Questions

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
18565Now do n''t you think,I pursued,"that it would be better to spend it for little cakes?"
18565What would you do,I asked the children,"if I gave you a piece of twenty- five centimes?"
18565Does the hate you bear them come from difference or likeness?
18565He came back very gayly; when they saw him so joyous,"What news?"
18565Shall I own that while this effect was not the fiery gorgeousness of our autumn leaves, it was something tenderer, richer, more tastefully lovely?
18565You burn to reform our Church; certainly it needs it; but how can you reform it, deformed as you are?
12404And what manner of man was he who lived in this house that nestles beneath the ancient castle?
12404Confused recollections of them arose in my memory; could I have been in Hamburg without being aware of it?
12404Does it speak of the revolt of 1160, or of the war between Mayence and Frankfort in 1332?
12404Have I preserved the impression made by some picture, some photograph?
12404He immediately replies, after reckoning up in his head,"How much have I then?
12404Is it Barbarossa?
12404Is it Louis of Bavaria?
12404These halls are worthy to hold such treasures, and what more could be said of them?
12404Why not build in brick frankly, since its water- coloring and capacity for ingeniously varied arrangement furnish so many resources?
11179And Geneva?
11179But what is it called?
11179But what mountain is that far away to the south?
11179Eh,he repeated, with a puzzled look,"who knows?
11179What are they saying, Peter?
11179Which mountain, Signora?
11179Again I asked myself"Can it be done?"
11179Could there be then an opening at the bottom of the funnel into which he had fallen?
11179He meant, who would believe that Croz could fall?
11179If sixty steps cost an hour, what would be the cost of two hundred?
11179Old Peter rent the air with exclamations of"Chamounix!--oh, what will Chamounix say?"
11179Seiler met me at his door, and followed in silence to my room:"What is the matter?"
11179Should we still find an impassable system of crevasses above us, or were we close to the top?
11179What are we to say to the modern rival of Venice, the upstart rebel, one is tempted to say, against the supremacy of the Hadriatic Queen?
11179Why then is this so?
46074''Mademoiselle,''he wrote,''must you be for ever pressing upon me a happiness which sound reason compels me to decline?
46074''What can I do for you?''
46074''What,''he asked,''do you expect the Pope to live on?
46074But what is the sober truth about those educational advantages?
46074He fled to Lausanne, but--''What was the good of coming here?
46074Of what else?
46074Shall I ever get out of it all alive?
46074The question then arose, Which Pope would be recognized by the other European Principalities and Powers?
46074The question which is left is, How do the Swiss systems of education compare with ours?
46074What are we to make of it all?
46074What the devil is the meaning of it?
46074Why did n''t I break it off long ago?
46074Would she forgive me if she knew where I am and what I am doing?
46074are they still turning out novels at Lausanne?''
46074or''Can there be friendship between a man and a woman in the same sense as between two women or two men?''
46074what am I to do?
39651Tell me,she said to Napoleon once,"whom do you think is the greatest woman in France to- day?"
39651And another Swiss doctor( Tissot) who dared to tell well- to- do people that their chief cause of ill- health was overfeeding?
39651Before such enthusiasm who dares to urge that the Alpine dawn may be as well seen from a point to which the railway will take you?
39651But now, can you tell me were those poets and wise men themselves generally of mountain peoples?
39651But what the use, or the justice of it?
39651Can you show me that it is a fact that mountain races are as you say?
39651Does that not seem to you a rational argument?
39651Has he lost the faculty of delight?
39651Have his eyes grown dim?
39651Is he growing old?
39651The exaltation of the keen high air?
39651The joy of the scenery?
39651What is the chief charm of this mountain- climbing?
39651What is the matter?
39651Why did n''t I break it off long ago?
39651Will you, if you have time, explain to me why that is so?
39651Yet surely the peoples who produce most plentifully great men, poets and philosophers, are the greatest peoples?
39651_ T._ On that point, surely, there is no difference of opinion at all?
35068Are the trains going to be stopped?
35068Has Germany declared yet?
35068How about money? 35068 How can I send a letter to my husband in Germany?"
35068Is England going into it?
35068Is there going to be a war?
35068Let me in this, will you?
35068Will all Americans be ordered home?
35068Will we be safe in Switzerland?
35068Will we have to have passports?
35068_ Encore?_I said.
35068And the Swiss prosperity, and the medical practice, and the sciences?
35068And the old car-- that to us had always seemed to have a personality and sentience-- had it been dreaming, too?
