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 |
---|---|
6804 | Were you not a noble? |
6804 | What need is there for discussion,exclaimed a delegate,"where all are agreed? |
6804 | ( 3800? |
6804 | (?-606 B.C. |
6804 | ? |
6804 | ASSHUR- BANI- PAL( 668- 626? |
6804 | As early as the times of Jeremiah, the permanency of physical characteristics had passed into the proverb,"Can the Ethiopian change his skin?" |
6804 | As the slave advanced, Marius shouted,"Man, do you dare to kill Caius Marius?" |
6804 | If the French people should be allowed to overturn the throne of their hereditary sovereign, who would then respect the divine rights of kings? |
6804 | Indeed, who is strong enough to rule the world? |
6804 | It is related that Caius had a dream in which the spirit of his brother seemed to address him thus:"Caius, why do you linger? |
6804 | It was begun in 214(?) |
6804 | Many thoughtful minds were hopelessly asking,"What is truth?" |
6804 | The most noted of these form what is known as the Epic of Izdubar( Nimrod? |
6804 | The state came to be known as Russia, probably from the word_ Ruotsi_( corsairs? |
6804 | and finished in 204(?) |
8896 | A pamphlet of Abbé_ Sieyés_, in answer to the question,"What is the Third Estate?" |
8896 | Already a far heavier sentence had been passed, and was hanging over a man''s head: before that fell, why should he not take a little pleasure?" |
8896 | But what matters the ingratitude of men? |
8896 | But when he saw the flashing eyes of the old general, and heard him cry,"Fellow, darest thou kill_ Caius Marius_?" |
8896 | How should the duchies be disposed of? |
8896 | Later still, apparently not earlier than the ninth century B.C., the_ Chaldoeans_( of Semitic stock?) |
8896 | THE MEANING OF HISTORY.--A thoughtful student can hardly fail to propose to himself the question,"What is the meaning of history? |
8896 | Their alphabet( invented by them?) |
8896 | Then lived a famous public officer,_ Yang Chên_, who, when asked to take a bribe, and assured that no one would know it, answered,"How so? |
8896 | There a priest named_ John Ball_ harangued them on the equality of rights, from the text,-- When Adam delved, and Eve span, Who was then a gentleman? |
8896 | This is not the place to consider the question, What was the primitive religion of man? |
8896 | Was Heaven, or Shang- ti-- or the Lord-- the visible heaven, the expanse above, clothed with the attribute of personality? |
8896 | Was the principle of heredity to come back? |
8896 | What but debasement could come from the worship of Astarte and the Phoenician El? |
8896 | What might then have been the subsequent course of European history? |
8896 | What survives of all these violent and arbitrary works? |
8896 | Who would be willing to sacrifice himself to the law of honor when he knew not whether he would ever live to be held in honor? |
8896 | Why is this long drama with all that is noble and joyous in it, and with its abysses of sin and misery, enacted at all?" |
8896 | _ Anaximander_( 611-? |
8896 | |+--C. Werner(?) |
11099 | And I suppose you also understand now, why this caused a civil war? |
11099 | And do you not think there is some other reason for learning, besides being amused? |
11099 | And why should you have said so? |
11099 | But why did the Africans go, papa? |
11099 | Can you tell me of any mistakes I make now papa? |
11099 | Do n''t I speak like a gentleman now, papa? |
11099 | How did you know that he was an ignorant boy, Charles? |
11099 | How does sugar grow? |
11099 | I shall like to read about it,said Charles,"but what did the people do when they thought they should like to have no king?" |
11099 | No, my dear; but these good men do not consider what is pleasant, they only consider what is right; and that is the proper way to think, is it not? |
11099 | Poor men,said Charles,"how sorry I am for them; but why do any more of them go, papa, if they are so badly treated?" |
11099 | Should I? 11099 Thank you, mamma,"said Charles,"I could not think how it was before; but do you think it is best to have one king or two?" |
11099 | Then how is it, papa, that Peter''s father has slaves? 11099 Then the missionaries go to teach them better, I suppose?" |
11099 | They are very wicked, then? |
11099 | Was it, papa;--why? |
11099 | Was there ever a civil war in England, mamma? |
11099 | What are arts, papa? |
11099 | What did they go to war for, mamma? |
11099 | What is a civil war, mamma? |
11099 | What is it? 11099 What is your objection to grammar, Charles?" |
11099 | Which do you think will win? |
11099 | Why did they not send the sailors away again, and say they would not go with them? |
11099 | Your desire can very easily be gratified,replied his papa;"but what has made you think of missionaries just now?" |
11099 | But Peter''s father''s slaves do not work in the gold mines, they make sugar: why is that?" |
11099 | Now I want to know what he was going for, and why every body was so glad?" |
11099 | You have seen in your map of America, a country called Peru?" |
11099 | exclaimed Charles:--"I should like to go to the West- Indies, if it was only to see a sugar plantation; but how do they get the sugar, papa?" |
11099 | said Charles;"But why do they do it mamma? |
14260 | God has subjected many peoples to me,wrote the barbarian to him:"will you alone refuse to recognize my power? |
14260 | Now,cried he,"who will dare a fight for the honor of God?" |
14260 | ''What extraordinary powers,''they will say,''what miracles, have been displayed by its ministers?'' |
14260 | Am I not one wheel of thy chariot?" |
14260 | But how came this hypocrisy, if it existed, to elude, during a long and bitter contest, the keen eyes of his adversaries? |
14260 | But how was the position to be maintained or to be improved? |
14260 | Chang Hi said,''How can I bear to leave them?'' |
14260 | Did I intrigue for power? |
14260 | Did you not then become Anda(_ i.e._, sworn friend) with my father, and was not this the reason I styled_ you_''father''? |
14260 | Do you know Charles and his thousands of executioners, and can you yet amuse yourselves with the decoration of banners? |
14260 | His reason for not so doing he assigned:"Wherefore should I become a Christian? |
14260 | How, then, was it possible for any traffic, however lucrative, to endure such perpetual exactions? |
14260 | If it be his wish to shoot arrows at them until his finger be weary, who shall complain? |
14260 | If you go and slay all the people, and only secure the land, what use is that? |
14260 | In what had Charles injured him or his city? |
14260 | It may perhaps be asked by some why, if he showed such a preference to the faith of Christ, he did not conform to it and become a Christian? |
14260 | O Khan, my father, why suspect me of ambition? |
14260 | The clause was admitted when the clergy swore fealty to the sovereign; why should it be rejected when they only promised the observance of customs? |
14260 | The kingdom of Sicily and Naples has not been wanting in men to desolate it; where now are they that will defend it?" |
14260 | Their departure from the country was a vain boast, for whither should they go? |
14260 | To the vociferations of Hugh of Horsea, a military subdeacon,"Where is the traitor?" |
14260 | What count or duke or knight of these days but would seize a crown thus offered, however great the peril? |
14260 | What had the Pope done in England but stir up the barons against John, and then abandon them to death or ruin? |
14260 | What is thy object now? |
14260 | What were the Palermitans to him that he should share their madness? |
14260 | When the King entered, they put aside their swords; but Henry, alarmed at their unusual appearance, exclaimed,"Am I then your prisoner?" |
14260 | While the robbers were within earshot, Merghen shouted:"There are two wild ducks, a male and a female; which shall I bring down?" |
14260 | Who then shall set foot upon her soil, except to find in it a yawning grave? |
14260 | Why does our territory on the Onon remain without a master? |
14260 | and now, far from restraining the people from rushing to their ruin, shouldst spur them wildly on? |
14260 | no answer was returned; but when Fitzurse asked,"Where is the Archbishop?" |
15345 | But, should we perish in your cause,asked they,"what will be our reward?" |
15345 | From_ Dei ira_[''God''s wrath''] are they to be freed? |
15345 | How call ye the king of that country? |
15345 | If you desired a speedy journey,answered Ali,"why did not you ask Omar to pray for you? |
15345 | What do ye? |
15345 | What is his name? |
15345 | Wherefore hast thou dishonored our race,said Clovis,"by letting thyself wear bonds? |
15345 | ''Is not Charles,''asked Didier of Ogger,''with his great army?'' |
15345 | ''What should we do, then,''rejoined Didier, who began to be perturbed,''should he come accompanied by a larger band of warriors?'' |
15345 | Abdallah, having paid his respects to Mahomet, Ali asked him whether he did not think of going? |
15345 | Afterward, when Mahomet said to the helper,"Did not I bid you tell Kaled not to kill anybody in Mecca?" |
15345 | Amazed and confounded they demanded,"Where is Mahomet?" |
15345 | And in what place was this first victory of Charlemagne won? |
15345 | Asked by Augustine: How must we do with the bishops of Gaul and Britain? |
15345 | Asked by Augustine: I pray thee, what punishment shall he suffer-- whosoever takes away anything by stealth from a church? |
15345 | Asked by Bishop St. Augustine: At what generation shall Christian people be joined among themselves in marriage with their kinsfolk?... |
15345 | But are we therefore to deny altogether their historical existence? |
15345 | But, as to those living in common life, what have we to say how they deal their alms, or exercise hospitality, and fulfil mercy? |
15345 | Could he have been two years about performing the course of a single one?" |
15345 | Do n''t you know that the prayers of Omar will not be turned back? |
15345 | Do you promise to pay me one hundred pieces of gold? |
15345 | How could it be otherwise? |
15345 | If worldly advantage had been his object, how had it been attained? |
15345 | In what province of England do they live?" |
15345 | Is it a miracle? |
15345 | Is it the influence of the sun? |
15345 | Is it the regular course of his revolution? |
15345 | Mahomet, being told of these underhand practices, said, one day,"Who will rid me of the son of Ashraf?" |
15345 | Martin?''" |
15345 | Next, on the gifts of the faithful which they bring to holy tables and to God''s churches-- how many doles of them shall be? |
15345 | Quoth they again,"How may we know that distinctly?" |
15345 | Quoth they to him,"How may we know whether he be so?" |
15345 | Should they cross the Apennines and blot out Rome as they had blotted out Aquileia from among the cities of the world? |
15345 | The awe of Rome was upon him and upon them, and he was forced incessantly to ponder the question,"What if I conquer like Alaric, to die like him?" |
15345 | The ministers of the senate presumed to ask, in a modest and suppliant tone,"If such, O king, are your demands, what do you intend to leave us?" |
