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 |
---|---|
13008 | After her broken questions to her deliverer,"What cut my mail? |
13008 | Gudrun Giuki''s daughter stood without, and these were the first words she spoke:''Where is now Sigurd, the lord of men, that my kinsmen ride first?'' |
13008 | How have I broken from sleep? |
13008 | How shall I get thee help, my hero?" |
13008 | Who has flung from me the dark spells?" |
7841 | Does she live far? |
7841 | Where are you going? |
7841 | ******* tapped thank dear arms hug called When Red Riding- Hood tapped on the door, the wolf called out,"Who is there?" |
7841 | At last they said,"Who let the apples go?" |
7841 | Freyja said,"Do you think I will be the Frost Giant''s wife? |
7841 | He said,"What makes Freyja''s eyes shine so?" |
7841 | Loki said,"Can you make me a gold crown that will grow like real hair?" |
7841 | So he went to Freyja and said,"Will you let me have your falcon suit? |
7841 | The cat said,"Can you growl?" |
7841 | The grandma said,"Who is there?" |
7841 | The hen said,"Can you lay eggs?" |
7841 | Thor said,"Did you cut off Sif''s hair?" |
7841 | Thor said,"Well, did you get the hammer?" |
7841 | What did he see? |
7841 | When he saw Loki, he said,"What do you want?" |
7841 | [ Illustration: THE CAT SAID,"CAN YOU GROWL?"] |
7841 | [ Illustration:"DID YOU CUT OFF SIF''S HAIR?"] |
7841 | he called,"Where are you?" |
13007 | For whom are the benches( in hell) strewn with rings, the halls fairly adorned with gold? |
13007 | Hast thou news in proportion to thy toil? 13007 How is it with the Aesir? |
13007 | It is ill with the Aesir, it is ill with the Elves; hast thou hidden the Thunderer''s hammer? |
13007 | Shall I get there to- day? |
13007 | What shall be Odin''s end, when the Gods perish? |
13007 | Whence shall the sun come on the smooth heaven when Fenri has destroyed this one? |
13007 | Which of the Aesir shall rule over the realms of the Gods, when Surt''s fire is quenched? |
13007 | Who will avenge the deed on Höd and bring Baldr''s slayer to the funeral pyre? |
13007 | Who will be Baldr''s slayer and rob Odin''s son of life? |
13007 | ( 3) In_ Vafthrudnismal_ the only reference is Odin''s question,"What said Odin in his son''s ear when he mounted the pyre?" |
13007 | For if, as it is claimed, the Icelanders had no mistletoe, why should they introduce it into a story to which it did not belong? |
13007 | He looked under the veil, he longed to kiss the bride, but he started back the length of the hall:"Why are Freyja''s eyes so terrible? |
13007 | How is it with the Elves? |
13007 | So many of the mythological poems are in this form that they suggest the question, did the asking of riddles form any part of Scandinavian ritual? |
13007 | The following account is given of their presence in Asgard:( 1) In_ Vafthrudnismal_, Odin asks:"Whence came Njörd among the sons of the Aesir? |
13007 | Then spoke Thrym, lord of the Giants:"Who ever saw a bride eat so eagerly? |
13007 | They did so, and Wodan exclaimed,"Who are these_ Long- beards_?" |
13007 | Two poems of the verse Edda describe it:( 1)_ Vafthrudnismal_: V."What is the plain called where Surt and the blessed Gods shall meet in battle?" |
13007 | Why art thou come alone into Jötunheim?" |
28497 | ''What flies up there, so quickly driving past?'' 28497 And he spake:''Hast thou hearkened, Sigurd? |
28497 | Hast thou within the nets of Satan lain? 28497 Know you the Nixies, gay and fair? |
28497 | Long is one night, and longer twain; But how for three endure my pain? 28497 Oh, manifold is their kindred, and who shall tell them all? |
28497 | Tell me this sweet morn, Tell me all you know-- Tell me, was I born? 28497 Then Regin spake to Sigurd:''Of this slaying wilt thou be free? |
28497 | Who art thou on thy black and fiery horse, Under whose hoofs the bridge o''er Giall''s stream Rumbles and shakes? 28497 Who goes empty- handed Down to sea- blue Ran? |
28497 | With a dreadful voice cried Gunnar:''O fool, hast thou heard it told Who won the Treasure aforetime and the ruddy rings of the Gold? 28497 Hast thou thy lip to Hell''s Enchantress lent, To drain damnation from her reeking cup? 28497 Hast thou thy soul to her perdition pledged? 28497 I have done and I may not undo, I have given and I take not again: Art thou other than I, Allfather, wilt thou gather my glory in vain?'' |
28497 | Tell me, did I grow?" |
28497 | When shall we three meet again, In thunder, lightning, or in rain? |
28497 | When the reluctant Vala had thus spoken, Odin next asked:"Who would refuse to weep at Balder''s death?" |
28497 | When to taste beer Thou did''st constantly refuse Unless to both''twas offered?" |
28497 | Wilt thou help a man that is old To avenge him for his father? |
28497 | Wilt thou rid the earth of a wrong And heal the woe and the sorrow my heart hath endured o''er long?''" |
28497 | Wilt thou win that treasure of Gold And be more than the Kings of the earth? |
28497 | dost thou remember When we in early days Blended our blood together? |
28497 | what shall him deliver From danger threat''ning round? |
37876 | How much do you ask? |
37876 | What do you bid? |
37876 | And then said he:''What long- beards are they?'' |
37876 | And where else should they have found it, if we regard the stream with the bickering flames as breaking against the very foot of the wall? |
37876 | And why not apply to ethnology the same principles as are admitted unchallenged in regard to the geography of plants and animals? |
37876 | But have our mythic fragments preserved any allusion to show that Aurboda, like Gulveig- Heid- Angerboda, ever dwelt among the gods in Asgard? |
37876 | But how did it come to be regarded as an evidence? |
37876 | But what had this source-- what had the Roman annals or the Roman literature in general to tell about Odin? |