35068And what of the rest of Europe?
35068And what of their positions in America?
35068And why a dog?
35068Any questions, please?
35068Are the Swiss banks going to stop payment on letters of credit?"
35068But what would be done with them later?
35068Could they ship all those cherries north and sell them?
35068Do their occupants have traditional rights from some vague time without date?
35068Do they pay rent, and to whom?
35068Furthermore, concerning the color chosen for profane use-- why blue?
35068He looked intelligent, too, and as a last resort I said:"''Could you, by any chance, tell me the name of the Swiss President?''
35068How can the French afford those roads-- how can they pay for them and keep them in condition?
35068How can they afford to keep it here?
35068How can they afford to maintain such a road through that sterile land?
35068How could Bonny, a mere village, ever have built a church like that-- a church that to- day would cost a million dollars?
35068How could they give a dinner like that, and a good bed, and coffee and rolls with jam next morning, all for four francs-- that is, eighty cents, each?
35068Keats( I think it was Keats, or was it Carolyn Wells?)
35068Mistral[ sa mère] eut une idée._"''_ Si nous faisons tapisser et plafonner ta chambre?''
35068Narcissa asked,"How would you get the car up there?"
35068Often we said as we drove along,"What little hotel do you suppose is waiting for us to- night?"
35068So I picked out a bright- looking subject, and said:"''What is the name of the Swiss President?''
35068What did the barbarians do there-- those hordes that swarmed in and trampled Rome?
35068What would you do then?"
35068Will the ships be running then?"
35068Would I go again, under the same conditions?
35068[ 11] The German Kaiser, once reviewing the Swiss troops, remarked, casually, to a sub- officer,"You say you could muster half a million soldiers?"
45097And do you believe that the soul of man will live hereafter?
45097And what shall we find at Winterberg?
45097And where are your children?
45097But what if one of those who has come to the holy sacrament falls into some sin, as stealing, or profane swearing?
45097But what is that?
45097But will it not vanish if we look away?
45097Can a woman come to that?
45097Do you speak English?
45097How do you know that you shall meet?
45097O Lord God of Hosts, who is a strong Lord like unto thee? 45097 What do you think of it?
45097What means this?
45097Which is the best hotel for us in Ichandau?
45097Will you,said she,"have the goodness to give me your name in writing?"
45097And now tell me, with all your studies have you yet learned how to die?
45097And who commanded,( and the silence came,)"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?"
45097Are the virtues of social life held in honor among them, and are the children of these mountain homes trained up in the way they should go?
45097But what are the morals of such a people?
45097Does not my country know, and does it not delight to honor a man whose philanthropy and genius are alike deserving the admiration of the world?
45097I said to him,"Are these yours?"
45097I_ know_ that in another land we shall meet?"
45097Is it not fine: very fine?"
45097Must we mothers nurse beggars at our breasts, and bring up our daughters to be maid- servants to foreign lords?
45097She at last ventured to come toward the point by asking,"In what part of England do you reside, Sir?"
45097What are the men of the mountain good for?
45097What indeed is wealth, and title, and power, to a fool?
45097What shall I do?"
45097Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows?
45097Who can be afraid of a storm when the rainbow appears?
45097Who can tell the sufferings, who can tell the joys that the people of God have known in these high places?
45097Who filled thy countenance with rosy light?
45097Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy, Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam?
45097Who made thee parent of perpetual streams?
45097Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon?
45097Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth?
45097Who, with living flowers Of loveliest hue, spread garlands at your feet?
45097Would it be an_ indiscretion_ for me to ask you what is your name, Sir?"
45097_ Lady._--"Bless me, and of what country are you, pray?"
45097_ Lady._--"O you are, are you?
45097_ Lady._--"When do you return, Sir?"
45097_ Lady._--"Where do you spend the winter?"
12990And the answer?
12990But you have been wounded in the leg, monsieur?
12990By the way,he suddenly asked me,"where was the idea of Harvey Birch, in the Spy, found?"
12990Could I tell him which was the window of his room?
12990Does Mein Herr see it?
12990Duke!--what Duke?
12990Madame goes to Paris?
12990Not left France!--Was he not carried into Switzerland?
12990Oh,said he,"it is a disease that only kills the rabble: I feel no concern-- do you?"
12990Sire, how would you like to be an honorary king?
12990That convent,I called out to the postilion,"is still inhabited?"
12990Wie ist diesen fluschen?
12990Would I try a bottle?
12990_ Et, il vino, signore; quale è il prezzo del vino?_demanded the_ padrone_.
