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 |
---|---|
39808 | But what is the tump for? |
39808 | What has that to do with it? |
39808 | What have you done? |
39808 | Before I had seen her a few minutes she remarked:"I suppose you do n''t remember me, Lord Tredegar?" |
39808 | He got on very well, as she thought, and one day, meeting his professor, she said,"Oh, Professor, do you think my son will ever learn to draw?" |
39808 | I have put this question to myself many times in the last month or so--"What does it all mean? |
39808 | I said,"What have they found out about you?" |
39808 | I saw in a newspaper which does not hold the same opinions as I do, the question,"What on earth is Lord Tredegar made a Viscount for?" |
39808 | I was hunting in the Midland Counties and I asked,"Where is Tom?" |
39808 | One is''What is Home Rule?'' |
39808 | Remarking to the young lady that the martial air appealed to an old soldier, she said,"Why, Lord Tredegar, were you ever in the Army?" |
39808 | So why,"said they,"do you want to have more knowledge?" |
39808 | What are your charges for telling me what I can call anyone without getting into trouble?" |
39808 | What have I ever done to deserve this great tribute?" |
39808 | Why? |
39808 | _ Conservative Meeting, Newport, February 2nd, 1894._ WHAT IS A PHILANTHROPIST? |
39808 | and the other is''Have you used Pear''s Soap?'' |
18188 | For who would wage war with the gods: who, even with the one god? |
18188 | And then we meet with the weighty question: What lies before this period? |
18188 | Apropos, ca n''t you get me a silhouette of him?" |
18188 | Are there characteristic differences between the utterances of the_ man of genius_ and the_ poetical soul of the people_? |
18188 | Has Homer''s personality, because it can not be grasped, gradually faded away into an empty name? |
18188 | Let us hear how a learned man of the first rank writes about Homer even so late as 1783:"Where does the good man live? |
18188 | Or had all the Homeric poems been gathered together in a body, the nation naively representing itself by the figure of Homer? |
18188 | What was left of Homer''s own individual work? |
18188 | What was meant by"Homer"at that time? |
18188 | Who was Homer previously to Wolf''s brilliant investigations? |
18188 | Why did he remain so long incognito? |
29343 | Other girls,you say,"bring home prizes: our brothers bring home prizes; or at any rate have the chance of doing so-- why do n''t we?" |
29343 | Purity, truth, and love, Are they such common things? 29343 A visitor asked,Did Mr. Robbins found a benevolent institution?" |
29343 | All these are among the religious influences; and what is their aim and object? |
29343 | And now, seeing these things are so, what ought to be the attitude of educated girls and women towards pleasures, the usual pleasures of society? |
29343 | And why? |
29343 | And yet is there not a type of educated woman which we do not wholly admire? |
29343 | Because you are better than others? |
29343 | But are we therefore to rest and be thankful in the complacent belief that we have now at length attained perfection, at least in our High Schools? |
29343 | But how is it for girls when they leave school? |
29343 | But when school life ends, what will become of this discovery that you have made? |
29343 | But you are beginning to ask-- Is all this religion? |
29343 | Did you ever read Kingsley''s"Nausicaa in London"? |
29343 | Did you ever think for what reason you should have had such a splendid time of it in your lives? |
29343 | Do you all know who Nausicaa was? |
29343 | How is sago made? |
29343 | How is this? |
29343 | How shall I describe it? |
29343 | How should we use them in our turn to better those who come after us? |
29343 | In the crusade against the lower type of education that prevailed twenty years ago, and still exists, who are the most important agents? |
29343 | Is it giving you greater delicacy of touch? |
29343 | Is it necessary to say anything to you about the value of education? |
29343 | Is it opening new channels for influences, streaming in on you or streaming out from you? |
29343 | May I venture to say to a Bath public that it is worth while to have first- rate buildings for educational purposes? |
29343 | Now, why is this? |
29343 | The first was miscellaneous: What is lightning? |
29343 | What are you yourselves at home, in society, with parents, brothers, sisters, children, friends, schoolfellows, servants? |
29343 | What is it that we should try and extract from them for ourselves? |
29343 | What is religion, that in the eyes of so many clever and intelligent and well- educated young people it should be thought dull? |
29343 | What were the Sicilian Vespers, the properties of the atmosphere, the length of the Mississippi, and the Pelagian heresy? |
29343 | What were the mistresses? |
29343 | but_ what_ can one do? |
4052 | And is not this threatening, at least in part, already put into execution? |
4052 | And what has been the event? |
4052 | And why is it that others who see all those things, do not take warning by them, to prepare for their own latter end? |
4052 | And will you still persevere in the road of misery? |
4052 | And, When will the sabbath be ended? |
4052 | But how can you reconcile these prohibitions to your conduct; or your consciences? |
4052 | But to whom? |
4052 | Can it be a question with you, whether the God who made heaven and earth, or Satan, the god of this world, is the best master? |
4052 | For should they be found so at last, what will become of you, if you live and die impenitent? |
4052 | For who amongst us can dwell with everlasting burnings? |
4052 | From whence proceed the infidelity, blasphemy, lying, theft, sabbath- breaking, slandering and the many horrid evils, which every where abound? |
4052 | Have not many of you, for the sake, perhaps, of a few shillings, unjustly obtained, plunged yourselves into misery for the remainder of your lives? |
4052 | Hence the thought of many is, What a weariness is it? |
4052 | Is not this the language of your hearts? |
4052 | Is this acting like rational or accountable creatures? |
4052 | My brethren, what shall I say? |
4052 | Now what must be the end of these courses? |
4052 | Shall not I visit for these things, saith the Lord? |
4052 | Such are all his posterity: for who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
4052 | The great point is, how we shall die? |
4052 | Thus it is said, God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son For what purpose? |
4052 | Was it not God? |
4052 | What would a stranger think, who regards the sabbath, if he visited every part of this colony on the Lord''s day? |
4052 | Whence is it that so many in this colony, labour under such sore and complicated disorders, pains, and miseries? |
4052 | Whence is there so much ignorance and contempt of God? |
4052 | Who gave you the powers of reason and speech? |
4052 | Why are so many, both young and old, taken away by death? |
4052 | Why do mankind so eagerly, so universally pursue the vain pleasures and follies of the world, while they seldom think of God their Maker? |
4052 | Will you not pray to be delivered from it? |
4052 | Will you still prefer the chains of your own depraved inclinations, to the service of God, which is perfect freedom? |
18323 | What is a victory like? |
18323 | You ai n''t? 18323 Again, sir, when we look for those who have been most distinguished as men of letters, in the usual sense of the word, where do we find them? 18323 And how generously, sons of New England, have we treated you? 18323 And where, I will ask, is the future of our race to be found? 18323 And who more worthy to preside over such a gospel than the chairman to whom I ask you to return your thanks to- day? 18323 Disregarding professions, view their conduct, and on a doubtful occasion ask,Would Hamilton have done this thing?" |
18323 | Do I err in supposing this an illustration of the supremacy which belongs to the triumphs of the moral nature? |
18323 | Does he convince me of the truth of his statements? |
18323 | Does he persuade me to act as he wishes? |
18323 | Does he proceed in the most effective manner possible? |
18323 | How does this speaker impress me? |
18323 | I may extend the question-- where is to be found the future of mankind? |
18323 | Is it to be with us as with them? |
18323 | Month after month until the months became years we have cried to those who stood upon our walls:"Watchmen, what of the night?" |
18323 | Was there ever child that had more cause for gratitude to its progenitor? |
18323 | Was there ever parent who had juster reason to be proud of its offspring? |
18323 | What are the elements of success in this speaker? |
18323 | What is literature, and who are men of letters? |
18323 | What is the Senate? |
18323 | What language would we rather speak than the tongue of Shakespeare and Hampden, of the Pilgrims and King James''s version? |
18323 | What yachts, as a tribute to ourselves upon their own element, would we rather outsail than English yachts? |
18323 | What''s that in the corner there?" |
18323 | Where are Assyria and Egypt, the civilization of Greece, the universal dominion of Rome? |
18323 | Where is the city or village in our State where you do not own the best houses, run the largest manufactories, and control the principal industries? |
18323 | Who in the imposing troop of worldly grandeur is now remembered but with indifference or contempt? |
18323 | Would we be free? |
20171 | And did you git onny thing? |
20171 | And what did you get, Jacob? |
20171 | Is it down William? |
20171 | What are those potatoes worth, I say? |
20171 | What''s you bin doin''in dat mud puddle? 20171 And is there no life and intelligence in all this throng of spheres? 20171 And what are they? 20171 And what did you get Pat? |
20171 | Are there no eyes to see those floods of light, no hearts to share with ours that love which holds all these mighty orbs in place? |
20171 | Are there no sails on those far away summer seas, no wings to cleave those crystal airs, no forms divine to walk those radiant fields? |
20171 | At last he said:"Then, if nothing but a fight will satisfy you, will you allow me to kneel down and say my prayer before we fight?" |
20171 | But why mourn and brood over broken fortunes and the calamities of life? |
20171 | Did I say phantoms of light? |
20171 | Did you ever pass the remains of a"boom"town in your travels? |
20171 | Did you never gaze upon the remains of"Bunk City,"where but yesterday all was life and bustle, and to- day it looks like the ruins of Babylon? |
20171 | Did you never hear a country fiddler tune his fiddle? |
20171 | Did you never hear a fiddler fiddle? |
20171 | Did you never hear a mountain love song? |
20171 | Did you never hear the juvenile orator of the old field school speak? |
20171 | Did you never hear the music of the old time singing school? |
20171 | Did you never observe him wrestling with a pair of boots two numbers too small, as Jacob wrestled with the angel? |
20171 | Did you never witness an old field school"exhibition,"far out in the country, and listen to its music? |
20171 | Do you sometimes forget and wound the hearts of your children with frowns and the dagger of cruel words, and sometimes with a blow? |
20171 | Do you sometimes, in your own peevishness, and your own meanness, wish yourself away from their fretful cries and noisy sports? |
20171 | Far happier than the bachelor is old Uncle Rastus in his cabin, when he holds Aunt Dina''s hand in his and asks:"Who''s sweet?" |
20171 | Fellow thitithenth, if you can trust me in the capathity uv a tholjer, caint you trust me in the capathity uv the Legithlature? |
20171 | Have you ever thought of the glory of Eden, the first estate of man? |
20171 | Have you ever thought of the wealth that perished when paradise was lost? |
20171 | If I had n''t a- been perseverin'', an''had n''t a- kep on a- dig- gin''an''a- diggin, whar would I have been to- day? |
20171 | If old Vanderbilt had n''t a- been persevering in his pertickler kind uv dig- gin'', whar would he be to- day? |
20171 | Just from college, ca n''t you tell? |
20171 | The ladies screamed and helped him to his feet, all crying at once:"Are you hurt Mr.''Rickety''--are you hurt?" |
20171 | The old lady screamed and shouted:"What in the world is the matter, Adam?" |
20171 | The paregoric period of life is full of spoons and midnight squalls, but what is home without a baby? |
20171 | We crush under our feet the roses of peace and love in our eagerness to reach the illuminated heights of glory; and what is earthly glory? |
20171 | We stumble over the golden nuggets of contentment in pursuit of the phantoms of wealth, and what is wealth? |
20171 | Whar did he git hit at? |
20171 | What are these, and all the sweet melodies we hear, but echoes from the realm of visions and dreams? |
20171 | What greater wonders will the dreamers yet unfold? |
20171 | What intelligence less than God could fashion the human body? |
20171 | What is it that thinks and feels and knows and acts? |
20171 | What is that white belt we call the milky way, which spans the heavens and sparkles like a Sahara of diamonds? |
20171 | What is this mystery we call the soul? |
20171 | What makes''em''buse de baby kaze de jam an''zarves am sweet? |
20171 | Whence, and what, if not of God, is this mystery we call the mind? |
20171 | Where ends this dream of God? |
20171 | While the old man was gone the merchant came out and said to John:"What are those potatoes worth, my son?" |
20171 | Who can forget the old time courtships at the singing school? |
20171 | Who can forget the old time singing master? |
20171 | Who knows but that Mars may now be a paradise inhabited by a blessed race, unsullied by sin, untouched by death? |
20171 | Who knows but that his roseate color is only the blush of his flowers? |
20171 | Who would not have been touched by such an appeal? |
20171 | Why do n''t da keep temptation frum de little han''s an''feet? |
20171 | Why have your house decorated and painted by inferior workmen, when you can have it done by skilled workmen-- by artists-- for the same price? |
20171 | Why tarry in the doldrums of pessimism, with never a breeze to catch your limp and drooping sails and waft you on a joyous wave? |
20171 | he shouted to a bystander,"whar wuz you_ at_ when the lightnin''struck the show?" |
20171 | who can forget the old school house that stood on the hill? |
7212 | A living woman, do I dream Or stands my sister there, Where only at the middle ebb The shelving ledge is bare? |
7212 | Are hearts here strong enough to found A glorious people''s sway? |
7212 | Did earth ever see On thy prairie''s line Tribes older than thine, Old Chief of the Cree? |
7212 | Did he know of any cases of misery? 7212 Go with me, O Diarmid; see me Not on horse, or foot; with friends, Nor alone; not night or morning Reigns: O come; thou wilt not flee me? |
7212 | Is union yours? 7212 Medicine from the plants we borrow, Salves from many a leaf; May they not kill hunger''s sorrow, Give with food relief?" |
7212 | Thou hast put our ring together Can it be as one again? |
7212 | Yet far too cramped the narrow space Your country''s rule can own? |
7212 | Yet for the arts to find a shrine, Too rough, I ween, and rude? |
7212 | You deem a nation here shall stand, United, great, and free? |
7212 | And what did his councillors say? |
7212 | Ask of our rivers as they bound From hill to plain, or ocean- sound, If they are strong to- day? |
7212 | Away from Duart now he steers; Why curses he its lord; Why flee to Inveraray''s strength, As though he feared his sword? |
7212 | Below, in the dark narrow spaces, The Islesman gropes, down in the hold; Unnoticed, and one among many; What harm can his hatred unfold? |
7212 | Bereft of the strength which was given To use for our good or our bane, Shall yearnings vain, impotent, endless, Be ours with their burden of pain? |
7212 | But how came France''s lilies there Beneath the flag of red and gold? |
7212 | But why these useless plaints renew? |
7212 | Can a stranger Have passed by the steep river side?" |
7212 | Car ne fut- ce pas d''ici que jaillirent ces influences qui changèrent en riches habitations de nations puissantes, ces vastes déserts inconnus? |
7212 | Chief, tell us why your mien is sad, When friends and kinsmen meet?" |
7212 | Dead in the earth, and there hidden away, Who shall not yearn for thee, fairer than day? |
7212 | Deem''st thou that no honour liveth Save in haughty breasts like thine? |
7212 | Does not history show, and do not modern and existing tendencies declare, that the lines of cleavage among them lie along the lines of latitude? |
