there no way to save you, Adhelmar?" |
9488 | Is this your innocence, Mistress Ursula, that can not endure the spoken name of a spade? |
9488 | It is a good sword, this,--a sharp sword, is it not? |
9488 | Let me see now, Sylvie, how old is your brother Richard? |
9488 | May one inquire, therefore, why you outsing my larks and linnets and other musical poultry that are now all abed? |
9488 | Mélite wept again, and cried,"Why had you not told me of this?" |
9488 | Nay, have proud long- dead kings Stricken no subtler chord, Whereof the memory clings, Love, my lord? |
9488 | Now she asked him, very quietly,"Where are you going, Kit?" |
9488 | Oh, thought Adhelmar, were it not very easy to leave Hugues to the dog''s death he merits and to take this woman for my own? |
9488 | Or, say Phyllis comes to- morrow: will an uninventive sun dare to rise in the old, hackneyed fashion on such a day of days? |
9488 | Perhaps-- he, he!--perhaps Ysabeau de Montigny might inform us, you say? |
9488 | Read Sir John:"_ Have pity, Sylvia? |
9488 | Said Mélite,"Was this Lady Venus, then, exceedingly beautiful?" |
9488 | Sang Fulke d''Arnaye:_"Had you lived when earth was new What had bards of old to do Save to sing in praise of you? |
9488 | Sang I:_"Through the mist of years does it gleam as yet-- That fair and free extent Of moonlit turret and parapet, Which castled, once, Content? |
9488 | Sang the voice:_"Had you lived when earth was new What had bards of old to do Save to sing in praise of you? |
9488 | She said,"Is it you, Will Sommers?" |
9488 | Sweetheart, do you not understand that a woman wants to be loved utterly and entirely? |
9488 | That is very flattering, is it not? |
9488 | The fool sighs for a fair woman,--what else should he do, being a fool? |
9488 | Then,"My lord, you have known of love,"said he, very slowly;"does there survive no kindliness for aspiring lovers in you who have been one of us? |
9488 | There be purgatory and Heaven, and yet another place, Master Mervale; why, then, crowd one another?" |
9488 | Though, again, why not? |
9488 | Three, say you? |
9488 | Three, say you? |
9488 | Three, say you? |
9488 | Was I a Bedlamite?" |
9488 | Was there ever a sweeter juxtaposition of sounds? |
9488 | We are some miles from your home, most beautiful lady,--can you ride those four long miles alone? |
9488 | We live and learn, is it not? |
9488 | Were one hour alone remaining Would ye spend it in attaining Learning, or to lips like these? |
9488 | What are we to do with this resurrected old lover of mine?" |
9488 | What better death for a lover? |
9488 | What bones, pray, did the Sieur Pyramus, that ill- starred Babylonish knight, make of a wall? |
9488 | What do they call you when you are at home?" |
9488 | What do you care for the ideals of that tall earl whom for a fortnight you have held from his proper business? |
9488 | What do you know of love?" |
9488 | What do you think of him, lass?" |
9488 | What is your will of me?" |
9488 | What need, then, have I to live?" |
9488 | What shall I do with him? |
9488 | What was that you were telling me about the priest with six hundred crowns in his cupboard?" |
9488 | Who are we to question this, when nine- tenths of us owe our existence to a summer flirtation? |
9488 | Who really cares to- day about what scratches were made upon wax by that old Euripides, the latchet of whose sandals I am not worthy to unloose? |
9488 | Why do you stare so, lass? |
9488 | Why has she not taken Noël d''Arnaye,--Noël the Handsome? |
9488 | Why should a man not love his cousin?" |
9488 | Why was my beard not combed this morning? |
9488 | Why, but what, he reflected, grimacing-- what if he had too hastily married somebody else? |
9488 | Why, do you not see, George, even now, that your wife will always come second to your real love?" |
9488 | Why, does this knavish watchman take me for a raven to feed him in the wilderness? |
9488 | Will he-- your husband that may be-- prove less susceptible, we will say, than I? |
9488 | Will you not mount, mademoiselle?" |
9488 | Yet to do this is not expedient, since any such attempt could not but revive the question as to whose son was Florian de Puysange? |
9488 | You will not promise? |
9488 | Your voice is very sweet, Catherine, and-- and he could refuse you nothing, could he, lass? |
9488 | _ Love Rises from un- Cytherean Waters_"I have heard, Master Mervale,"said the marquis, gently,"that love is blind?" |
9488 | _"Tantaene irae? |
9488 | and for what reason did you burn it, may one ask?" |
9488 | and how much must I humor him in his foolishness?" |
9488 | and warble them to rest with this pleasing but-- if I may venture a suggestion-- rather ill- timed madrigal?" |
9488 | and was it he that had the impudence to send you to me?" |
9488 | cried Sir John, testily; and continued, in a virtuous manner:"Was not the apostle reproved for that same sin? |
9488 | did not his protestations slip through a chink, mocking at implacable granite and more implacable fathers? |
9488 | for does even that very greatly matter? |
9488 | growled Gilles;"have you, then, no respect for churchmen?" |
9488 | had not even you the wit to perceive it was immortal beauty which would have lived long after you and I were stinking dirt? |
9488 | he cried, in his agony;"why can you not believe me? |
9488 | how dare you show your face here? |
9488 | if Love distemper thus the spectral ichor of the gods, is it remarkable that the warmer blood of man pulses rather vehemently at his bidding? |
9488 | in this night so dangerous? |
9488 | or for the ideals of any man alive? |
9488 | said Roger, in a flattish tone;"what was that?" |
9488 | said he,"what do you mean?" |
9488 | said she;"another swine fresh from the gutter? |
9488 | said the marquis;"I fought in Flanders somewhat-- in Spain-- what matter where? |
9488 | she asked him, softly,"or just the lips?" |
9488 | she said, oddly:"and are you talking of a rope ladder?" |
9488 | the marquis cried, and clasped his sides in noisy mirth;"was there no other way to cool your courage? |
9488 | what is a theft or two? |
9488 | why should I not? |
9488 | will you flee to England, then?" |
37848 | Are you Christians,said the holy man,"or heathens?" |
37848 | But if any one knoweth not how to rule over his own house, how shall he employ his care over the church of God? |
37848 | Have not I left all things to your disposal? |
37848 | My father,said she,"is there any daughter that can love her father more than duty requires? |
37848 | What is your name? |
37848 | Who,said the boy,"instructed you to do this?" |
37848 | Ye are,saith he,"the salt of the earth; if that the salt vanisheth away, wherein shall it be salted? |
37848 | --"Who can advise you in this matter,"said Ulfin,"when no force will enable us to have access to her in the town of Tintagel? |
37848 | A sword of fire is sent out against you, and who is he that shall restrain it? |
37848 | After seven years, Ceawlin and Cutha fought against the Britons, at a place called Fethanleage[ Frethern? |
37848 | And a little after,"Why hast thou looked upon mine incense, and upon my sacrifice, with a dishonest eye? |
37848 | And a little after:"What is the matter that my beloved hath in my houses committed many offences? |
37848 | And after a few words:"Who shall have pity on thee Jerusalem, or who shall be sorrowful for thee, or who shall pray for thy peace? |
37848 | And after some few speeches,"Whoso falleth doth he not arise again, and whoso is turned away, shall he not return again? |
37848 | And afterwards,"And the angel asked me, what dost thou see? |
37848 | And afterwards,"Why will ye contend with me in judgment? |
37848 | And again,"Behold our Lord of hosts will come, and who can conceive the day of his coming, and who shall endure to stand to behold him? |
37848 | And choirs of virgins celebrate thy praise? |
37848 | And how do ye fulfil that which followeth:"Behold I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves?" |
37848 | And indeed, should you refuse him, what right could you plead to the crown of Britain against him? |
37848 | And now what one of the aforesaid sort hath indeed been void of all these? |
37848 | And shall we Christians be worse than the Jews, in refusing them mercy? |
37848 | And therefore what holy man is there, who, moved with the narration of such a history, would not presently break out into weeping and lamentations? |
37848 | And thus complaining, he begins his prophecy:"How long, O Lord, shall I call, and thou wilt not hear? |
37848 | And what did he commit, whether it were adultery or murder, like to the offences of the present time? |
37848 | And what shall adorn the city? |
37848 | And what shall then become of you, who, as the prophet hath said, believe God only with your lips, and do not adhere to him with your hearts? |
37848 | And which of ye hath willingly fulfilled that which next ensueth? |
37848 | And who hath known us? |