15345 | Then he lifted up his head, and the tears ran down his cheeks, and he said,"Who is able to do this without the divine assistance?" |
15345 | To which of the two, Catholics or Arians, would Clovis ally himself? |
15345 | To whom, Arian, pagan, or Catholic, would Clotilde be married? |
15345 | What can you oppose to them? |
15345 | What character and weight must be attached to their intervention in the government of the State? |
15345 | What shall I say concerning his boots? |
15345 | What, then, was the government of this empire of which Charlemagne was proud to assume the old title? |
15345 | What, then, went on in their midst? |
15345 | Wherefore keepest thou here thine army whilst thine enemy doth hide himself in a well- fortified place? |
15345 | Who were these Teutons? |
15345 | and, What is thy religion? |
15345 | and, Who is thy prophet? |
754 | Is it worth while,so they ask,"to work and slave for the benefit of creatures who have not yet passed beyond the stage of the earliest cave men?" |
754 | There,he would say, pointing to a bend of the river,"there, my boy, do you see those trees? |
754 | This is very well as far as it goes,said the next critic,"but how about the Puritans? |
754 | Are not the social changes of the nineteenth century of greater importance than the career of an ill- balanced woman who had better be forgotten? |
754 | But there can be no union without a strong leadership, and who was to be this leader? |
754 | But was it a time of darkness and stagnation merely? |
754 | But was there a way out? |
754 | But what could they do? |
754 | But what does the word really mean? |
754 | But what was one to do? |
754 | But what will they think of those short four thousand years during which we have kept a written record of our actions and of our thoughts? |
754 | But what? |
754 | But who cared? |
754 | But who was to be commander- in- chief? |
754 | Could they change the existing order of things and do away with a system of rivalry which so often sacrificed human happiness to profits? |
754 | Did anybody object? |
754 | Do n''t you see how these surroundings must have influenced a man in everything he did and said and thought? |
754 | From one blunder to another, until one gasps and exclaims"but why in the name of High Heaven did not the people object?" |
754 | He was vain( who would not be under the circumstances?) |
754 | How about the Church, the second great power in the world? |
754 | How could they realise the threatened danger? |
754 | Indeed, and why not? |
754 | The Serbians remembered their ancient glory as who would not? |
754 | The question then became where was this money to be found? |
754 | To JIMMIE"What is the use of a book without pictures?" |
754 | Upon this subject, the Abbe Sieyes then wrote a famous pamphlet,"To what does the Third Estate Amount?" |
754 | What did you find? |
754 | Where could he find this gold? |
754 | Where did the stars come from? |
754 | Where do we come from? |
754 | Which side should a dutiful subject and an equally dutiful Christian take? |
754 | Whither are we bound? |
754 | Who are we? |
754 | Who made the noise of the thunder which frightened him so terribly? |
754 | Who was he, himself, a strange little creature surrounded on all sides by death and sickness and yet happy and full of laughter? |
754 | Why defend something which meant nothing to them but a temporary boarding house in which they were tolerated as long as they paid their bills? |
754 | Why did I leave out such countries as Ireland and Bulgaria and Siam while I dragged in such other countries as Holland and Iceland and Switzerland? |
754 | Why is he so curious about the insides of fishes and the insides of insects? |
754 | Why not do it now? |
754 | Why not indeed? |
754 | Why should he not be contented with our Latin- Arabic translation which has satisfied our faithful people for so many hundred years? |
754 | Why should they work and exert themselves? |
754 | Why should we ever read fairy stories, when the truth of history is so much more interesting and entertaining? |
754 | Would he please come and teach them? |
754 | Would it not be a good idea to consult the representatives of the people? |
754 | You desired proof of this? |
754 | You may ask why I tell you this story in such great detail? |
10151 | But where,demanded the wise grandson of Olga,"is your country?" |
10151 | But,says he,"it will be said, perhaps, how do we know that this work came from the Lord? |
10151 | Desirest thou power? |
10151 | Did not I tell thee,said the latter, mournfully,"what the consequences would be; that we should be driven from our palace and country?" |
10151 | See you,said he to his disciples,"these hills? |
10151 | Thou wert indeed a true prophet,replied the self- accused father;"but what power could avert the decrees of fate?" |
10151 | Valiant warriors,said Hastings to Rollo,"whence come ye? |
10151 | Yes,said Rollo,"we have heard tell of him; Hastings began well and ended ill.""Will ye yield you to King Charles?" |
10151 | And what shall we do-- whither shall we go, when we have no longer a country?'' |
10151 | Are these military ensigns, or are they not rather the garnishments of women? |
10151 | Are you ignorant that these fierce inhabitants of the desert resemble their own native tigers? |
10151 | But what can one man, however able and advanced, do against the current of his age? |
10151 | But who art thou, thou who speakest so glibly?" |
10151 | Can it happen that the sharp- pointed sword of the enemy will respect gold, will it spare gems, will it be unable to penetrate the silken garment? |
10151 | Could the holiest office in Christendom be more deeply outraged than by a sale such as this? |
10151 | Dost thou not perceive that thy Moslems flee? |
10151 | Dost thou wish the Mussulmans to curse me? |
10151 | Had he the right to massacre? |
10151 | How can our Lord say to such,''Ye are the light of the world,''''the salt of the earth''? |
10151 | How can the saying be applied to them,''Blessed are the poor in spirit''? |
10151 | How can they say with the apostle Peter,''Lo, we have left all and followed thee,''and,''Silver and gold have I none''? |
10151 | If peradventure these walls had been confided to thy keeping as they have been to mine, wouldst thou do as thou biddest me?" |
10151 | If these can only be rallied, who can say what may follow? |
10151 | Is it peace, or is it war?" |
10151 | Knowest thou not that King Charles doth purpose thy death by cause of all the Christian blood that thou didst aforetime unjustly shed? |
10151 | Now who is it who writes thus? |
10151 | The weight of the name of Olga decided her grandson, and he said no more in answer than these words:"Where shall we be baptized?" |
10151 | Upon one occasion the King came to speech with Leif, and asked him,"Is it thy purpose to sail to Greenland in the summer?" |
10151 | What are they about? |
10151 | What did that signify to him? |
10151 | What do ye, sirs? |
10151 | What does it matter? |
10151 | What insufferable madness is this-- to wage war with so great cost and labor, but with no pay except either death or crime? |
10151 | What is the name of your lord and master? |
10151 | What miracle dost thou work that we should believe thee? |
10151 | What seek ye here? |
10151 | Whence, therefore, O soldiers, cometh this so stupendous error? |
10151 | Who can say that, in such a case, the three kingdoms would have taken the form they took in 843? |
10151 | Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury upon thee? |
10151 | [ 40][ Footnote 37: These chains are not mentioned by the Arabs; but what can be expected from their brevity?] |
10151 | said the African,"how long wilt thou remain here? |
10151 | what tidings bringeth this stranger? |
48276 | Do you not hear the prisoners moaning? 48276 Does God rule the world?" |
48276 | Shall hateful tyrants, mischief breeding, With hireling host, a ruffian band, While peace and liberty lie bleeding, Affright and desolate the land? 48276 This will be a good book for the young, and all those who have not the opportunity to consult larger works, will it not?" |
48276 | What constitutes a state? 48276 Where have you obtained the facts contained in this volume?" |
48276 | A parish priest was only permitted to dine at the second table, after his superiors(?) |
48276 | And how did Joseph accomplish so much in so short a time? |
48276 | But if, as Luther claimed, she had through apostasy lost her authority, then, it may be asked, From whence did Luther receive his authority? |
48276 | But it may be asked, whence came they? |
48276 | But what agency for conveying intelligence can ever excel that which is instantaneous? |
48276 | By what terrible magic was this change wrought so swiftly: that three millions of people should be taught to abhor the country they once loved? |
48276 | He waved his broad- brimmed hat for silence, and then exclaimed:"What would ye, my friends? |
48276 | If Rome had been in error in this case, where was her infallibility? |
48276 | Is it for nothing that Spain has been made a hideous skeleton among the nations-- a warning spectacle to the world? |
48276 | It may be asked, Why did not the human mind, in this era, free itself from its trammels, claim its true freedom and concede it to every one? |
48276 | May we not also consider him an instrument in the hands of God for the execution of His purposes? |
48276 | Might not some of her other teachings be equally false? |
48276 | Now the question arises, who built these mounds in the Mississippi valley, and these pyramids in Mexico? |
48276 | Shall we compare it with the contemporary barbarism of the other portions of Europe? |
48276 | Some of the states were large, others small: ought the small ones to have equal voice in the government with the large ones? |
48276 | Some of their officers even asked in amazement,"was it true that God and the elements were going to fight against them?" |
48276 | They came to ask those profound questions that human reason, unaided, can never answer:"What am I? |
48276 | They eagerly asked"What is to be done?" |
48276 | They wished to follow the example of the United States, but how could this be accomplished? |
48276 | To{ 114} what race belong the relics found in Massachusetts, Illinois and Iowa? |
48276 | What can I know?" |
48276 | What was it that produced this barrenness, this intellectual degradation in Constantinople? |
48276 | When will free- born Americans learn to act thus nobly? |
48276 | Whence came the men who wrought these mighty changes? |
48276 | Where am I? |
48276 | Where shall we find their equals at that time in so- called Christian countries? |
48276 | Who does not perceive that the statesmanship of Pitt was one of the great instrumentalities for the execution of the divine purposes? |
48276 | Who does not see a divine providence-- a marvelous wisdom in all this? |
48276 | Who does not see a marvelous wisdom in all this? |
48276 | Who does not see in all this the traces of a purer religion, which centuries of apostasy and degradation had not been able to entirely destroy? |
48276 | Who does not see the hand of Providence in her retribution, as well as in the fate of Herculaneum and Pompeii? |