7212 | Ever young, who are these Whom Death can not seize? |
7212 | For a day he tarried, hearkening, Wondering, as he went his way, Whose the voice that gladly called him With the merry tones of day? |
7212 | For who can turn away his face From home and kin and be at rest? |
7212 | From each Moya thronged the dwellers:"Hath the chief the arrows sent?" |
7212 | Had he found starving settlers?" |
7212 | He too reached the Castle''s portal, Stood within its archway grim, Loitering in the path of others; Who would step aside for him? |
7212 | How came it there? |
7212 | I am sure that in this opinion all our Irish friends will join, for what is a Highlander but an Irishman? |
7212 | If in 1812 Canada was dear for her own sake to Canadians, how much more is she so now? |
7212 | Is she your queen With the shells and deer- teeth broidered, Decked with sheen of gold between?" |
7212 | Ist''s Preußenland? |
7212 | Ist''s Schwabenland? |
7212 | Ist''s wo am Belt die Möve zieht? |
7212 | Ist''s wo am Rhein die Rebe blüht? |
7212 | It is impossible for Irishmen to feel anything but the most cordial feeling of love for you, for what is Scotland but an Irish colony? |
7212 | It must be asked,"Will such an Exhibition spread useful knowledge over wider districts which require it?" |
7212 | Know ye not how old enchantment Saw his storm- born sire appear, Armed, upon a peak dark- lifted O''er the snows and glaciers drear? |
7212 | Loved Ossian, sweetest voiced, what day But sees us listeners to thy lay? |
7212 | Now, gentlemen, what are the objects of your present effort? |
7212 | Qu''Appelle?" |
7212 | Say, Dúin''s son, whom I love well, Canst thou thereof the reason tell? |
7212 | See what is that, which yonder gleams, Where skarts alone make home; Is that but one oft- breaking sea, Some frequent fount of foam? |
7212 | Shall it come, and never mercy Shown of God avert the doom? |
7212 | Shall the longing for the absent Turn to feasting o''er his tomb? |
7212 | Sir Balva heard the giant roar,"What wave- thrown stranger climbed our shore?" |
7212 | Spoke he sadly:"Hast thou truly Still the heart I loved? |
7212 | Statistics are at all times wearisome, but are not these full of hope? |
7212 | Strange as when on Space the voices Of the stars''hosannahs fell, To this wilderness of beauty Seemed his call"Qu''Appelle? |
7212 | Strong Duart reeled as from a stroke; He stared as at the dead: How could her glance o''er that dark face Such deathly palor spread? |
7212 | Surely Safety guards his footsteps; Enmity he hath not sown: Yet who stealthily glides near him, Whose the arm around him thrown? |
7212 | The question must necessarily be asked, With what army are they to operate? |
7212 | The question must not only be,"Will such an Exhibition pay its expenses?" |
7212 | The wives, the old and feeble folk alone were left, and these He gathered, asking how to blind the strangers of the seas? |
7212 | Then she raised her face, and proudly Spoke unto her serving- men:"See you where the Baron''s people Come with him along the road? |
7212 | Then through the silence broke a voice,"Know you that lady, chief? |
7212 | Think''st thou men, like dogs in spirit, At such blows but wince and whine? |
7212 | To me these hills beside the wave With every year have dearer grown; Is it so great a thing to crave To call my native land, mine own? |
7212 | V."They are strong; could not they aid us?" |
7212 | Was it God, who gave dumb Nature Voice and words to shout to one Who, a pioneer, came, sunlike, Down the pathways of the sun? |
7212 | What Spirits of air?" |
7212 | What country e''er can take the place That Ireland fills within my breast? |
7212 | What do we find has been, and is, the tendency of the peoples of this continent? |
7212 | What good is your life to me? |
7212 | What man among the Feinne e''er saw The youth from friend or foe withdraw? |
7212 | What wonder is it that Canada thrives when the only change in her future is that she falls from the hands of one Scotsman into that of another? |
7212 | When thus they deal with us in peace, how shall we fare when blood Runs from the wounds to blind the eyes to aught but selfish good?" |
7212 | Where is now the old talk which we used to hear from a few of the faint- hearted of a change in destiny or of annexation? |
7212 | Where is the girl?" |
7212 | Who does not recall with gratitude to the country that gave him birth, the rule of the late Governor- General of Canada, the Earl of Dufferin? |
7212 | Why allowed you them to pass? |
7212 | Why known to so few were its rivers and plains, Where rustle so tall in their ripeness the grains? |
7212 | Why love a woman mild in speech, And yet a traitoress to each? |
7212 | Why speeds your boat so fast? |
7212 | Why waited we fearing to plant and to sow? |
7212 | _ LEGEND OF THE CANADIAN ROBIN_ Is it Man alone who merits Immortality or death? |
7212 | _ WERE THESE THE FIRST DISCOVERERS OF AMERICA?_ MILICETE LEGEND OF THE OUANGONDÉ, OR RIVER ST. JOHN. |
7212 | are we near your fires? |
7212 | but where is man or woman Who may boast of triumph long? |
7212 | friends, you deceived me,"he said;"Why conceal from my ears that Carillon Has the name that was named by the dead? |
7212 | may foeman''s might Your love ne''er break or chain?" |
7212 | must we part, my darling? |
7212 | on what path of victory has not an Irish hand carried forward among the foremost the banner of our union? |
7212 | what golden circlet broken Sees she there that gleams and burns? |
7212 | what has it won, That the deed of one hour has not more than undone? |
14062 | ''Did not Velasquez paint crinolines? |
14062 | ''How can you possibly paint these ugly three- cornered hats?'' |
14062 | ''How could I?'' |
14062 | ''Shall I be Biblical or Shakespearean, sir?'' |
14062 | ''What do you sit for?'' |
14062 | ''What is the use of setting an artist in a twelve- acre field and telling him to design a house? |
14062 | Am I pleading, then, for mere technique? |
14062 | And Goethe and Scott had brought romance back again from the prison she had lain in for so many centuries-- and what is romance but humanity? |
14062 | And criticism-- what place is that to have in our culture? |
14062 | And do you think that this was an exceptional case? |
14062 | And health in art-- what is that? |
14062 | And how shall men dress? |
14062 | And these pre- Raphaelites, what were they? |
14062 | And what became of the road? |
14062 | And what is the meaning of this beautiful decoration which we call art? |
14062 | Are ye afraid of him? |
14062 | But now what availeth him his wisdom or his arts? |
14062 | By virtue of what claim do I demand for the artist the love and loyalty of the men and women of the world? |
14062 | Did he heal them? |
14062 | Do the birds of the air feed him? |
14062 | Do the jackals share their booty with him? |
14062 | Do you like this spirit or not? |
14062 | Do you think it simple and strong, noble in its aim, and beautiful in its result? |
14062 | Do you think that they were an artistic people? |
14062 | Do you think, for instance, that we object to machinery? |
14062 | Does any new method remain for him? |
14062 | Does he plant a garden or catch fish in a net? |
14062 | Does he set his hand to the wooden plough and walk behind the oxen? |
14062 | Does he sow or reap? |
14062 | Does he think that literature went to the dogs when Thackeray wrote about puppydom? |
14062 | Does he weave linen on a loom? |
14062 | Dwells he not here, the beautiful young hermit, he who will not look on the face of woman? |
14062 | For what is decoration but the worker''s expression of joy in his work? |
14062 | Has he a house of reeds or a house of burnt clay or does he lie on the hillside? |
14062 | Has not Tite Street been thrilled with the tidings that the models of Chelsea were posing to the master, in peplums, for pastels? |
14062 | How did they treat Phidias? |
14062 | Is not art difficult, you will say to me, in such surroundings as these? |
14062 | Is this an artistic error? |
14062 | Now, having seen what makes the artist, and what the artist makes, who is the artist? |
14062 | Or do ye worship any gods? |
14062 | Or does he make his bed in the rushes? |
14062 | Simon, is supper ready? |
14062 | The olive wood is ever sacred to the Virgin Pallas, the Goddess of Wisdom; and who would have dreamed of finding Eros hidden there? |
14062 | Then there is the overcoat: now, what are the right principles of an overcoat? |
14062 | Thinking this, what place can I ascribe to art in our education? |
14062 | This apostle of inhospitality, who delights to defile, to desecrate, and to defame the gracious courtesies he is unworthy to enjoy? |
14062 | Were they an artistic people then? |
14062 | What does he do, the beautiful young hermit? |
14062 | What gods then do ye worship? |
14062 | What is a picture? |
14062 | What is an artistic people but a people who love their artists and understand their art? |
14062 | What is finish? |
14062 | What is his name? |
14062 | What is the difference between absolutely decorative art and a painting? |
14062 | What is the story of his days? |
14062 | What is the voice that speaks to him at night time in his cave? |
14062 | What mode of life has he? |
14062 | What more do you want?'' |
14062 | What profit have ye in so doing? |
14062 | What then is the position of Polybius? |
14062 | What think you of that for a school of design? |
14062 | What would you say of a dramatist who would take nobody but virtuous people as characters in his play? |
14062 | Where are these gods ye worship? |
14062 | Where did ye meet with them? |
14062 | Where does he dwell, the beautiful young hermit who will not look on the face of woman? |
14062 | Who built the beautiful cities of the world but commercial men and commercial men only? |
14062 | Who calls Honorius? |
14062 | Who is He whose love is greater than that of mortal men? |
14062 | Who is she? |
14062 | Why are ye afraid of him? |
14062 | Why did the three lepers call to him? |
14062 | Why didst thou come to this valley in thy beauty? |
14062 | Why didst thou tempt me with words? |
14062 | Why do ye feed him? |
14062 | Why do ye yourselves not look at me? |
14062 | Why should clogs be despised? |
14062 | Why should not American boys do a great deal more and better than Swiss boys? |
14062 | Why should they not? |
14062 | Why will he not look on the face of woman? |
14062 | Without parallel? |
14062 | Would you not cry out against the barbarism and the Puritanism of such an idea? |
14062 | Would you not rush off and burn down Newgate, if necessary, and say that such a thing was without parallel in history? |
14062 | Would you not say he was missing half of life? |
14062 | Ye have seen many of the gods? |
14062 | _ What_, you will say to me, the Greeks? |
14062 | were not they an artistic people? |
7427 | ''Miserable business to be in, ai n''t it?'' 7427 ''Who are you?'' |
7427 | Air you the man I voted for and that I''ve been reading about in the papers doin''legislatin''and sich in Washington? |
7427 | And a prominent member of the gymnastic class? |
7427 | And now what is it? |
7427 | And quite a hand at all athletic exercises? |
7427 | And what did she say? |
7427 | By gravy, mister,said the farmer, admiringly,"air you in the aggercultural business?" |
7427 | Ca n''t you postpone the call? |
7427 | Ca n''t you wait until after the call? |
7427 | Did you see any like me there, dear? |
7427 | Did you tell your mamma that Mr. and Mrs. Blank are here? |
7427 | Do you carry big loads of household goods for thirty cents? |
7427 | Do you use the electric or pneumatic signals? |
7427 | Have you a double track? |
7427 | How did politics get you out? |
7427 | How is it you''ve managed to keep so fresh and good- looking all these years? |
7427 | How many did I kill sir? 7427 How many?" |
7427 | How much did you get for both? |
7427 | How much is the cross worth? |
7427 | It''s-- er-- a-- did you say, what is it? |
7427 | Maybe you can help me out"Well, what is it? |
7427 | Nayther whiskey punch? |
7427 | Now, on which side are the most people? |
7427 | On the south side? |
7427 | On which side is the South Pole? |
7427 | Pray, who is that? |
7427 | Quite a hand? 7427 Say, ma, do they play base- ball in heaven?" |
7427 | Shall I send them on an emigrant train, or must they go first- class? 7427 Then how are you an Episcopalian?" |
7427 | Then what in thunder air you? |
7427 | To what parish do you belong? |
7427 | Well, now, suppose they should open on you with shells and musketry, what would you do? |
7427 | Well, of course, you have a train dispatcher, and run all trains by telegraph? |
7427 | Well, then,continued the clergyman,"what diocese do you belong to?" |
7427 | Well, thin, yer riverence, would it be any harrum fur me to give a toast? |
7427 | What barley? |
7427 | What did you do with the hide? |
7427 | What have you been drinking? |
7427 | What is a jackleg carpenter? |
7427 | What is it? |
7427 | What is that boy tied up there for? |
7427 | What is this cent for? |
7427 | What kind of a carpenter? |
7427 | What new substance, my dear? |
7427 | What''s his name? 7427 What''s that for? |
7427 | Where''s the hamper? |
7427 | Who confirmed you, then? |
7427 | Why not? |
7427 | Why, what did he say? |
7427 | Why, what did you mean by sending me such a message? |
7427 | Why, where have you been sleeping these last two nights since we left? |
7427 | Why? 7427 Will you, really?" |
7427 | Y''ain''t selling plows? |
7427 | You know your duty here, do you, sentinel? |
7427 | ''Did you see anything down- stairs worth stealing?'' |
7427 | ( to a committeeman at his side)"Eh? |
7427 | ATHLETIC NURSE Young Wife--"Why, dear, you were the stroke oar at college, were n''t you?" |
7427 | Ai n''t you got the nerve to go up and down Broadway fixed up like that, and your poor father and mother workin''hard at home? |
7427 | Ai n''t you''shamed o''yourself, and your father a honest, hard- workin''driver, and your mother a decent, respectable washwoman? |
7427 | An inquisitive passenger on a railroad recently had the following dialogue:"Do you use the block system on this road?" |
7427 | But he asked who is this coming man? |
7427 | But how are you able to do it?" |
7427 | But why is it not as reputable to invent one''s own story as to tell the story some one else has invented? |
7427 | CUTE BOY The teacher in geography was putting the class through a few simple tests:"On which side of the earth is the North Pole?" |
7427 | Catch on to them gaiters, will you? |
7427 | Do n''t I pay you enough?" |
7427 | Do n''t you Britishers know anything?" |
7427 | Does the second telling improve its morality? |
7427 | FAMILY AFFAIRS"Newlywed seems to find particular delight in parading his little family affairs before the eyes of his acquaintances,""Does he? |
7427 | First, what are sound views of literature; second, what is a religious paper? |
7427 | HITTING A LAWYER"Have you had a job to- day, Tim?" |
7427 | Has our nation always been just and kind? |
7427 | How did it happen? |
7427 | How do you flag the rear of your train if you are stopped from any cause between stations?"'' |
7427 | How in the world do you expect to live and keep a horse on seventy cents a day?" |
7427 | Husband--"May I hear about it?" |
7427 | I never thought of that; but why ca n''t we eat a bit of duck, yer riverence?" |
7427 | I replied:"Very well, stay there, and do n''t let any one see you, do you hear?" |
7427 | MORAL SUASION"What are your usual modes of punishment?" |
7427 | Mrs. McSwatters--"What is?" |
7427 | One year it was,"How many kinds of trees are there in the college yard?" |
7427 | Our Noble Selves: Why not toast ourselves and praise ourselves since we have the best means of knowing all the good in ourselves? |
7427 | STILL ROOM FOR RESEARCH"What is this new substance I hear so much about?" |
7427 | Scandals?" |
7427 | Some of his more intimate companions, in self- defense, would exclaim when he proposed a story,"Is it a mile from Boston?" |
7427 | The dismal youth looked thoughtful, and then replied:"You know I always inclose a stamp for the return of rejected manuscript?" |
7427 | Then, when he was breathless, he turned to his companion, and asked:"Where''s your farm?" |
7427 | Toast.--"Should Religious Papers Make Money?" |
7427 | WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
7427 | Were civilization and Christianity to be snatched from the Zenanese just when both were within their grasp? |
7427 | What a sensation he would create with his modest(?) |
7427 | What are they? |