37848 | And who would not prefer the possession of a lesser country with liberty, to all the riches of that island in servitude? |
37848 | And,"If the just indeed be hardly saved, where shall the wicked and sinner appear?" |
37848 | Are not men in the course of human generation often the reverse of one another? |
37848 | Are there not also at this time many countries and cities bearing the same names as they did two or three thousand years ago? |
37848 | As for what you complain of,--that you were banished your country by him,--if you duly consider the result, in strictness can it be called injustice? |
37848 | Because you were only the common people at the time when we had soldiers of our own, do you therefore think that manhood has quite forsaken you? |
37848 | Berin- byrig, Banbury? |
37848 | Britain has rulers, and she has watchmen: why dost thou incline thyself thus uselessly to prate?" |
37848 | But how shall it be, where neither the father, nor the son, depraved by the example of his evil parent, is found to be chaste? |
37848 | But let us pass over to that which followeth to this effect:"What shall we therefore say, shall we continue still in sin that grace may abound? |
37848 | But tell me now, what is there under the foundation? |
37848 | But what can he do, if he can not save himself or escape thence? |
37848 | But why do we dwell in examples of the Old Testament as if there were none in the New? |
37848 | But why doth our meanness intermeddle in this so manifest a determination? |
37848 | But why should I say more? |
37848 | Cair gurcoc(_ Anglesey?_) 4. |
37848 | Can not those same poisonous cups of offences yet satisfy thy stomach? |
37848 | Cittanford( Ottanford?) |
37848 | Conan made answer:"Why is he then attended with so great a multitude? |
37848 | Dic certam sedem qua te venerabor in ævum, Qua tibi virgineis templa dicabo choris?" |
37848 | Do I with my will voluntarily wish the death of the unrighteous, saith our Lord, rather than that he should return from his evil way and live? |
37848 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
37848 | Do not such narratives exhibit proofs of Divine Providence? |
37848 | Do not you, therefore, think that we ought to demand tribute of the Romans? |
37848 | Does he desire to be reconciled and make his submission to Cæsar, of whom Cæsar himself had before desired peace? |
37848 | Does my lord then condescend to entreat me now, whom before he took upon him to command? |
37848 | Does not the same diversity happen in a mechanic and a soldier? |
37848 | Doth God, therefore, not behold the works of the wicked? |
37848 | Doth the virgin forget her ornament, or the spouse her gorget? |
37848 | For what does the scripture afterwards declare of his son? |
37848 | For what prince is to be compared with the king of Britain, either for brave and gallant soldiers, or for large treasures? |
37848 | For what room could there be for suspicion, when Gorlois himself seemed to be there present? |
37848 | For what wise man will resist the wholesome counsel of God? |
37848 | For who can doubt that they who, as conquerors of the world, were at liberty to choose, did not select places fitted for their purposes? |
37848 | For who less than he could have released from their chains the banished Trojans, when reduced under slavery to so many great princes? |
37848 | For who was present in the counsel of our Lord, and hath seen and heard his speech, who hath considered of his word, and hearkened thereunto? |
37848 | For why shall their countrymen conceal what foreign nations round about now not only know, but also continually are casting in their teeth? |
37848 | God forbid, for we who are dead to sin, how shall we again live in the same?" |
37848 | God will threaten all, and who will not be terrified? |
37848 | Have these base exiles made a camp also in my kingdom? |
37848 | Hear likewise what he speaketh unto the Ephesians; and consider if ye find not your consciences attainted as culpable of this that followeth? |
37848 | How art thou therefore converted into naughtiness? |
37848 | How shall the old leaven, which is sin, be purged away, that from day to day with your uttermost endeavours is increased? |
37848 | If I shall but live to see that day, how sweet will be the wounds which I shall then either receive or give? |
37848 | If ye set and apply what is lame or languishing, is it not evil? |
37848 | In the dispute, Dabutius said to Merlin:"You fool, do you presume to quarrel with me? |
37848 | In the eighth year there was a great slaughter on both sides, at a place called Wodnesbyrg[ Wemborow? |
37848 | Is not a ploughman often the father of a soldier, and a soldier of a ploughman? |
37848 | Is then every honest gratification forbidden? |
37848 | Is there any equality in our birth? |
37848 | Is this a fit reward for my services? |
37848 | Know ye not that a little leaven corrupteth the whole mass? |
37848 | Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you? |
37848 | Must your hopes, therefore, always depend upon foreign assistance? |
37848 | Of the daily embassies sent to him by foreign nations, from the Tyrrhenian sea to the farthest end of Ireland? |
37848 | Of what service are these things, but to delude the world with unmeaning trifles? |
37848 | On whom truly shall I cast mine eye, but on the humble poor man, and the contrite in spirit, and him that dreadeth my speeches? |
37848 | Or how have ye observed this that followeth? |
37848 | Or who hath respected this that followeth? |
37848 | Revolve in your minds which of these ye have performed? |
37848 | Shall I cry out unto thee, to what end hast thou given me labours and griefs, to behold misery and impiety?" |
37848 | Shall I ever again see the day when I may be able to reward those according to their deserts who have forsaken me in my distress? |
37848 | Shall I receive the same at your hands, saith our Lord? |
37848 | Shall not fire? |
37848 | Shall there fail from the rock of the field, the snow of Libanus? |
37848 | Some persons have written concerning these Hebudes, that during winter darkness continues for the space of thirty days? |
37848 | Stemrugam, Stonehenge? |
37848 | The boy, going on with his questions, asked the wise men what was in it? |
37848 | The priests have not said, Where is our Lord? |
37848 | The same, four years afterwards, fought with Ceawlin against the Britons, near a place called Berin- byrig[ Banbury?] |
37848 | Then St. Germanus, addressing him, said,"Dost thou believe in the Holy Trinity?" |
37848 | Then the boy said to the king,"Why have your servants brought me hither?" |
37848 | Then the holy man, lifting up his eyes, replied,"What man, when there are stones at hand, lays a foundation with reeds?" |
37848 | There is none who repenteth of his sin, saying, What have I done? |
37848 | This question may be answered by another: Where are now the Assyrians, Parthians, Sarmatians, Celtiberians? |
37848 | Thus therefore saith our Lord, Ask the Gentiles, who hath heard such horrible matters, which the virgin Israel hath too often committed? |
37848 | To whom shall I speak and make protestation that he may hear me? |
37848 | Upon his urging me to make haste and write it quickly, I said to him,"Are you willing that I should write that quotation on some leaf apart? |
37848 | Upon this, the messengers diligently inquired of the mother and the other boys, whether he had had a father? |
37848 | Vortigern inquired of his wise men the cause of this opposition to his undertaking, and of so much useless expense of labour? |
37848 | Was ever the like folly heard of? |
37848 | What are the stones of Ireland better than those of Britain, that our kingdom must be put to this disturbance for them? |
37848 | What are you doing?" |
37848 | What dost thou also, thou lion''s whelp( as the prophet saith), Aurelius Conanus? |
37848 | What faith ought we to keep with them? |
37848 | What further service do I owe you? |
37848 | What happened to David for numbering his people, when the prophet Gad spake unto him in this sort? |
37848 | What has he then done, but raised you from a vassal to be a king? |
37848 | What is this house that ye will erect unto me, and what place shall be found for my resting- place? |
37848 | What more is there to be done than that he make his submission and pay tribute to the Roman state?" |
37848 | What need many words? |
37848 | What one of you( I pray you) doth not seek the field of the reward of iniquity? |
37848 | What shall I say of his repeated expeditions against the pagans, his wars, and incessant occupations of government? |
37848 | What shall I say of the cities and towns which he restored, and of others which he built, where none had been before? |
37848 | What therefore shall be done in her last and final ends? |
37848 | What, hath not one God created us? |
37848 | What, is there not one Father of us all? |
37848 | Where shall we next thy lasting temples raise? |