48276 | Who will attempt to deny that God, through him, spake words pregnant with a meaning that men at that age did not understand? |
48276 | Why did not France succeed in establishing a free government? |
48276 | Why was it then that such a marvelous change should take place in the minds of the American people, during the next twelve years? |
48276 | { 203} But while mankind had progressed in science they had remained stationary in religion; and how could it be otherwise? |
19893 | Do you desire it? |
19893 | Have you hope? |
19893 | Is it so, old fox? |
19893 | What is your request? |
19893 | Against whom was the satire levelled? |
19893 | Although conqueror, his forces were diminishing every day, and was not the need of aid the only and true motive for his bearing toward Ivan? |
19893 | And what is the secret of his success? |
19893 | And why can not we believe the author when he avers that never did his humble pen stoop to satire? |
19893 | But how shall these colonial subjects be governed? |
19893 | But how shall we blame him for struggling to realize it? |
19893 | But is this true? |
19893 | Do not let our impious foe ask us,''Where is your God?'' |
19893 | Every such man is the born enemy of Disorder; hates to be in it: but what then? |
19893 | He hailed,"Who goes there?" |
19893 | He has the power of holding his peace over many things which do not vitally concern him--"They? |
19893 | Henry IV entering the Chapel of St. Denis, the Archbishop said to him,"Who are you?" |
19893 | How could Cervantes''romance fail of holding the field against all the romances? |
19893 | Is there a moment in history more tragic than that? |
19893 | Mother of God? |
19893 | Mother? |
19893 | Nay, how shall they at Foulkstone be able to do it, who are nearer by more than half the way? |
19893 | Nay, is it not what all zealous men, whether called Priests, Prophets, or whatsoever else called, do essentially wish, and must wish? |
19893 | Nay, what was Cervantes''own life but a romance of chivalry? |
19893 | Or what of Scotland? |
19893 | Says the Pauper in the interlude:"Quhair will ye find that law, tell gif ye can, To tak thine ky, fra ane pure husbandman? |
19893 | See to it at once-- at once; do you hear?" |
19893 | Some answered very promptly,"Why should they waste their time in giving reasons? |
19893 | The King looking at me that moment,"Monsieur de Rosny,"said he,"what makes you so thoughtful? |
19893 | This indeed is properly the sum of his offences, the essential sin; for which what pardon can there be? |
19893 | Thou hast been at Parris Garden, hast not?'' |
19893 | What wonder if the curse of God seemed upon it? |
19893 | Whether run you nowe? |
19893 | Who was the bold man who, being neither courtier nor ecclesiastic, made sport for the world out of the weaknesses of_ caballeros_? |
19893 | Who, then, was the man-- the original of Don Quixote? |
19893 | Why can not we believe the author, when he thus plainly and candidly avows his purpose? |
19893 | Will not you speak your mind absolutely any more than the others?" |
19893 | Would these persons now be willing to lay their possessions at the feet of the ministers from whom they professed to have received the true Gospel? |
19893 | Yet what matters it? |
19893 | Yet, at bottom, after all the talk there is and has been about it, what is tolerance? |
19893 | [ 1]"Has he yet taken Paris?" |
19893 | and from whom shall they derive their laws? |
19893 | from some of the very errors he had himself burlesqued? |
19893 | said the preacher, appealing to all the audience: what then is_ his_ duty? |
19893 | what are they?" |
19893 | what is there that does not prove the inconstancy of worldly matters? |
10128 | ''We can all swim,''they said;''who carried the white man across the river but himself?'' 10128 What would you have them do?" |
10128 | Again in another key:"Am I on my way to die in Sebituane''s country? |
10128 | And why the hasty after- indorsement of the decision by the President and others? |
10128 | As well might it be asked, How can any civilized nation still, as some still do, believe in such a principle? |
10128 | But can we, for that reason, run ahead, and infer that he will make any particular change, of which he himself has given no intimation? |
10128 | But if it is, how can he resist it? |
10128 | But what of his aged mother, his wife and children, his helpless followers in the deira? |
10128 | But what shall be said of the popular hero, sprung from the ranks of the people, who had given a kingdom to his sovereign? |
10128 | But who could stop those fiery and impetuous volunteers in their rush on the foe? |
10128 | But why do I speak of denouncing? |
10128 | Can he possibly show that it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest? |
10128 | Can we safely base our action upon any such vague inference? |
10128 | Could it be an outer planet? |
10128 | Could this planet be inside the orbit of Uranus? |
10128 | Did we brave all then, to falter now--- now, when that same enemy is wavering, dissevered, and belligerent? |
10128 | Do those gentlemen see what that may lead to? |
10128 | Does Douglas believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching? |
10128 | Does he really think so? |
10128 | Hardly anything else was known of them; and people asked with curiosity,"What had been their fate-- what their fortunes?" |
10128 | Have I seen the last of my wife and children, leaving this fair world and knowing so little of it?" |
10128 | Have we no tendency to the latter condition? |
10128 | How can he oppose the advances of slavery? |
10128 | How can we best do it? |
10128 | How, it may be asked, could any sane legislator adopt such measures? |
10128 | In 1855 he inquired of the Sardinian minister,"What can I do for Italy?" |
10128 | Is not this the history of human selfishness in every country? |
10128 | Lesser examples of this are seen in his grim jest at Westminster Hall--"What use of so many lawyers? |
10128 | Now what was"such a trade"as we carried on with China? |
10128 | Shall we be slaves or free? |
10128 | The fugitive princes ought to have returned to their States, but how was it possible? |
10128 | They listened to the story of cotton- mills as fairy dreams, exclaiming:"How can iron spin, weave, and print? |
10128 | Was it likely that a young and unknown man should have solved so extremely difficult a problem? |
10128 | Was it not a proof of their confidence in him? |
10128 | Was the break to be accomplished peacefully or in flame and wrath? |
10128 | Was the long- predicted, and to most of Europe eagerly desired, disruption of the United States at hand? |
10128 | Were they caused by a failure in the law of gravitation or by the presence of a resisting medium? |
10128 | Were they due to some large but unseen satellite or to a collision with some comet? |
10128 | What was the motive that had induced Napoleon to break his lately made promise of freeing Italy from the Alps to the Adriatic? |
10128 | Where were they? |
10128 | Wherein, then, lies the difference? |
10128 | Who then were those Representatives assembled at the_ mairie_ of the Tenth Arrondissement, and what did they do there? |
10128 | Why even a Senator''s individual opinion withheld, till after the Presidential election? |
10128 | Why mention a State? |
10128 | Why the delay of a reargument? |
10128 | Why the incoming President''s advance exhortation in favor of the decision? |
10128 | Why the outgoing President''s felicitation on the indorsement? |
10128 | Why was the amendment, expressly declaring the right of the people, voted down? |
10128 | Why was the court decision held up? |
10128 | Will you grant me this further service?" |
10103 | And do you reply to me,exclaimed the Protector,"with your_ ifs_ and your_ ands_? |
10103 | My brother,he asked,"am I not safe in your dominions?" |
10103 | Of what avail,said they,"are chivalry and heroic valor? |
10103 | When do you mean to finish my chapel? |
10103 | Who will stand by me,said he,"in an enterprise of desperate peril?" |
10103 | Whom shall a man trust,he said,"when those who I thought would most surely serve me, at my command will do nothing for me?" |
10103 | Would you,exclaimed the Primate,"give up Russia to fire and sword, and the churches to plunder? |
10103 | Again arose that difficult question: Who should be the new king under such difficult circumstances? |
10103 | And what said the magistracy and the people? |
10103 | But what shall we say of a faith that could only hope to be kept alive in the world by the extinction of charity, honor, pity, and humanity? |
10103 | But while Ferdinand, Isabella, Torquemada, and the nuncio were concerting their plans and preparing death for heretics, what said Spain to it? |
10103 | But, having tried Sir Robert''s scruples, and found them somewhat stronger than he anticipated, what follows? |
10103 | Can you make your nest amid the stars? |
10103 | Can you soar upward like the eagle? |
10103 | Could he have desired a more glorious death? |
10103 | Does not this show an advanced state of organization, which might have become fatal if it had not been watched? |
10103 | How could even Ferdinand,"the Wise,"keep them employed now that there were no longer Moors to fight against? |
10103 | How give an idea of these countless sublime figures to those who have not trembled and turned pale in this awful temple? |
10103 | How, indeed, could there possibly be two opinions about a rumor of this kind, seeing that it was never contradicted by the King himself? |
10103 | I leave my readers to consider whether this punishment of an error of the understanding was consistent or not with the doctrine of the Gospel? |
10103 | If such were the women of Spain, what was to be expected of the men? |
10103 | Is it in this way Praxiteles and Phidias would have represented Lycurgus and Solon? |
10103 | Is it not a sure sign that the indignation of the people was at its height and that they were quite opposed to the Inquisition? |
10103 | Is it the Moses of the Bible? |
10103 | My people, what desire hath ever been mine but to see ye saved, to see ye united? |
10103 | Of painting speech and speaking to the eyes? |
10103 | Peter and Paul? |
10103 | So that, making the proportion, if twenty- four hours are equal to three hundred and sixty degrees, what are five hours and a half equal to? |
10103 | That we, by tracing magic lines, are taught How both to color and embody thought?" |
10103 | Was it a sudden idea which occurred to him upon his progress? |
10103 | Was the Inquisition as unpopular as it has been represented? |
10103 | What advantage is it to the victim to hear his executioners proclaim toleration? |
10103 | What could have induced Richard to time his cruel policy so ill and to arrange it so badly? |
10103 | What is the meaning of this terrible work? |
10103 | What means this long evolution of human destiny? |
10103 | What more evident proof, we shall be told, can you have than the assassination of the inquisitor? |
10103 | What, then, was the system advised by Luther, according to Seckendorff, one of his apologists? |
10103 | Whither would you fly? |
10103 | Why otherwise should it especially be called"the Discovered Cape"if not because this cape was first discovered? |