7427 | What if you are not the most brilliant, humorous, and stirring speaker of the evening? |
7427 | What shall we say to them on this ligneous occasion? |
7427 | Where and how have these qualities been most strikingly manifested? |
7427 | Why did our heroes die? |
7427 | Why do you ask?" |
7427 | Would that be any harrum, sir?" |
7427 | You can put it on, ca n''t you?" |
7427 | _ Does Dr. Jones know it?_"Ma caught her breath, but failed to articulate a response. |
7427 | _ how many_ enemies did I kill? |
7427 | did He? |
7427 | do philosophers love dainties?" |
7427 | musha, Mistress O''Brien, what have ye there?" |
7427 | one man form a line?" |
7427 | replied the scholar;_"do you think all the good things of this world were made only for blockheads? |
7427 | said he,"have you got them hanging there?" |
7427 | says the man;''burglar?'' |
7427 | the next,"What is the make- up of the present English cabinet?" |
20768 | And to what? 20768 By Jove,"I said to myself,"here''s B''ssold[ Transcriber''s note:''B''s old''?] |
20768 | Dogs, would you live forever? |
20768 | If John was perfect, why are you and I alive? |
20768 | Progress? |
20768 | The fact that I am here certainly shows me that the Soul has need of an organ here, and shall I not assume the post? |
20768 | ''Is heaven so poor that_ justice_ Metes the bounty of the skies? |
20768 | ****** What of thy priests''confuting, Of fate and form and law, Of being and essence and counterpoise, Of poles that drive and draw? |
20768 | A shallow view this, truly; for who can say what might have prevailed if man had ever been a reasoning and not a fighting animal? |
20768 | And all gain is of the lost?'' |
20768 | And how confluent with one another may they become? |
20768 | And is individuality with us also going to count for nothing unless stamped and licensed and authenticated by some title- giving machine? |
20768 | And what is the result to- day? |
20768 | And what makes essential quality in a university? |
20768 | And what_ is_ this instant now? |
20768 | Are individual"spirits"constituted there? |
20768 | Are we doomed to suffer like the rest? |
20768 | Barbecues, bonfires, and banners? |
20768 | Blood again writes,"is the stare[ Transcriber''s note: state?] |
20768 | Blood? |
20768 | But a live man''s answer might be in this way: What is the multiplication table when it is not written down? |
20768 | But are we Americans ourselves destined after all to hunger after similar vanities on an infinitely more contemptible scale? |
20768 | But what on earth is"social force"? |
20768 | But what was this"It"? |
20768 | But when was not the science of the future stirred to its conquering activities by the little rebellious exceptions to the science of the present? |
20768 | By what diversity of means, in the differing types of human beings, may the faculties be stimulated to their best results? |
20768 | Can the two thick volumes of autobiography which Mr. Spencer leaves behind him explain such discrepant appreciations? |
20768 | Can the"no"answer be as unhesitatingly uttered? |
20768 | Can we find revealed in them the higher synthesis which reconciles the contradictions? |
20768 | Did it reconcile the South and the North that both agreed that there were slaves? |
20768 | Did the fact that both believed in the existence of the Pope reconcile Luther and Ignatius Loyola? |
20768 | First of all, is not our growing tendency to appoint no instructors who are not also doctors an instance of pure sham? |
20768 | For how shall he entertain a reason bigger than himself? |
20768 | Have we here contradiction simply, a man converted from one faith to its opposite? |
20768 | Here we have subjective factors; but are not transsubjective or objective forces also at work? |
20768 | How are old maids and old bachelors made? |
20768 | How can I do so better than by uttering quite simply and directly the impressions that I personally receive? |
20768 | How can he be concealed?" |
20768 | How can it be otherwise? |
20768 | How can the loss of distinction make a_ difference_? |
20768 | How can we measure the cash- value to France of a Pasteur, to England of a Kelvin, to Germany of an Ostwald, to us here of a Burbank? |
20768 | How not to let the level lapse? |
20768 | How numerous, and of how many hierarchic orders may these then be? |
20768 | How pay the love unmeasured That could not brook reward? |
20768 | How permanent? |
20768 | How prompt self- loyal honor Supreme above desire, That bids the strong die for the weak, The martyrs sing in fire? |
20768 | How to keep it at an appreciable maximum? |
20768 | How transient? |
20768 | I spoke of how shrunken the wraith, how thin the echo, of men is after they are departed? |
20768 | If distinction should vanish, what would remain? |
20768 | If she does a bit of scolding now and then who can blame her? |
20768 | If we were asked that disagreeable question,"What are the bosom- vices of the level of culture which our land and day have reached?" |
20768 | In such a stagnant summer afternoon of a world, where would be the zest or interest? |
20768 | Is not the mould as shapely as the model? |
20768 | Knowing all this, he should be able to answer the twin question,''What is the difference_ between sameness and difference_?'' |
20768 | Must not we of the colleges see to it that no historian shall ever say anything like this? |
20768 | Now, exactly how much does this signify? |
20768 | Now, what is supposed to be the line of us who have the higher college training? |
20768 | Now, who can be absolutely certain that this may not be the career of democracy? |
20768 | Our democratic problem thus is statable in ultra- simple terms: Who are the kind of men from whom our majorities shall take their cue? |
20768 | Shall it not be auspicious? |
20768 | So poor that every blessing Fills the debit of a cost? |
20768 | That all process is returning? |
20768 | The crowded orders, the stern decisions, the foreign despatches, the Castilian etiquette? |
20768 | The problem is, then, how can men be trained up to their most useful pitch of energy? |
20768 | The scientist, for his part, sees a"will to deceive,"watching its chance in all of us, and able( possibly?) |
20768 | The writer goes on, addressing the goddess of"compensation"or rational balance;--"How shalt thou poise the courage That covets all things hard? |
20768 | The"dissipation of motion"part of it is simple vagueness,--for what particular motion is"dissipated"when a man or state grows more highly evolved? |
20768 | This happened in the instance by which I introduced this article, and it happens daily and hourly in all our colleges? |
20768 | Time turns a weary and a wistful face; has he not traversed an eternity? |
20768 | To what other could it change as a whole? |
20768 | To what tracts, to what active systems functioning separately in it, do personalities correspond? |
20768 | What again, are the relations between the cosmic consciousness and matter? |
20768 | What are the conditions of individuation or insulation in this mother- sea? |
20768 | What are the limits of human faculty in various directions? |
20768 | What country under heaven has not thousands of such youths to rejoice in, youths on whom the safety of the human race depends? |
20768 | What filled it? |
20768 | What has concluded, that we might conclude in regard to it? |
20768 | What is its inner topography? |
20768 | What is one to think of this queer chapter in human nature? |
20768 | Whatever else, it is_ process_--becoming and departing; with what between? |
20768 | When in doubt how to act, ask yourself, What does nobility command? |
20768 | Where is anything that one feels honored by belonging to? |
20768 | Where is the blood- tax? |
20768 | Where is the conscription? |
20768 | Where is the savage"yes"and"no,"the unconditional duty? |
20768 | Where is the sharpness and precipitousness, the contempt for life, whether one''s own, or another''s? |
20768 | Where then would be the steeps of life? |
20768 | Which is the suggestive idea for this person, and which for that one? |
20768 | Which kind of will, and how many kinds of will are most inherently probable? |
20768 | Who can say with certainty? |
20768 | Whom shall they treat as rightful leaders? |
20768 | Why do I droop in bower And sigh in sacred hall? |
20768 | Why should men not some day feel that it is worth a blood- tax to belong to a collectivity superior in_ any_ ideal respect? |
20768 | Why should not Stanford immediately adopt this as her vital policy? |
20768 | Why should they not blush with indignant shame if the community that owns them is vile in any way whatsoever? |
20768 | Why stifle under shelter? |
20768 | Why, then, assume the positive, the immediately affirmative, as alone the ingenious? |
20768 | Will any one pretend for a moment that the doctor''s degree is a guarantee that its possessor will be successful as a teacher? |
20768 | XIII THE SOCIAL VALUE OF THE COLLEGE- BRED[1] Of what use is a college training? |
20768 | You can, of course, build out a chip by modelling the sphere it was chipped from;--but if it was n''t a sphere? |
20768 | [ 5] But whose is the originality? |
20768 | [ 5] Elsewhere Blood writes:--"But what then, in the name of common sense,_ is_ the external world? |
20768 | and how can Stanford ever fail to enter upon it? |
20768 | and shall another give the secret up? |
20768 | and, in the fluctuations which all men feel in their own degree of energizing, to what are the improvements due, when they occur_? |
20768 | but_ both in the same time_?'' |
18823 | And de boat,continued Johnson,"was to strike a snag and smash to pieces, and eberybody go into de water, who would you save?" |
18823 | Johnson,said Billy Rice,"who would you save, yo''mudder or yo''wife?" |
18823 | Tell you what, boss,says''Rastus, after a moment''s reflection:"ca n''t you put it in that I am just as honest as my instincts will let me be?" |
18823 | Then what do you mean by''maistly,''if you have not lived here most of your life? |
18823 | Then,said he,"repeat the first speech of Sir Peter Teazle,''When an old bachelor marries a young wife, what is he to expect?''" |
18823 | Well,he said,"wo n''t you try me on the statutes? |
18823 | What do you mean by''maistly''? 18823 Why not,"he was asked,"have n''t you all the materials?" |
18823 | Will ze lady and ze gentleman haf table d''hote or a la carte? |
18823 | You do n''t remember me? |
18823 | ''Spose you was in de boat, in de middle of de river, wid yo''wife and yo''mudder- in- law?" |
18823 | Again, sir, when we look for those who have been most distinguished as men of letters, in the usual sense of the word; where do we find them? |
18823 | Ah, is there not a wider sovereignty over the race, and a deeper homage from human nature than ever can come from an allegiance to power? |
18823 | And how was this obtained? |
18823 | And now for the outlook in other senses than that of material prosperity, how is it? |
18823 | And shall we not proclaim That blood of honest fame, Which no tyranny can tame By its chains? |
18823 | And what is the next resting- place in our pilgrim''s progress-- the pilgrim of Outre- Mer? |
18823 | And what is this"yore and gore"fiction when you analyze it? |
18823 | And yet who has given a sword or spread a feast to that purest flame of chivalrous heroism, Richard Wainwright? |
18823 | Are the echoes which resound in this hall Irish or American echoes? |
18823 | Are we, of the Chamber of Commerce, worthy of the blessings that have come down to us out of the glorious past? |
18823 | But is it because of such triumphs as these that the name of Scotland appeals so powerfully to the heart and the imagination of men? |
18823 | But shall we dare to think that the coming generation will have no songs and no singers? |
18823 | But what can I say to thank you for the kind manner in which you have received me? |
18823 | But what can I say, Mr. Chairman, of the Chamber of to- day? |
18823 | But what of the problem itself? |
18823 | But what would that occasion have amounted to, either in the fact of it or in the celebration of it, if the English had not been there? |
18823 | But where did we miscarry even in that calculation? |
18823 | But why am I talking about smashed crockery when I am told that it is the very life of your trade? |
18823 | By what fair rule shall the stigma be put upon one section, while the other escapes? |
18823 | Can any undergraduate of either institution, can any recent graduate of either institution, imagine a man responding to that toast? |
18823 | Can we not come together for the future? |
18823 | Can we solve it? |
18823 | Can you imagine a Scotsman, however matter- of- fact and commonplace, offering such a definition of his native land? |
18823 | Could we have done that in the sight of God or man? |
18823 | Could we have left them in a state of anarchy and justified ourselves in our own consciences or before the tribunal of mankind? |
18823 | Could we have required less and done our duty? |
18823 | Counsel asked him,"Were you born here?" |
18823 | Despairing, here I stop, And my poor offering drop,-- Why stammer I when thou art here to sing? |
18823 | Did I say before the dawn? |
18823 | Did we ask their consent to liberate them from Spanish sovereignty or to enter Manila Bay and destroy the Spanish sea- power there? |
18823 | Did we need their consent to perform a great act for humanity? |
18823 | Did you come here when you were a child?" |
18823 | Do you? |
18823 | Does not that record honor him, and vindicate his neighbors? |
18823 | For, what have we not done on a little oatmeal? |
18823 | Has it not always been so? |
18823 | How did you know that I was a Democrat?" |
18823 | How did you know that I was a minister?" |
18823 | How shall we distinguish between Irishmen and Americans? |
18823 | How then have their deeds become the source of song and story? |
18823 | How was the doubt that stood, all unwilling, between outstretched hands and sympathetic hearts, to be, in fact, dispelled? |
18823 | I could get anudder wife, but where under the blue canopy of hebben could I get anudder dear old mudder?" |
18823 | If in the years of the future they are established in government under law and liberty, who will regret our perils and sacrifices? |
18823 | If this had been revealed to him, would it not have required all the glow of his imagination and all the strength of his judgment to believe it? |
18823 | If we can benefit these remote peoples, who will object? |
18823 | In what spirit shall we meet them as they arise? |
18823 | Is it not manifest destiny that old Nieuw Amsterdam, the present New York, should become a greater city than any on the earth to- day? |
18823 | Is it not that of one language in common between the two nations? |
18823 | Is it quite safe for your children to grow up in ignorance of your past, while you are looking down upon the century of the future? |
18823 | Is there anything more delightful in this world than to be flattered and fed? |
18823 | It seems to me that the old English phrase with regard to a man in difficulties, which asks:"What is he going to do about it?" |
18823 | Just as they were approaching a station, she said to a gentleman, in the compartment with her:"Will you assist me to alight at this station, sir? |
18823 | MR. CHAIRMAN:--I have the honor to propose the toast of"Mere Man"[ laughter], but why"Mere Man,"I want to know? |
18823 | May I not speak here of this gift of the Players? |
18823 | May I venture to suggest that there are some ways by which it is possible for us to minimize the danger we find in these discontents? |
18823 | May we not therefore claim the indistinguishable unity of nationality, of sentiment, and of feeling? |
18823 | Now, what remains? |
18823 | One of the boys inquired,"What am I to be punished for, sir?" |
18823 | Or deceive them, when we are educating them to the utmost limit of our ability? |
18823 | Or have robbed a people who, twenty- five years from unrewarded slavery, have amassed in one State$ 20,000,000 of property? |
18823 | Or outlaw them when we work side by side with them? |
18823 | Or that we intend to oppress the people we are arming every day? |
18823 | Remembering some past occurrences on occasions like this, we agree with the pupil who was asked by his teacher,"What is the meaning of elocution?" |
18823 | Shall man no longer behold God and nature face to face? |
18823 | Shall we build the sepulchre of poetry? |
18823 | Shall we ever think of Monmouth pleading for his life with James II, without remembering the picture which hung last year upon these walls? |
18823 | Shall we express ourselves only in histories and criticisms? |