37848 | Which of you, like James the brother of John, has by the unjust prince been beheaded? |
37848 | Which one of you, I pray, hath with his whole mind so pursued sanctity, that he hath earnestly hastened, as much as in him lay, to fulfil the same? |
37848 | Who else could have encouraged them to make head against the Greeks? |
37848 | Who is he that like Joseph, hath rooted out of his heart the remembrance of an offered injury? |
37848 | Who is so fit to succeed as he? |
37848 | Who shall give water unto my head, and to mine eyes a fountain of tears, and I will day and night bewail the slaughtered of my people? |
37848 | Why do not we kill him, that Vortigern may enjoy his crown? |
37848 | Why do ye break in pieces my people, and grind the faces of the poor? |
37848 | Why do you behold these things with the sleepy eyes of your souls? |
37848 | Why do you delay to restore us to our native country? |
37848 | Why dost thou wilfully heap like a mountain, upon thy kingly shoulders, such a load of sins? |
37848 | Why dost thou wilfully kindle against thyself the eternal fires of hell? |
37848 | Why dost thou, in place of enemies, desperately stab thyself with thine own sword, with thine own javelin? |
37848 | Why standest thou astonished, O thou butcher of thine own soul? |
37848 | Why therefore doth every one despise his brother?" |
37848 | Why therefore is not the wound of the daughter of my people healed? |
37848 | Will you suffer these effeminate wretches to escape? |
37848 | Woe be unto you that are profound in heart, to conceal counsel from our Lord, whose works are in darkness, and they say, who seeth us? |
37848 | [ 238] Why will ye still inquire, adding iniquity? |
37848 | [ 628]"Where,"asks he,"are the vestiges of those cities and names which you commemorate? |
37848 | and fire will pass forth from out of his wrath, and who shall extinguish it? |
37848 | and hast honoured thy children more than me, that thou mightest bless them from the beginning in all sacrifices in my presence? |
37848 | and the house of the wicked hoarding up unjust treasures, and with injury unrighteousness? |
37848 | and thou who killest, shalt not thyself be killed? |
37848 | asked the king;"I am called Ambrose( in British Embresguletic),"returned the boy; and in answer to the king''s question,"What is your origin?" |
37848 | do so many thousands of you fly one man? |
37848 | expect from such belly beasts? |
37848 | in offering on mine altar polluted bread: and ye have said, Wherein have we polluted it? |
37848 | it shall brandishing shine, and who will not fear it? |
37848 | it shall thunder, and who will not shake with dread? |
37848 | of the royal halls and chambers, wonderfully erected by his command, with stone and wood? |
37848 | of the royal vills constructed of stone, removed from their old site, and handsomely rebuilt by the king''s command in more fitting places? |
37848 | or by what art can he remain there and improve his cause? |
37848 | or can the waters be drawn dry that gush out cold and flowing? |
37848 | or how dost thou say to thy brother, suffer me to cast the mote out of thine eye, and behold the beam remaineth still in thine own eye?" |
37848 | or shall any one quench out the fire when the straw is burning? |
37848 | or shall not my soul be revenged upon such a nation?" |
37848 | or with so small a body of men vanquished so numerous and powerful an army, and taken their king prisoner in the engagement? |
37848 | our Lord God will send out evils, and who is he that shall repress them? |
37848 | shall I not visit these men, saith our Lord? |
37848 | shall any man repulse a lion that hungereth in the wood? |
37848 | shall the holy flesh take away thy maliciousness from thee, wherein thou hast glorified? |
37848 | unfold our fate, And say what region is our destined seat? |
37848 | when shall it be lawful for my carcass to enjoy them? |
37848 | when shall they be let loose at me? |
37848 | when shall those beasts come the workers of my salvation, which are for me prepared? |
37848 | whither fly ye, base wretches? |
37848 | who shall live( as a certain one before us hath said) when such things are done by our countrymen, if perchance they may be any where accomplished? |
37848 | who will grant me in the wilderness the inn of passengers? |
37848 | why did you ever advance me to an unstable felicity, since the punishment of lost happiness is greater than the sense of present misery? |
37848 | why do you hearken unto them with the deaf ears of your senses? |
37848 | why therefore hath my people said, we have departed, we will come no more unto thee? |
37848 | why therefore is this people in Jerusalem, with a contentious aversion alienated? |
37848 | will our Lord have burnt offerings or oblations, and not rather that the voice of our Lord should be obeyed? |
8771 | A good morning to you, madame,says Jurgen,"and whither are you going?" |
8771 | Ah, but, godmother, would it be quite just for you to accord me so much more than is granted to other persons? |
8771 | Ah, then you are not happy with your husband, Sylvia? 8771 Am I to be confronted with every pound of tender flesh I have embraced? |
8771 | And are you happy here? |
8771 | And did you ever hear of a satyr going indoors? |
8771 | And do you never move? |
8771 | And do you really think, Jurgen, that I am going to explain to you why I made things as they are? |
8771 | And do you think of that tow- headed bean- pole very often, King Jurgen? |
8771 | And does that make so great a difference? |
8771 | And for what reason? |
8771 | And how can that be? |
8771 | And how does a king come thus to be traveling without any retinue or even a sword about him? |
8771 | And how should I know whether or not I speak the truth? |
8771 | And in what way could Koshchei juggle so with time? |
8771 | And is the Queen as fair as people report? |
8771 | And is the road to this garden roundabout? |
8771 | And must you be trying, while I die, to get your grieving for me into the right words? |
8771 | And was that Dorothy whom I loved in youth an imaginary creature? |
8771 | And what becomes of these timid persons, Centaur? |
8771 | And what do you do here, grandmother? |
8771 | And what does that mean? |
8771 | And what have you to say about her? |
8771 | And what is this Cocaigne? |
8771 | And what is this thing that I desire? |
8771 | And what thing is this which I desire? 8771 And what was that thing, Sylvia?" |
8771 | And what will you do now? |
8771 | And what will you do with all this money, Rudolph? |
8771 | And what, madame, can they be? |
8771 | And what, pray, is this ceremonial? |
8771 | And where, did you say, is this palace? |
8771 | And why do you call me a prince, Jurgen? |
8771 | And why do you do these things year in and year out? |
8771 | And why is pride impossible to Koshchei? |
8771 | And why must I assist you? |
8771 | And why, pray? |
8771 | And will your majesty talk politics again? |
8771 | But certainly I heard somebody approaching through the forest--"Well, and do you not perceive I have withdrawn my staff from its hiding- place? |
8771 | But do you not ride with them to London? |
8771 | But do you not understand? |
8771 | But have you any reason to blame me? 8771 But how am I to make a choice without having seen any of these countries? |
8771 | But how are you to use it, pray? |
8771 | But how can that be, Prince? |
8771 | But how can you and I be kin? |
8771 | But how could that be done? |
8771 | But how may I come to him, grandmother? |
8771 | But how, madame, did you happen to become a vampire if the life does not please you? 8771 But is it magic? |
8771 | But is not Queen Helen the loveliest of ladies that you have ever seen? |
8771 | But is not cleverness the main thing, sir? |
8771 | But of what are you thinking so intently? |
8771 | But stay,said Koshchei:"what is that which comes into this woman''s eyes as she speaks of her children?" |
8771 | But what has he decided about you, Jurgen? |
8771 | But what have I to do with the Moon? |
8771 | But what is on that bit of parchment? |
8771 | But wherefore is this place called the Hell of my fathers? |
8771 | But why is love impossible to Koshchei? |
8771 | But, darling, are you not just the least, littlest, tiniest, very weest trifle bigoted? 8771 Did I create this love?" |
8771 | Did I not say this place was not in touch with new ideas? |
8771 | Did you note that? 8771 Do you care about me, one way or the other, then?" |
8771 | Do you know what I have come for? |
8771 | Do you mean that, King Jurgen? |
8771 | Do you really think so? |
8771 | Do you think so? |
8771 | Do you think this is reputable conduct, King? |
8771 | Do you think you could persuade them to go elsewhere? 8771 Do you think,"says Jurgen, about to unlace his antagonist''s helmet,"that this is Thragnar?" |
8771 | Eh? |
8771 | Eh? |
8771 | Hah, and what have we to do with that? |
8771 | Has this woman died, then? |
8771 | Hast thou the marmaritin, Tib? |