37876 | Could he have taken it with him on the horse''s back? |
37876 | Did they look upon themselves as aborigines or as immigrants in Teutondom? |
37876 | Does it rest on native traditions? |
37876 | Has the mythology forgotten to meet this logical claim? |
37876 | How did the belief that Troy was the original home of the Teutons arise? |
37876 | Is Gudmund an invention of Christian times, although he is placed in an environment which in general and in detail reflects the heathen mythology? |
37876 | Or is there to be found in the mythology a person who has precisely the same environment and is endowed with the same attributes and qualities? |
37876 | Should this clan of gods, celebrated in song as benevolent, useful, and pure, be kindly disposed toward the evil and corrupting arts of witchcraft? |
37876 | There a Thuringian met him and asked him:"Why do you wear so much gold around your lean neck?" |
37876 | To the question,"Whence came the Skjoldungs, Skilfings, Andlungs, and Ylfings, and all the free- born and gentle- born?" |
37876 | To which sea can the myth refer? |
37876 | Was there occasion for it among the ideas of the heathen eschatology? |
37876 | What human persons shall still live when the famous fimbul- winter has been in the world?" |
37876 | Whence did he get this ladder, which must have been colossal, since the wall he got over in this manner is said to be_ præaltum_? |
37876 | Where near the North Sea or the Baltic was this centre located? |
37876 | Where, then, on our continent was the home of this Aryan European people in the stone age? |
37876 | Which, then, can be the passage in Virgil''s poems in which the discoverer succeeded in finding the proof that the Franks were Trojans? |
37876 | Who among them was Scef- Yngve? |
37876 | Who was_ Liserus_ in our mythology? |
37876 | Why have the Vans objected to the killing of Gulveig- Heid? |
37876 | Why, then, not apply to the Aryans and to Europe the same conclusions as hold good in the case of the Mongolians and Asia? |
37876 | heima eigud? |
48908 | And must you have nine men''s food? |
48908 | And will Thor contest with the power of Utgard? |
48908 | And you will bring all three of them? |
48908 | And you will bring them at once? |
48908 | Are you Odin? 48908 Are you ready to do what I asked of you?" |
48908 | Are you ready to do what I asked of you? |
48908 | Are you ready to do what I asked of you? |
48908 | Are you ready to do what I asked of you? |
48908 | Are you willing to do what I asked of you? |
48908 | But the wolf-- what shall we do with the wolf? 48908 Can the great god Thor boast no greater power than that? |
48908 | Can you give me shelter for the night? |
48908 | Do you not know I shall bring to this boat''s edge the terrible Midgard Serpent itself? |
48908 | Do you not know a god speaks to you? |
48908 | Do you think a god would be content with less than the greatest fish in all the sea? |
48908 | For Baldur? |
48908 | Has the Fimbul- winter come? |
48908 | Have you brought the crown? |
48908 | How did you know there is a cask in my brother''s cellar? |
48908 | Indeed, Thor, are you here? 48908 It is a feast for the gods,"they said;"but pray, how will you finish your journey without your goats?" |
48908 | O who has stolen from me in my sleep my gold? 48908 Of course you have agreed to give him nine men''s wages?" |
48908 | They were, indeed,answered Bauge;"but how shall I get my work done without them?" |
48908 | Was ever there such a stupid bird? 48908 What brings you here in the land of the Frost giants?" |
48908 | What is it that sweeps sometimes across the valley, and moves the trees and the leaves, and so gently fans our cheeks? |
48908 | What is that,sneered Loke,"compared with this? |
48908 | What is that? |
48908 | What is that? |
48908 | What is to be done with him? |
48908 | What is your name? |
48908 | Where is the thief? |
48908 | Who are you that you know that river''s name? 48908 Who are you?" |
48908 | Who are you? |
48908 | Who challenges me and defies my power? |
48908 | Who comes? |
48908 | Who says I do not know? |
48908 | Why did you drop the bellows? 48908 Why has my father''s voice been stilled? |
48908 | Why this sudden quiet? |
48908 | Will one name be enough for all nine of you? |
48908 | Will you give me your children? |
48908 | Will you give me your freedom? |
48908 | Will you give me your health? |
48908 | Will you give me your tongue, your ears, your eyes? |
48908 | You are willing to bring the apples of life? |
48908 | After all your boasted strength, why is it that you shrink from a contest in which the gods have willingly taken part? |
48908 | And is this your Sleipner-- the winged steed of which the gods of Asgard boast? |
48908 | And its branches? |
48908 | And, more than that, did he not know all things even from the beginning? |
48908 | But if you are blinding me-- if you have here a cord woven with magic such as no power can break-- how am I to know? |
48908 | But the thief? |
48908 | But what is he compared with Hodor for strength?" |
48908 | Did I not command that you be careful, and see that every bone should be placed, uninjured, upon the goat skins?" |
48908 | Did he not see and hear all sights and sounds? |
48908 | Did you not feel the earth shake and the mountains tremble?" |
48908 | Do you mean to say that, because the gods have been defeated, you fear that you, too, may be defeated?" |
48908 | Fenris, are you a coward? |
48908 | Had his hammer lost its magic power? |
48908 | Has Odin forgotten his children? |
48908 | Have the Frost giants fallen upon Asgard?" |
48908 | No living creature? |
48908 | Pray, do you ask the wages of nine men as well?" |
48908 | Then, too, of what use was it to hide from the great, all- seeing eye of Odin? |