18823 | Shall we not have new thought, new work and new worship? |
18823 | The fact is that it has been partly due to a certain-- may I speak of our ancestors as having been qualified by a certain dulness? |
18823 | Upon their judgment and conscience can we not rely? |
18823 | Was it necessary to ask their consent to capture Manila, the capital of their islands? |
18823 | Was it suppression in Virginia and natural causes in Massachusetts? |
18823 | Was it, in fact, a reproduction of a new song, or a mystification of a great modern, careless of fame and scornful of his time? |
18823 | Was this Weltschmerz, which we thought a malady of our day, endemic in Persia in 1100? |
18823 | We commit the highest destinies of this Republic, which some of us hope bears the hope of the world in her womb-- to whom? |
18823 | Well, I accept the fact, although I find it hard to realize, and I ask myself, what is there to show for this half lifetime that has passed? |
18823 | Well, I think I can paraphrase that and say,"When a young man enters the theatrical profession, what is he to expect?" |
18823 | Well, now, gentlemen, what are you laughing at? |
18823 | What are you to say for us who graduated under President Day? |
18823 | What can I say in reply to all that the kindly feeling of my friend has dictated? |
18823 | What could the critic do with Claude Monet thirty- five years ago? |
18823 | What could the critic do with Robert Browning when he appeared? |
18823 | What did Washington do for us? |
18823 | What do we ask of you? |
18823 | What does it signify to us? |
18823 | What does it typify, sirs? |
18823 | What dreams romantic filled my brain, And summoned back to life again The Paladins of Charlemagne, The Cid Campeador?" |
18823 | What else is there for this Republic to do? |
18823 | What has the critic done thus far with Walt Whitman, the greatest spiritual democrat this nation has ever produced? |
18823 | What invites the negro to the ballot- box? |
18823 | What is it in the Puritan heritage, externally so bare and cold, that make it intrinsically so poetic and inspiring? |
18823 | What is it in the sense of material prosperity? |
18823 | What is literature, and who are men of letters? |
18823 | What is that agency? |
18823 | What is that cause? |
18823 | What is the character of that monument? |
18823 | What is the first hallowed spot in the Transatlantic pilgrimage of every true American? |
18823 | What is the testimony of the courts? |
18823 | What is the true Mecca of his heart? |
18823 | What is this Constitution for which we have been fighting, and which must be preserved? |
18823 | What more, or what less, should he do and do his duty? |
18823 | What nation was ever able to write an accurate programme of the war upon which it was entering, much less decree in advance the scope of its results? |
18823 | What other court in the world has that power? |
18823 | What people, penniless, illiterate, has done so well? |
18823 | What resulted? |
18823 | What solution do they offer? |
18823 | What solution, then, can we offer for the problem? |
18823 | What then did the college do to justify our speaking of the war now? |
18823 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon or set of sun, Hand of man or kiss of woman? |
18823 | What were some of the distinctive features in the character of the old Domine? |
18823 | When will he have the civil rights that are his?" |
18823 | When will the black man cast a free ballot? |
18823 | When will the blacks cast a free ballot? |
18823 | Where is"the West"? |
18823 | Wherein lies the wonderful spell?"] |
18823 | Who can circumscribe it? |
18823 | Who can measure it? |
18823 | Who can, except by the simple rule of three, which never errs, determine its progress? |
18823 | Who is to stop it? |
18823 | Who mentions the scores of seamen who begged to be of the immortal seven who were his companions in that forlorn hope? |
18823 | Who repeats the names of the young officers who pleaded for Hobson''s chance to risk his life in the hull and hell of the Merrimac? |
18823 | Who will not rejoice in our heroism and humanity? |
18823 | Who would not rather be a great man than a great king? |
18823 | Who would not rather be a great woman than a great queen? |
18823 | Whom have we with us to- day? |
18823 | Why all the honor that we pay them? |
18823 | Why did n''t I dream a novel by Turgenef, or Bjornsen? |
18823 | Why do you laugh? |
18823 | Why do you laugh? |
18823 | Why is this? |
18823 | Why not? |
18823 | Why should we disguise from ourselves that there are great prejudices to the profession of an actor? |
18823 | Why then? |
18823 | Why was wampum good money in its time? |
18823 | Why? |
18823 | Will you permit me to thank you and your honored President for your gracious reception of me to- night? |
18823 | Would you not prefer to go home and sleep upon what you already have? |
18823 | You do n''t have electric lights or anything of that kind? |
18823 | and de boat strike a snag?" |
18823 | was dumb? |
3286 | All are agreed, that parliaments should not be perpetual; the only question is, what is the most convenient time for their duration? |
3286 | Am I not to avail myself of whatever good is to be found in the world, because of the mixture of evil that will always be in it? |
3286 | Am I to congratulate a highwayman and murderer, who has broken prison, upon the recovery of his natural rights? |
3286 | And indeed how is it possible? |
3286 | And shall we Englishmen revoke to such a suit? |
3286 | Are all the taxes to be voted grievances, and the revenue reduced to a patriotic contribution, or patriotic presents? |
3286 | Are silver shoe- buckles to be substituted in the place of the land- tax and the malt- tax, for the support of the naval strength of this kingdom? |
3286 | Are the church lands to be sold to Jews and jobbers; or given to bribe new- invented municipal republics into a participation in sacrilege? |
3286 | Are the citizens of London to be drawn from their allegiance by feeding them at the expense of their fellow- subjects? |
3286 | Are the curates to be secluded from their bishops, by holding out to them the delusive hope of a dole out of the spoils of their own order? |
3286 | Are the old assignats depreciated at market? |
3286 | Are we to deny to a MAJORITY of the people the right of altering even the whole frame of their society, if such should be their pleasure? |
3286 | But in what manner was this chaos brought into order? |
3286 | But is it in destroying and pulling down that skill is displayed? |
3286 | But is superstition the greatest of all possible vices? |
3286 | But who are to judge what that profit and advantage ought to be? |
3286 | But who gave Robespierre the power of being a tyrant? |
3286 | But who will answer for the temper of a house of commons elected under these circumstances? |
3286 | But why proscribe the other, and surely, in every point of view, the more laudable use of estates? |
3286 | Can I now congratulate the same nation upon its freedom? |
3286 | Do you imagine, then, that it is the land- tax which raises your revenue? |
3286 | Does a design against the constitution of this country exist? |
3286 | Does any one of you think that England, so wasted, would, under such a nursing attendance, so rapidly and cheaply recover? |
3286 | Does evil so react upon good, as not only to retard its motion, but to change its nature? |
3286 | Does he mean the Pay- office Act? |
3286 | Does it not produce something ignoble and inglorious? |
3286 | Does not something like this now appear in France? |
3286 | For what have I entered into all this detail? |
3286 | For which of her vices did they put to death the mildest of all human creatures, the duchess of Biron? |
3286 | For which of his vices did that great magistrate, D''Espremenil, lose his fortune and his head? |
3286 | For which of the vices of that pattern of benevolence, of piety, and of all the virtues, did they put her to death? |
3286 | For, if you admit this interpretation, how does their idea of election differ from our idea of inheritance? |
3286 | From passive submission was it to expect resolute defence? |
3286 | Had you no way of turning the revenue to account but through the improvident resource of a spendthrift sale? |
3286 | Had you no way of using the men but by converting monks into pensioners? |
3286 | Has it not hitherto been true in the colonies? |
3286 | Have we an example on record of a House of Commons punished for its servility? |
3286 | I can not help asking, Why all this pains, to clear the British nation of ambition, perfidy, and the insatiate thirst of war? |
3286 | If froward men should refuse this cure, can they vitiate anything but themselves? |
3286 | If there be danger, must there be no precaution at all against it? |
3286 | If these examples take root in the minds of men, what members hereafter will be bold enough not to be corrupt? |
3286 | If we repent of our good actions, what, I pray you, is left for our faults and follies? |
3286 | In the distractions which it produces, what room is there for the cultivation of letters, or the pursuits of any honourable art? |
3286 | In what light is all this viewed in a great assembly? |
3286 | Indeed, how should they? |
3286 | Is a compulsory paper currency to be substituted in the place of the legal coin of this kingdom? |
3286 | Is a politic act the worse for being a generous one? |
3286 | Is episcopacy to be abolished? |
3286 | Is every land- mark of the country to be done away in favour of a geometrical and arithmetical constitution? |
3286 | Is his charge equal to the finding of the grand jury of Europe, and sufficient to put you upon your trial? |
3286 | Is it him, who sees that chosen spot of plenty and delight converted into a Jacobin ferocious republic, dependent on the homicides of France? |
3286 | Is it not the same virtue which does everything for us here in England? |
3286 | Is it not true in Ireland? |
3286 | Is it not true, that they were the first to declare war upon this kingdom? |
3286 | Is it only an oppressive nightmare with which we have been loaded? |
3286 | Is it only an unbookish jealousy, as Shakspeare calls it? |
3286 | Is it that the people are changed, that the commonwealth can not be protected by its laws? |
3286 | Is it then all a frightful dream, and are there no regicides in the world? |
3286 | Is no concession proper, but that which is made from your want of right to keep what you grant? |
3286 | Is our monarchy to be annihilated, with all the laws, all the tribunals, and all the ancient corporations of the kingdom? |
3286 | Is the House of Lords to be voted useless? |
3286 | Is the fate of the queen of France to produce this softening of character? |
3286 | Is then fraud and falsehood become the distinctive character of Englishmen? |
3286 | Is this a lesson of MODERATION to a descendant of Maria Theresa, drawn from the fate of the daughter of that incomparable woman and sovereign? |
3286 | Is this a triumph to be consecrated at altars? |
3286 | Is this principle to be true in England, and false everywhere else? |
3286 | Issue new assignats.--Mais si maladia opiniatria, non vult se garire, quid illi facere? |
3286 | It is his by law; what have I to do with it or its history? |
3286 | It may, perhaps, be far advanced in its aphelion.--But when to return? |
3286 | Quid domini facient, audent cum talia fures? |
3286 | Quis inter haec, literis, aut ulli bonae arti, locus? |
3286 | Rights which are absolutely repugnant to it? |
3286 | Shall I not say to these men,"Arrangez- vous, canaille?" |
3286 | Shall we be more tender of the tyrants of our own time, when we see them acting worse tragedies under our eyes? |
3286 | Should we not obtest Heaven, and whatever justice there is yet on earth? |
3286 | That the Convention should not contain one military man of name? |
3286 | The only question is, what is it worth to the buyer? |
3286 | They may, like him, begin by singing"Beatus ille"--but what will be the end? |
3286 | To what purpose have I recalled your view to the end of the last century? |
3286 | To whom then would I make the East- India Company accountable? |
3286 | Was little done because a revolution was not made in the constitution? |
3286 | Was she a person so very ferocious and cruel as, by the example of her death, to frighten us into common humanity? |
3286 | What can be hoped for after this? |
3286 | What ferocity of character drew on the fate of Elizabeth, the sister of King Louis the Sixteenth? |
3286 | What have they thought of in France, under such a difficulty as almost puts the human faculties to a stand? |
3286 | What hinders this monster from being sent as ambassador to convey to his majesty the first compliments of his brethren, the regicide Directory? |
3286 | What is the remedy? |
3286 | What is the use of discussing a man''s abstract right to food or medicine? |
3286 | What is there to shock in this? |
3286 | What lesson does the iniquity of prevalent factions read to us? |
3286 | What must they think of that body of teachers, if they see it in no part above the establishment of their domestic servants? |
3286 | What signify all those titles, and all those arms? |
3286 | What then? |
3286 | What was the event? |
3286 | What would you call it? |
3286 | What( says the financier) is peace to us without money? |
3286 | When I say I have not received more than I deserve, is this the language I hold to majesty? |
3286 | When a man can not live and maintain his family by the natural hire of his labour, ought it not to be raised by authority? |
3286 | When was it that a king of England wanted wherewithal to make him respected, courted, or perhaps even feared, in every state of Europe? |
3286 | Whence is their amendment? |
3286 | Whence this alarming change? |
3286 | Where shall we find recorded exertions of active benevolence at once so numerous, so varied, and so important, made by one man? |
3286 | Who could have imagined that atheism could produce one of the most violently operative principles of fanaticism? |
3286 | Who will accumulate, when he does not know the value of what he saves? |
3286 | Who will answer for the courage of a house of commons to arm the crown with the extraordinary powers that it may demand? |
3286 | Who will labour without knowing the amount of his pay? |
3286 | Who will study to increase what none can estimate? |
3286 | Why do I feel so differently from the Reverend Dr. Price, and those of his lay flock, who will choose to adopt the sentiments of his discourse? |
3286 | Why should you presume, that, in any country, a body duly constituted for any function, will neglect to perform its duty, and abdicate its trust? |
3286 | Why, through the violation of all property, through an outrage upon every principle of liberty, forcibly carry them from the better to the worse? |
3286 | Why? |
3286 | Why? |
3286 | Will any one presume, against both authority and opinion, to hold up this unfashionable, antiquated, exploded constitution? |
3286 | Will these gentlemen of the direction animadvert on the partners of their own guilt? |
3286 | With you, in your purifying revolution, whom have you chosen to regulate the church? |
3286 | Would not such a coincidence of interest and opinion be rather fortunate? |
3286 | Would twenty shillings have ruined Mr. Hampden''s fortune? |
3286 | You would not secure men from tyranny and sedition, by rooting out of the mind the principles to which these fraudulent pretexts apply? |
3286 | a kind of meanness in all the prevalent policy? |
3286 | a tendency in all that is done to lower along with individuals all the dignity and importance of the state? |
3286 | and the slough of slavery, which we are not able to work off, to serve them for their freedom? |
3286 | and who were the instruments of his tyranny? |
3286 | are we to give them our weakness for their strength? |
3286 | or that it is the Mutiny Bill, which inspires it with bravery and discipline? |
3286 | our opprobrium for their glory? |
3286 | shall we not use the same liberty that they do, when we can use it with the same safety? |
3286 | that it is the annual vote in the committee of supply, which gives you your army? |
3286 | to be commemorated with grateful thanksgiving? |
3286 | when to speak honest truth only requires a contempt of the opinion of those whose actions we abhor? |
18422 | ''... Quis jam locus... Quæ regio in terris nostri non plena laboris?'' 18422 A State?" |
18422 | And pray, my young sir,asked a stern matron of forty,"will you please to tell us what is the appropriate sphere of woman?" |
18422 | And who are those gentlemen up there on the elevation looking so pale and frightened and eating nothing? |