8771 | Heyday, and did it not lead to the eternal glory of the first and greatest of the popes? 8771 How can any of us know anything? |
8771 | How can any of us know anything? 8771 How can that be?" |
8771 | How could there be any pretty women in this horrible place? 8771 How do I know that?" |
8771 | How do you know? 8771 How is that shown, Messire de Logreus?" |
8771 | How long, then, must I remain here? |
8771 | How many feet had the first wearer of your shirt? 8771 How should I know you when I never saw you before?" |
8771 | How should I know, since I am but the illusion of an old woman, as you have so frequently proved by logic? 8771 How then can you be the leaders of Philistia?" |
8771 | How then, sir, would you have me deal with everybody? |
8771 | I suppose you already have your eyes upon some minx or other? |
8771 | I understand,says Jurgen:"but has no other person ever perceived this shadow of yours?" |
8771 | In the Hell of your fathers? 8771 Is it any more preposterous than to travel with an imaginary creature like a centaur?" |
8771 | Is not that customary when age talks with youth? 8771 It must depend entirely upon what your father thinks about it--""But what has he to do with it?" |
8771 | May I speak with you a moment? |
8771 | My Lord Bishop,says Jurgen, simply,"can you tell me the truth about this Christ?" |
8771 | My dear,says her husband, as he rejoined her,"and who was the young gentleman?" |
8771 | My friend, do you forget the poet that you might be, even yet? 8771 My own sweetheart,"says she,"and do we not know very well what is to happen?" |
8771 | No doubt: but then why should I explain it to you, Jurgen? |
8771 | Now answer me this, Dame Anaïtis: were you not visited by two ghosts to- night? |
8771 | Now, but what else was I to do? |
8771 | Now, who may you be, that come to us alive, in a fine shirt of which we never saw the like before? |
8771 | Oh, sir, and is this a place wherein to talk about mere earthly dignities? 8771 Oh, sir, and must you still be finding fault with mother?" |
8771 | See here, Prince, are you beginning all over again? 8771 Sir,"says Jurgen, astounded,"do you read people''s inmost thoughts?" |
8771 | That vexed you, did it not? 8771 Then why do you complain because I piously emulate the Gods, and offer unto Love the sincerest form of flattery?" |
8771 | They will tumble apart without anyone having to touch them, and then what becomes of your crucifix? |
8771 | Two months it was that we played at intimacy, was it not, Félise? 8771 Was he? |
8771 | Was it for that reason you did not praise Pandelis and her Mondays with the other Léshy? |
8771 | Well, and was there ever a flaw in my logic? |
8771 | Well, and was there ever such a treasury as the Library of Cocaigne? 8771 Well, and what could anybody expect me to do about it? |
8771 | Well, friend, and whither are you going? |
8771 | Well, now I wonder what did the priest say to your bold shadow? |
8771 | Were you the animal, then,says Jurgen,"and was it a quite ordinary animal, that conveyed me to the garden between dawn and sunrise?" |
8771 | What do you call me? 8771 What do you plan, Messire de Logreus?" |
8771 | What else would you expect when the Master''s teachings are being flouted? 8771 What is art to me and my way of living?" |
8771 | What is pride? 8771 What is that to you, Duke Jurgen, since you and I are still in the warm flesh? |
8771 | What is the meaning of this insane country? |
8771 | What makes you sure of that? |
8771 | What man would ever have thought of that? |
8771 | What sort of breakage, sir? |
8771 | What will become of you? |
8771 | What, Jurgen, and would you look for justice, of all places, in Heaven? |
8771 | What, can it be that you are remorseful? |
8771 | What, do you mean Praxagoras of Cos? |
8771 | Where is that? |
8771 | Which of those minxes has been making up to you? |
8771 | Who are you, and why do you thank me? |
8771 | Who could expect it of a clever fellow, who sees so clearly through the illusions of old women? |
8771 | Who could have expected such a monstrous clever fellow ever to envy the illusions of old women? |
8771 | Who is that? |
8771 | Why are you fumbling in your pocket? |
8771 | Why are you telling us of these irrelevant matters? |
8771 | Why do you keep contradicting me? |
8771 | Why is it, then, that I am not content? |
8771 | Why should I tell you, Jurgen? 8771 Why, I wonder if everything is right, in a way? |
8771 | Why, and will there be any love- making, do you think, in Hell? |
8771 | Why, but do you not remember, too, that I ran away in the night when Maugis d''Aigremont stormed Storisende? 8771 Why, heyday, and was I not born upon a Wednesday? |
8771 | Why, no: but what have I to do with justice? 8771 Why, what could anybody possibly expect me to do about it? |
8771 | Why, what does it matter? 8771 Will you go with me, Jurgen?" |
8771 | Yes, Jurgen? |
8771 | Yes, but what do you think? |
8771 | Yes, but why not stop occasionally? |
8771 | Yes, certainly, Silenus: but how will this war end? |
8771 | Yes, sir,said Jurgen:"but, still, what does it matter if you did?" |
8771 | Yet am not I a monstrous clever fellow,he would console himself,"to take them all in so completely? |
8771 | Yet how may I be sure,thought Jurgen, instantly,"that this black gentleman was really Koshchei? |
8771 | You are wearing yourself out, my darling,Jurgen would say:"and does it not seem, after all, a game that is hardly worth the candle? |
8771 | You do not even wish to be tortured? |
8771 | You do not know me, then? |
8771 | You have worn this for some time, I understand,said Koshchei, meditatively:"and did you ever notice any inconvenience in wearing this garment?" |
8771 | You mean that you judge all affairs by feeling rather than reason? 8771 You mean, nobody ever leaves this island?" |
8771 | You would chop off an arm? 8771 Your conscience, then, does not demand that you be punished?" |
8771 | --and Jurgen shrugged here--"well, and what could I be expected to do about it?" |
8771 | Ah, but how will you recognize Koshchei? |
8771 | Ah, but why bother about them? |
8771 | And I cry aloud, in the immortal words of Apollonius Myronides--""Of whom?" |
8771 | And I wonder if it was Thragnar''s head I removed in the black and silver pavilion? |
8771 | And I wonder, too, if he left it here a year ago or only this evening? |
8771 | And am I not to use them, to requite King Smoit for the injustice he did poor Ludwig? |
8771 | And besides, what call have you and I to be bothering over the pranks of common mariners, so long as they do their proper duty?" |
8771 | And do my own grandfathers, and all the forefathers that I had in the old time, inhabit this gray place?" |
8771 | And finally, when it came to serving women, what sort of service did women most cordially appreciate? |
8771 | And how do you get on with her?" |
8771 | And how, Jurgen, did you become an emperor?" |
8771 | And is there anything"--Jurgen coughed delicately--"and is there anything to pay, sir?" |
8771 | And it was as in a dream that Jurgen was speaking,_"Who are you, and why do you thank me? |
8771 | And it was signed,"Thragnar R.""I wonder now for whom King Thragnar left this notice?" |
8771 | And of what is your majesty thinking?" |
8771 | And so why not be happy while we may? |
8771 | And sometimes I have wondered--? |
8771 | And then Jurgen wondered how he would be despatched into the Hell of his fathers? |
8771 | And this one is, I think, the little Jewess I purchased from Hassan Bey in Sidon, but how can one be sure? |
8771 | And what becomes of the great principle of papal infallibility when a pope admits to a mistake in elementary arithmetic? |
8771 | And what is Jurgen, that his knowing or his not knowing should matter to anybody?" |
8771 | And what is Jurgen, that his knowing or his not knowing should matter to anybody?" |
8771 | And what is it that they call you?" |
8771 | And while I think of it, I wonder now if any of you gentlemen can give me news of that Lisa who used to be my wife?" |
8771 | And whom shall I be thanking for his kindness, now?" |
8771 | And why need you continue seeking your wife''s society when it is so much pleasanter living in Hell?" |
8771 | Are you content to endure this interrogatory, my spruce young fellow who wear the shirt of a king?" |
8771 | Besides, if she were perfect in everything, how could I live any longer, who would have no more to desire? |
8771 | Besides, what does all his flimsy sophistry avail against Nicanor''s fine chapter on this very subject? |
8771 | Besides, why keep talking about this Stella, after a vengeance so spectacular and thorough as that to which Anaïtis had out of hand resorted? |
8771 | But I am wondering what pleasure you get out of it all?" |
8771 | But can one obtain a divorce here?" |
8771 | But do you not perceive I am likewise your son Jurgen?" |
8771 | But how can I know that you are speaking the truth?" |