48908 | Was the giant Skrymer immortal? |
48908 | What did it mean? |
48908 | What had become of his workman? |
48908 | What shall be done with him?" |
48908 | What would the gods be more than the mortals of Midgard or the giants of Jotunheim? |
48908 | Who are you that you dare tell me I shall never cross to its farther shore?" |
48908 | Without them, what would Asgard be more than the cities of Midgard or of Jotunheim? |
46063 | Am I now free? |
46063 | Art thou Siegmund? |
46063 | But at the cost of love? |
46063 | But should suspense permit the foe to cry,''Behold they tremble!--haughty their array, Yet of their number no one dares to die''? 46063 But who will guide us?" |
46063 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
46063 | Dost thou come at last,said he,"long expected, and do I behold thee after such perils past? |
46063 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for thee worthy of thy praise? |
46063 | Know ye the weight of my hammer''s blow? |
46063 | Knowest thou what''tis to me? 46063 Milk the ewe that thou hast; why pursue the thing that shuns thee? |
46063 | O, Pyramus,she cried,"what has done this? |
46063 | Oh, Cyclops, Cyclops, whither are thy wits wandering? 46063 The Ring?" |
46063 | The world''s wealth,he mutters;"might I win that by the spell of the gold? |
46063 | Then takest thou from Siegmund thy shield? |
46063 | Thy name and fortune? |
46063 | What is it, ye sleek ones, That there doth gleam and glow? 46063 What meaneth the name, then?" |
46063 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
46063 | What seek ye here? |
46063 | What woman warneth me thus? |
46063 | What''s he whose arms lie scattered on the plain? 46063 What, then, aileth the immortals?" |
46063 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Balder?" |
46063 | Who pursues thee? |
46063 | Who was it,she asks,"that brought him his conquering sword? |
46063 | Why do you refuse me water? |
46063 | [ 374] Has he never heard of the Rhine- gold? 46063 ''Comfort my heart, mayhap, with the loyal love of my husband?'' 46063 ''Haste to the Gnossian hills?'' 46063 ),_ 34, 83_; The Cuckow and Nightingale, or Boke of Cupid(? 46063 ),_ 38_( 1); The Romaunt of the Rose(? 46063 ***** Lovely world, where art thou? 46063 ***** Oh, whence has silence stolen on all things here, Where every sight makes music to the eye? 46063 =_ Poems._= Chaucer, The Cuckow and Nightingale, or Boke of Cupid(? 46063 A voice followed her,Why flyest thou, Arethusa? |
46063 | Again-- thou hearest? |
46063 | And Hermod gazed into the night, and said:"Who is it utters through the dark his hest So quickly, and will wait for no reply? |
46063 | And all who saw them trembled, And pale grew every cheek; And Aulus the Dictator Scarce gathered voice to speak:"Say by what name men call you? |
46063 | And before my time If I shall die, I reckon this a gain; For whoso lives, as I, in many woes, How can it be but he shall gain by death? |
46063 | And shall I let thee go into such danger alone? |
46063 | And were they ever believed? |
46063 | And wherefore ride ye in such guise Before the ranks of Rome?" |
46063 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
46063 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
46063 | Because he wears his years so lightly must he seem to thee ever to be a child? |
46063 | Both are goddesses of the moon(? |
46063 | But Brünnhilde? |
46063 | But what are the characteristics of the mental state of our contemporary savages? |
46063 | But what has become of my glove?" |
46063 | But why this mortal guise, Wooing as if he were a milk- faced boy? |
46063 | Chaucer, Legende of Good Women, 208_ et seq._; Court of Love(? |
46063 | Couldst thou keep thy course while the sphere revolved beneath thee? |
46063 | Demeter(?) |
46063 | Deserv''d they death because thy grace appear''d In ever modest motion? |
46063 | Did I lack lovers? |
46063 | Did marigolds bright as these, gilding the mist, Drop from her maiden zone? |
46063 | Die Edda, 458_ n_ Lydgate, John, 1370(?)-1451(?). |
46063 | Dost thou again peruse, With hot cheeks and sear''d eyes, The too clear web, and thy dumb sister''s shame? |
46063 | Dost thou not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
46063 | Dost thou to- night behold, Here, through the moonlight on this English grass, The unfriendly palace in the Thracian wild? |
46063 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied:"Wouldst thou then, Nisus, refuse to share thy enterprise with me? |
46063 | For why, ah, overbold, didst thou follow the chase, and being so fair, why wert thou thus overhardy to fight with beasts?" |
46063 | Forlorn, what succor rely on? |
46063 | Had he lost there a father, or brother, or any dear friend? |
46063 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
46063 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
46063 | He spake; and the fleet Hermod thus replied:--"Brother, what seats are these, what happier day? |
46063 | He was loath to surrender his sweetheart to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a heifer? |
46063 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixed his eyes on the virgin and said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
46063 | How dost thou fare on thy feet through the path of the sea beasts, nor fearest the sea? |
46063 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
46063 | How, then, did the senseless and cruel stories come into existence? |
46063 | I have done and I may not undo, I have given and I take not again; Art thou other than I, Allfather, wilt thou gather my glory in vain?" |
46063 | I, what were I, when these can nought avail? |
46063 | If strength might save them, could not Odin save, My father, and his pride, the warrior Thor, Vidar the silent, the impetuous Tyr? |