18422 | Are ye, are ye,he would say, with a voice of exultation, and yet softened with melancholy,"Are ye our children? |
18422 | But whereabouts on your person? |
18422 | But,said I, anxiously,"do you really regard that circumstance as reflecting disparagingly upon the man''s work in the next room?" |
18422 | But,said the corporal,"President Lincoln knows, does n''t he?" |
18422 | Do you pretend to say Iowa has sent 39,000 men into this cruel Civil War? |
18422 | Have yez? 18422 How many men has she sent to this cruel war?" |
18422 | Is this one part of the great reward, for which my brethren and myself endured lives of toil and of hardship? 18422 Now, how could you get wounded in the face while on the retreat?" |
18422 | Now,he says,"we have arrived at the stairs; will you kindly tell me which way the stairs run?" |
18422 | Surely,said he,"you noticed that two- thirds of the works in the next room are already sold?" |
18422 | Well, perhaps, by and by? |
18422 | Well,he said,"you Dutch did lick us on the Excise question, did n''t you?" |
18422 | Well,says he,"where''s Iowa?" |
18422 | What are you looking at, Mike? |
18422 | What do you mean? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What may that be? |
18422 | What shall I do to make my son get forward in the world? |
18422 | Will you now kindly give the location of the hall in which the accident occurred? |
18422 | ( Need I say I mean his fishing- smack?) |
18422 | A friend came along, and seeing that the man did not look as pleasant as usual, said to him,"What is the matter? |
18422 | A traveller passing through Concord inquired,"How do all these people support themselves?" |
18422 | After that I had a very good mind to come back to America, and say, like the Queen of Uganda:"There, what did I tell you?" |
18422 | And can you not help the world abroad as well as at home? |
18422 | And how comes it that the workers of evil just as instinctively aim to fraudulently use it or silence it, and with such poor success? |
18422 | And the Cavaliers, who missed their stirrups, somehow, and got into Yankee saddles? |
18422 | And was not Eve, the first of orthodox women, the type of every feminine perfection? |
18422 | And what does a poet want that he does not find in New England? |
18422 | And what has Virginia done for our Union? |
18422 | And what was the answer? |
18422 | And who doubts it? |
18422 | And why not? |
18422 | And, if we should care to pursue the subject farther back, what about Ethan Allen and John Stark and Mad Anthony Wayne-- Cavaliers each and every one? |
18422 | Another servant came to him and said,"Sir, shall I take your order? |
18422 | Are they not? |
18422 | Are we a degenerate people? |
18422 | Are we going to cure it by more tinkering? |
18422 | Are we to be daunted, therefore, because the conditions are new? |
18422 | Beasley?" |
18422 | But did they forget the principles on which they acted because the conditions were unprecedented? |
18422 | But the question has also been asked, here and there-- and very naturally-- is a Minister to a foreign Court to be appointed for such a purpose? |
18422 | But to speak more seriously: Is modern journalism, then, nothing but a reflection of the frivolity of the day, of the passing love of notoriety? |
18422 | But what is a critic? |
18422 | But what is culture? |
18422 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
18422 | But where meanwhile is the substance of power? |
18422 | Did not John Bull, in his rough methods with the Celestial Empire, sometimes literally act"like a bull in a China shop"? |
18422 | Did they not discover new applications for old principles? |
18422 | Did you ever have anything to do with indorsements?" |
18422 | Do I err in supposing this an illustration of the supremacy which belongs to the triumphs of the moral nature? |
18422 | Do we need to look further for a reply to the question,"Why are the New Englanders unpopular?" |
18422 | Do you ever think of him? |
18422 | Do you ever think of his career, that of the prototype of our own Washington? |
18422 | Do you know what the effect will be? |
18422 | Do you remember to what circumstance Chicago owed its fame? |
18422 | Does he belong to the flag of the country? |
18422 | Does he rest under the eagle and the Stars and Stripes? |
18422 | Does that flag protect him? |
18422 | Does this scene of refinement, of elegance, of riches, of luxury, does all this come from our labors? |
18422 | Edwin Arnold, the author of"The Light of Asia,"said:"Do you think you can do all this?" |
18422 | Else how could this noble city have been redeemed from bondage? |
18422 | For what does America stand? |
18422 | Great heavens, men, do you want to live forever?" |
18422 | Have we lost the old principle and the old spirit? |
18422 | Have we not been rook- shooting with Mr. Winkle, and courting with Mr. Tupman? |
18422 | Have we not played cribbage with"the Marchioness,"and quaffed the rosy with Dick Swiveller? |
18422 | Have we not ridden together to the"Markis of Granby"with old Weller on the box, and his son Samivel on the dickey? |
18422 | Have we not together investigated, with Mr. Pickwick, the theory of Tittlebats? |
18422 | Have we not walked with him in every scene of varied life? |
18422 | He poked his head out of the upper berth at midnight, hailed the porter and said,"Say, have you got such a thing as a corkscrew about you?" |
18422 | Her friend said,"Shall I pour some water in your whiskey?" |
18422 | His reward was what? |
18422 | How can I best serve them?" |
18422 | How can it be that any man should make a decent portrait of his fellow- man in these days? |
18422 | How did they achieve it? |
18422 | How shall we account for this reception? |
18422 | How was I to prove that what I have said is true? |
18422 | I am not here to urge a return to the Puritan life; but have you forgotten that the Puritans came into a new world? |
18422 | I am not only unlike other gentlemen, taken by surprise, but I am absolutely without a subject, and what am I to say? |
18422 | I came to civilization, and what do you think was the result? |
18422 | I know that what I say is true when I charge the Chairman with irony, for do not I feel his iron entering my soul? |
18422 | I mean by that, the lawyer says in a dignified way,"What principle is involved, and how can I best serve my client, always forgetting myself?" |
18422 | I regard true beauty as the divinest gift which woman has received; and was not Pandora, the first of mythical women, endowed with every gift? |
18422 | I said to him:"I never felt better in all my life; how do you feel?" |
18422 | I said:"What does that mean to me? |
18422 | I was received by the Paris Geographical Society, and it was then I began to feel"Well, after all, I have done something, have n''t I?" |
18422 | I will confess that I do not know what I mean by this; for what is beauty? |
18422 | I would enter a protest, but what use? |
18422 | If we give up that Constitution, what are we? |
18422 | In that hour of trial which you and I, sir, know to have been a menace and a reality to whom did she turn for succor? |
18422 | Is he an American-- is he of us? |
18422 | Is it a place?" |
18422 | Is it spelled with an O or a W?" |
18422 | Is it wonderful that we are delighted to see him, and to return in a measure his unbounded hospitalities? |
18422 | Is n''t it strange that two of the smallest sections of the earth should have produced most of the grandest history of the world? |
18422 | Is there a New Englander here who would wipe"Bunker Hill"from his list for any price in Wall Street? |
18422 | Is this magnificent city, the like of which we never saw nor heard of on either continent, is this but an offshoot from Plymouth Rock? |
18422 | Is this modern ideal to survive throughout the future? |
18422 | It has been said that a good woman, fitly mated, grows doubly good; but how often have we seen a bad man mated to a good woman turned into a good man? |
18422 | MR. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN:--[3]_Voulez- vous me permettre de faire mes remarques en français? |
18422 | May we not foresee the nature of the difference? |
18422 | Not the lawyer in politics; but"What is there in it for the people I represent? |
18422 | Now what are you going to do with a people like that? |
18422 | Now, here we are asked, why did Virginia go into the War of Secession? |
18422 | Now, what are we going to do? |
18422 | Now, who achieved that? |
18422 | Of our sweethearts the humorist hath it:--"Where are the Marys and Anns and Elizas, Lovely and loving of yore? |
18422 | One question, with its answer, and I shall have done: Are these Southerners in Wall Street divorced in spirit and sympathy from their old homes? |
18422 | Respecting the exact nature of the proposition I shall not reveal? |
18422 | Said some one to him when the prayer was over,"My dear brother, why were you so hard upon the Hottentot?" |
18422 | Said the man,"To Ireland? |
18422 | Shakespeare naturally said what every artist must feel; for what is an artist? |
18422 | Shall we learn the lesson which is taught us in this recent war? |
18422 | Shall we not imagine our foe in the future, as might well be the case, to be superior to the one over which we have been victorious? |
18422 | Shall we rest on the laurels which we may have won, or shall we prepare for the future? |
18422 | Should your country decide to keep the Philippines, what would be the consequences? |
18422 | That is the fact of the matter; nobody can deny that; but what are we going to do? |
18422 | The General said:"Why do n''t you work?" |
18422 | The President, Cornelius N. Bliss, proposed the query for Dr. Wayland,"Why are New Englanders Unpopular?" |
18422 | The commonplace question:"How is the weather going to be?" |
18422 | The first inquiry of the lawyer and politician is,"What is there in it?" |
18422 | The next question is, is there any practical means of improving this state of things? |
18422 | The old gentleman says:--"General, what troops are these passing now?" |
18422 | The politician, and not the statesman, says,"What is in it?" |
18422 | The question now arises, is such a state of things necessarily connected with a Republican government? |
18422 | The"Daily Telegraph''s"proprietor cabled over to Bennett:"Will you join us in sending Stanley over to complete Livingstone''s explorations?" |
18422 | Then how did we lose it? |
18422 | They are laughing in their sleeves and saying:"Watch him, watch him; did you ever hear lawyers talk as much for nothing? |
18422 | They may have their faults, but who has not? |
18422 | They opened that highway to you, and shall no honor be given to them? |
18422 | To which she returned the still more laconic autograph,"Wo n''t I?" |
18422 | Under all the circumstances, who will dispute the magnificence of that showing? |
18422 | Was the inexorable unrelaxing determination with which they, being so few and so poor, maintained their point somewhat wrought into their faces? |
18422 | We have had tariffs, have we not, every few years, ever since we were born; and has not the farmer become discontented under these conditions? |
18422 | Well, what about this Forefathers''Day? |
18422 | Well, what moved in your splendid Dix when he gave that order? |
18422 | What New England Society has ever made so good a showing of hospitality and good cheer? |
18422 | What am I to talk about? |
18422 | What are the Dutch? |
18422 | What are the ethics of the press of Chicago? |
18422 | What are the truths that have gone into her blood and made her strong and beautiful and dominant? |
18422 | What do you mean by 39th?" |
18422 | What has Virginia done for our common country? |
18422 | What is it? |
18422 | What is the Senate? |
18422 | What is the charm that unites so many suffrages? |
18422 | What is the matter now? |
18422 | What is the result? |
18422 | What is to become of our English landscape if it is to be simply a sanitary or advertising appliance? |
18422 | What made your section great, dominant, glorious in the history of our common country? |
18422 | What man would part with the fame of Harrison and of Perry? |
18422 | What more can a poet desire? |
18422 | What names has she contributed to your historic roll? |
18422 | What reflecting mind can contemplate some of those characters without being made more kind- hearted and charitable? |
18422 | What river is this?" |
18422 | What then was the course of Virginia? |
18422 | What was the answer? |
18422 | What would a poet sing about, I wonder, who lived on the Kankakee Flats? |
18422 | What, then, is the part of Her Majesty''s Government in this critical and difficult circumstance? |
18422 | When he got through she said,"How did you like that?" |
18422 | When he had finished his remarks a French gentleman sitting beside me inquired:"Where is he from?" |
18422 | Whence came these qualities? |
18422 | Where is there such a galaxy of great men known to history? |
18422 | Where will you look for its parallel? |
18422 | Who are Still first in colleges and letters in this land? |
18422 | Who asks what State you are from, in Europe, or in Africa, or in Asia? |
18422 | Who had the first chance on your destiny, your character, your development? |
18422 | Who in the imposing troop of worldly grandeur is now remembered but with indifference or contempt? |
18422 | Who is here to deny it? |
18422 | Who to- day are the first to rally to the side of a good cause, on trial in the community? |
18422 | Who, east or west, advocate justice, redress wrongs, maintain equal rights, support churches, love liberty, and thrive where others starve? |
18422 | Whoever saw a satisfactory definition of love? |
18422 | Why did n''t we see it before? |
18422 | Why should they not feast and why should they not dance? |
18422 | Why should we not welcome him as a friend? |
18422 | Why, I repeat it, the intense unpopularity of New England? |
18422 | Why? |
18422 | Will not old principles be adaptable to new conditions, and is it not our business to adapt them to new conditions? |
18422 | Will you have some of the chicken soup?" |
18422 | Would he gaze at you with sad, sad eyes, and weep over you as the degenerate sons of noble sires? |
18422 | Yes, but what would you have, gentlemen? |
18422 | Yet how should we get on without them? |
18422 | You, the father, come home, and you say:"Fannie, what are you doing in the kitchen? |
18422 | [ 3] TRANSLATION.--Will you kindly allow me to make my speech in French? |
18422 | [ A Voice:"Which is the eighth Commandment?"] |
18422 | and the woman replied,"For God''s sake, have n''t I had trouble enough already to- day?" |
18422 | enforcing it with the following quotations:"Do you question me as an honest man should do for my simple true judgment?" |
18422 | go back to Africa? |
18422 | is that a thunder- cloud in the North? |
18422 | maiden fair, wilt thou be mine? |
18422 | that makes 22,000 men?" |
18422 | where is Minnesota?" |
16858 | About a half mile? |
16858 | Ai n''t you got no mama and papa? |
16858 | And mama was born in Scotland? |
16858 | And you had a king at the head of your armies? |
16858 | Boss, ai n''t you got three cents? |
16858 | Come out, you imp, what are you doing under there? |
16858 | David, what''s that in thy hand? |
16858 | Has he any money, and is he a member of the church? |
16858 | Have you a Christian man with the train? |
16858 | Have you no mother? |
16858 | How deep do you own into the earth? |
16858 | How do you make that out? |
16858 | How far do you own eastward? |
16858 | How far do you own toward the west? |
16858 | How old are you, sir? |
16858 | Know what? 16858 My little lad, what''s that you have?" |
16858 | My purse is light, but what of that? 16858 No, boss, what''s de matter?" |
16858 | Shamgar, what''s that in thy hand? |
16858 | Sir, are you a Christian? |
16858 | That is well so far, but may we ask what sacrifice would this home be willing to make for the republic if its flag were in peril? |
16858 | That''s a good job,said the Judge;"why did n''t I think of that?" |
16858 | What are you doing with that sign? |
16858 | What did you do, Pat? |
16858 | What do you mean by getting so close to me? 16858 What''s the nationality of that gintleman, anyway?" |
16858 | What''s the trouble? |
16858 | Where are you going, all by your little self, anyway? |
16858 | Who are you? |
16858 | Who are your neighbors? |
16858 | Why, my child, he has no trade, no money, and very little education; what are you going to do for a living? |
16858 | Wo n''t you ask God to hold that train? 16858 Yes, dear; why do you ask?" |
