)
[242] “The military port alone
contained
two hundred and twenty
vessels.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Napoleon - History of Julius Caesar - a |
|
But there
Heracles
had been left behind with the younger heroes and he quickly bent his back-springing bow against the monsters and brought them to earth one after another; and they in their turn raised huge ragged rocks and hurled them.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Appolonius Rhodius - Argonautica |
|
")
"As the Bellman would tell you," he added with pride,
"I have uttered that
sentiment
once.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Lewis Carroll |
|
1
_First Edition, November_ 1905
_Reprinted, November_ 1906
" _February_ 1908
" _March_ 1910
" _December_ 1910
" _February_ 1913
" _April_ 1914
" _June_ 1916
" _November_ 1919
" _April_ 1921
"
_January_
1923
" _May_ 1925
" _August_ 1927
" _January_ 1929
_(All rights reserved)_
PERFORMED AT
THE COURT THEATRE, LONDON
IN 1907
_Printed in Great Britain by
Unwin Brothers Ltd.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Euripides - Electra |
|
But between
1405, when Timur died, and 1500 (by which time Timur's central
Asian kingdoms had been divided between the Uzbegs and the
Safavids) among all the Timurid princes—who are known to Muslim
historians as the
Mirzas—there
was none capable of consolidating
their common heritage.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of India - v4 - Mugul Period |
|
The following are the genuine works
There are several editions of his
separate
works.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
William Smith - 1844 - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities - b |
|
Looking at the German book market, we see an emphasis on ambitious translations of classic texts from other
national
literatures with extensive commentaries--only recently, new editions of Miguel de Cervantes' (1605-1615) Don
210 Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht
Quixote and Stendhal's (1830) Le rouge et le noir appeared.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Gumbrecht - Steady Admiration in an Expanding Present - Our New Relationship to Classics |
|
In a society of rapidly rising--and
sometimes
unrealistic--expec-
?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Blackshirts-and-Reds-by-Michael-Parenti |
|
How
feeble and worn out must all this now seem, how
imperfect and clumsy, how
arbitrarily
fanatical,
and, above all, how uncertain: now that its horrible
contrast has been taken away—the ever-present
fear of the Christian for his eternal salvation!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - v09 - The Dawn of Day |
|
Disillusionment with the Enlightenment is not merely a sign that
epigones
may and must be more critical than the founders.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sloterdijk-Cynicism-the-Twilight-of-False-Consciousness |
|
Though the rights of a father of even seven
children
be given you, Zoilus, no one can give you a mother, or a father.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Martial - Book XI - Epigrams |
|
Am I a sea or a whale, that thou hast
compassed
me about with a prison?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
St Gregory - Moralia - Job |
|
[Herbert Eulenberg (1876-1949),author of Schattenbilder (Silhouettes), a collec- tion of biograptlical miniatures of notables
published
in 1910.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Adorno-The Essay As Form |
|
Any attempt at self-overcoming or coming over to another side only inscribes him more
stubbornly
in the structure of what was to be overcome.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Trakl - Falling to the Stars- Georg Trakl’s “In Venedig” in Light of Venice Poems by Nietzsche and Rilke |
|
As a whole the world is more
primitive
today than it
was fifty years ago.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orwell - 1984 |
|
Wherever religious reforms took place (I have in mind above all the monastical movements of the Middle Ages and the religious upheavals of the 16th Century), they understood
themselves
as 'conservative revolutions' which obeyed a call to return to the origins.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sloterdijk-Cynicism-the-Twilight-of-False-Consciousness |
|
I bless God that nothing in
all this time has troubled my notions of
happiness
in death.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v06 to v10 - Cal to Fro |
|
This addition would not change the structure of the self-
reflection
at which Harpham aims--although it is not (at least not only) for reasons of political correctness that I propose such a modification.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht - Reactions to Geoffrey Galt Harpham's Diagnosis of the Humanities Today |
|
These
travellers
were mounted on four dromedaries, and having passed through Spain, they went to Norway and from there to Babylon and the Holy Land.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Appoloinaire |
|
The good suffer, because they are
chastened
as sons: the wicked exult, because they are condemned as strangers.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Augustine - Exposition on the Psalms - v4 |
|
8 Indisputably, the arcades embodied a suggestive spatial concept in the age of incipient consumerism-they
fulfilled
the fusion, so stimulating for Benjamin, ofsalon and universe in a public interior; they were in the eyes of the researcher the "temples of commodity capital," "street[s] of lascivious commerce,"9 a projection of the bazaar from the Orient into the bourgeois world and a symbol of the metamorphosis of all things in the light of purchasability-the stage of a feerie10 that magically transforms the customer for the length of his stay into a virtual master of the world.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sloterdijk-A-Crystal-Palace |