12990--"And can we cross with your horses?"
12990Are rights thus to be purchased by concessions so unworthy and base?
12990Are they necessarily inseparable?
12990But why name a solitary instance?
12990Did you know him?"
12990How is it with, us?
12990How long would an English tide- waiter, for instance, keep his place should he vote against the ministerial candidate?
12990I asked him if he had ever known a true liberal in politics, who had been educated in the school of Napoleon?
12990I asked him why he remained in Paris, having no family, nor any sufficient inducement?
12990It may appear presumptuous in a foreigner to give an opinion against such high authority; but,"what can we reason but from what we know?"
12990Master Harry,"exclaimed the latter,"you are here, are you?"
12990My companion now looked at me as hard as a well- bred man might, and said earnestly,"Where did you learn to speak English so well?"
12990The family of Talleyrand- Perigord is so ancient, that, in the middle ages, when a King demanded of its head,"Who made you Count de Perigord?"
12990The"Par quelle route, monsieur?"
12990This he would not admit, for what man is ever willing to confess that his own opinions are prejudiced?
12990This is all that the throne does in England, and why need it do more in France?
12990Tieck?"
12990We got"_ monsieur sait-- monsieur pense-- monsieur fera_"--for"_ que voulez- vous, monsieur?_"We had no more to do with mountains.
12990We have some extraordinary words, too: who, but a Philadelphian, for instance, would think of calling his mother a_ mare_?
12990[ 42][ Footnote 42: Has it not?
12990[ Footnote 11: Was Mr. Jefferson himself free from a similar charge?]
12990ship ahoy!--what cheer, what cheer?"
12990ship ahoy!--what cheer, what cheer?"
12990you are not a Scotchman?"
22377Ah,said Rollo, seating himself upon the soft cushion on one of the seats,"is not this superb?
22377An avalanche?
22377And a glacier,said Rollo;"what is that?"
22377And after you get into the valley,said Rollo,"shall you go across it, and go over the mountains on the other side, into Italy?"
22377And carry them over the Wengern Alp?
22377And did they succeed at last?
22377And how high must we go up in Switzerland?
22377And how much do you suppose it will cost you?
22377And shall you pay them?
22377And then where does it go?
22377And what shall we come to then?
22377And where did it go to?
22377And where do you suppose mine is?
22377Are we going to ride or walk?
22377Are we going to take dinner here?
22377Are you all going to ride in the coupà ©?
22377Are you going in this diligence?
22377Are you going to Berne?
22377But how can we get our carriage?
22377But how do we take seats in it? 22377 But, uncle George where are we to get our tickets?"
22377But, uncle George,said Rollo,"why did not you get me a ticket when you got yours?"
22377Can we get up to the Wengern Alp from either valley?
22377Can we get up to the top of it?
22377Can we go there and see them?
22377Can you put our trunk on a horse?
22377Can you speak English?
22377Come, uncle George,said Rollo,"is not it time for us to get up to our places?"
22377Did you ever study English, Henry?
22377Do the women work in the fields every where in Switzerland, Henry?
22377Do we go by a railway?
22377Do you think any body can get up there?
22377Does the lake reach to the end of the valley?
22377Have you any objection?
22377Have you any thing to declare?
22377Have you found Paris?
22377Henry,said Rollo, looking up to the guide,"what is the French for_ head over heels_?"
22377How did you get over?
22377How do we get there?
22377How do you know that there will be any boat there?
22377How far is it that we have got to walk?
22377How far is it?
22377How long do you think you will be gone?
22377How long will it take you to pack your trunk?
22377How long?
22377How much must I pay?
22377How much should we have saved,asked Rollo,"in going to Strasbourg, if we had taken a second- class car?"
22377How will you find out what to do?
22377I wonder whether I could climb up to the top of it,he continued, still talking to himself,"if I could only find some way to get across the river?
22377If one man does not pay his duty,rejoined Rollo,"do the others have to pay more?"
22377Is it so every where?
22377Is that the way the lakes are formed?
22377Is that yours?
22377Is there a road along the shore?
22377Is there a village there?
22377Is there no_ possible_ way?
22377Never?
22377None at all?
22377Now, uncle George,said Rollo,"wo n''t we have a magnificent ride?"
22377Rollo,said Mr. George, after a short pause,"do you wish to travel in Switzerland intelligently or blindly?"
22377Rollo,said he, as they were standing together in front of the hotel after breakfast,"how would you like to go up with me to the top of that hill?"