16858 | You never used liquor? |
16858 | A Chicago editor quoted the statement and asked:"Is it possible education breeds in woman a distaste for matrimony and home life?" |
16858 | A friend called to see him and said:"Jim, what have you to say after this misfortune?" |
16858 | A friend said to me, during the great depression:"Do n''t you think it will be over soon?" |
16858 | A little boy in Chicago said:"Papa, you were born in England?" |
16858 | A man riding along a highway said to a farmer by the wayside:"How far to Baltimore?" |
16858 | A physician came and as he bent over to examine the heart, the tramp said:"Was the little one saved?" |
16858 | A visiting lady after service said:"Doctor, have you any more of the breed of that dog? |
16858 | Again a half- drunk Union soldier rode up to our gate and said:"Who lives here?" |
16858 | Am I putting too much stress upon the humanity side of national life? |
16858 | An old woman suffering from rheumatism was asked by a friend:"Did you ever try electricity?" |
16858 | And what was the fare to slumberland? |
16858 | Another question was:"Who was Abraham Lincoln?" |
16858 | Are they bankers or leading business men? |
16858 | As they neared the poor fellow, one said to the other:"Did you ever see such an appeal for a drink? |
16858 | Before I close would you like to have me point you to greatness? |
16858 | Boys, are you poor? |
16858 | Boys, can you stand the test? |
16858 | Boys, have any of you done this within the past month, or six months? |
16858 | Bring me the Bible and what do I find? |
16858 | But how many are there who regret they ever put the bottle to their lips? |
16858 | But suppose when the occasion comes, instead of inspiration one has indigestion, then what? |
16858 | But what do you think? |
16858 | But, who is the government? |
16858 | Ca n''t we be just as earnest and eloquent in dealing out the truth?" |
16858 | Call me a tramp, do you? |
16858 | Can the man obey the doctor? |
16858 | Can we save the cities of this republic? |
16858 | Can you afford to wrap up your hopes of happiness in him and to him swear away your young life and love? |
16858 | Cromwell said:"What good are they doing as silver apostles? |
16858 | Did I say too much when I said the preacher would eat the turkey? |
16858 | Did Solomon know what he was talking about when he gave it that detestable name? |
16858 | Did he go to a better? |
16858 | Did he settle it? |
16858 | Did he settle it? |
16858 | Did that settle it? |
16858 | Did you sign it for him to sell to other fathers''sons and not yours?'' |
16858 | Do n''t you see you have put mud on my dress from your shoes? |
16858 | Do n''t you think if alcoholic liquor had been intended as a beverage for mankind, the great Creator would have made a few springs of it somewhere? |
16858 | Do our brothers stumble over strong drink? |
16858 | Do you ask has the platform any blemishes? |
16858 | Do you ask what we are to do with the Philippine Islands? |
16858 | Do you know half the failures of life come from misfits of occupation? |
16858 | Do you know how to do things? |
16858 | Do you know what that means, a match struck in the dark? |
16858 | Do you realize what it means when an American home is destroyed by drink? |
16858 | Do you say that no such ignominious possibility hangs over any boy in this audience? |
16858 | Do you say you can drink or let it alone? |
16858 | Do you tell me money is the great question of this country, tariff the great question? |
16858 | Does he let them stand? |
16858 | Does it deceive and mock? |
16858 | Does some young man in this audience say,"I can quit if I please?" |
16858 | Does strong drink make our brother to offend? |
16858 | Finally a very beautiful, blue- eyed, charming young lady said:"Since you do not dance, may I engage you for a promenade around the ball room?" |
16858 | Go to the churches; are they crowded with men? |
16858 | Go to the gambling halls; are they crowded with women? |
16858 | Go to the jails and penitentiaries; are they full of women? |
16858 | Go to the saloons; are they frequented by women? |
16858 | Going to the house I said to my wife:"Where is Charlie?" |
16858 | Going to the parlor I said:"What are you doing here?" |
16858 | Going to the spot from whence came the voice and bending over the prostrate form of a dying soldier, the chaplain asked:"What can I do for you?" |
16858 | Good for strength? |
16858 | Have men all the intelligence? |
16858 | Have men all the virtue? |
16858 | Have mightier than we fallen through strong drink? |
16858 | Have some of you had sorrows you could not harmonize with the logic of life? |
16858 | Have you a trade? |
16858 | Have you ever considered how it is baited to resist the forces of evil? |
16858 | He answered:''No, father, but you signed that man''s petition to set up the saloon; whom did you expect him to sell to? |
16858 | He asks,"Is not this my wife?" |
16858 | He further said:"Will I ever drink again? |
16858 | He immediately addressed the man who had the monkey:"Sir, is that gintleman in the cage paying his fare? |
16858 | How does regulation regulate? |
16858 | How would you have enjoyed being with the majority at the time of the flood? |
16858 | I admit you can drink but are you sure you can let it alone? |
16858 | I am frequently asked:"What do you recall as the best introduction you ever had?" |
16858 | I am often asked:"Where do you find the most appreciative audiences?" |
16858 | I answer by asking: What becomes of the men the saloons put out of business? |
16858 | I called to mother; she came running, and taking the chicken from him said:"Do n''t you know to eat solid food will kill you?" |
16858 | I said,"Judge, the question is, which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art? |
16858 | I said:"This is a trying time with me, wo n''t you take a stroll along the beach and let me be alone today?" |
16858 | I said:"Yes, but what are you going to do with it?" |
16858 | I staggered to the colt, held the halter rein and when the tooth was removed my uncle, looking at me, said:"What''s the matter with you? |
16858 | I''m sorry''bout the mud, you''ll''scuse me, wo n''t you, good lady?" |
16858 | If I had life to live over would I do any better than I have done? |
16858 | If it''s good for strength, why not give it to the ox, the mule and the horse?" |
16858 | If we enter that young man''s home what do we find? |
16858 | If you are going to California tomorrow, which way would you start, east or west? |
16858 | If you can_ now_, are you sure you can two years hence? |
16858 | If you merchants could take in eighty thousand dollars, could n''t you pay out six thousand and not get hurt? |
16858 | Is alcoholic liquor as a beverage hurtful and wrong? |
16858 | Is dat de chile I loved and laid wake wif so many nights and cooked so many sweet things for? |
16858 | Is it a counterfeit business? |
16858 | Is it any wonder the saloons hide behind green blinds or stained glass windows? |
16858 | Is our country in danger?" |
16858 | Is that true? |
16858 | Is the drinker weak? |
16858 | Is wine a mocker? |
16858 | Is you got a knife? |
16858 | Is you got a little girl like me?" |
16858 | Judge, will you please let me kiss my little sister before you take her from me?" |
16858 | Just then my uncle called:"George, where are you?" |
16858 | Mr. Spurgeon called lecturing an art, and why not? |
16858 | My answer is: how much more would they drink if we had not done what has been done? |
16858 | My brother, what''s that in thy hand? |
16858 | My reply was:"Are minorities always wrong or hopeless? |
16858 | Nearing the old man he said:"Uncle, would you loan me three cents to cross the ferry?" |
16858 | Now and then I am asked:"What will become of the men who are engaged in the liquor business if the country goes dry? |
16858 | Now if public sentiment has made such a mistake in the allotment of virtues, why may it not have made a greater mistake in the allotment of spheres? |
16858 | On leaving the platform an old miner said:"How do you stand on the money question? |
16858 | On one occasion the question for debate was:"Which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art?" |
16858 | On our way to the hotel I said:"Were you not frightened when we started down that mountain?" |
16858 | One night when he was sleeping drunk in one room, his old mother in another said:"Oh God, is my cup of sorrow not yet full?" |
16858 | One who had heard me many times said:"Why do you do better at Ocean Grove than anywhere else I hear you?" |
16858 | Seated one day in front of a hotel in London, a bootblack halted before him and said:"Mister, will you have a shine?" |
16858 | Seeing the Yankee farmer at the front gate she rode up, dismounted and said:"Sir, will you please tell me, is this the way to Wareham?" |
16858 | Several years ago my brother said to me:"Are you going West soon, as far as Kansas City?" |
16858 | She had a baby in her arms, and I said:''Madam, what are you crying about?'' |
16858 | She said:"Is n''t this a grand sight?" |
16858 | Some years ago when out on a little coast ride for pleasure,( if that''s what you call it) I said to the captain:"How long till we reach the shore?" |
16858 | Students of history are asking,"Will the fate of Rome be repeated in the history of this republic?" |
16858 | The Judge said:"Pat, how many times have you been before this court?" |
16858 | The boy went but soon returned with his rosy cheeks cleansed, saying:"Sir, how do you like the job?" |
16858 | The buyer looked the horse over and said:"Young man, what is your price?" |
16858 | The drunkard with help arose and said:"Where am I? |
16858 | The friend asked:"What does she do with so much money?" |
16858 | The great jurist hailed the boy, saying,"Boy, have you a string?" |
16858 | The judge rapped for order in the court and repeated the question,"Are you guilty or innocent of the charge?" |
16858 | The lad had never seen a monkey and as they played their pranks about the cage he said:"Father, did God make monkeys?" |
16858 | The little six- year old boy of the home said:"Mother, did you say little brother came from heaven?" |
16858 | The man sinking into a chair said:''O God, am I never to see my home again?''" |
16858 | The old woman broke the silence, saying:"Is dat my chile? |
16858 | The superintendent said:"Will you help me lift this on to the track?" |
16858 | The teacher of his class said to him:"James, who was the strongest man of whom we have any account?" |
16858 | The three entered the saloon, the glasses were filled and the tramp took his and draining it, said:"Young men, I''m very thirsty, may I have another?" |
16858 | They say to me:"What steps did you take?" |
16858 | To a woman who could speak English I said:"How do you like this country?" |
16858 | To say,"Of all my father''s family I love myself the best, If Providence takes care of me, who cares what takes the rest?" |
16858 | Turning to the guide he said:"Who are these?" |
16858 | Was n''t I in good condition for the trip? |
16858 | Was strong drink recommended as a stimulant? |
16858 | Was there ever a word of more weight in its application? |
16858 | What about intelligence? |
16858 | What about this inhuman denial of the right to order meat, drink, clothing and home life? |
16858 | What are the consequences? |
16858 | What are these little traits in human character? |
16858 | What are you going to do about it?" |
16858 | What becomes of their families? |
16858 | What does this fellowship imply? |
16858 | What makes the drunkard? |
16858 | What makes the saloon? |
16858 | What management would allow a horse to be thus handicapped? |
16858 | What may the young before me expect in the next fifty years? |
16858 | What supplies the drink? |
16858 | What was done to revive him and renew his strength? |
16858 | What was it? |
16858 | What will become of their families?" |
16858 | What would have become of the ship? |
16858 | What''s the matter?" |
16858 | When I answered, he asked:"Can your mother get supper for fourteen soldiers in thirty minutes?" |
16858 | When I asked;"What''s your trouble?" |
16858 | When brought before the court an austere judge said:"Who claims this child?" |
16858 | When he said:"Going down the mountain to where we came from,"I said,"What will we hold to?" |
16858 | When the father replied:"Yes,"the boy said:"Well, do n''t you guess God laughed when he made the first monkey?" |
16858 | When they admitted they had, I said to my son:''Did I ever set such an example for you to follow?'' |
16858 | When they tired of the confinement, the older boy said:"Mother, can we go out for a walk?" |
16858 | Where is the man who would be so inconsiderate as to thus hinder a horse? |
16858 | Which is the safer, moderation or total- abstinence? |
16858 | While taking my supper my hostess said:"Would you know smallpox if you were to see the symptoms?" |
16858 | Who are the license voters? |
16858 | Who is my neighbor? |
16858 | Who makes the law? |
16858 | Who makes the legislator? |
16858 | Who would have thought an Emperor of Germany would ever"go back"on beer? |
16858 | Whom did Daniel Webster leave his seat in the Senate that he might hear his eloquence? |
16858 | Why do you ask that?" |
16858 | Why is this? |
16858 | Why was it better? |
16858 | Why will he eat when he knows it means death? |
16858 | Will he eat it? |
16858 | Wo n''t you take her now?" |
16858 | Young man, start wrong and end right? |
16858 | Young man, which way are you going? |
16858 | Young man, will you tamper and trifle with strong drink? |
16858 | Young men, did Luke Howard go to a better hotel? |
16858 | Young men, why was it a tree that had withstood the storms of ages, should, before such a little gust of wind bow its head and die? |
16858 | Young people, do you know you live in a testing world, a world in which all buds and blossoms are tested? |
16858 | who runs this house?" |
14182 | Doth not,saith this kind of slanderer,"his temper incline him to do thus? |
14182 | I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind? |
14182 | Is it not monstrous,he asks,"that Calne, with 173 voters, should return a member, while Glasgow returns only two, with a constituency of 20,000?" |
14182 | O, yet a nobler task awaits thy hand, For what can war but endless war still breed? |
14182 | What could have been done more? |
14182 | Why contend,say they,"for a little territory that you do not need?" |
14182 | A treaty is a bargain between nations, binding in good faith; and what makes a bargain? |
14182 | Again, how is"Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth,"understood? |
14182 | Again:"He doeth well,"saith the sycophant,"it is true; but why, and to what end? |
14182 | Am I asked, would you render the judges superior to the legislature? |
14182 | Am I borne out in this declaration by the clause referred to? |
14182 | And can it be more justifiable to fight for my goods than for my life?" |
14182 | And can we have a safer model in forming ours? |
14182 | And gentlemen, what has been the result? |
14182 | And he added,"How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? |
14182 | And how is his name hallowed in us, except while it makes us holy? |
14182 | And how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? |
14182 | And if we have, are we not to make use of it in judging of the expediency or inexpediency of the treaty? |
14182 | And is it not quite clear, that to such persons, God can not be said to be their God? |
14182 | And is not Christ worth the seeking? |
14182 | And now, gentlemen, what is about to happen? |
14182 | And now, gentlemen, what is the condition of the great body of the people? |
14182 | And what event of weightier intrinsic importance, or of more extensive consequences, was ever selected for this honorary distinction? |
14182 | And what has occurred? |
14182 | And what is that? |
14182 | And what is the result to Athens? |
14182 | And what object of consideration more pleasing than this can be presented to the human mind? |
14182 | And what would the bride''s guardian and conductor say, the divine and blessed Paul? |
14182 | And why was this, save that thine own head might not suffer-- thine own conscience might not be wounded? |
14182 | And why? |
14182 | And, since free labor is inevitable, will you have it in its worst forms or in its best? |
14182 | And, with this, what have you done? |
14182 | Another point is this, whether and how far a private person may aid another in distress? |
14182 | Are all that hear me this day certain they shall be saved? |
14182 | Are despots alone to be approached for unfeeling indifference to the tears and blood of their subjects? |