46063 | Knowest thou not that he is now of age? |
46063 | Max Müller derives Athene from the root_ ah_, which yields the Sanskrit Ahanâ and the Greek Daphne, the Dawn(?). |
46063 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
46063 | Might Hela perchance surrender Balder if Höder himself should take his place among the shades? |
46063 | NEREÏDS ON SEA BEASTS]"Whither bearest thou me, bull god? |
46063 | Never a pity entreat thy bosom for shelter?... |
46063 | Never, could never a plea forfend thy cruelly minded Counsel? |
46063 | Nisus said to his friend:"Dost thou perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
46063 | Of the wondrous star whose glory lightens the waves? |
46063 | On the authorship of the Younger Edda, 459 Johnston, T. C. Did the Ph[oe]nicians discover America? |
46063 | Or shall I offer to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
46063 | Or what pale promise make? |
46063 | Say, does the seed scorn earth and seek the sun? |
46063 | See Byron, Don Juan, 3, 86,"You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
46063 | Shall I trust Æneas to the chances of the weather and the winds?" |
46063 | Shall it, then, be unavailing, All this toil for human culture? |
46063 | She brushes aside the plea of Wotan and his subterfuge,--who has ever heard that heroes can accomplish what the gods can not? |
46063 | She would have wept to see her father weep; But some God pitied her, and purple wings( What God''s were they?) |
46063 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Freyr exclaimed:"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
46063 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out:"What''s the matter? |
46063 | So having paus''d awhile, at last she said,"Who taught thee rhetoric to deceive a maid? |
46063 | Starting from his sleep, the old man cried out,"My daughters, would you kill your father?" |
46063 | THE THREE FATES From the painting by Michelangelo(?)] |
46063 | That I should die I knew( how should I not? |
46063 | That friend looked rough with fighting: had he strained Worst brute to breast was ever strangled yet? |
46063 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is it that in the morning goes on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
46063 | The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
46063 | The day will come, when fall shall Asgard''s towers, And Odin, and his sons, the seed of Heaven; But what were I, to save them in that hour? |
46063 | The death of= Creüsa=, also called Glauce, suggests that of Hercules( in the flaming sunset?). |
46063 | The deathless longings tamed, that I should seethe My soul in love like any shepherd girl? |
46063 | The gods pretend dismay:--he can make himself great; can he make himself small, likewise? |
46063 | Then Idas, humbly,--"After such argument what can I plead? |
46063 | Then one cried,"Lo now, Shall not the Arcadian shoot out lips at us, Saying all we were despoiled by this one girl?" |
46063 | Then, with a louder laugh, the hag replied:"Is Balder dead? |
46063 | There are certain questions that nearly every child and every savage asks: What is the world and what is man? |
46063 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
46063 | They seize Freia, and bear her away as pledge till that ransom be paid...."Alack, what aileth the gods?" |
46063 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
46063 | Through the cloud- rack, dark and trailing, Must they see above them sailing O''er life''s barren crags the vulture? |
46063 | Thus is it thou dost flout our vow, dost flout the Immortals,-- Carelessly homeward bearest, with baleful ballast of curses? |
46063 | True, I did boldly say they might compare Even with thyself in virgin purity: May not a mother in her pride repeat What every mortal said? |
46063 | Was my beauty dulled, The golden hair turned dross, the lithe limbs shrunk? |
46063 | Wert thou last kissed, Pale hyacinth, last seen, before his face? |
46063 | What art thou? |
46063 | What cared I for their dances and their feasts, Whose heart awaited an immortal doom? |
46063 | What chant, what wailing, move the Powers of Hell? |
46063 | What city is your home? |
46063 | What could the king of gods and men do? |
46063 | What drink is sweet to thee, what food shalt thou find from the deep? |
46063 | What else did the maker do? |
46063 | What favor have you to ask of us?" |
46063 | What folk inhabit?--cruel unto strangers, Or hospitable? |
46063 | What form is this of more than mortal height? |
46063 | What if I the fact confess? |
46063 | What is death, and what becomes of us after death? |
46063 | What king ruleth here? |
46063 | What other outcome can be expected when mere physical or brute force joins issue with the enlightened and embattled hosts of heaven? |
46063 | What romance would be left?--who can flatter or kiss trees? |
46063 | What should he do; how extricate the youth; or would it be better to die with him? |
46063 | What should he do?--go home to the palace or lie hid in the woods? |
46063 | When-- but can it be? |
46063 | Whence came the commodities of life? |
46063 | Where both deliberate, the love is slight: Who ever lov''d, that lov''d not at first sight? |
46063 | Who art thou, then, that here withstandest?" |
46063 | Who made them? |
46063 | Who of Thessalians, more than this man, loves The stranger? |
46063 | Who that now inhabits Greece? |
46063 | Why do we celebrate certain festivals, practice certain ceremonials, observe solemnities, and partake of sacraments, and bow to this or the other god? |
46063 | Why not confer upon them human and superhuman passions and powers? |
46063 | Why slay each other? |
46063 | Why wilt them ever scare me with thy tears, And make me tremble lest a saying learnt In days far- off, on that dark earth, be true? |