22377Should I?
22377That great icy mountain?
22377To the Staubach? 22377 To the Staubach?
22377To the Staubach?
22377Uncle George,said he,"when are you going down to breakfast?"
22377Want a guide? 22377 We are going along that lake,"said Rollo"are we not?"
22377We are going in one of the steamboats that are lying at the pier, are we not?
22377Well, uncle George,said Rollo,"are you planning our journey?"
22377Well,said Rollo,"I will; only how shall I do it?
22377Well,said Rollo,"do you think it_ is_ a good carriage?"
22377What are they?
22377What can that be, I wonder?
22377What did he say?
22377What do they do, then,asked Henry,"to spend their time?"
22377What do you mean by that?
22377What do you suppose those girls are going to do?
22377What does she say?
22377What does that mean?
22377What is a moraine?
22377What is he going to do with that cannon?
22377What is he going to do?
22377What is he going to do?
22377What is it?
22377What kind of a boat?
22377What shall I order?
22377What shall we come to when we get to the end of the lake?
22377What should I do then?
22377What would you do with it,asked Mr. George,"if you had it?"
22377What would you like to have?
22377What''s the reason he wo n''t take your passports?
22377Where do you suppose we are to go, Carlos?
22377Where have they been?
22377Where is the American legation?
22377Where is your father?
22377Which is the best way?
22377Which would you rather have,said Mr. George to Rollo, as they resumed their march,"this pair, or some new ones?"
22377Why ca n''t we see it all the way?
22377Why did n''t they? 22377 Why do they not go all the way by land?"
22377Why does n''t it melt?
22377Why, what is the difficulty?
22377Why?
22377Would it if I were to send the kite up in America?
22377_ Up_ to them?
22377At the same time he rose from his seat, saying,--"Well, Rollo, which is the way?"
22377But would you rather it would be in the coupà ©, or in the banquette?"
22377Do n''t you think it will?"
22377Do you feel afraid?"
22377Do you think it will clear up before we go away?"
22377Do you think you can find it?"
22377Do you understand this?"
22377Is there a book for us to write our names in, with the place where they are to call for us?"
22377May I go out and walk over on that bridge after breakfast?"
22377Rollo turned round and saw a boy look up to him with a smile, saying again at the same time,--"How do you do?"
22377So he began to teach the guide to say"How do you do?"
22377The English"How do you do?"
22377To make it sure, he pointed to the left- hand road and said to Henry,--"To Grindelwald?"
22377To the Staubach?"
22377Want a guide?
22377Want a guide?"
22377Want a guide?"
22377What do they mean?"
22377What do you think it is?"
22377What have you got for us?"
22377Where shall I go?"
22377Where to go to get them stamped?"
22377Which way do you think we had better go?"
22377While Rollo was paying for his toys he felt a small hand taking hold of his own, and heard a voice say, in English,--"How do you do?"
22377Will you go with me?
7373'';_ for''what is the road to?''
7373''Anything else?''
7373''Can not you see for yourself that it is open?''
7373''Can you in an hour,''said I,''give me a meal to my order, then a bed, though it is early day?''
7373''How many Jews have you in your town?''
7373''Men?''
7373''The Earth?''
7373''The poor in our great towns, Sir Charles''( for the Learned Man had been made a Baronet),''the condition, I say, of the-- Don''t I feel a draught?''
7373''Tourist- e?''
7373''What do you mean?''
7373''What have you?''
7373''Why then?''
7373''Yes, of course,''I said,''but what is its name?''
7373''_ meaning''Dare you ask fivepence?''
7373--Where was I?
7373...?...
7373And I say to them, what about the distribution of the ownership of the concentrated means of production?
7373And did you see nothing of Piacenza?
7373And how far on was that?
7373And if you are so worn- out and bereft of all emotions, how can you tell a story?
7373And it rained all the time, and there was mud?
7373And so I was forced to consider and to be anxious, for how would this money hold out?
7373And was it not his loneliness that enabled him to see it?
7373And what art or songs have you?
7373And what do you think he did at that?
7373And what is there else but pleasure, and to what else does beauty move on?
7373And what of that?
7373And when you have arrested him, can you do more than let him go without proof, on his own word?
7373And where are you?''
7373And who is a penny the better for it?
7373And why do you suppose I got it?
7373And why( you will say) is all this put by itself in what Anglo- Saxons call a Foreword, but gentlemen a Preface?
7373And, by the way, would you like to know why universities suffer from this curse of nervous disease?