14182 | Are gentlemen disposed to risk the consequences? |
14182 | Are not these, my lord, very afflicting thoughts? |
14182 | Are our ears so deafened? |
14182 | Are our eyes so blinded? |
14182 | Are our hearts so hardened? |
14182 | Are our noble predecessors''souls got so far into the English cabbage stock and cauliflowers that we should show the least inclination that way? |
14182 | Are our tongues so faltered? |
14182 | Are republicans unresponsible? |
14182 | Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference because they are greener? |
14182 | Are there not Christians enough to kill? |
14182 | Are there not associations which, overleaping the recent past, carry us back to times when, over North and South, this flag was honored alike by all? |
14182 | Are there not many who live, to all appearances, as unconscious of his existence as we fancy the inferior animals to be? |
14182 | Are there not many who never think of God or care about his service? |
14182 | Are they to be bound by popular election? |
14182 | Are we come to exult that Northern hands are stronger than Southern? |
14182 | Are we going to fight because we can not agree upon the mode of disposing of our neighbor''s lands? |
14182 | Are we sufficient for the comprehension of the sublimest spiritual truths, and unequal to material and temporal ones? |
14182 | Are you not yet weary of contest? |
14182 | As Mrs. Surratt came forward, he asked her this question,"Do you know this man?" |
14182 | At the end of a war there must be a negotiation, which is the very point we have already gained; and why relinquish it? |
14182 | Because then it was most rightly and most truly said,"How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed?" |
14182 | Blush ye not, speaking lies against the divine oracles? |
14182 | But am I reduced to the necessity of proving this point? |
14182 | But have they maturely considered the whole subject? |
14182 | But how, even for so short a time, can I be separated from my beloved ones? |
14182 | But if at that period this would be unreasonable, what makes it otherwise now? |
14182 | But if he is God, and the throne of his kingdom is everlasting, in what way could God advance? |
14182 | But if, at the same time, it does not belong to the courts of the United States, where does it lead the people? |
14182 | But is it in this house only that we find these indications of the want of maturity in our views upon this subject? |
14182 | But is this view of delight only and not of discovery-- of contentment, and not of benefit? |
14182 | But she returned not,""Is there no balm in Gilead? |
14182 | But the greatest question of all is, How will that decision affect the country as a whole? |
14182 | But to the eye of reason what can be more clear than that all men have an equal right to happiness? |
14182 | But what good do we wish for ourselves, when we say,"Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth?" |
14182 | But what is the effect of it? |
14182 | But what is the right of a huntsman to the forest of a thousand miles over which he has accidentally ranged in quest of prey? |
14182 | But what mysterious distribution of character has the craft of statesmen, more fatal than priestcraft, introduced? |
14182 | But what purpose can arguments of this kind answer? |
14182 | But when did the President of the Senate ever undertake to call the two houses together to witness the opening and counting of the votes? |
14182 | But when hear we such questions? |
14182 | But, after all this,"shall they fall and not arise? |
14182 | But, if so, how can you expect that it will be of so much more use hereafter as to make it worth dissolving the Union? |
14182 | But, if that be true, what is the use of asking for the protection anyhow, much less in the Constitution? |
14182 | But, if we pass to the other condition, is it any more reasonable? |
14182 | But, say those who hide the absurdity under the cover of ambiguous phrases, Have we no discretion? |
14182 | But, sir, if it were a compromise, what is there in compromise that is discreditable either to men or to nations? |
14182 | By disregarding the mode and forms prescribed by the constitution for amending it? |
14182 | By nominees of the sovereign power? |
14182 | Byrhtnoth, angry and resolute, gave him this answer:--"Hearest thou, pirate, what this folk sayeth? |
14182 | Can any thing essential, any thing more, than mere ornament and decoration be added to this by robes or diamonds? |
14182 | Can anything tend more to make men think themselves mean, or degrade to a lower point their estimation of virtue and their standard of action? |
14182 | Can not men be saved without so much ado? |
14182 | Can the gentlemen relieve themselves from this dilemma? |
14182 | Can they take it upon them to say that an Indian peace, under these circumstances, will prove firm? |
14182 | Can you give the colonies any security that such a period will never come? |
14182 | Can you talk to them of transgressing their powers, when no one has a right to judge of those powers but themselves? |
14182 | Contemplate the mangled bodies of your countrymen, and then say, What should be the reward of such sacrifices? |
14182 | Could he look with affection and veneration to such a country as his parent? |
14182 | Did I say that we brought back the same banner that you bore away, noble and heroic sir? |
14182 | Did ever so many hearts, in so brief a time, touch two such boundless feelings? |
14182 | Did he ever do it? |
14182 | Did he grudge us this? |
14182 | Did the government express any disapprobation of such conduct? |
14182 | Did the protection we received annul our rights as men, and lay us under an obligation of being miserable? |
14182 | Did they not agree to go to King Street, and attack the main guard? |
14182 | Did you not know that whether of you shall be slain, the loss would be the great seignor''s?" |
14182 | Dismissing, therefore, the justice of our cause, as incontestable, the only question is, What is best for us to pursue in our present circumstances? |
14182 | Do not these make light of Christ and salvation? |
14182 | Do not those men make light of Christ and salvation that shun the mention of his name, unless it be in a vain or sinful use? |
14182 | Do not those then make light of Christ and salvation that think of them so seldom and coldly in comparison of other things? |
14182 | Do the angels need books, and interpreters, and readers? |
14182 | Do they forget that they interdicted representative government? |
14182 | Do we exult over fallen cities? |
14182 | Do we not ask rain of him, to- day, and yesterday, and the day before? |
14182 | Do you not see the men who delivered the Delphian temple invested not only with that glory but with the leadership against Persia? |
14182 | Do you want more war? |
14182 | Does not the South need peace? |
14182 | Does not the power of the legislature become absolute and omnipotent? |
14182 | Does not this open wide the door for the admission of the plea of"reasonable doubt"? |
14182 | Does the power reside in the States? |
14182 | Doth not that soul make light of all these that thinks his ease more worth than they? |
14182 | For a mountain is a height, and what is higher than heaven? |
14182 | For are there as many ages yet remaining as have already passed away? |
14182 | For is not he who attempts to murder me more injurious than he who barely attempts to rob me? |
14182 | For shall we receive the Eucharist when we shall have come to Christ himself, and begun to reign with him forever? |
14182 | For to whom doth he say,"Say, Our Father, which art in heaven?" |
14182 | For what are debts, but sins? |
14182 | For what rights of a citizen will be deemed inviolable when a State renounces the principles that constitute their security? |
14182 | For when did he not reign? |
14182 | For when this life shall have passed away, shall we ask for daily bread then? |
14182 | Further, it seems to me, we may make another question, whether you are satisfied that their real intention was to kill or maim, or not? |
14182 | God will judge impartially; why should not we do so? |
14182 | Good men and angels will cry out:"How long, O Lord, how long, wilt thou not avenge?" |
14182 | Had he not a right to kill the man? |
14182 | Had she a single eye to our advantage? |
14182 | Has it checked your progress in any one department of human effort? |
14182 | Has it crippled your resources? |
14182 | Has it impaired your energies? |
14182 | Has it paralyzed your industry? |
14182 | Has nothing been gained? |
14182 | Has our blood been expended in vain? |
14182 | Has the legislature of a State a right to declare an act of Congress void? |
14182 | Has this long and weary period of strife been an unmingled evil? |
14182 | Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods?" |
14182 | Have the principles, on which you ground the reproach upon cabinets and kings, no practical influence, no binding force? |
14182 | Have they forgotten that the Lacedemonians had the right to vote in the assemblies only when they held helots? |
14182 | Have we not said,"Our Father, which art in heaven,"and the rest which follows? |
14182 | Have you gone to them, and told them the doubtfulness of your case, and asked their help in the judging of your condition? |
14182 | Have you nobody to inquire of, that might help you in such a work? |
14182 | He( Smith) stepped to the door of the parlor and said,"Mrs. Surratt, will you step here a minute?" |
14182 | His young companions in the chase or the gymnasium? |
14182 | How are these acts proven? |
14182 | How are you to meet the case of the representation of South Lancashire in reference to its boroughs? |
14182 | How can this difficulty be got over? |
14182 | How did he give them up? |
14182 | How did she set about it? |
14182 | How have they treated them? |
14182 | How is a second chamber to be constituted? |
14182 | How is this? |
14182 | How is this? |
14182 | How many letters hast thou indited to holy men, imploring their prayers, not that thou mightest obtain these human--nuptials, shall I call them? |
14182 | How many ways of proceeding lie open before us? |
14182 | How stands the case, then? |
14182 | How then ought he to forgive who is himself forgiven, when he forgiveth all who oweth nothing that can be forgiven him? |
14182 | How were the obligations of this treaty fulfilled? |
14182 | How will these despisers of Christ and salvation be able one day to look him in the face, and to give an account of these neglects? |
14182 | How, then, does this take place? |
14182 | How, then, is it to be treated? |
14182 | How? |
14182 | I ask those who remind us of them, if it is at such government they would arrive? |
14182 | I ask, further, when such attempts have been made, have they not failed of success? |
14182 | I immediately inquire to what extent does the authority of Congress, in relation to commercial treaties, reach? |
14182 | I trust it is neither too presumptuous nor too late to ask, Can you put the dearest interest of society at risk without guilt, and without remorse? |
14182 | If he can be so mistaken about those facts, may he not be in regard to that whole transaction? |
14182 | If he goeth to clear himself from the matter of such aspersions:"What need,"saith this insidious speaker,"of that? |
14182 | If so, may they not adopt means which they believe will tend to produce a concurrence? |
14182 | If the people were willing to part with commerce, can the government dispense with it? |
14182 | If we can not speak the law as it is, where is our liberty? |
14182 | If we do mark what is done in many( might I not say, in most?) |
14182 | If we have passed through fire and water, so that neither did the fire consume us, nor the water drown us, whose is the glory? |
14182 | If we reject the treaty, will our peace be as safe as if we executed it with good faith? |
14182 | In spite of this mock solemnity, I demand, if the House will not concur in the measure to execute the treaty, what other course shall we take? |
14182 | In that period will they be still bound to acknowledge that supremacy over them which we now claim? |
14182 | In the highest possible sense of the terms; but who can tell what that highest possible sense of the terms is? |
14182 | In what manner are they to be elected? |
14182 | Is David dead? |
14182 | Is Hampden dead? |
14182 | Is Washington dead? |
14182 | Is any man that ever was fit to live dead? |
14182 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
14182 | Is it feared that the government will oppress the conquered States? |
14182 | Is it feared that the rights of the States will be withheld? |
14182 | Is it not grown so common a thing to asperse causelessly that no man wonders at it, that few dislike, that scarce any detest it? |
14182 | Is it not our great interest to place our judges upon such high ground that no fear can intimidate, no hope seduce them? |
14182 | Is it not safe to abide by such examples? |
14182 | Is it not the sport and divertisement of many to cast dirt in the faces of all they meet with? |
14182 | Is it not true that thou didst fix a punishment for him, and threaten him with death by torments? |
14182 | Is it not, as most men do, out of ill design? |
14182 | Is it ours, so that we should exult in it as if it belonged to us? |
14182 | Is it possible that this will should not be done? |
14182 | Is it to be neglected or ridiculed? |
14182 | Is memory dead? |
14182 | Is not everlasting salvation worth more than all this? |
14182 | Is not her Majesty in danger by such a method? |
14182 | Is not the monarchy in danger? |
14182 | Is not the nation''s peace and tranquillity in danger? |
14182 | Is such an instance to be found? |
14182 | Is the aid of the legislature necessary in all cases whatsoever, to give effect to a commercial treaty? |
14182 | Is the legislative sanction necessary to give it effect? |
14182 | Is the only benefit which our constancy till death has obtained for our country, that it should be sunk into a deeper and more ignominious vassalage? |
14182 | Is there a word on record of conversation between Booth and Mrs. Surratt? |
14182 | Is there any language of reproach pungent enough to express your commentary on the fact? |
14182 | Is there anything in Mrs. Surratt''s mind and course of life to show that she was prepared for the commission of this crime? |
14182 | Is there no historic pride? |
14182 | Is there no physician there? |
14182 | Is there one among you who can hear the simple and pathetic energy of these expressions without tenderness and admiration? |
14182 | Is this immense wealth always to be exposed as a prey to the rapacity of freebooters? |
14182 | Is this necessary except in this life? |
14182 | Is this to be the one idea which is to mold the policy of the government, when that gentleman and his friends shall control it? |
14182 | Is truth ever barren? |
14182 | It cried to the Lord,"Wherefore am I deposed?" |
14182 | Let us inquire also against whom she has protected us? |
14182 | Lord, when didst thou see these good things in us? |
14182 | May I not, then, well express the hope that never again may we or ours be called upon so to celebrate this anniversary? |
14182 | Must they always continue an appendage to our government and follow it implicitly through every change that can happen to it? |
14182 | Nay, does not the Lord himself say to some who now walk in the spirit of Jeremiah,"Hast thou seen what the virgin of Israel hath done unto me?" |
14182 | Need I say that we fly in the face of that resolution when we pretend that the acts of that power are not valid until we have concurred in them? |
14182 | Now, consider: How does Demosthenes answer to these conditions? |
14182 | Of such a father what shall we ask? |
14182 | On what protection does this vast property rest? |
14182 | Or how shall they hear without a preacher? |
14182 | Or how shall they preach except they be sent?" |
14182 | Or what promotion is it to the Everlasting to have put on the temporal? |
14182 | Or what was there wanting to him who was sitting on his Father''s throne? |
14182 | Or, if his life should not be invaded, what would its enjoyments be in a country odious in the eyes of strangers and dishonored in his own? |
14182 | Our peaceful triumphs? |
14182 | Our peaceful triumphs? |
14182 | Our understandings have been addressed, it is true, and with ability and effect; but, I demand, has any corner of the heart been left unexplored? |
14182 | Q,--Anything besides the carbines and ammunition? |
14182 | Q.--All three together? |
14182 | Q.--For what purpose, and for how long, did he ask you to keep these articles? |