46063 | Why, then, should not the savage believe, of beings worthy of worship and fear and gratitude, all and more than all that is accredited to man? |
46063 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
46063 | Wouldst thou stay me? |
46063 | Yea, but where shall I turn? |
46063 | Yet hold me not forever in thine East: How can my nature longer mix with thine? |
46063 | Yet where is thy triumph? |
46063 | You will be free? |
46063 | [ 392] See T. C. Johnston''s Did the Ph[oe]nicians Discover America? |
46063 | and do ye come for tears? |
46063 | and what the first men? |
46063 | and whose shield is ordained to cover him in the fight?" |
46063 | and will ye stop your ears, In vain desire to do aught, And wish to live''mid cares and fears, Until the last fear makes you nought? |
46063 | art thou forever blind? |
46063 | become of mee? |
46063 | cries he,"free in sooth? |
46063 | has shee done this to thee? |
46063 | my soul''s far better part, Why with untimely sorrows heaves thy heart? |
46063 | p. 226, in text; Heracles in the eastern pediment of the Parthenon(? |
46063 | said Æneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
46063 | the cause? |
46063 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise, What was thy pity''s recompense? |
46063 | was then the rumor true that thou hadst perished? |
46063 | what desolate cavern? |
46063 | what land? |
46063 | what lioness whelped thee? |
46063 | whither go? |
46063 | who was the alien woman that I beheld in my sleep? |
46063 | within the heart of this great flight, Whose ivory arms hold up the golden lyre? |
46063 | Æneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination?" |
14726 | And what became of the sons of Bor, whom ye look upon as gods? |
14726 | And where did this god remain before he made heaven and earth? |
14726 | But has Odin,said Gangler,"the same food as the heroes?" |
14726 | But on what did the cow feed? |
14726 | But tell me,he( Gangler) continued,"did it ever happen to Thor in his expeditions to be overcome either by spells or by downright force?" |
14726 | But what will preserve this abode when Surtur''s fire consumes heaven and earth? |
14726 | But who is he,asked Gangler,"that causes her this anxiety?" |
14726 | But with what did he begin, or what was the beginning of things? |
14726 | Hast thou had success as well as labour? 14726 Hast thou not been told that the gods made a bridge from earth to heaven, and called it Bifrost? |
14726 | How did the race of Ymir spread itself? |
14726 | How doth All- father regulate the course of the sun and moon? |
14726 | How goes it with the Æsir? 14726 How will the swarthy dwarf afford us aid?" |
14726 | I have not heard before of Ragnarok,said Gangler;"what hast thou to tell me about it?" |
14726 | I must now ask thee,said Gangler,"who are the gods that men are bound to believe in?" |
14726 | I must now ask,said Gangler,"which is the path leading from earth to heaven?" |
14726 | Knowest thou whether we can get the liquor- boiler? |
14726 | Of what wouldst thou ask me? 14726 Tell me now,"said Gangler,"which are the goddesses?" |
14726 | Thou tellest me many wonderful things of heaven,said Gangler,"but what other homesteads are to be seen there?" |
14726 | Verily,said Gangler,"it was a famous exploit which Thor performed on that journey, but did any other such events take place among the Æsir?" |
14726 | Was there,asked Gangler,"any kind of equality or any degree of good understanding between these two races?" |
14726 | What can a foot to a foot give; or, grown to the body, one hand the other? |
14726 | What did All- father do after Asgard was made? |
14726 | What hast thou to say,demanded Gangler,"of Skidbladnir, which thou toldst me was the best of ships? |
14726 | What have the heroes to drink,said Gangler,"in sufficient quantity to correspond to their plentiful supply of meat: do they only drink water?" |
14726 | What is most noteworthy in this country? 14726 What is there remarkable in regard to that place?" |
14726 | What man is this, to me unknown, who has for me increased an irksome course? 14726 What more wonders hast thou to tell me,"said Gangler,"concerning the ash?" |
14726 | What thinkest thou the woman[102] means, by sending us a ring in a wolf''s clothing wrapt? 14726 Whence come these wolves?" |
14726 | Where dwelt Ymir, and on what did he live? |
14726 | Where is this God? |
14726 | Where,asked Gangler,"is the chief or holiest seat of the gods?" |
14726 | Who are the men that on the rings''possessor have laid bonds? 14726 Why are so piercing Freyia''s looks? |
14726 | Why have ye Hniflungs such wrathful countenances? |
14726 | Why sit ye here? 14726 Why wilt thou, young Kon: tame the birds? |
14726 | Will any of the gods survive, and will there be any longer a heaven and an earth? |
14726 | Wilt thou do half the work with me, either the whales home to the dwelling bear, or the boat fast bind? |
14726 | Wilt thou the prince for his wealth circumvent? 14726 [ 130]"But tell me,"said Gangler,"does fire burn over Bifrost?" |
14726 | ''But,''she added,''thou hast not death''s hue on thee, why then ridest them here on the way to Hel?'' |
14726 | ( Where are now the bones of the famous and wise goldsmith Weland? |
14726 | *** She then inquired who would go the steeds to saddle, the chariot to drive, on horseback ride, the hawk let fly, arrows shoot from the yew bow? |
14726 | 17. Who is this of the Alfar''s, or of the Æsir''s sons, or of the wise Vanir''s? |
14726 | 2. Who is the churl of churls, that cries across the water? |
14726 | 5. Who has incited thee? |
14726 | A guest is come in: where shall he sit? |
14726 | A tree withers that on a hill- top stands; protects it neither bark nor leaves: such is the man whom no one favours: why should he live long? |