7373And, tell me-- what can it profit you to know these geographical details?
7373As_ La Croix_ said in a famous leading article:_''La Presse?
7373But Mr_( deleted by the Censor)_ does not think so?
7373But all that does not excuse an intolerable prolixity?
7373But all this is by the way; the point is, why was the eight francs and ten centimes of such importance just there and then?
7373But could it be done?
7373But do you intend to tell us nothing of Rome?
7373But perhaps you have been reading little brown books on Evolution, and you do n''t believe in Catastrophes, or Climaxes, or Definitions?
7373But what is it?
7373But what rule governs all this?
7373But why did_ this_ tenth milestone from_ this_ Roman town keep its name?
7373But, frankly, do you suppose I came all this way over so many hills to talk economics?
7373Can the sun be said truly to rise or set, and is there any exact meaning in the phrase,''Done to a turn''as applied to omelettes?
7373Che sono forestiere?
7373Che vole?
7373Che?
7373Come, let me do so... Where are you?
7373Could you give me a little red wine?''
7373Could you give me a little red wine?''
7373Did something in my accent suggest wealth?
7373Did you suppose that I thought it was called Decimo because the people had ten toes?
7373Did you think I missed you, hiding and lurking there?)
7373Do I make myself clear?
7373Do you follow?
7373Do you know those books and stories in which parts of the dialogues often have no words at all?
7373Do you want it made plainer than that?
7373Eh?
7373Eh?
7373Eh?
7373Eh?
7373For who, having noise around him, can strike the table with pleasure at reading the Misanthrope, or in mere thirst or in fatigue praise Chinon wine?
7373Had he opinions?
7373Have you a priest in Calestano, and does he know Latin?''
7373Have you not read in books how men when they see even divine visions are terrified?
7373Have you seen anything moving on the heights?''
7373He said,''What do you want?''
7373How came I at such an hour on foot?
7373How can a man draw pain in the foot and knee?
7373How does their opinion flourish?''
7373How many more interior brackets are we to have?
7373How much more interesting must Old Lodi be which is the mothertown of Lodi?''
7373How much more is it the duty of a Christian man to pity the rich who can not ever get into prison?
7373How then would you write such a book if you had the writing of it?
7373How''German''?
7373I approached a priest and said to him:_''Pater, quando vel a quella hora e la prossimma Missa?
7373I caught him up, and, doubting much whether he would understand a word, I said to him repeatedly--_''La granda via?
7373I know that; but what am I to do?
7373I put my head in at the door and said--''Am I in Switzerland?''
7373I said''_ Molinar_?''''
7373I said,''Have you any beans?''
7373I should very much like to know what those who have an answer to everything can say about the food requisite to breakfast?
7373I spoke to the woman, and pointing at the tin cans, said--''Is this what you call open wine?''
7373I thought you said you were not going to talk economics?
7373I wonder what the people are paid for it?
7373II san Gottardo?
7373If it did, I think there is a little question on''why should habit turn sacred?''
7373In the name of all decent, common, and homely things, why not begin and have done with it?
7373Indeed?
7373Is it not art?
7373Is it not much wiser to arrest such a man?
7373Is this algebra?
7373It is worth eight''scutcheons the hectolitre, that is, eight sols the litre; what do I say?
7373It is years ago now... Michael, what are those little things swarming up and down all over it?''
7373Just as I neared them, hobbling, I met a man driving two cows, and said to him the word,''Guest- house?''
7373La via a Piacenza?
7373May he not cut off it, as his due, twenty- five miserable little miles in the train?''
7373Non se vede che non parlar vestra lingua?
7373Now, why did he say this and grin happily like a gargoyle appeased?
7373Only dots and dashes and asterisks and interrogations?
7373Pray are we to have any more of that fine writing?
7373Pray, sir, will you not look at other maps for a moment?''
7373Shall I detail all that afternoon?
7373Shall a man march through Europe dragging an artist on a cord?
7373Shall an artist write a book?
7373She was moreover not exactly of- what shall I say?
7373So I, very narrowly watching him out of half- closed eyes, held up my five fingers interrogatively, and said,_''Cinquante?
7373So you think one can say a plain thing in a plain way?
7373Tell me at least one thing; did you see the Coliseum?
7373Tell me, Lector, had this man any adventures?
7373Tell me, do you believe in the peak of the Matterhorn, and have you doubts on the points of needles?
7373Tell me, why is not every place ten miles out of a Roman town called by such a name?