8771 | But how does it happen, Messire Merlin, that you have never used this token in the fashion you suggest to me?" |
8771 | But of what are you thinking, Duke of Logreus?" |
8771 | But what has become of your concrete example?" |
8771 | But what is life without confidence in one another? |
8771 | But what is the old lady doing in such high company?" |
8771 | But what is this other thing which is impossible to Koshchei?" |
8771 | But whither, pray, am I expected to go?" |
8771 | But who are you, friend, that have such curious notions about me?" |
8771 | But who governs this country?" |
8771 | But who, messire, are you that go about Hell unscorched, in such a fine looking shirt?" |
8771 | But why do you call me a member of the family?" |
8771 | But why is it that such attendants follow some men while other men are permitted to live in decent solitude? |
8771 | But why is it, pray, that you have never married before, in all these years?" |
8771 | But with what are you charging me?" |
8771 | But, after all, just what exactly is the point of it? |
8771 | Come now, could you not let me see my first wife for just a moment?" |
8771 | Could you face that interpretation, Jurgen?" |
8771 | Do we not sit here, just as we were before? |
8771 | Do you not find my reason sufficient?" |
8771 | Do you not think so, sir?" |
8771 | Do you not think that this or something very like this is happening to- night in my city of Cameliard, Messire de Logreus?". |
8771 | Do you suppose that we Apostles enjoy hearing jokes made about the Church?" |
8771 | Do you think, for example, that I am frowzing in this underground place by my own choice? |
8771 | Florimel considered the saying cryptic: just what precisely did his majesty mean? |
8771 | For do I not know what emperors are? |
8771 | For is not Love a god, and a jealous god that has wings with which to leave us?" |
8771 | For is not that thy law?" |
8771 | For no woman has ever loved me save that Azra who was my mother--""I wonder if your mother told you that?" |
8771 | For this is my vacation, granted yearly by the Law of Kalki--""And who is Kalki, madame?" |
8771 | For what does Rudigernus say outright upon this point? |
8771 | For what have you made of a year of youth? |
8771 | Granted He was a god, were the Arians or the Sabellians in the right? |
8771 | Have you no sense of responsibility whatever, thus to be frolicking on a working- day?" |
8771 | He said he was? |
8771 | How can I be happy, when all the while I know the long years of misery and vain regret are near at hand?" |
8771 | How can I possibly know what you mean when you refuse to tell me what you mean?" |
8771 | How can I remember everything when I consider the might of Sereda?" |
8771 | How else was he to prove the Princess of Glathion had the loveliest hand in the world? |
8771 | How many times must I tell you that?" |
8771 | How much-- abominable usurer!--could you advance me upon this necklace?" |
8771 | How otherwise could I be Koshchei? |
8771 | How otherwise could he be Koshchei?" |
8771 | How should I? |
8771 | How, then, can I come to Koshchei?" |
8771 | How, then, can Koshchei be proud?" |
8771 | How, then, can Koshchei love anything?" |
8771 | I put it to you fairly, King Jurgen: now how could this conceivably have come about unless the Author sometimes composes nonsense?" |
8771 | I wonder if I want Lisa back?" |
8771 | I wonder if that is the large secret of everything? |
8771 | I wonder if the Author gets much pleasure from these simple characters? |
8771 | I wonder now what would she say if I told her as much?" |
8771 | I wonder now--?" |
8771 | In any event, you Emperor Jurgen, by what authority do you question Satan, in Satan''s home?" |
8771 | In what other young man of twenty- one may you look to find such continence? |
8771 | Is anything changed between us? |
8771 | Is it not strange that our exceeding wickedness should have resulted in nothing save the memory of dust upon a lamp chimney? |
8771 | Is there no reason at all in you? |
8771 | It had happened a number of hundred of times since Jurgen first sat down to eat his lunch: and what was gained by it? |
8771 | It is Aillê, the daughter of Cormac, whom I love, and who can blame me? |
8771 | Jurgen demanded, almost indignantly:"But have you not then, Prince, been guiding all my journeying during this last year?" |
8771 | Lastly, and above all, how do I know there is a word of truth in your high- sounding fancies?" |
8771 | Look you, Mother Sereda, does your shadow report in all this year one single instance of misconduct with a woman?" |
8771 | Now tell me, Heart''s Desire, but was not that a foolish dream? |
8771 | Now, how can it be possible that Koshchei, who made all things as they are, should be a rebel? |
8771 | Now, my boy, I put it to you fairly, how could there have been a twenty- first unless there had been a twentieth? |
8771 | Now, then, Silenus, since you are so wise, come tell me, is it really the best fate for a man to be drunk always?" |
8771 | Now-- but what is your name, woman who wish to go to Heaven?" |
8771 | O God, why could You not let me have faith? |
8771 | Or else, why could You not let me deride, as the remainder derided so noisily? |
8771 | Or were the Merinthians right? |
8771 | Peter?" |
8771 | Requirements of Bread and Butter"Nessus,"says Jurgen,"and am I so changed? |
8771 | Said Anaïtis, blankly:"And is that all?" |
8771 | Said Jurgen, scornfully:"But is justice, then, a word?" |
8771 | So why do you not convey her to this Heaven which she believes in, and thus put an end to the matter?" |
8771 | So why keep worrying about it?" |
8771 | So, in the interest of domesticity, suppose you ransom Dame Lisa with that fine shirt of yours?" |
8771 | Still, is there any need of pulling quite such a portentously long face? |
8771 | That makes you my godmother, does it not?" |
8771 | The priests said so- and- so: but did anybody believe the gallant Bishop of Merion, for example, was always to be depended upon? |
8771 | Then Jurgen wondered why he should ever have expected Koshchei to be intelligent? |
8771 | Then privately Koshchei asked,"Are these children and grandchildren of Steinvor such as she reports?" |
8771 | Then would it have been more shrewd, dear ladies, to have avoided love? |
8771 | Vexatious Estate of Queen Helen"But how can I travel with the Equinox, with a fictitious thing, with a mere convention?" |
8771 | Was He Melchisedek, or Shem, or Adam? |
8771 | Was He the husband of Acharamoth, that degraded Sophia, as the Valentinians aver? |
8771 | Was he, then, also a mathematician?" |
8771 | Was it quite fair to anyone concerned? |
8771 | Well"--and here he shrugged,--"well, and what could anybody expect me to do about it? |
8771 | Well, I am willing to taste any drink once: but this is a very horrible device, none the less; and I wonder if I have the pluck to endure it?" |
8771 | Well, and why are you always drunk, Silenus?" |
8771 | Well, but who can deny that cleverness is truly a curiosity in Cocaigne?" |
8771 | Well, what if I took vengeance now upon this thieving comeliness, upon this robber that strips life of joy and sorrow?" |
8771 | Were you a very wicked ruler?" |
8771 | What are you about to show me?" |
8771 | What can anyone say against Sævius Nicanor?--ah, what indeed?" |
8771 | What did he say, dear?" |
8771 | What do these poor enamored creatures matter when to you my heart is ever faithful?" |
8771 | What do you mean now, Horvendile, by your hints that I have faltered in my constancy to Dame Melicent since I saw Queen Helen? |
8771 | What does it mean?" |
8771 | What else was living good for unless it brought me back to you?" |
8771 | What happened then?" |
8771 | What if by some misfortune he were to get back his real youth? |
8771 | What is this thing, then, that I desire? |
8771 | What more can an old poet say? |
8771 | What need have you to wear yourself out, and to devote your entire time to such proselitizing, when you might be so much more agreeably employed? |
8771 | What now is your desire?" |
8771 | What will become of you, my dear?" |
8771 | What, after all, is forty- and- something when one is well- preserved? |
8771 | Where does this woman come from?" |
8771 | Wherein art thou better than I? |
8771 | Who will be bride to Sclaug?" |
8771 | Why could You not let me believe, where so many believed? |
8771 | Why do I feel life is not treating me quite justly?" |
8771 | Why do you call me Lisa?" |
8771 | Why do you not sometimes take holiday?" |
8771 | Why do you talk such nonsense?" |
8771 | Why is it they seem always without fear, those dull and calm- eyed priests? |
8771 | Why is it, pray, that no one else can do so?" |
8771 | Why should I? |
8771 | Why the devil''s name, should I? |
8771 | Why, then, am I not out of my head about her? |
8771 | Why, whatever are you talking about?" |
8771 | Why, you remember what Calpurnius Bassus says about all blondes?" |
8771 | Would you be throwing stones at respectability, Prince Jurgen? |