10103 | Would they otherwise have been hurried into such excesses? |
10103 | Would those who imagine that Rome has always been the hot- bed of intolerance, the firebrand of persecution, have imagined this? |
10103 | and will it be said that its adversaries were the majority of the people? |
10103 | exclaimed he;"when did misfortunes ever equal mine?" |
26337 | And would you not do better to return to Noyon and to God? |
26337 | How long will you sleep? |
26337 | Master,said he,"what think you of the new- comer?" |
26337 | Where are you going, Master John,he demanded,"in this fine disguise?" |
26337 | Where then do you mean to take refuge? |
26337 | Who art thou? |
26337 | Why,said they,"should slavery be perpetuated in the state while the Church invites all men to a glorious liberty? |
26337 | You recognize me as Emperor now? |
26337 | And why was this? |
26337 | Besides, why this proselytism of a moral_ curé_? |
26337 | But in what manner are we to deal with the account that is presented to us of that which took place on this occasion? |
26337 | But what are we to understand by the Bible? |
26337 | Do you feel your heart beat at the mention of justice and truth? |
26337 | Flight to France was continually talked of; had he not followed in his appeal a precedent set by the University of Paris? |
26337 | Had the fault been committed by a Catholic, where is the Protestant who would not have done the same thing as Varillas? |
26337 | Has any dogmatist succeeded in drawing up a confession of faith by means of the Bible which could not be attacked by means of reason? |
26337 | How could he apply to the Mommor family? |
26337 | How could he aspire to rule others, who so poorly could rule himself? |
26337 | How would it be, think you, if we were to demolish Nambanji?'' |
26337 | Is not this a fearful error-- a desolating doctrine? |
26337 | It has been said that all Christendom demanded a reformation-- who disputes it? |
26337 | Las Casas was asked what number of negroes would suffice? |
26337 | Offend Charles who was just helping him crush the Florentines, or refuse his"Defender of the Faith"? |
26337 | On which would the storm burst? |
26337 | On your consciences, I ask you, am I a traitor?" |
26337 | Then he asks,"Who are our accusers?" |
26337 | Then the decrees debated in the last session and at its adjourned meeting were adopted, being subscribed by 234( or 255?) |
26337 | Then, observing a pocket- book, he took it up, and found several letters addressed to Thomas Munzer,"Art thou Munzer?" |
26337 | To whose hands could the ten consign the irresponsible disposal of their souls and bodies? |
26337 | What could there be in the son of a butcher to command such deference? |
26337 | What decision, then, was to be expected on the crucial question as to the relations between papal and episcopal authority? |
26337 | What is it to rebel, if it be not to avenge one''s self? |
26337 | What is the meaning of this fine word, Reformation? |
26337 | What was poor Pope Clement to do? |
26337 | Who does not remember that exclamation of Melanchthon,"We have committed many errors, and have made good of evil without any necessity for it"? |
26337 | Who, having read the lives of such adventurers as these, shall ridicule the wildest extravagance in all the romances of chivalry? |
26337 | Why should governments rule only by force, when the Gospel preaches nothing but gentleness?" |
26337 | Yet further he asked where so many mouths might obtain sustenance? |
26337 | Yet to whose hands should be assigned-- and for life-- this irresponsible power over the bodies, souls, and understandings of his companions? |
26337 | and that so many generations should have had no other pastor but Antichrist? |
26337 | said he;"art thou one of the rebels?" |
26337 | that he would have allowed millions of his creatures to walk in the shadow of death? |
9929 | To whom shall we go now for orders, Your Majesty? |
9929 | What is there for us to do? |
9929 | What means this? |
9929 | Why hast thou brought out the holy icon? |
9929 | Would you like,says the tender- hearted lady to her daughter,"would you like to have news of Rennes? |
9929 | Ah, you will go to Panama, will you? |
9929 | An inconsistent, treacherous man? |
9929 | And this, then, is the end of Sweden, and its bad neighborhood on these shores, where it has tyrannously sat on our skirts so long? |
9929 | Could Frederick the Great have saved it had he been_ par impossible_ Louis XIV''s successor? |
9929 | Could this be the far- famed Mississippi, or was it not rather old Avernus? |
9929 | Could this be true? |
9929 | Had anyone ever before seen a czar of Moscow quit Holy Russia to wander in the kingdoms of foreigners? |
9929 | Had not Pulcheria, daughter of an emperor, reigned at Constantinople in the name of her brother, the incapable Theodosius? |
9929 | Had she not contracted a nominal marriage with the brave Marcian, who was her sword against the barbarians? |
9929 | I have not my Louisa now; to whom now shall I run for advice or help?" |
9929 | In other words, what was the cause of the consummate failure, the unexampled collapse, of the French monarchy? |
9929 | Is there not something extremely romantic in the characters of the men of that epoch? |
9929 | It is toward that cause, that great"Why?" |
9929 | Lights were soon obtained, and then--"Where is the charter?" |
9929 | Louisiana had been named from a king: was it not in keeping that those lakes should be called after ministers? |
9929 | Now what did the emissaries of Sophia propose to them? |
9929 | Of what importance to him was the ruin of many thousand innocent families? |
9929 | Question by the Court:"Ann Putnam, who hurts you?" |
9929 | Question by the Court:"What do you say, Goodman Procter, to these things?" |
9929 | Shall we regain our rights?" |
9929 | Sophia could only save herself by seizing the throne-- but who would help her to take it? |
9929 | The Prince only asked what he now thought of predestination? |
9929 | The next Sunday after this accusation Parris preached from the verse,"Have I not chosen you twelve, and one is a devil?" |
9929 | The person answered:"What is that to you? |
9929 | The streltsi? |
9929 | They undertook that deputies[ others than some of those present?] |
9929 | Under an unknown sky, at the extremity of the world, on the shores of the"ocean sea,"what dangers might he not encounter? |
9929 | Was it a dream-- a wild delirium of the mind? |
9929 | Was it to be the son of the Miloslavski, or the son of the Narychkine? |
9929 | What could Andros do? |
9929 | What did it mean? |
9929 | What is it you wait for? |
9929 | What meant this very unparliamentary conduct, or was it a gust of wind which had startled all? |
9929 | What then was Peter to do? |
9929 | What was to become of the poor czarevni, of the blood of kings? |
9929 | Where was the charter? |
9929 | Who knew what adventures might befall him among the_ niemtsi_ and the_ bousourmanes_? |
9929 | Who should succeed Feodor? |
9929 | Who should succeed him? |
9929 | Who was first to be attacked? |
9929 | Why not act?" |
9929 | and why I was not at home saying my prayers till the dead- cart came for me? |
9929 | how do you do? |
9929 | what is the matter?" |
30186 | Are you afraid? |
30186 | Damme, Jack,they shouted,"didst ever take h-- ll in tow before?" |
30186 | How, my father,said they in reply,"are you so bent upon death that you would also sacrifice us? |
30186 | I want to know on what ground the volition of the human species and its opinions rest under the circumstances in which it is placed? |
30186 | I want to know what the course of my life, such as it has been, has made of me? 30186 They nourished up by your indulgence? |
30186 | They protected by your arms? 30186 What is history,"said Napoleon,"but a fiction agreed upon?" |
30186 | What would I not give, except in Silesia? |
30186 | Who run? |
30186 | Will it be safe for the consignees to appear in the meeting? |
30186 | And should I thank thee, who wast sleeping whilst I worked?" |
30186 | And whence should magazines for the spring, uniforms, and recruits be obtained? |
30186 | Are there any other resources of German art and thought which can account for the advent of the great musician? |
30186 | Because a number of creditors had been ruined by the falsity of nominal values, was it a reason to continue the fiction that it might extend the ruin? |
30186 | But are not all ideals of an essentially aristocratic nature? |
30186 | But would Amherst get through to Montreal and down the St. Lawrence in time to be of use before the short season had fled? |
30186 | Cope might be here to- morrow, the day after to- morrow, to- day, who knows? |
30186 | Do you know it was he who made me the mode?" |
30186 | Have you nothing you desire to keep secret?" |
30186 | How shall we attempt to characterize this movement? |
30186 | How were you delivered? |
30186 | Indeed, how should they do otherwise when they have not spared one another? |
30186 | Is it not my heart, burning with a sacred ardor, which alone has accomplished all? |
30186 | No reverence in the boy who would kneel to the picture of the great Frederick? |
30186 | On her side she"distributed compliments in abundance, gold medals also( but more often in bronze? |
30186 | Ought any married person to be there unless husband and wife be there together?" |
30186 | Pontiac, conscious of his power and position, haughtily asked Major Rogers,"What his business was in that country?" |
30186 | Shall I again give the Austrians battle, and drive them out of Silesia? |
30186 | The bad passions of those men to whom I have been most useful( would you believe it?) |
30186 | The following, among others, were the questions asked at every meeting:"What known sin have you committed since our last meeting? |
30186 | The great question was, would Cope come in time? |
30186 | The only allusion he made to the fate of the battle was to softly repeat once or twice to himself,"Who would have thought it?" |
30186 | To what other influence than the Lutheran can we attribute the growth of Bach? |
30186 | To which Colonel Barre replied:"They planted by your care? |
30186 | Was there no light, no touch of nobility at all in that strange chaotic temperament? |
30186 | What have I done? |
30186 | What have you thought, said, or done of which you doubt whether it be sin or not? |
30186 | What is the human species doing? |
30186 | What is the human species? |
30186 | What remains, then, for man? |
30186 | What temptations have you met with? |
30186 | What, in fact, took place? |
30186 | When speaking one day to Kummer- u- din, who was then vizier, he demanded how many ladies he had? |
30186 | Who can prove that with time the same might not have occurred to everybody? |
30186 | Who does not know this temper of the man of the world, that worst enemy of the world? |
30186 | Who shall say that young Bach knew not of these things? |
30186 | With our eight hundred men do you ask us to attack four thousand English? |
30186 | and I want to know what the course of life, such as it has been, has made of the human species? |
30186 | and how he dared enter it without Pontiac''s permission? |
30186 | are they not conceived without trouble or labor? |