14182 | Q.--How long a rope? |
14182 | Q.--How much ammunition was there? |
14182 | Q.--Was her question to you first, whether they were still there, or what was it? |
14182 | Q.--Were they concealed in that condition? |
14182 | Q.--Were they put in that place? |
14182 | Q.--Were those articles left at your house? |
14182 | Q.--What did they bring to your house, and what did they do there? |
14182 | Q.--What did they bring to your house? |
14182 | Q.--You say that he asked you to conceal those articles for him? |
14182 | Question.--"Was her question to you first, whether they were there, or what was it?" |
14182 | Shall a philanthropist say to a banker, who defends himself against a robber,"Why do you need so much money?" |
14182 | Shall he forbid the oaks of the forest to fall before the ax of industry, and to rise again, transformed into the habitations of ease and elegance? |
14182 | Shall he forbid the wilderness to blossom like a rose? |
14182 | Shall he not as well discern the riches of Nature''s warehouse as the beauties of her shop? |
14182 | Shall he not be able thereby to produce worthy effects and to endow the life of man with infinite commodities?" |
14182 | Shall it be ignorant, impertinent, indolent, or shall it be educated, self- respecting, moral, and self- supporting? |
14182 | Shall not we then argue for that which our progenitors have purchased for us at so dear a rate, and with so much immortal honor and glory? |
14182 | Shall the hazard of a father unbind the ligaments of a dumb son''s tongue; and shall we hold our peace, when our_ patria_ is in danger? |
14182 | Shall the liberal bounties of Providence to the race of man be monopolized by one of ten thousand for whom they were created? |
14182 | Shall the lordly savage not only disdain the virtues and enjoyments of civilization himself, but shall he control the civilization of a world? |
14182 | Shall we complain of our nature-- shall we say that man ought to have been made otherwise? |
14182 | Shall we hesitate to go forward with the work? |
14182 | Shall we, dreading to become the blind instruments of power, yield ourselves the blinder dupes of mere sounds of imposture? |
14182 | She might have said she did not know Payne-- and who within the sound of my voice can say they know him now? |
14182 | Should not the consideration of these things vivify these dry bones of ours? |
14182 | Should not the memory of our noble predecessors''valor and constancy rouse up our drooping spirits? |
14182 | Since this flag went down on that dark day, who shall tell the mighty woes that have made this land a spectacle to angels and men? |
14182 | Some of you will, perhaps, ask in amazement: Is a man to be indicted for his temperament? |
14182 | Some unforeseen Providence will fall out, that may cast the balance; some Joseph or other will say,"Why do ye strive together, since ye are brethren?" |
14182 | Suppose there shall be an interruption in the count, as has occurred in our history, can the President of the Senate do it? |
14182 | That the body whom they are to check has the power to destroy them? |
14182 | That_ mendax__ infamia_ from the press, which daily coins false facts and false motives? |
14182 | The evil spirit is cast out: why should not this nation cease to wander among tombs, cutting itself? |
14182 | The manner of the reprehension was in these words:"How durst you undertake to fight one with the other? |
14182 | The question arises, who is most responsible-- a peer for life whose dignities are not descendible, or a peer for life whose dignities are hereditary? |
14182 | The question is, Are you satisfied the people made the attack in order to kill the soldiers? |
14182 | The question was asked Lloyd, During this conversation, was the word''carbine''mentioned? |
14182 | The question was then asked,"Can you swear on your oath, that Mrs. Surratt mentioned the words''shooting irons''to you at all?" |
14182 | The single test has been, is it oratory? |
14182 | The slaveholding States will secede, and what then? |
14182 | The true question is, shall the judiciary be permanent, or fluctuate with the tide of public opinion? |
14182 | Their specific was to despoil churches and plunder landlords, and what has been the result? |
14182 | Then Justice, with an angry countenance, and meditating on a grief which she had not expected, said to her father,"Am not I thy daughter Justice? |
14182 | Then shall the righteous answer and say, Lord, why hast thou prepared such glory and such good things? |
14182 | Then they also shall answer and say, Lord, why hast thou prepared such punishments for us? |
14182 | They met each other as if each would ask the other,"Am I awake, or do I dream?" |
14182 | This principle admitted, does any constitution remain? |
14182 | To others I will urge, Can any circumstance mark upon a people more turpitude and debasement? |
14182 | Trembling and astonished, Paul cries out,"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" |
14182 | Truth, when she heard this, was excessively angry, and looking sternly at her father,"Am not I,"said she,"thy daughter Truth? |
14182 | Under what clause of the constitution is the right to exercise this power set up? |
14182 | Was the man true, was he brave, was he earnest, was all we thought of then;--not, did he vote or think with us, or label himself with our party name? |
14182 | Was there ever such a combination of negligence and blundering? |
14182 | We are asked, sir, if the judges are to be independent of the people? |
14182 | We read in the book of holy Job,"Is not the life of man upon earth a temptation?" |
14182 | Well, what is a treaty? |
14182 | Were there not more than three persons in Dock Square? |
14182 | Were these colonies backward in giving assistance to Great Britain, when they were called upon in 1739 to aid the expedition against Carthagena? |
14182 | Were we to hear our character as a people ridiculed with indifference? |
14182 | What additional proof of confidential relations between Weichmann and Booth could the court desire? |
14182 | What advance, then, of promotion, and reward of virtue, or generally of conduct, is proved from this in our Lord''s instance? |
14182 | What advancement, then, was it to the Immortal to have assumed the mortal? |
14182 | What am I to fear? |
14182 | What are the acts she has done? |
14182 | What are the objects to be accomplished? |
14182 | What argument, therefore, do we want to show the equity of our conduct; or motive of interest to recommend it to our prudence? |
14182 | What becomes, then, of the lively narrative of the right honorable gentleman, and what becomes of the inference and conclusions which he drew from it? |
14182 | What can any tempter from without, whether the devil or the devil''s minister, do against thee? |
14182 | What check can there be when the power designed to be checked can annihilate the body which is to restrain? |
14182 | What debts? |
14182 | What do men commonly please themselves in so much as in carping and harshly censuring, in defaming and abusing their neighbors? |
14182 | What does he mean but this? |
14182 | What does reason, what does argument avail, when party spirit presides? |
14182 | What does this signify? |
14182 | What effect must all these things have on those who have lived viciously? |
14182 | What excuse, then, remains to thee, or to any one else, when he utters such language as this? |
14182 | What follows? |
14182 | What happened in this country? |
14182 | What happened? |
14182 | What hast thou done upon earth? |
14182 | What have they done? |
14182 | What impudent servant ever carried his insane audacity so far as to fling himself upon the couch of his lord? |
14182 | What influence can be exercised by a chamber of nominees? |
14182 | What is a Legislature? |
14182 | What is patriotism? |
14182 | What is the best foundation of independence? |
14182 | What is the earth? |
14182 | What is the express language of the treaty? |
14182 | What is this twenty millions in money, and how is it to be paid? |
14182 | What means"to know"? |
14182 | What more? |
14182 | What nation in so short a time has seen so many? |
14182 | What other form of government, indeed, can so well deserve our esteem and love? |
14182 | What possible motive has the government to narrow the base of that pyramid on which its own permanence depends? |
14182 | What power of the House is relinquished? |
14182 | What power of the Senate is relinquished? |
14182 | What power that both should possess is withheld? |
14182 | What reward can be great to the Everlasting God and King, in the bosom of the Father? |
14182 | What then becomes of the equal measure of power in the two houses over this subject? |
14182 | What was the position of the American government? |
14182 | What will, at that period, be the duty of the colonies? |
14182 | What would you say, or rather what would you not say? |
14182 | What, but this? |
14182 | What, gentlemen, is the first quality which is required in a second chamber? |
14182 | What, however, are his qualifications in respect to sagacity and to power of speech? |
14182 | What, the alienations and jealousies, the discords and contentions, and the causes of them? |
14182 | What, then, are we called upon to do? |
14182 | What, then, do we pray for? |
14182 | What, then, has he hereby taught us? |
14182 | What, then, ought we to do for the death of the soul? |
14182 | What, then, shall hinder the rebuilding of the Republic? |
14182 | When Payne, according to Weichmann''s testimony, inquired,"Where is my mustache?" |
14182 | When did he begin to reign? |
14182 | When the Gospel pierceth the heart indeed, they cry out,"Men and brethren, what shall we do to be saved?" |
14182 | When the certificates have been opened, when the votes have been counted, can the President of the Senate declare the result? |
14182 | When was there a time in the history of the government that there was no North side of this Chamber and of the other? |
14182 | When, sir, did millions of people, as a single man, rise in organized, deliberate, unimpassioned rebellion against justice, truth, and honor? |
14182 | When, then, were these things spoken of him, but when he came in the flesh, and was baptized in Jordan, and the spirit descended on him? |
14182 | Where are the names of the chief men, of the noble families of Stuarts, Hamiltons, Grahams, Campbels, Gordons, Johnstons, Humes, Murrays, Kers? |
14182 | Where are the two great officers of the crown, the constables and marshals of Scotland? |
14182 | Where is it unjust? |
14182 | Where is the collision here? |
14182 | Where will this end, my lord? |
14182 | Where, then, is the reason for hesitation at calling it a riot? |
14182 | Wherefore have we come hither, pilgrims from distant places? |
14182 | Who among you, my countrymen, that is a father, would claim authority to make your child a slave because you had nourished him in infancy? |
14182 | Who can explain, who can worthily so much as conceive, how much he loveth us? |
14182 | Who can foretell the judgment of this commission upon any question of law or fact? |
14182 | Who does not delight in oratory? |
14182 | Who has an omnipotent hand to restore a million dead, slain in battle or wasted by sickness, or dying of grief, broken- hearted? |
14182 | Who has omniscience to search for the scattered ones? |
14182 | Who shall enumerate their value to the millions yet unborn? |
14182 | Who shall judge whether we govern equitably or not? |
14182 | Who shall recount our martyr''s sufferings for this people? |
14182 | Who shall restore the lost to broken families? |
14182 | Who will accuse me of wandering out of the subject? |
14182 | Who will say that I exaggerate the tendencies of our measures? |
14182 | Who would venture upon a voyage in a ship each plank and timber of which might withdraw at its pleasure? |
14182 | Who, after this, will say that republicans are ungrateful? |
14182 | Whom did he wish us to call our father, save his own father? |
14182 | Whose rights are endangered by it? |
14182 | Why did Christ bow his head on the cross? |
14182 | Why did he not go to Mrs. Surratt and communicate his suspicions at once? |
14182 | Why did this civil war begin? |
14182 | Why is it, then, persevered in, and the other rejected? |
14182 | Why need I delay you by my words and by my tears? |
14182 | Why need I say more? |
14182 | Why need any eye turn from this spectacle? |
14182 | Why require protection where you will have nothing to protect? |
14182 | Why should it not come, clothed and in its right mind, to"sit at the feet of Jesus"? |
14182 | Why will you protect your citizens and their property upon land, and leave them defenseless upon the ocean? |
14182 | Why, then, is it that harmony is not restored? |
14182 | Why, then, is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?" |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Will a change of parties make the nation more happy? |
14182 | Will any one answer by a sneer, that all this is idle preaching? |
14182 | Will any one deny that we are bound, and I would hope to good purpose, by the most solemn sanctions of duty, for the vote we give? |
14182 | Will it be called day by day when there will be one eternal day? |
14182 | Will it be pretended that the State courts have the exclusive right of deciding upon the validity of our laws? |
14182 | Will it be whispered that the treaty has made a new champion for the protection of the frontiers? |
14182 | Will reflecting men not perceive, then, the wisdom of accepting established facts, and, with alacrity of enterprise, begin to retrieve the past? |
14182 | Will the tendency to Indian hostilities be contested by any one? |
14182 | Will they be still bound to unconditional submission? |
14182 | Will they say, though a judge has no power to pronounce a law void, he has a power to declare the constitution invalid? |
14182 | Will this again be necessary in the life to come? |
14182 | Will you gather up the unexploded fragments of this prodigious magazine of all mischief, and heap them up for continued explosions? |
14182 | Will you give them letters of marque and reprisal to pay themselves by force? |
14182 | Will you go to war to avenge their injury? |
14182 | Will you have men as drudges, or will you have them as citizens? |
14182 | Will you interpose and frustrate that hope, leaving to many families nothing but beggary and despair? |
14182 | Will you pay the sufferers out of the treasury? |
14182 | Will you say afterwards that their existence depends upon the legislature? |
14182 | Will you say that we now govern equitably, and that there is no danger of such revolution? |
14182 | Without this protection what would be the condition of the Northern inventor? |
14182 | Would not the quick ears of Weichmann have heard the remark had it been made? |
14182 | Would not this be so? |
14182 | Would you render them independent of the legislature? |
14182 | You I can comfort; but how can I speak to that twilight million to whom his name was as the name of an angel of God? |
14182 | You want to know if we have a government; if you have any authority to collect revenue; to wring tribute from an unwilling people? |
14182 | __"Are you certain?" |
14182 | and art not thou called merciful? |
14182 | and what is it that you neglect? |
14182 | are thou not called just? |
14182 | art not thou called true? |
14182 | but what saith he? |
14182 | companies, what is it but one telling malicious stories of, or fastening odious characters upon, another? |
14182 | did I name you? |
14182 | do you not prejudge yourself guilty? |
14182 | had he not fair opportunity and strong temptation to it? |
14182 | hath he not acted so in like cases? |
14182 | have not others made as fair a show? |
14182 | may he not dissemble now? |
14182 | may he not recoil hereafter? |
14182 | may not his interest have swayed him thereto? |
14182 | must I needs mean you? |
14182 | rather this dishonorable defilement--but that thou mightest not fall away from the Lord Jesus? |
14182 | shall he turn away and not return?" |
14182 | shall it be said that we waver in the view of those who begin by trying to expunge the sacred memory of the fourth of July? |
14182 | that ask of his service as Judas of the ointment, What need this waste? |
14182 | that provide outward necessaries so carefully for their families, but do so little to the saving of their souls? |
14182 | the single question, is there eloquence? |
14182 | to bespatter any man with foul imputations? |
14182 | what is it you run after? |
14182 | why do you then assume it to yourself? |