8771 | Would you not rather have that, dearie, than your Wednesday? |
8771 | and Zantipher Magnus, too? |
8771 | and be content again, in some fair- colored realm? |
8771 | and can you really believe that I shall ever care a snap of my fingers for anybody but you?" |
8771 | and do I not know you?" |
8771 | and do such dignities content a Jurgen? |
8771 | and does the thought of her approaching marriage really disturb you?" |
8771 | and have you not just seen that which you may not ever quite forget?" |
8771 | and how did you learn of this?" |
8771 | and how do you know you have not already passed by Koshchei in some street or meadow? |
8771 | and how do you know?" |
8771 | and in that event, what sort of a something was the Logos? |
8771 | and knew your name by accident?" |
8771 | and that all this, too, took place a long, long while ago? |
8771 | and was never heard of any more? |
8771 | and were you ever an old man?" |
8771 | and what do you mean--?" |
8771 | are you certain it is authentic magic?" |
8771 | but failing either?" |
8771 | but what has that to do with it?" |
8771 | but what was it that I wanted to forget? |
8771 | but what will become, in all this fighting, of Jurgen?" |
8771 | had He existed always, co- substantial with the Father and the Holy Spirit, or was He a creation of the Father, a kind of Israelitic Zagreus? |
8771 | how if I slew you now,"says the brown man,--"I being what I am?" |
8771 | is there no heart in this spry young body you have regained? |
8771 | or Kalakau, as contends Basilidês? |
8771 | or a hand? |
8771 | or a whole finger? |
8771 | or the son of Pantherus, as say the Jews? |
8771 | or was He verily the Logos? |
8771 | or was it, as the Docetês taught, only a tinted cloud in the shape of a man that went from Jordan to Golgotha? |
8771 | said Jurgen then:"why is it that I am denied a God? |
8771 | said he,"and did you not do this?" |
8771 | says Jurgen,"and have not the devils enough to bear as it is?" |
8771 | why keep reverting to a topic which was repugnant to Jurgen and visibly upset the dearest nature myth in all legend? |
39143 | ''Ah, Checco, how goes it?'' |
39143 | ''Ah, how could I? |
39143 | ''Am I incommoding you?'' |
39143 | ''And I? |
39143 | ''And Orso?'' |
39143 | ''And are you?'' |
39143 | ''And how has he treated us?'' |
39143 | ''And how has she lived since then?'' |
39143 | ''And how is it when they are together?'' |
39143 | ''And if I wish to speak to you?'' |
39143 | ''And now, what is to happen?'' |
39143 | ''And now?'' |
39143 | ''And now?'' |
39143 | ''And now?'' |
39143 | ''And pray, madam, what can I do for you?'' |
39143 | ''And that is?'' |
39143 | ''And that--?'' |
39143 | ''And the others?'' |
39143 | ''And then?'' |
39143 | ''And to you?'' |
39143 | ''And what did he answer to that?'' |
39143 | ''And what did they think of it in Forli?'' |
39143 | ''And what has the town to say of me?'' |
39143 | ''And what is your opinion of love, Messer?'' |
39143 | ''And what of your wife and children?'' |
39143 | ''And when?'' |
39143 | ''And where am I?'' |
39143 | ''And who are you, Antonio, I should like to know?'' |
39143 | ''And who will do the actual deed?'' |
39143 | ''And without me, what will happen to my supporters?'' |
39143 | ''And would you for that refuse them altogether?'' |
39143 | ''And you are going to take the risk?'' |
39143 | ''And you''ll come and see me often?'' |
39143 | ''Are they so cruel, do you think?'' |
39143 | ''Are you a beggar, that you are so importunate? |
39143 | ''Are you her lover?'' |
39143 | ''Are you in love with her?'' |
39143 | ''Are you not glad to be back in Forli?'' |
39143 | ''Are you quite heartless?'' |
39143 | ''Are you quite sure?'' |
39143 | ''Are you safe-- quite safe?'' |
39143 | ''Assassination?'' |
39143 | ''At what time do the gates open?'' |
39143 | ''Besides?'' |
39143 | ''But Ercole and his men?'' |
39143 | ''But are you not at all in love with me?'' |
39143 | ''But are you sure he meant to arrest you?'' |
39143 | ''But can we venture in the enemy''s camp?'' |
39143 | ''But do you believe it?'' |
39143 | ''But do you mean that it is all finished? |
39143 | ''But do you think she would betray you?'' |
39143 | ''But has she no relations?'' |
39143 | ''But love? |
39143 | ''But think, Bartolomeo,''said Checco,''you are grey- headed; you are not so very far from the tomb; if you killed this man, what of afterwards?'' |
39143 | ''But what good can it do you to have all these people in love with you?'' |
39143 | ''But what happened afterwards?'' |
39143 | ''But what will be the lot of the people when you are gone? |
39143 | ''But why not yesterday, or the day before? |
39143 | ''But why not?'' |
39143 | ''But why should you think I do not like you? |
39143 | ''But would he dare seize you in cold blood?'' |
39143 | ''But you will not?'' |
39143 | ''But you, Checco, if you can do no good, why will not you come too?'' |
39143 | ''But you?'' |
39143 | ''But, Claudia-- you loved her too?'' |
39143 | ''By the way, why have you not been to her?'' |
39143 | ''Certain; what else?'' |
39143 | ''Checco, are you hurt?'' |
39143 | ''D''you know whom we are?'' |
39143 | ''Deigned?'' |
39143 | ''Did he make up his mind to sit still and wait till Girolamo found means to carry his threats into effect?'' |
39143 | ''Did you believe it?'' |
39143 | ''Did you not see as he passed?'' |
39143 | ''Did you not see the adornment of his noble head, the elegant pair of horns?'' |
39143 | ''Did you not think of my honour?'' |
39143 | ''Do n''t you love me at all?'' |
39143 | ''Do n''t you love me, Giulia?'' |
39143 | ''Do n''t you?'' |
39143 | ''Do you ask me that?'' |
39143 | ''Do you feel better?'' |
39143 | ''Do you know-- when they meet?'' |
39143 | ''Do you not agree that the judgment is just?'' |
39143 | ''Do you really wish to know?'' |
39143 | ''Do you remember that night at the Palace? |
39143 | ''Do you still refuse to do to Girolamo as he has tried to do to you?'' |
39143 | ''Do you suppose Girolamo is going to allow things to go on as before? |
39143 | ''Do you suppose you can escape the ordinary fate of husbands?'' |
39143 | ''Do you think I am a fool? |
39143 | ''Do you want money? |
39143 | ''Do you want to come out?'' |
39143 | ''Does that give us enough time? |
39143 | ''Er-- have you been home?'' |
39143 | ''Ercole? |
39143 | ''Fabio, have you well looked after all I left in your hands when I went to Rome?'' |
39143 | ''Fabio, what is it? |
39143 | ''Fair wind, foul wind?'' |
39143 | ''Firstly, are you convinced that the attempt on your life was plotted by Girolamo Riario?'' |
39143 | ''Further?'' |
39143 | ''Giorgo? |
39143 | ''Giulia, do n''t you love me?'' |
39143 | ''Giulia,''I said,''what is it?'' |
39143 | ''Has he been here to- day? |
39143 | ''Has he not insulted me by sending a sheriff to demand his dues?'' |
39143 | ''Has she? |
39143 | ''Have n''t you? |
39143 | ''Have they that power?'' |
39143 | ''Have you anything to say, Orso Orsi?'' |
39143 | ''Have you been home?'' |
39143 | ''Have you nothing more to say to me than that?'' |
39143 | ''Have you so much to boast?'' |
39143 | ''Have you the right to sacrifice your fellowmen? |
39143 | ''He is coming?'' |
39143 | ''He must be very jealous of so beautiful a wife?'' |
39143 | ''How can such an idea have entered your head? |
39143 | ''How could you be expected to believe me?'' |
39143 | ''How did the others escape?'' |
39143 | ''How did you employ those hours, Matteo?'' |
39143 | ''How do I know?'' |
39143 | ''How do you know?'' |
39143 | ''How far have the negotiations gone?'' |
39143 | ''How is it that now you never speak to me? |
39143 | ''How long has she been a widow?'' |
39143 | ''How?'' |
39143 | ''I have lent him so much that he has not the face to ask for more; and how do you think he has rewarded me? |
39143 | ''I wonder what it is?'' |
39143 | ''I? |
39143 | ''If he is unhurt, why does he not show himself?'' |
39143 | ''In your own tomb?'' |
39143 | ''Is he safe?'' |
39143 | ''Is it because Giorgio dall''Aste has just returned?'' |
39143 | ''Is it necessary that birth and life here should be the birth and life of slaves? |
39143 | ''Is it you, Checco?'' |
39143 | ''Is there nothing further than that?'' |
39143 | ''It is not so much for myself I care; but what would happen to my children? |
39143 | ''It was a matter of pride?'' |
39143 | ''Most interesting; but how has she gained her reputation?'' |
39143 | ''My dear Giulia-- you will allow me to call you Giulia?'' |
39143 | ''No?'' |
39143 | ''Now, madam,''I said,''will you dismiss these ladies?'' |
39143 | ''Of what are you frightened? |
39143 | ''Of what?'' |
39143 | ''Oh God, why did you say there was?'' |
39143 | ''Oh, how can you stand before me, uttering these hypocrisies? |
39143 | ''Oh, my God, what shall I do?'' |
39143 | ''Once more, I ask you,''said Savello,''will you surrender the castle?'' |
39143 | ''Perhaps I have; who knows?'' |
39143 | ''Ready?'' |