14726 | And the giant Vafthrûdnir, when Gangrad asked,''Whence came Orgelmir the first of the sons of giants?'' |
14726 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
14726 | Atli oft inquired whither his boys were gone to play, as he nowhere saw them? |
14726 | Brynhild answered:"Why shall I go on along with thee in this more than in anything else?" |
14726 | But Skrymir sat up, and stroking his cheek, said--"''Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
14726 | But are there any more of them besides those you have already mentioned?" |
14726 | But how do the heroes pass their time when they are not drinking?" |
14726 | But how is the earth fashioned?" |
14726 | But how was the fetter smithied?" |
14726 | But tell me, did Thor ever avenge this affront?" |
14726 | But was he not punished for these crimes?" |
14726 | But what didst thou, Thor? |
14726 | But what hast thou done with my glove?'' |
14726 | But who owns this skiff, which by the strand thou holdest? |
14726 | Can I get there to- day? |
14726 | Carest thou this to know? |
14726 | Carest thou this to know? |
14726 | For whom are those benches strewed o''er with rings, those costly couches o''erlaid with gold?" |
14726 | For whom will vengeance be the easier to appease, if the son lives?" |
14726 | Gangler thus began his discourse:--"''Who is the first, or eldest of the gods?" |
14726 | Gudrun asked why she did so? |
14726 | Gudrun said:"It is premature to glory in that: this forebodes something; but what instigates thee against us?" |
14726 | Gunnar his head then turned, and to Hogni said:"What counselest thou, bold warrior? |
14726 | Has the sea him deluded, or the sword wounded? |
14726 | Hast thou Hlorridi''s hammer hidden?" |
14726 | Hast thou last night with corpses lain? |
14726 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?'' |
14726 | Hast thou seen Sigrlinn, Svafnir''s daughter, of maidens fairest, in her pleasant home? |
14726 | Hast thou sorrow in thy heart? |
14726 | Helgi then of Hiorleif asked:"Hast thou mustered the valiant people?" |
14726 | How art thou called? |
14726 | How art thou named? |
14726 | How did your women prove towards you? |
14726 | How do men call thee? |
14726 | How do thy kindred call thee? |
14726 | How fares it with thee, Thor?'' |
14726 | How for happiness shall hereafter be this affinity? |
14726 | How goes it with the Alfar? |
14726 | How is it with the Æsir? |
14726 | How with the Alfar? |
14726 | Hrimgerd, Hati''s daughter, said: 12. Who are the chieftains in Hatafiord? |
14726 | I shall be Giuki''s guest, and I shall thence depart: what will next my life befall? |
14726 | I will now just mention, how that fair youth thy mind corrupted, who thee a necklace gave, and around whom thou thy limbs didst twine? |
14726 | I will yet know who the maidens are, that weep at will, and heavenward cast their neck- veils? |
14726 | If I may indemnify thee, say fully to the king: was it one being only, that saved the prince''s ships, or went many together? |
14726 | If thou hast no father like the sons of men, by what wonder art thou begotten? |
14726 | In the air aloft what glideth?'' |
14726 | Is the wise king of the land at home? |
14726 | Is there no other ship as good or as large?" |
14726 | Knowest thou how to grave them? |
14726 | Knowest thou not, Eldir, that if we two with bitter words contend, I shall be rich in answers, if thou sayest too much? |
14726 | Knowest thou that I gave to those I ought not-- victory to cowards? |
14726 | Odin said,"Seest thou Agnar, thy foster- son, where he is, getting children with a giantess in a cave? |
14726 | Of what art thou in quest? |
14726 | Once, as she drove out, certain Vanir saw her car in the air, when one of them exclaimed,"''What flieth there? |
14726 | Shall I obtain the damsel? |
14726 | Shall I then with Gunnar form relationship, and with Gudrun join in wedlock? |
14726 | Sigurd applied to him, and asked: 1. Who here inhabits, in these towers? |
14726 | Sigurd said:"Why dost thou shrink back, Gunnar?" |
14726 | Skirnir having reported the success of his message, Frey exclaimed,"''Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
14726 | Skrymir awakening, cried out--"''What''s the matter? |
14726 | The bold chief they asked, if the Goths''lord would with gold his life redeem? |
14726 | The choicest race of men under heaven? |
14726 | Then demanded the god- born Gudmund:"Who is the chieftain that commands the fleet, and that formidable force brings to our land?" |
14726 | Then said Thrym, the Thursar''s prince:"Where hast thou seen brides eat more voraciously? |
14726 | Then went the powers all to their judgment- seats, the all- holy gods, and thereon held council: who had all the air with evil mingled? |
14726 | Then you had kind damsels there? |
14726 | They the Jötuns questioned, wise seers of the future, whether this might not forebode calamity? |
14726 | This said Gudmund, Granmar''s son: 17. Who is the warrior that commands the ships, and lets his golden banner wave o''er his prow? |
14726 | Thor cried out:-- 1. Who is the knave of knaves, that by the sound stands yonder? |
14726 | To what end is that? |
14726 | To whom does he belong, and what is there to say respecting him?" |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | What are their functions, and what have they brought to pass?" |
14726 | What atonement will that woman take, for the frauds we shall have practised on her? |
14726 | What chieftain has on thee brought this dishonour? |
14726 | What fish is this, that in the river swims, and can not from harm itself protect? |
14726 | What goeth there? |
14726 | What has befallen Helgi, Hiorvard''s son? |
14726 | What has my corslet cut? |