30186 | exclaims an eye- witness,"there are plenty of sketches to be seen, but where is the finished picture?" |
30186 | will you suffer your father to depart alone?" |
27562 | Am I your king or your prisoner? |
27562 | But if you should be deprived of the privilege of hearing mass? |
27562 | Do your voices forbid your submitting to the Church militant? |
27562 | Have you not good hope in the Lord? |
27562 | Soft, your Hungarian Majesty,thinks Jobst:"till my cash is paid may it not probably be another?" |
27562 | What is your age? |
27562 | Who are the true martyrs, of those who are slain on my side or on that of my enemies? |
27562 | Who is this we have got for a Governor? |
27562 | Why am I thus guarded? |
27562 | Will these men fight? |
27562 | Will you put on a woman''s dress, in order to receive your Saviour at Easter? |
27562 | A servant waiting at dinner inadvertently let slip the word:"Ziska there? |
27562 | After all, what, who was she, to undertake to gainsay these prelates, these doctors? |
27562 | And may we not be certain that if we were to treat with the King of England, the King of France would not be the less urgent in seeking our alliance? |
27562 | Are the elements in league with this enemy of the Church? |
27562 | Besides, have we not with us all the communes of Brabant, of Hainault, of Holland, and of Zealand?" |
27562 | But, supposing it to be vacant, what pretensions could Henry of Lancaster advance to it? |
27562 | Can the King of France prevent us from treating with the King of England? |
27562 | Can we believe that he would meet with opposition from his associates, the Percy family? |
27562 | Do you not see banners and pennons in the valley?" |
27562 | Galloping up to the archers he exclaimed:"What are ye doing, my lieges? |
27562 | Had he falsified the divine message to the people in his charge? |
27562 | He began to think: Was it for him to hope to discover that land which had been hidden from so many princes? |
27562 | How could they abandon their obedient girl, they who had so often promised her"safety and deliverance"? |
27562 | How dared she speak before so many able men-- men who had studied? |
27562 | How far was the Christianity of the day unlike the Christianity to be found in the record of Christ and his apostles? |
27562 | If it was not-- if the council had wrongfully or uncanonically condemned the successor of Peter-- how could it be infallible? |
27562 | Kaiser of the Holy Roman Empire, and so much else: is not Sigismund now a great man? |
27562 | On the other hand, if the deposition was a valid one, with what consistency could the French continue to regard Eugenius as their legitimate pastor? |
27562 | On the whole, was not the old strategy best, the strategy of retreat? |
27562 | On whom, then, was vengeance so likely to fall as on the Jews, the usurers and the strangers who lived at enmity with the Christians? |
27562 | Shall they give up the trial? |
27562 | Than the kynge sayde, is my sonne deed or hurt or on the yerthe felled? |
27562 | The Duchess of Bedford sent her female attire; but by whom? |
27562 | The King replied,"Is my son dead, unhorsed, or so badly wounded that he can not support himself?" |
27562 | The great general might well be of doubtful mind-- was to- morrow to bring a second and a more fatal Falkirk? |
27562 | This was the beginning of pawnings to Brandenburg; of which when will the end be? |
27562 | To every man whom they met they put the question,"With whom holdest thou?" |
27562 | Was he turning men''s hearts from the worship of God? |
27562 | Was his priestly office disgraced by carelessness or drunkenness or impurity of life? |
27562 | Was it a crime? |
27562 | Was there not presumption and damnable pride in an ignorant girl''s opposing herself to the learned-- a poor, simple girl, to men in authority? |
27562 | What are we to think of the imbecility of the judge, or of his horrible connivance? |
27562 | What think you, reader, were the evils which this pale ascetic had wrought, needing a very earthquake to cleanse them from the land? |
27562 | What were pedlers and mechanic fellows made for, if not to be plundered when needful? |
27562 | Where find a finer legend than this true history? |
27562 | Wherefore is the so long promised deliverance delayed? |
27562 | Which of us now warms and thrills with emotion at hearing the name of Aldus Manutius or of Henricus Stephanus or of Johannes Froben? |
27562 | Which was to come first, the election of a new pope or the adoption of a scheme of ecclesiastical reform? |
27562 | Who will be able to make this partition without great difficulty? |
27562 | Who, pray, shall forbid that we defend our interests by using our rights? |
27562 | Would it not, he thought, be ingratitude to God, who thus moved his mind to these attempts, if he were to desist from his work, or be negligent in it? |
27562 | _ Question_:"You say that you wear a man''s dress by God''s command, and yet, in case you die, you want a woman''s shift?" |
27562 | am I to be treated so horribly and cruelly? |
27562 | and when should its legislation in any other particulars be indisputable? |
27562 | do they come no more in this pressing need of hers? |
27562 | must I then die here?" |
27562 | must my body, pure as from birth, and which was never contaminated, be this day consumed and reduced to ashes? |
27562 | to do homage to the laws and me?" |
27562 | what must her feelings have been? |
27562 | what need of their solemn ambassage to him? |
32690 | And what is the proposed compensation to the Northern States for a sacrifice of every principle of right, every impulse of humanity? 32690 By whose instigation?" |
32690 | Can we carry on the war much longer? |
32690 | Champigny, are you not an ex- noble? |
32690 | Dorival, do you know anything of the conspiracy? |
32690 | Durfort, were you not in the bodyguard? |
32690 | Fortune,he exclaimed,"dost thou abandon me? |
32690 | Gondrecourt, is not your father- in- law at the Luxembourg? |
32690 | Guidreville, are you a priest? |
32690 | Have the armies been written to? |
32690 | In the name of whom? |
32690 | Is it possible,cried Henriot, as he came forth from the Hôtel de Ville,"that these scoundrels of gunners have abandoned me? |
32690 | Ménil, were you not a domestic of the ex- constitutional Menou? |
32690 | No matter; what is thy name? 32690 Vély, were you not architect for Madame?" |
32690 | What aim? |
32690 | What tempted you, then? |
32690 | Who is that person? |
32690 | Why do n''t you lay down your arms? |
32690 | Will he fight? |
32690 | Will this man long remain master of the Convention? |
32690 | Will you,they replied to the Governor,"will you, brave General, that we should, like sheep, throw ourselves into the jaws of the wolf? |
32690 | A black Flag hung on this latter noble Edifice, appealing to the pity of the besiegers; for though maddened, were they not still our brethren? |
32690 | A group of representatives went forth from the hall and cried,"What are you doing, soldiers? |
32690 | Admitting it as a certainty that I obtain both, what stock should I add to my little fund of happiness? |
32690 | And now, mere deaf madness and cannon- shot enveloping them, will not the desperate Municipality fly, at last, into the arms of Royalism itself? |
32690 | And so Marat,"People''s Friend"is ended: the lone Stylites has been hurled down suddenly from his Pillar-- whitherward? |
32690 | Apparently she will to Paris on some errand? |
32690 | Are they admitted as property? |
32690 | As for fame, what is it? |
32690 | At this moment Captain Pearson, her commander, hailed the Bonhomme Richard and demanded,"What ship is that?" |
32690 | Bad is growing ever worse here; and how will the worse stop, till it have grown worst of all? |
32690 | But who would dare to venture among the whites? |
32690 | Does not the Coalition, like a fire- tide, pour in; Prussia through the opened Northeast; Austria, England through the Northwest? |
32690 | Have not we destroyed the Knights of Malta, because these madmen believed that God had called them to make war upon Mussulmans? |
32690 | Have not we destroyed the pope, who called upon Europe to make war upon Mussulmans? |
32690 | He is gone then, and has not seen us? |
32690 | Her business is with Marat, then? |
32690 | His anticipations thus realized, his intentions accomplished, what must have been the feelings of such a man as Jenner? |
32690 | How can such political and legislative disorder be regulated? |
32690 | How shall we explain either puzzle-- that England should have so nearly missed success, to fail at last? |
32690 | If slaves are to be imported, shall not the exports produced by their labor supply a revenue to help the government defend their masters? |
32690 | If they were bastards, who had made them so? |
32690 | Is Catiline at our gates? |
32690 | Is it I who need to be accused of making myself master in any respect? |
32690 | Is not La Vendée still blazing-- alas too literally-- rogue Rossignol burning the very corn- mills? |
32690 | Many take off their hats, saluting reverently; for what heart but must be touched? |
32690 | Not to the reign of Brotherhood and Perfect Felicity; yet surely on the way toward that? |
32690 | Now what are the Traitors doing at Caen? |
32690 | O Reader, knowest thou that hard word? |
32690 | Ought population alone to be the basis of apportionment, or should property be taken into account? |
32690 | Ought the number from each State to be fixed, or to increase with the increase of population? |
32690 | Said Mr. Wilson:"Are they admitted as citizens? |
32690 | Soldiers, with such a prospect before you, can you fail in courage and constancy?" |
32690 | The British lieutenant, like a true officer, then questioned his commander,"Have you struck, sir?" |
32690 | The first important question determined by the convention was, whether the confederation should be amended or a new government formed? |
32690 | The hail was repeated:"What ship is that? |
32690 | The man from whom you take his Life, to him can the whole combined world do more? |
32690 | The presentiment existed, for had not the Abbé Raynal long before predicted a vindicator for the race? |
32690 | The procuring of supplies of linen yarn needed for the warp of these textiles was not difficult, but where was the cotton yarn to come from? |
32690 | The true question at present is, whether the Southern States shall or shall not be parties to the Union? |
32690 | Then why is not other property admitted into the computation?" |
32690 | Then why not on an equality with citizens? |
32690 | They were not allowed to vote; why should they be represented? |
32690 | They were not represented in the States; why should they be in the General Government? |
32690 | Was it not too late? |
32690 | Were not all outcasts, hunted beasts, fugitive slaves? |
32690 | What Deputies are at Caen?" |
32690 | What could it mean? |
32690 | What is the meaning of this insolent dictation, the array of arms, the violation of the national temple, merely to command you to be happy? |
32690 | What is the remedy for this evil? |
32690 | What temper he is in? |
32690 | What was his reply? |
32690 | What will become of Lyons? |
32690 | Where are the enemies of the nation, that this outrage should be attempted? |