39143 | ''Surely it is not cowardice to refuse a duel with a person like yourself?'' |
39143 | ''Tell me how Count Girolamo and the gracious Caterina are progressing? |
39143 | ''The beautiful Claudia?'' |
39143 | ''The man too?'' |
39143 | ''Then you consent?'' |
39143 | ''Then, why do n''t you let me see it more plainly?'' |
39143 | ''Then, why do you avoid me?'' |
39143 | ''They have been taken to the prison, and--''''Well?'' |
39143 | ''They quarrel?'' |
39143 | ''Was that all?'' |
39143 | ''Well, about your business from Forli?'' |
39143 | ''Well, we are good friends now, are n''t we?'' |
39143 | ''Well, what do you think of our wine?'' |
39143 | ''Well, what the hell are you standing there for? |
39143 | ''Well,''said Matteo,''what will you do?'' |
39143 | ''Well; and you?'' |
39143 | ''Well?'' |
39143 | ''Well?'' |
39143 | ''Well?'' |
39143 | ''Well?'' |
39143 | ''Well?'' |
39143 | ''Were your sins so small this week?'' |
39143 | ''What about?'' |
39143 | ''What are they going to do to him?'' |
39143 | ''What can I do? |
39143 | ''What can I do? |
39143 | ''What can I do?'' |
39143 | ''What can be done?'' |
39143 | ''What can you do against all these?'' |
39143 | ''What did she think of it?'' |
39143 | ''What did you do?'' |
39143 | ''What did you think of him?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean, Filippo?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What do you think of all this?'' |
39143 | ''What do you think of it?'' |
39143 | ''What do you think?'' |
39143 | ''What do you want me to say to you?'' |
39143 | ''What have they been telling you about him?'' |
39143 | ''What is it you want with me?'' |
39143 | ''What is it? |
39143 | ''What is it? |
39143 | ''What is it?'' |
39143 | ''What is it?'' |
39143 | ''What is it?'' |
39143 | ''What is it?'' |
39143 | ''What is it?'' |
39143 | ''What is that on your hand, Filippo?'' |
39143 | ''What is the matter with you, Filippo?'' |
39143 | ''What is the matter with you?'' |
39143 | ''What is the matter?'' |
39143 | ''What is the meaning of this?'' |
39143 | ''What more?'' |
39143 | ''What news? |
39143 | ''What news? |
39143 | ''What shall I do?'' |
39143 | ''What the devil d''you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What the devil do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What the devil do you mean?'' |
39143 | ''What war?'' |
39143 | ''What will you do now?'' |
39143 | ''What will you do?'' |
39143 | ''What, liberty?'' |
39143 | ''What?'' |
39143 | ''When can I see you?'' |
39143 | ''When shall I see you again?'' |
39143 | ''When will you start?'' |
39143 | ''Where are you going?'' |
39143 | ''Where is Fabio?'' |
39143 | ''Where is the Count?'' |
39143 | ''Where is the Countess? |
39143 | ''Where is the Orso?'' |
39143 | ''Who are you? |
39143 | ''Who are you?'' |
39143 | ''Who are you?'' |
39143 | ''Who are you?'' |
39143 | ''Who else?'' |
39143 | ''Who has done it?'' |
39143 | ''Who is it?'' |
39143 | ''Who is responsible for this? |
39143 | ''Who is she?'' |
39143 | ''Who knows?'' |
39143 | ''Who the devil are you?'' |
39143 | ''Whom was the second for?'' |
39143 | ''Why are you cross?'' |
39143 | ''Why are you smiling so contentedly?'' |
39143 | ''Why did you do that?'' |
39143 | ''Why did you not tell me before?'' |
39143 | ''Why do I mind? |
39143 | ''Why do n''t you answer when I speak to you? |
39143 | ''Why do n''t you speak?'' |
39143 | ''Why do n''t you speak?'' |
39143 | ''Why do you look at me?'' |
39143 | ''Why do you turn away from me and withdraw your hand?'' |
39143 | ''Why does not Fabrizio come? |
39143 | ''Why does not Fabrizio come?'' |
39143 | ''Why have you given it me at all if you want to take it away?'' |
39143 | ''Why have you not been to see me, Messer Filippo?'' |
39143 | ''Why not anticipate him?'' |
39143 | ''Why not? |
39143 | ''Why not?'' |
39143 | ''Why should I not turn away from you and withdraw my hand?'' |
39143 | ''Why should I?'' |
39143 | ''Why so sad, sweet lady?'' |
39143 | ''Why so silent, Messer Bartolomeo?'' |
39143 | ''Why the devil do n''t you hurry up when you''re sent for?'' |
39143 | ''Why the devil does n''t this man come?'' |
39143 | ''Why will you not come?'' |
39143 | ''Why?'' |
39143 | ''Why?'' |
39143 | ''Why?'' |
39143 | ''Why?'' |
39143 | ''Why?'' |
39143 | ''Why?'' |
39143 | ''Why?'' |
39143 | ''Will I not do instead?'' |
39143 | ''Will you do as you are told?'' |
39143 | ''Will you do it?'' |
39143 | ''Will you have no one to accompany you?'' |
39143 | ''Will you have the goodness to tell me what you mean?'' |
39143 | ''Will you promise not to be violent?'' |
39143 | ''Will you take me as your servant? |
39143 | ''Will you try? |
39143 | ''Without a name?'' |
39143 | ''Wo n''t you trust me?'' |
39143 | ''Would you have me slink down a back passage, like a thief, in my own house? |
39143 | ''Yes, and what am I to do?'' |
39143 | ''You are going far, sir?'' |
39143 | ''You are your own mistress.... Why do you mind?'' |
39143 | ''You do not think me importunate?'' |
39143 | ''You had never seen that man before?'' |
39143 | ''You have been travelling, Matteo?'' |
39143 | ''You have made up your mind that if you commit sins you are ready to go to hell for them?'' |
39143 | ''You have no cause, my lord, but-- would it not be well to examine the men to see if they are known in Forli? |
39143 | ''You have preferred earth and me to Heaven and the worthy father?'' |
39143 | ''You have recovered from your fatigue?'' |
39143 | ''You know? |
39143 | ''You live at Città di Castello?'' |
39143 | ''You mean you do not love me?'' |
39143 | ''You were unhappy?'' |
39143 | ''You will take care of him?'' |
39143 | ''You''re not in love with her?'' |
39143 | ''Your husband?'' |
39143 | ''Your name is Fabio?'' |
39143 | After a while Checco spoke,--''Will you listen to me?'' |
39143 | Am I a clumsy, lumbering creature?'' |
39143 | And I felt sick with love....''Messer Filippo,''she said,''will you help me now? |
39143 | And are you so sure of your soldiers? |
39143 | And do you think I look upon them as you who are a stranger? |
39143 | And was it then she flung herself into dissipation to drown her trouble? |
39143 | And what do you intend to do now?'' |
39143 | And what has he to complain of now? |
39143 | And when the little ones love you so dearly, can you think that I should hate you?'' |
39143 | And who knows, perhaps its last state may be worse than its first? |
39143 | And who would believe in my disinterestedness when he saw me take up the sceptre which the lifeless hand has dropped? |
39143 | And why did he want to do it so secretly? |
39143 | And why is it you want them? |
39143 | And you, you know Girolamo will kill you; it is a matter of time, and who can tell how short a time? |
39143 | And, pray, who are you?'' |
39143 | Are these not my fellow- citizens, my brothers, my friends? |
39143 | Are they any of them happy? |
39143 | Are you so angry with me?'' |
39143 | Are you waiting to see the Count?'' |
39143 | As yet they neither praised nor blamed, but how long would it be before they refrained from cursing him they had blessed? |
39143 | At last Bartolomeo Moratini whispered to Matteo,--''Where did you leave Checco?'' |
39143 | Besides, have you not a fine pair of legs and a handsome body; what are you ashamed of?'' |
39143 | Besides, when he had me in his power, what could have been done? |
39143 | But afterwards?'' |
39143 | But as it was--''''I see my cousin Violante in the corner there; will you lead me to her?'' |
39143 | But they stood there dismayed, confounded, like sheep.... And was not the tyrant dead? |
39143 | But why do you tell me this to- day?'' |
39143 | But why? |
39143 | Ca n''t you see that I am an old man? |
39143 | Caterina turned to Savello,--''What shall I do?'' |
39143 | Checco bowed courteously, and asked his cousin,''You have just arrived, Matteo?'' |
39143 | Checco turned to Savello, and said gloomily,--''Will you come? |
39143 | Checco, as he passed me, asked,--''Are you ready?'' |
39143 | Could Checco have made terms with the Count, and was it a comedy they were playing? |
39143 | Did he intend to leave them himself? |
39143 | Did she love me? |
39143 | Do we not know that fortune is uncertain? |
39143 | Do you know that the Orsi have been great and rich for three hundred years? |
39143 | Do you not know that fortune is uncertain? |
39143 | Do you not see that all men lie humble at your feet, attentive to every word and gesture?'' |
39143 | Do you not see what we must do? |
39143 | Do you remember Lorenzo''s words? |
39143 | Do you see? |
39143 | Do you see?'' |
39143 | Do you suppose Giulia''s character has altered because you have married her? |
39143 | Do you think I care? |
39143 | Do you understand, Filippo?'' |
39143 | Donna Giulia called me,''if you are not too engaged, will you speak to me for one moment?'' |
39143 | Had I not said the same? |
39143 | Had he lost his love and was he afraid? |
39143 | Has he not madly oppressed the people? |