7373The woman as sulkily said to me, not looking me in the eyes--''How much will you pay?''
7373Then I added,''Can you make omelettes?''
7373Then I gave a lira to the molinar, and to his companion on stilts 50 c., who said,''What is this for?''
7373Then I said to the molinar,_''Quanta?
7373Then I said,_''Soixante Dix?
7373Then I thought,''Shall I take a favour from such a man?''
7373Then tell me, how would you treat of common things?
7373Then the soldiers began calling out to him singly,''Where are you off to, Father, with that battery?''
7373Then they say to me, what about the concentration of the means of production?
7373Then they talked a great deal together, while I shouted,_''Quid vis?
7373Then what emotions have you had, unimprisonable rich; or what do you know of active living and of adventure?
7373Then you will say, if I felt all this, why do I draw it, and put it in my book, seeing that my drawings are only for fun?
7373Then, to make conversation, I said,_''Diaconus es?
7373This comfort I ascribe to four causes( just above you will find it written that I could not tell why this should be so, but what of that?
7373Thus he told me the name for a knife was_ cultello;_ for a room,_ camera par domire;_ for''what is it called?''
7373Thus she would say:''Perhaps the joint would taste better if it were carved on the table; or do the gentlemen prefer it carved aside?''
7373To the man who had brought me I gave 50 c., and so innocent and good are these people that he said_''Pourquoi?
7373To what emotion shall I compare this astonishment?
7373Tu ris?
7373Vis ne me assassinare?
7373Visne mi dare traductionem in istam linguam Toscanam non nullorum verborum?
7373Was it in so small a space that all the legends of one''s childhood were acted?
7373Was the defence of the bridge against so neighbouring and petty an alliance?
7373Well, it was a short play and modern, was it not?
7373What I want to know is, why a duchess?
7373What about him?
7373What about that great work on The National Debt?
7373What about that little lyric on Winchelsea that you thought of writing six years ago?
7373What about the Brigand of Radicofani of whom you spoke in Lorraine, and of whom I am waiting to hear?
7373What could prevent me?
7373What did I at Lodi Vecchio?
7373What did the old sailor say to the young fool?
7373What do you think, then, was the consequence?
7373What do you turn out, you higglers and sticklers?
7373What else is Venice?
7373What is all this?
7373What is it, do you think, that causes the return?
7373What is ninety miles?
7373What is that in a Book?
7373What is that in the mind which, after( it may be) a slight disappointment or a petty accident, causes it to suffer on the scale of grave things?
7373What is the Grand Climacteric?
7373What is the meaning of that?''
7373What rhodomontade and pedantry is this talk about the shape of a window?
7373What road could it be?
7373What was it I saw?
7373What will you do for fame?
7373Where are they?
7373Where could such a road lead, and why did it follow right along the highest edge of the mountains?
7373Where had I come from?
7373Where( if I was honest) had I intended to sleep?
7373Who began it?
7373Who but Germans would so feel the mystery of the hills, and so fit their town to the mountains?
7373Who but Germans would so preserve-- would so rebuild the past?
7373Who can not live on four francs a day?
7373Who does not need for either of these perfect things Recollection, a variety of according conditions, and a certain easy Plenitude of the Mind?
7373Who else can give benedictions if people can not when they are on pilgrimage?
7373Who knows?
7373Who would change( says Aristippus of Pslinthon) the moon and all the stars for so much wine as can be held in the cup of a bottle upturned?
7373Why are the few lines still in your head and not on paper?
7373Why could it not be crossed?
7373Why do you use phrases like_''possible exception''?_ AUCTOR.
7373Why not?
7373Why on earth did you write this book?
7373Why should I?
7373Why should the less gracious part of a pilgrimage be specially remembered?
7373Why was I there?
7373Why was the guardian a duchess?
7373Why your benediction?
7373Why, what was the next point in the pilgrimage that was even tolerably noteworthy?
7373Why?
7373Why?
7373Why?
7373Why?
7373You follow?
7373You think that, do you?
7373You would simply say what you had to say?
7373_''come si chiama?
7373_''quella e la via a...?
7373_( For who but critics could complain Of''riding''in a railway train?)
7373and''Why carry cold water to Commercy?
7373eh?
7373my jolly Lector?
7373or was he naturally kindly?
7373said the Padre Eterno, a little puzzled...''The Earth?
7373sneered the Devil,''are you an anti- vaccinationist as well?
7373without a ghost of an idea what you are talking about, do you know what is meant by the god?