32690 | Who gives you this command? |
32690 | Who imposes his imperious laws? |
32690 | Why repeat instances? |
32690 | Why, then, must we ask on the other side, did England fail at last? |
32690 | or that America should have succeeded, after having been almost constantly on the brink of failure? |
25821 | Gain influence? |
25821 | Shall we allow the Jesuit scoundrels to come here? |
25821 | Why? |
25821 | And now what was Richelieu''s statesmanship in its sum? |
25821 | And thus we doubt not but God will be with us; and if God be with us, who can be against us?" |
25821 | And where did he find this? |
25821 | And who are you that prate of constitutional formulas, rights of Parliament? |
25821 | Are there any now who practically repeat their error, and resist new truth? |
25821 | But did they not leave a mark also upon the country and upon the world? |
25821 | But was the change sudden? |
25821 | By examining the nature of his thoughts? |
25821 | By examining the process of his thoughts? |
25821 | By looking inward? |
25821 | Can a great soul be possible without a_ conscience_ in it, the essence of all_ real_ souls, great or small? |
25821 | Can we not understand him? |
25821 | Could he not hit on the device and make an instrument capable of bringing the heavenly bodies nearer? |
25821 | Did he not, in spite of all, accomplish much for us? |
25821 | Do we find in it any trace of the influence of the_ Novum Organon_? |
25821 | England, Scotland, Ireland, all lying now subdued at the feet of the Puritan Parliament, the practical question arose, What was to be done with it? |
25821 | Ever the constitutional Formula: How came_ you_ there? |
25821 | Fame, ambition, place in History? |
25821 | For the first question which in any state emergency sprang into the mind of a French noble was not, How does this affect the welfare of the nation? |
25821 | Having whispered to Kniphausen that Gustavus was dead, he asked him what was to be done? |
25821 | He asked of the Parliament, What it was they would decide upon? |
25821 | He courts no notice: what could notice here do for him? |
25821 | How could they throw off in a moment the shackles of custom and old opinion? |
25821 | How is he to know himself? |
25821 | How will you govern these Nations, which Providence in a wondrous way has given- up to your disposal? |
25821 | If inquiry is to be independent, if reason is to walk alone, in what direction must she walk? |
25821 | In all this what"hypocrisy,""ambition,""ca nt,"or other falsity? |
25821 | In dealing with these historic events will you allow me to repudiate once for all the slightest sectarian bias or meaning? |
25821 | In the commonest meeting of men, a person making what we call"set speeches,"is not he an offence? |
25821 | Is it over yet? |
25821 | Is it surprising that local attachments soon sprung up in the breasts of the survivors, endearing them to the place of refuge and their sorrows? |
25821 | Is it surprising that the thoughts of the exiles were enraptured in contemplating this beautiful land? |
25821 | It is like Pococke asking Grotius, Where is your_ proof_ of Mahomet''s Pigeon? |
25821 | Nay, a man preaching from his earnest_ soul_ into the earnest_ souls_ of men: is not this virtually the essence of all Churches whatsoever? |
25821 | Not so Cromwell:"For all our fighting,"says he,"we are to have a little bit of paper?" |
25821 | Oliver''s life at St. Ives and Ely, as a sober industrious Farmer, is it not altogether as that of a true and devout man? |
25821 | Reform Bill, free suffrage of Englishmen? |
25821 | Should they settle at Cold Harbor or seek a more eligible site? |
25821 | Should they trust their monarch''s word, when bitter experience had taught them the ease with which it could be broken? |
25821 | The fair questions, then, are: did he not commit the fewest and smallest wrongs possible in beating back those many and great wrongs? |
25821 | The poor old mother!--What had this man gained; what had he gained? |
25821 | This was natural enough, but was it moving the right way? |
25821 | Was it criminal to seek a pleasant abode? |
25821 | Was it possible the tables were wrong? |
25821 | Were his opponents convinced? |
25821 | What old liberties? |
25821 | What was his object? |
25821 | What will he do with it? |
25821 | What_ will_ he do with it? |
25821 | Whatever wrongs he did, were they not all frightfully avenged on him? |
25821 | When a friend showed him a person dying of hunger, he said:"Does that astonish you? |
25821 | Where should an asylum for their children be reared? |
25821 | Which policy was cruel? |
25821 | Which policy was tyrannical? |
25821 | Whither should they turn their steps? |
25821 | Whither, then, should they go? |
25821 | Why are you not here? |
25821 | Why not ask for more when everything was granted to them? |
25821 | Why not? |
25821 | Why should we? |
25821 | Would the princes of Germany come to the help of the directors? |
25821 | Wrong has often a quick, spasmodic force, but was there not in his arm a steady growing force, which could only be a force of right? |
25821 | [ 31] Why did not others make any of these observations? |
25821 | and"How?" |
25821 | but, How does this affect the position of my order? |
25821 | was not his doom stern enough? |
25821 | who cling to any old anchorage of dogma, and refuse to rise with the tide of advancing knowledge? |
16352 | After the death of King Wan,said he,"was not the cause of truth lodged in me? |
16352 | And how, Lord, do they treat the remains of a king of kings? |
16352 | And what kind of man is he? |
16352 | But of what kind of spirits is the Lord, the venerable Anuruddha, thinking? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the higher penalty? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | For whom have you come? |
16352 | Has the superior man,said Tsze- loo,"indeed, to endure in this way?" |
16352 | Has your majesty,said this officer,"any servant who could discharge the duties of ambassador like Tsze- kung? |
16352 | Have you heard any lessons from your father different from what we have all heard? |
16352 | How do you mean that you are unknown? |
16352 | If the great mountain crumble,said he,"to what shall I look up? |
16352 | Kung Kew,replied the disciple,"Kung Kew, of Loo?" |
16352 | No,replied Le,"he was standing alone once when I was passing through the court below with hasty steps, and said to me,''Have you read the Odes?'' |
16352 | Sir,replied Confucius,"in carrying on your government why should you employ capital punishment at all? |
16352 | What do you say,asked the chief of the Ke clan on one occasion,"to killing the unprincipled for the good of the principled?" |
16352 | What is this world? |
16352 | What makes you so late? |
16352 | Who are you, sir? |
16352 | Who is that holding the reins in the carriage yonder? |
16352 | Why, then, do you not remove from the place? |
16352 | Again he inquired of him, saying:"Canst thou act as my guide?" |
16352 | Am I a bitter gourd? |
16352 | Am I to be hung up out of the way of being eaten?" |
16352 | And even if some gain should accrue to the people, in what way would this interfere with the sage''s action? |
16352 | And if they existed, do the order and relation agree with actual truth? |
16352 | And until we know, is it not a waste of time to pore over the lesser happenings between? |
16352 | Another day, in the same place and the same way, he said to me,''Have you read the rules of Propriety?'' |
16352 | Arbaces communicated his ideas and projects to the prince then intrusted with the government of Babylon, the Chaldæan Phul( Palia? |
16352 | But did all those who preceded him, and those who followed him, exist as he did? |
16352 | But my principles make no progress, and I, how shall I be viewed in future ages?" |
16352 | But the real formula is,_ post trigesimum diem_, and we may ask, Why did Livy or the annalist whom he followed make this alteration? |
16352 | But what was the practical result? |
16352 | Can the vanishing pictures of the past be made as simply obvious as mathematics, as fascinating as a breezy novel of adventure? |
16352 | Can this be accomplished? |
16352 | Did not kings Wan and Woo, from their small states of Fung and Kaou, rise to the sovereignty of the empire? |
16352 | Did the Ptolemies admit the claims which the local priests attempted to deduce from this romantic tale? |
16352 | Heaven will not let the cause of truth perish, and what therefore can the people of Kwang do to me?" |
16352 | How is it possible that they should not be dissolved?" |
16352 | How is it possible that[ they should not be dissolved]?" |
16352 | How many of us do really know about them? |
16352 | How then is it possible[ that such a being should not be dissolved]?''" |
16352 | If I associate not with people, with mankind, with whom shall I associate? |
16352 | If the strong beam break, and the wise man wither away, on whom shall I lean? |
16352 | If while an ox is passing on the street[ market?] |
16352 | If you accept the invitation of this Pih Hih, who is in open rebellion against his chief, what will people say?" |
16352 | Is not he who neglects to teach his son his duties, equally guilty with the son who fails in them? |
16352 | Is there any who will assist me?" |
16352 | Miki In no no Mikoto, also indignant at this, said:"My mother and my aunt are both sea- goddesses; why do they raise great billows to overwhelm us?" |
16352 | No sooner had the envoys put the question to the Delphian priestess, on the day named,"What is Croesus now doing?" |
16352 | One time he said to his friend just named,"Do you think we are governing the people well?" |
16352 | That this poetry is very ancient can not be doubted; but did the legend at all times describe Romulus as the son of Rea Silvia or Ilia? |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor summoned him and then inquired of him, saying:"Who art thou?" |
16352 | The first problem to be confronted was, What were the Great Events that should be told? |
16352 | The question now is, What were these two towns of Roma and Remuria? |
16352 | Then the Mallas of Kusinara said to the venerable Ananda:"What should be done, Lord, with the remains of the Tathagata?" |
16352 | We are told that he reckoned a sheep and a medimnus( of wheat or barley?) |
16352 | What is his likeness?" |
16352 | What is to be done?" |
16352 | Where is the place in which the Nile is born? |
16352 | Which was the greater, the external magnificence, or the moral sublimity of this scene? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice?" |
16352 | Who is the god or goddess concealed there? |
16352 | Who would suspect any uncertainty here if it were not for this passage of Dionysius? |
16352 | Why do they harass me by land, and why, moreover, do they harass me by sea?" |
16352 | Why need there be such rectification?" |
16352 | Why should we not proceed thither, and make it the capital?" |
16352 | Why should we remain for a long time in one place? |
16352 | Why? |
16352 | Will this not be well? |
16352 | _ But will God in very deed dwell with men on the earth? |
16352 | and did the god regain possession of the domains and dues which they declared had been his right? |