39143 | Has that had no effect on him?'' |
39143 | Have we not been together since childhood, and our fathers and grandfathers before us? |
39143 | He and Giulia''s husband were not friends, and so--''''Why were they not friends?'' |
39143 | He came to me, and sitting on the arm of my chair, put his hand on my shoulder and said affectionately,--''We''re friends, are n''t we, Filippo?'' |
39143 | He hesitated a moment and then asked,--''What shall I do?'' |
39143 | He is above us always, always watching us; and what should I say to Him with the blood of that man on my hands? |
39143 | How can you look on and see all this? |
39143 | How could I be so disturbed at the slanders of a wicked, jealous woman? |
39143 | How could I go on existing with this aching void in my heart? |
39143 | How dare you say these things to me, when you are enjoying the fruits of his death and my misfortune? |
39143 | How doth this struggle profit you? |
39143 | How had his scruples disappeared? |
39143 | How had it come? |
39143 | How long would it last? |
39143 | How long? |
39143 | I asked,--''By the way, who is that Giorgio dall''Aste, of whom Checco was speaking?'' |
39143 | I did as she asked, and as she was bowing me my dismissal I said,--''We have had a very pleasant talk, and we are quite good friends, are we not?'' |
39143 | I have a good thirty years of life before me, and what can one not do in thirty years? |
39143 | I knew her pride would prevent her from coming or sending to me, and should I give her no opportunity? |
39143 | I remembered that Giulia had not seemed so pleased to see me; at the time I chid myself, and called myself exacting, but was it true? |
39143 | I told myself I was a fool, but was it true? |
39143 | I took hold of Claudia''s wrists and said,--''What do you mean? |
39143 | If she really loves him, why do they not keep together now that there is no hindrance?'' |
39143 | Is he here to- day?'' |
39143 | Is he safe?'' |
39143 | Is there not enough misery in the world already? |
39143 | Is this why you lay in wait for me, and brought me here? |
39143 | It is only the fool who trusts to chance and waits for circumstances to develop themselves....''''Tell your master--''''I beg your pardon?'' |
39143 | It was full of men, but where was the enthusiasm we had expected, the tumult, the shouts of joy? |
39143 | It would have been bearable to stand an ordinary siege, but when they had their own citadel against them, what could they do? |
39143 | Lodovico Pansecchi asked,--''Is he dead?'' |
39143 | My father is safe-- he is so old and helpless that they would never think of touching him-- but my boys? |
39143 | None of us had seen letter or messenger; the suspicion seized us too, and Checco asked,--''Is there a letter?'' |
39143 | Now, once more, who are they?'' |
39143 | Now, what is your news?'' |
39143 | O Ciechi, il tanto affaticar che giova? |
39143 | Oh, why could not I have done with the life I hated, and also enjoy the quiet? |
39143 | Oh, why had I come? |
39143 | One is always wise to respect the prejudices of the mob....''''What do you propose?'' |
39143 | Or are those right who say that the world is misery, and that the only happiness is to die? |
39143 | Perhaps she tried; who knows? |
39143 | Scandal said evil things.... Had she, too, felt remorse and tried to kill her love, and had the attempt failed? |
39143 | Shall I aid you to conquer my own town?'' |
39143 | Shall I tell you?'' |
39143 | Shall we go down on our knees to you?'' |
39143 | She made her first husband a cuckold, and do you suppose that she has suddenly turned virtuous? |
39143 | She paused a moment, and then said,--''You do like me, then, after all?'' |
39143 | Should they speak or be silent? |
39143 | Suddenly Pietro stopped and said,--''What is that?'' |
39143 | Swear that you will--''She lifted her sweet face and smiled, and nestling close up to me, whispered,--''Will you marry me?'' |
39143 | The door of the Countess''s apartments was opened, and a lady said,--''What is this noise?'' |
39143 | Then a great discouragement fell upon the people; the army was on the way, but why did it not arrive? |
39143 | Then another rush, a little band of men suddenly appeared round the corner, and Ercole Piacentini''s voice, crying,--''What is it? |
39143 | Then, after a pause,''Where is Fabrizio?'' |
39143 | Then, after a while, I asked again,''But are you sure?'' |
39143 | Then, as I mounted and arranged the reins in my hand, he said,--''Where are you going?'' |
39143 | Then, seeing my pale face, they cried,''But what is it? |
39143 | Then, to Matteo,''We must all be good Christians if we can, eh, Matteo?'' |
39143 | There was deadly silence in the hall, all eyes were fixed on him, and all minds were asking themselves,''What will he say?'' |
39143 | They are ground down now; the Count must impose these taxes, and what will be their condition then? |
39143 | They asked what was to happen now-- what Checco would do? |
39143 | Turning to me he asked,--''Where are you going?'' |
39143 | Was all this an attempt to get him in his hand, and this time not to let him go? |
39143 | Was he afraid of the siege? |
39143 | Was it true? |
39143 | Was not the tyrant dead? |
39143 | Was this Antonio Sassi? |
39143 | We expelled the Ordelaffi because they wished to give us a bastard boy to rule over us, and shall we accept this Riario? |
39143 | We had four days in which to make merry and gather the roses; after that, who knows? |
39143 | Were you languorous from his embraces?'' |
39143 | Were you thinking of him when I came? |
39143 | What are these men?'' |
39143 | What can I do?'' |
39143 | What can I do?'' |
39143 | What can I do?'' |
39143 | What could be behind them? |
39143 | What could be the man''s thoughts that his eyes should never rest? |
39143 | What do you mean by stopping me like this?'' |
39143 | What do you mean?'' |
39143 | What do you want?'' |
39143 | What had I done that I should be denied the little happiness of this world? |
39143 | What had I done that all this should come to me? |
39143 | What has happened?'' |
39143 | What is it?'' |
39143 | What is it?'' |
39143 | What is it?'' |
39143 | What is the matter?'' |
39143 | What is--?'' |
39143 | What matter all the petty little affairs of life? |
39143 | What more can I want?'' |
39143 | What news?'' |
39143 | What news?'' |
39143 | What of that?'' |
39143 | What right has he more than another? |
39143 | What right have these people to make us unhappy? |
39143 | What was Nemesis to me now when I thought my happiness so great that it could not help but last? |
39143 | What was coming? |
39143 | What was going to happen? |
39143 | What was he doing here? |
39143 | What was it? |
39143 | What will happen to your wife and children if you are dead?'' |
39143 | What will men say of my rule when it is known that the peaceful citizen can not walk home at night without danger to his life? |
39143 | What?'' |
39143 | When I had finished, he said--''And what will happen now?'' |
39143 | When would the army come from Rome? |
39143 | Where is Checco?'' |
39143 | Where is Checco?'' |
39143 | Where is Fabrizio? |
39143 | Where is Fabrizio? |
39143 | Where is the Orso?'' |
39143 | Who are you?'' |
39143 | Who knows how long it will be before these pictures have mouldered off the walls, and the very walls themselves are crumbling to dust?'' |
39143 | Who knows? |
39143 | Who sent him away? |
39143 | Whom was she expecting? |
39143 | Why did he not come back to her? |
39143 | Why did she not come? |
39143 | Why did she want me? |
39143 | Why do n''t you tell me? |
39143 | Why do n''t you tell me?'' |
39143 | Why do you tell me your name is Fabio? |
39143 | Why do you torment us when you know we are on pins and needles?'' |
39143 | Why not Saturday week? |
39143 | Why should I be more unhappy than others? |
39143 | Why should I drag you after me in my unhappiness?'' |
39143 | Why should footpads rob me this night?'' |
39143 | Why should he try to conceal it? |
39143 | Why should the world be so beautiful, and I so miserable? |
39143 | Why should you think that?'' |
39143 | Why to- day particularly?'' |
39143 | Why? |
39143 | Will they take part for you against their fathers and brothers, their children?'' |
39143 | Will you go?'' |
39143 | Will you let me languish?'' |
39143 | Will you not come in?'' |
39143 | Will you promise?'' |
39143 | Will you three come here to play a game of chess on Friday night at ten? |
39143 | Would it never end? |
39143 | Would she never come? |
39143 | XXXIX What shall I say of the eagerness with which I looked forward to seeing my dear wife, the rapture with which, at last, I clasped her in my arms? |
39143 | You are not angry?'' |
39143 | could it be true?... |
39143 | he answered, laughing;''how do women usually gain their reputations? |
39143 | how goes it?'' |
39143 | man, how do you know?'' |
39143 | was it true? |
39143 | was it true? |
39143 | what is this? |