14726 | What injury has Sigurd done thee, that thou the hero wilt of life bereave?" |
14726 | What is it that prevents thy mirth?" |
14726 | What is it to me, although the maiden be of aspect fair? |
14726 | What is that sound of sounds, which I now sounding hear within our dwelling? |
14726 | What little thing is that I see wagging its tail, and snapping eagerly? |
14726 | What man is this, that in my habitation by word addresses me? |
14726 | What man is this, who lays claim to power over that fair, bright maiden? |
14726 | What man is this? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Harbard? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Harbard? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Harbard? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Harbard? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Harbard? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Thor? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Thor? |
14726 | What meanwhile didst thou, Thor? |
14726 | What men cause a ship along the coasts to float? |
14726 | What monster is it before the fore- court standing, and hovering round the perilous flame? |
14726 | What monster is that, before the fore- court standing, who to the wayfarer offers not hospitality? |
14726 | What mortals will live, when the great"Fimbul"-winter shall from men have passed? |
14726 | What new tidings canst thou give from Norway? |
14726 | What now troubles my only son? |
14726 | What of Odin will the life''s end be, when the powers perish? |
14726 | What said Odin in his son''s ear, ere he on the pile was laid? |
14726 | What will then follow? |
14726 | When awakened from her sleep, on what will she chiefly with Sigurd converse hold, which to the prince''s benefit may tend? |
14726 | When to taste beer thou didst constantly refuse, unless to both''twas offered? |
14726 | When wilt thou converse hold with the powerful son of Niord? |
14726 | Whence art thou come? |
14726 | Whence hast thou journeyed? |
14726 | Whence will come the sun in that fair heaven, when Fenrir has this devoured? |
14726 | Where didst thou learn words than which I never heard more irritating? |
14726 | Which of the Æsir will rule o''er the gods''possession, when Surt''s fire shall be quenched? |
14726 | Who are the Skilfings? |
14726 | Who are the Skioldungs? |
14726 | Who are the maidens that o''er the ocean travel, wise of spirit, journey? |
14726 | Who has decked thee with bracelets? |
14726 | Who in his faith will trust? |
14726 | Who is it that inquires? |
14726 | Who the Odlings? |
14726 | Who the Ylfings? |
14726 | Who the hers- born? |
14726 | Who the hold- born? |
14726 | Whom dost thou seek? |
14726 | Why about the nose art thou so pale? |
14726 | Why art thou come alone to Jotunheim?" |
14726 | Why art thou come alone, through the hostile fire, our halls to visit? |
14726 | Why beneath the helm eat ye raw flesh? |
14726 | Why dost thou chafe so, Thor? |
14726 | Why dost thou not leave off, Loki? |
14726 | Why hast thou lost that beauteous colour? |
14726 | Why never laughest thou? |
14726 | Why shall I tell thee, thou young man, my mind''s great trouble? |
14726 | Why shall we here desire to listen to that screaming?" |
14726 | Why shouldst thou thy name conceal, unless thou crime hast perpetrated? |
14726 | Why so acute are Borgny''s pains? |
14726 | Why temptest thou me? |
14726 | Why will ye, Æsir twain, here within, strive with reproachful words? |
14726 | Why wouldst thou stretch thy arm across the sound, when there is altogether no offence? |
14726 | Will Giuki''s sons on their relative redden their swords? |
14726 | Will the alliance for Gunnar''s solace henceforth prove, or even for mine? |
14726 | Will the chief with me come and converse? |
14726 | Will the prudent Gunnar, Guthorm, and Hogni, at her instigation, then proceed? |
14726 | Will then Gunnar, chief among men, the noble woman we d? |
14726 | Wilt thou a longer chat? |
14726 | Wisely she asked: might they not be appeased? |
14726 | Wishest thou a longer narrative? |
14726 | Wishest thou a longer narrative? |
14726 | Wishest thou a yet longer narrative? |
14726 | Wishest thou yet a longer narrative? |
14726 | Wishest thou yet a longer narrative? |
14726 | With what affliction art thou burthened, that thou thy mother callest, who to dust is come, and from human homes departed? |
14726 | [ 25] knowest thou how to consume? |
14726 | [ 46] our gold, in Ulfdal?" |
14726 | [ 55] Why is thy corslet sprinkled with blood? |
14726 | [ 8] Understand ye yet, or what? |
14726 | absorbed in evil and murderous thoughts? |
14726 | although three nights by me the chieftain''s bride glad of heart has slept? |
14726 | and me have bound?" |
14726 | and what hath he done to display his glory?" |
14726 | are ye so silent, so reserved, that ye can not speak? |
14726 | as on the mound thou sittest, and watchest all the ways, how I to the speech may come, of the young maiden, for Gymir''s dogs? |
14726 | as thou art wise declared, and many things to know, how that holm is called, where Surt and the Æsir will sword- liquor together mingle? |
14726 | asked Gangler;"or dost thou believe that this giant was a god?" |
14726 | by Hwæt( hwær) Welondes? |
14726 | by what fellow art thou begot? |
14726 | desirest thou to know? |
14726 | did an acorn fall on my head? |
14726 | dost thou desire, which for tears thou canst not utter? |
14726 | dost thou remember when we in early days blended our blood together? |
14726 | dost thou upbraid me that I am far from my paternal home? |
14726 | ere thou thy foot settest one step forward, on what converse the sons of the triumphant gods at their potation? |
14726 | ere thou thy steed unsaddlest, and a foot hence thou goest, what thou hast accomplished in Jotunheim, for my pleasure or thine? |