16352 | he cried,"for whom have you come?" |
16352 | or any one to compare as a general with Tsze- loo? |
16352 | or any so well qualified for a premier as Yen Hwuy? |
16352 | or even know what they are? |
16352 | or one- twentieth part of them? |
16352 | surely thou knowest our Master?" |
10341 | And if throughout all your realm there is no good government, what is to be done then? |
10341 | If I can do this for others, why ca n''t I do it for myself? |
10341 | What does any woman get by it? |
10341 | Who will buy them? |
10341 | Why waste time over abstract resolutions? |
10341 | You are newspaper correspondents? |
10341 | ''What are you about?'' |
10341 | And as to Alexander the Great, has the world really made no progress since his time? |
10341 | And do our laws take note of this curious state of things? |
10341 | And to the rest, those who sit by inheritance, does it not apply even more? |
10341 | And what have been the consequences of this overwhelming tragedy? |
10341 | And who will deny the word"exceptional"? |
10341 | And whose negligence could conceivably come in there? |
10341 | But his mother was a Bourbon, and what more need be said? |
10341 | But then the question arises, how can the permanency of such a coalition be guaranteed? |
10341 | But they preferred their own ways, and what is the result? |
10341 | But whither-- and into what? |
10341 | But, you ask me, has not this confirmation of the ancient principles of Russian state policy in Finland been bought at too dear a price? |
10341 | Can Germany now be approached with a request to reduce her armaments, unless she is given the most solid guaranty against attack? |
10341 | Can anybody bring them to account? |
10341 | Did we not also beat the French, and the Austrians, and the Belgians, and all the other foreign adventurers who came with Maximilian? |
10341 | Did we not beat the Spaniards? |
10341 | Do n''t you know that some man with eloquent tongue, without conscience, who did not care for the Nation, could put this whole country into a flame? |
10341 | Do n''t you know that this country from one end to another believes that something is wrong? |
10341 | Do n''t you see by that theory that a man never can get redress for negligence on the part of the employer? |
10341 | Do they even attempt to distinguish between a man''s act as a corporation director and as an individual? |
10341 | Does either adjective require defending? |
10341 | Does that mean that this town is socialistic?" |
10341 | Does the public deal with that president and that board of directors? |
10341 | Finns are long- suffering and patient, but who could endure all this? |
10341 | Have we the proper hauling power? |
10341 | Have you not noticed the growth of socialistic sentiment in the smaller towns? |
10341 | How shall each in his wisdom or his folly interpret that well- worn motto which still has virtue both to quicken and control,"Noblesse oblige"? |
10341 | How will the sleds behave? |
10341 | I said,"What does that mean? |
10341 | ISRAEL ZANGWILL THE AWKWARD AGE OF THE WOMEN''S MOVEMENT"And what did she get by it?" |
10341 | If it is, what is the cause of the revolution? |
10341 | In doing so she had to pass the most powerful ship of the squadron, the_ Dom Carlos_: would she get past in safety? |
10341 | In other words, is the republic likely to last? |
10341 | Is it to be wondered at that, by the time his seventh term expired in 1910, he should have at last come to regard himself as indispensable? |
10341 | Is that freedom? |
10341 | Is there any clear purpose before our new leaders, and how does it differ from mankind''s former purposes? |
10341 | Meanwhile, what had become of the naval cooperation, on which so much reliance had been placed? |
10341 | Now, do the working men employed by that stock corporation deal with that president and those directors? |
10341 | On what, then, does the claim to Finnish autonomy rest and how was it conferred? |
10341 | Or do we believe nothing of the sort? |
10341 | Or the descendant of Confucius? |
10341 | Shall we lose that also? |
10341 | Should they or should they not be constrained to make good their threats, and use it? |
10341 | Should we summon to a conclave of the nations a king who had no kingdom? |
10341 | So many questions presented themselves: What will be the nature of the region we have to cross? |
10341 | So they began to ask,"What is the use of voting? |
10341 | Such is the theory; but what is the tragic result? |
10341 | The descendant of the Mings? |
10341 | The law instituting the income tax was approved October 31[? |
10341 | The moment that begins, there is formed-- what? |
10341 | The present situation of woman suffrage in England recalls the old puzzle: What happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable body? |
10341 | Was not loyalty to the sovereign part of the Chinese religion? |
10341 | Was not the Emperor a sacred being who represented an unbroken political continuity of thousands of years, and who ruled by divine right? |
10341 | Was not the ship"unsinkable"after all? |
10341 | Well, how are they going to raise it? |
10341 | Were there no reactionary movements to warn us of the terrible reassertion of autocratic power so soon to deluge earth with horror? |
10341 | Were we the first, or----? |
10341 | What are the main sources of Portugal''s pride? |
10341 | What could the poor boy do? |
10341 | What does this"immemorial China"--meaning thereby the great bulk of the Chinese, the un- Westernized Chinese-- think of the republic? |
10341 | What has been the precise effect on French prosperity? |
10341 | What indeed is the death of an organism all of whose parts may yet survive for some time? |
10341 | What is the meaning of democracy? |
10341 | What is the result to- day? |
10341 | What more is there to say? |
10341 | What natural barrier prevents a woman from accepting or rejecting a man who proposes to represent her in Parliament? |
10341 | What should he do with such a friend?" |
10341 | What sort of republic will it probably be, viewing the situation as it stands? |
10341 | What was the plan of campaign and the degree of preparedness of the principal belligerent in the second Balkan war which was about to commence? |
10341 | What will be its ultimate outcome? |
10341 | What will follow its success? |
10341 | What, then, can be done to save Europe from these impending dangers? |
10341 | What, under the circumstances, was to be his individual line of conduct? |
10341 | Who can say that her experience, her point of view, is not much better worth consulting than her husband''s on the housing problem? |
10341 | Who is his employer? |
10341 | Why are we in the presence, why are we at the threshold, of a revolution? |
10341 | Why did not General Demetrief go on? |
10341 | Why did that army which had proceeded thus far with such impetuous and irresistible momentum suddenly turn snail? |
10341 | Why is it that we have a labor question at all? |
10341 | Why load a vessel down with useless life- boats, which only hung the year in and year out, blocking up space? |
10341 | Why should I be? |
10341 | Why should they not? |
10341 | Why should we not try to make our observations at the Pole itself? |
10341 | Why was the cash idea inaugurated? |
10341 | Why? |
10341 | Will Bulgaria, Greece, and Servia quietly look on while the work of a generation is being undone? |
10341 | Will a republic be established and will it work successfully? |
10341 | Will our equipment meet the requirements of the situation? |
10341 | Will the Greeks, Serbs, and Bulgarians residing in Turkey allow themselves to be denationalized more or less forcibly? |
10341 | Would he in a new edition add General Diaz to his list? |
10341 | Yet how many people save those in the business, or who have bought cars, know this interesting fact? |
42224 | If we had so much stone, what could one do with it? |
42224 | Let thy face be cheerful as long as thou livest; hast any one come out of the coffin after having once entered it? |
42224 | What bringeth her heart to me, pray? 42224 Which is the true, and which the false?" |
42224 | Which is the true? |
42224 | Why from hands and from feet take the rings, pray, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou from my breast the jewels, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou from my neck the necklace, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou from my waist my gemmed- girdle, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou the great crown from my head, O porter? |
42224 | Why tak''st thou the rings from my ears, O porter? |
42224 | Why take from my body my cincture, O porter? |
42224 | ''Great father Amon, I have known thee well, And can the father thus forget his son? |
42224 | ''Hast thou tried the wool of a young sheep?'' |
42224 | ( 3)_ Men._"Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the Gods? |
42224 | ( But what) shall I answer the city, the people, and the elders?" |
42224 | :"Am I now come up without the Lord against this place to destroy it? |
42224 | A definite time the god Shamash had appointed: The ruler of the darkness(?) |
42224 | After Ishtar, the goddess, had( been thus afflicted)(?) |
42224 | After working out an outline of their political development, suppose it should be asked, But how did these people dress? |
42224 | Am I now come up without the Lord against this place to destroy it? |
42224 | And I-- have I not brought Thee many victims, And filled Thy temple with the captive folk? |
42224 | And for Thy presence built a dwelling place That shall endure for countless years to come? |
42224 | As soon as dawn began to appear,( Five or six lines wanting) The weak(?) |
42224 | As soon as the mistress of the gods arrived She lifted up the great jewels(?) |
42224 | Behold he said to me,"For what cause hast thou come hither? |
42224 | But Rab- shakeh said unto them, Hath my master sent me to thy master, and to thee, to speak these words? |
42224 | But if we look at the matter more closely, do we not see other, deeper reasons? |
42224 | But what has Egypt to offer the modern man? |
42224 | Consider, is he not toiling on the river? |
42224 | Does it interest any but specialists and archaeologists? |
42224 | Does not the face grow pale, of him who beholds thy countenance; Does not the eye fear, which looks upon thee?" |
42224 | Every carpenter carrying tools,--is he more at rest than the laborer? |
42224 | For where was Chufu[1] now-- the king who had cemented that mountain of stone with the sweat of his subjects? |
42224 | Has a matter come to pass in the palace? |
42224 | Has the king of the two lands, Sehetepabra, gone to heaven? |
42224 | Hath any of the gods of the nations delivered at all his land out of the hand of the king of Assyria? |
42224 | Have I done aught without Thy high behest, Or moved or staid against Thy sovereign will? |
42224 | Have I ever opened his door, or leaped over his fence? |
42224 | Have I in any deed forgotten Thee? |
42224 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set where were they?" |
42224 | Her wise ladies answered her, Yea, she returned answer to herself,"Have they not found, Have they not divided the spoils? |