14726 | etc., how those maids are called, who sit at Menglod''s knees in harmony together? |
14726 | etc., to what the virtue is of that famed tree applied, which nor fire nor iron will harm? |
14726 | etc., what that mount is called, on which I see a splendid maiden stand? |
14726 | etc., what that structure is called, than which among the gods mortals never saw a greater artifice? |
14726 | etc., what that tree is called that with its branches spreads itself over every land? |
14726 | etc., what the cock is called that sits in that lofty tree, and all- glittering is with gold? |
14726 | etc., what the grate is called, than which among the gods mortals never saw a greater artifice? |
14726 | etc., what this hall is called, which is girt round with a curious flickering flame? |
14726 | etc., what those dogs are called, that chase away the giantesses, and safety to the fields restore? |
14726 | etc., whether any man can enter while those fierce assailants sleep? |
14726 | etc., whether he will alive return, who seeks after, and will take, that rod? |
14726 | etc., whether there be any weapon, before which Vidofnir may fall to Hel''s abode? |
14726 | etc., whether there is any food that men can get, such that they can run in while they eat? |
14726 | etc., whether there is any man that may in Menglod''s soft arms sleep? |
14726 | etc., whether there is any treasure, that mortals can obtain, at which the pale giantess will rejoice? |
14726 | etc., whether they protect those who offer to them, if it should, be needful? |
14726 | etc., which of the Æsir''s sons has that constructed, which within the court I saw? |
14726 | exclaimed the woman,''have all things sworn to spare Baldur?'' |
14726 | for I desire to know, why alone thou sittest in the spacious hall the livelong day? |
14726 | for this make thee amends? |
14726 | from Valland, my dwelling visit? |
14726 | from the land driven, and alone art come to find us? |
14726 | hast thou wakened war, or fed the birds of conflict''s sisters? |
14726 | how he children begat, the bold Jötun, as he had no giantess''s company? |
14726 | how will Sigurd''s life fall out?" |
14726 | knowest thou how to depict them? |
14726 | knowest thou how to expound them? |
14726 | knowest thou how to offer? |
14726 | knowest thou how to pray? |
14726 | knowest thou how to prove them? |
14726 | knowest thou how to send? |
14726 | knowest, whence came the day, which over people passes, and night with waning moons? |
14726 | knowest, whence came the moon, which over mankind passes, and the sun likewise? |
14726 | knowest, whence first came Aurgelmir, among the Jötun''s sons, thou sagacious Jötun? |
14726 | knowest, whence first came the earth, and the high heaven, thou, sagacious Jötun? |
14726 | knowest, whence winter came, and warm summer first among the wise gods? |
14726 | knowest, which of the Æsir earliest, or of Ymir''s sons, in days of old existed? |
14726 | may be derived from_ G._ tasche, a pocket or pouch; hence the Permeating Pouch? |
14726 | now suchlike we hear? |
14726 | nurtured with Heimir? |
14726 | of my brave boys what is become?" |
14726 | of what people are thou the son? |
14726 | or to the Jötun race Od''s maid had given? |
14726 | or what most desirable in the Hunnish land?" |
14726 | or"How fares it with thee?" |
14726 | said Gangler;"what is his power? |
14726 | since on the floor thou wilt prove thy proficiency, how that plain is called, where in fight shall meet Surt and the gentle Gods? |
14726 | since on the floor thou wilt prove thy proficiency, how that steed is called, which from the east draws night o''er the beneficent powers? |
14726 | since on the floor thou wilt prove thy proficiency, how the horse is called that draws each day forth over human kind? |
14726 | since on the floor thou wilt prove thy proficiency, how the stream is called, which earth divides between the Jötuns and the Gods? |
14726 | since that thou art pleased to give me? |
14726 | since thou knowest the omens both of gods and men, which omens are the best-- if to fight''tis needful-- at the swing of glaves? |
14726 | speakest thou from the floor? |
14726 | that it was they, who their kin avenged? |
14726 | that of my wickedness I more recount? |
14726 | that thou in Fafnir reddenst thy glittering falchion? |
14726 | that which I will ask thee, and I desire to know: who here holds sway, and has power over these lands and costly halls? |
14726 | thin, glittering- bright, which I have here in hand? |
14726 | thin, glittering- bright, which I have here in hand? |
14726 | though strong, how wilt thou contend with the Huns''deadly wiles? |
14726 | to a joyless being such miseries recount? |
14726 | true what has been told to me, that thou and Volund in the isle together sat?" |
14726 | what await ye in Brunavagar? |
14726 | what didst thou do? |
14726 | what nation''s king do people name him? |
14726 | what the Einheriar do in Haerfather''s halls, until the powers perish? |
14726 | what thou doest first remember, or earliest knowest? |
14726 | whence Niörd came among the Æsir''s sons? |
14726 | whence the wind comes, that over ocean passes, itself invisible to man? |
14726 | where do ye warriors a home possess? |
14726 | whither desire ye to explore a way? |
14726 | who has cast from me the fallow bands? |
14726 | why from sleep have I started? |
14726 | why hast thou suffered thyself to be incited to take my life? |
14726 | why shall we exchange forms and manners, when on the way we are? |
14726 | why sleep life away? |
14726 | wilt thou further speak? |
14726 | with all forethought, as we hold friendly converse; seest thou of Sigurd those bold achievements, that will highest soar under heaven''s regions?" |
14726 | with dowry purchase the lovely royal daughter? |