42224 | How are they to be explained? |
42224 | How can we account for the frequent despoiling of her proud cities during her later years? |
42224 | How then wilt thou turn away the face of one captain of the least of my master''s servants, and put thy trust on Egypt for chariots and for horsemen? |
42224 | How was that lintel- stone raised? |
42224 | How were these capitals lifted? |
42224 | I opened(?) |
42224 | I provided a rudder(?) |
42224 | In heaven who is supreme? |
42224 | In heaven, who is supreme? |
42224 | It is some envious jealousy from seeing me; does he think that I am like some steer among the cows, whom the bull overthrows? |
42224 | Like a reed that is broken she( bent to the ground)(?). |
42224 | Ninib openeth his mouth and speaketh, He speaks to the warrior Bel:"Who but Ea doeth( this) thing? |
42224 | Now on whom dost thou trust, that thou rebellest against me? |
42224 | O Judah, what shall I do unto thee? |
42224 | On earth, who is supreme? |
42224 | On earth, who is supreme? |
42224 | One day the hurricane( raged), Violently it blew, the waters( covered?) |
42224 | Six_ sars_ of bitumen I spread on the outside(?). |
42224 | The question arises consequently, how did the idea of a future existence, of a soul apart from the body, have its origin among men? |
42224 | The question naturally arises: Who makes these discoveries, and under what circumstances are the secrets of the tombs revealed? |
42224 | The ruler of the darkness(?) |
42224 | They chose new gods; Then was war in the gates: Was there a shield or spear seen Among forty thousand in Israel? |
42224 | This I did-- When were such things done in former time? |
42224 | This law, this fiend- destroying law of Zarathustra, by what greatness, goodness, and fairness is it great, good, and fair above all other utterances? |
42224 | What did not this mother do? |
42224 | What did the war- loving, blood- thirsting Assyrians leave for future ages? |
42224 | What effect did the worship of these gods have upon his life? |
42224 | What is the sum of the cats, mice, ears and grains?" |
42224 | What more noble forms could have ushered the people into the temple of their gods? |
42224 | What part did the citizen take in the worship of his national gods? |
42224 | What then were the points of advantage for Thebes, lying 400 miles farther south? |
42224 | What trouble? |
42224 | When Allatu these tidings received( from the porter), Like a tamarisk cut she( bowed herself down)(?). |
42224 | Where are the gods of Hamath, and of Arpad? |
42224 | Where are those stately ruins which, even in the middle ages, extended over a space estimated at half a day''s journey in every direction? |
42224 | Where is the Memphis of Herodotus and Strabo? |
42224 | Which is the fifth place where the Earth feels sorest grief?" |
42224 | Which is the first place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Which is the first place where the Earth feels sorest grief?" |
42224 | Which is the fourth place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Which is the second place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Which is the second place where the Earth feels sorest grief?" |
42224 | Which is the third place where the Earth feels most happy?" |
42224 | Whilst Asshur and Ishtar support me, who can prevail against me? |
42224 | Who could describe them all? |
42224 | Who is like thee, glorious in holiness, Fearful in praises, doing wonders? |
42224 | Who is the first that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy?" |
42224 | Who shall give unto my tongue authority to utter unto the young men the counsels from of old? |
42224 | Why tarry the wheels of his chariots?" |
42224 | Will God forget what he has ordained, and how shall that be known?" |
42224 | With this one forsooth( shall I share my dwelling?) |
42224 | _ Women._ Gilead abode beyond Jordan--_ Men._ And Dan, why did he remain in ships? |
42224 | _ Women._ Through the window she looked forth, and cried, The mother of Sisera, through the lattice,"Why is his chariot so long coming? |
42224 | _ Women._ Why satest thou among the sheepfolds, To hear the pipings for the flocks? |
42224 | hath he not sent me to the men which sit on the wall? |
42224 | have they delivered Samaria out of mine hand? |
42224 | he covered(?) |
42224 | or who vouchsafeth unto me to declare the counsels received from on high? |
42224 | where are the gods of Sepharvaim, Hena, and Ivah? |
10114 | And that beauty and goodness are something? |
10114 | But how will they be able,said they,"to wrestle on ground so rough and bushy?" |
10114 | But if they expend all their stones,rejoined Xenophon,"is there anything else to prevent us from advancing? |
10114 | But what as to such things as these, Simmias? 10114 But what with respect to the acquisition of wisdom, is the body an impediment or not, if anyone takes it with him as a partner in the search? |
10114 | But what? 10114 But wouldst thou have_ me_ share the prey? |
10114 | Did you ever lay hold of them by any other bodily sense? 10114 Does not then the soul of the philosopher, in these cases, despise the body, and flee from it, and seek to retire within itself?" |
10114 | How not? |
10114 | If I am innocent,said he,"why did you place such a stain on me? |
10114 | Is it anything else than the separation of the soul from the body? 10114 It shall be done,"said Crito;"but consider whether you have anything else to say?" |
10114 | Must it not then be by reasoning, if at all, that any of the things that really are become known to it? |
10114 | Not at all"What then? 10114 Now, then, have you ever seen anything of this kind with your eyes?" |
10114 | We will endeavor then so to do,he said;"but how shall we bury you?" |
10114 | What then, Socrates,said Simmias,"would you go away keeping this persuasion to yourself, or would you impart it to us? |
10114 | What then,said he,"is not Evenus a philosopher?" |
10114 | What, Cebes, have not you and Simmias, who have conversed familiarly with Philolaus[40] on this subject, heard? |
10114 | When, then,said he,"does the soul light on the truth? |
10114 | Why, then, Socrates, do they say that it is not allowable to kill one''s self? 10114 (Who is like unto thee among the gods, O Jehovah? |
10114 | And Socrates, on seeing the man, said:"Well, my good friend, as you are skilled in these matters, what must I do?" |
10114 | And after we have made all these conquests, what shall we do then?" |
10114 | And when one that came in said angrily,''Was this well done of your lady, Charmion?'' |
10114 | As he sat in his tent in the dead of night, he thought a huge and shadowy form stood by him; and when he calmly asked,"What and whence art thou?" |
10114 | But he said:"What are you doing, my admirable friends? |
10114 | But is this conquest of Sicily to be the extreme limit of our campaign?" |
10114 | But what caused this whole emigration? |
10114 | But what could Cæsar do, in the centre of nearly the whole of the known world? |
10114 | But what could undisciplined bravery avail against the attack of an army skilled in all the arts of war and inspired by a long train of conquests? |
10114 | But why should I speak doubtfully about stealing? |
10114 | Chirisophus then said:"But why should you go, and leave the charge of the rear? |
10114 | Cineas then, after waiting for a short time, said:"O King, when we have taken Italy, what shall we do then?" |
10114 | Could he hope to succeed where Hannibal and Mithradates had perished? |
10114 | Cæsar, too, had some suspicion of him, and he even said one day to his friends:"What think you of Cassius? |
10114 | Do they not seem so to you?" |
10114 | Do we say that justice itself is something or nothing?" |
10114 | Do we think that death is anything?" |
10114 | Does it appear to you to be becoming in a philosopher to be anxious about pleasures, as they are called, such as meats and drinks?" |
10114 | Does it not seem so to you?" |
10114 | Does it not seem so to you?" |
10114 | Had there been similar flowerings of genius amid forgotten Asiatic times? |
10114 | If I am guilty, why am I more fit for a second consulship than I was for my first one?" |
10114 | In the fold of this garment I carry war and peace; which of the two do you choose?" |
10114 | Is death anything else than this?" |
10114 | Is not he the person, Simmias, if any one can, who will arrive at the knowledge of that which is?" |
10114 | Now, if heaven grants us the victory over them, what use shall we make of it?" |
10114 | On his coming up, one of the populace asked who that was? |
10114 | Or who will hear your friends when they attempt to show that this is not an open servitude on the one hand and tyranny on the other? |
10114 | The Carthaginians hesitating to comply, Fabius, who was at the head of the embassy, exclaimed:"What is the meaning of this delay? |
10114 | This also Meha granted, saying:"Why should we undertake a war for the sake of a woman?" |
10114 | To stand a comrade by my side, The sharer of my fame, And worthy of a brother''s pride And of a brother''s name? |
10114 | To this Simmias said:"What is this, Socrates, which you exhort Evenus to do? |
10114 | Two great Romans had yielded to her, why not the third, who seemed a smaller man? |
10114 | Were you personally present, Phaedo, with Socrates on that day when he drank the poison in prison? |
10114 | What else can one do in the interval before sunset?" |
10114 | What had been the doom of Viriathus? |
10114 | What was the reason of this, Phaedo? |
10114 | When the name of Nero is heard, who thinks of the consul? |
10114 | While he was so employed, there arose a question,"What kind of death was the best?" |
10114 | Why comes he not in battle''s van His country''s chief to be? |
10114 | Would you quarrel with your neighbors for a horse?" |
10114 | [ Footnote 58: Why should he be ashamed to admit that Rome was saved by the aid of the gods? |
10114 | _ Ech._ And what, Phædo, were the circumstances of his death? |
10114 | _ Ech._ But what is this ship? |
10114 | _ Ech._ But who were present, Phaedo? |
10114 | _ Ech._ How should I not? |
10114 | _ Ech._ Was anyone else there? |
10114 | _ Ech._ Well, now, what do you say was the subject of conversation? |
10114 | _ Ech._ Were any strangers present? |
10114 | _ Ech._ What then did he say before his death? |
10114 | _ Phæd._ And did you not hear about the trial how it went off? |
10114 | about the pleasures of love?" |
10114 | and how did he die? |
10114 | and what warning against vain valor was written on the desolate site where Numantia once had flourished? |
10114 | and who of his friends were with him? |
10114 | cried he,"how is it possible that a people possessed of such magnificence at home could envy me an humble cottage in Britain?" |
10114 | does such a man appear to you to think other bodily indulgences of value? |
10114 | or did you hear an account of it from someone else? |
10114 | or would not the magistrates allow them to be present, but did he die destitute of friends? |
10114 | were not Aristippus and Cleombrotus present? |
10114 | what dost thou mean?" |
10114 | what was said and done? |
10114 | whom they ordered to grant that peace, and whom to conduct the army out of Africa? |