|
Out of the window
perilously
spread
Her drying combinations touched by the sun's last rays,
On the divan are piled (at night her bed)
Stockings, slippers, camisoles, and stays.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
T.S. Eliot - The Waste Land |
|
these words are writ
By a living, loving one,
Adown whose cheeks, the proofs of life
The warm quick tears do run:
Ah, let the
unloving
corpse control
Thy scorn back from the loving soul
Whose place of rest is won.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Elizabeth Browning - 1 |
|
Generated for (University of
Chicago)
on 2014-12-24 14:32 GMT / http://hdl.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Frank |
|
Clean my rooms, as temples be,
To entertain that deity;
Give me words
wherewith
to woo,
Suppling and successful too;
Winning postures; and withal,
Manners each way musical;
Sweetness to allay my sour
And unsmooth behaviour:
For I know you have the skill
Vines to prune, though not to kill;
And of any wood ye see,
You can make a Mercury.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Robert Herrick - Lyric Poems |
|
The year of a release date is no longer part
of the
directory
path.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dickinson - Three - Complete |
|
CHAPTER 5
STALIN'S FINGERS
In 1989-1991,
remarkable
transformations swept across Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Blackshirts-and-Reds-by-Michael-Parenti |
|
)
So the Prince was tended with care:
One wrung foul ooze from his
clustered
hair;
Two chafed his hands, and did not spare;
But one propped his head that drooped awry
Till his eyes oped, and at unaware
They met eye to eye.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Christina Rossetti |
|
Augustine's faith from the
same error aggravated by the far darker
accompaniment
of the Manichaean
heresy.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Biographia Literaria copy |
|
Yet de-
spite the belief that he and his friends may have held about his
symptoms of epilepsy, we must
conclude
that he did not ac-
tually suffer from epilepsy.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Weininger - 1946 - Mind and Death of a Genius |
|
KURBJUWEIT/GORRIS: What do you
remember
of those events in 1954?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sloterdijk - Selected Exaggerations |
|
But if involuntarily we also
include Heinrich von Treitschke, the reason for it lies
not in the age attained by him but in his
unfading
fresh-
ness.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Treitschke - 1914 - Life and Works |
|
The ghastly bed-and -breakfast houses where the sheets always
smell faintly of slops and the fried egg at
breakfast
has a yolk paler than a lemon.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orwell - Coming Up for Air |
|
She beheld the minister advancing
along the path,
entirely
alone, and leaning on a staff which he had
cut by the wayside.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hawthorne - Scarlett Letter |
|
On the second, your coarse
thoughts
set (like the sun).
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Wang-ch-ug-Dor-je-Mahamudra-Eliminating-the-Darkness-of-Ignorance |
|
-
FROM 'QUISISANA ›
[Uncle Bertram, in the grief of his
hopeless
and unconfessed love, has
sought relief in the excitement of political life; and a brilliant career is open-
ing before him, when his health, undermined by his secret sorrow and fever-
ish activity, gives way.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v23 - Sha to Sta |
|
Under such prosaic conditions, science becomes the courage to
tolerate "the strangest, most ludicrous sight" of mathematical-synthe- sized movement long enough until empirical, that is, prosaic media
techniques
like film rush to the rescue.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Kittler-Drunken |
|
They shall establish Nomentum and Gabii and Fidena
city, they the
Collatine
hill-fortress, Pometii and the Fort of Inuus,
Bola and Cora: these shall be names that are now nameless lands.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Virgil - Aeneid |
|
On the 27th of March a
complaint
of breach of privilege, founded on this
publication, was made in the House by Mr.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Table Talk |
|
Cyrus replied by presenting him with six months' pay for four thou sand mercenaries, only stipulating that Aristippus should not come to terms with his antagonists without final
consultation
with himself.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Universal Anthology - v04 |
|
The
awakening
requires time, as the dream takes place during that
period.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dream Psychology by Sigmund Freud |
|
And
throughly
to the very ground it was so crispe and cleare,
That every little stone therein did plaine aloft appeare.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Ovid - Book 5 |
|
Unless you have removed all
references
to Project Gutenberg:
1.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Stephen Crane |
|
Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in
paragraph
1.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Li Bai - Chinese |
|
He said : People can be made to sprout (produce, act, follow), they cannot be
commissioned
to know.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Ezra Pound - Confucian Analects |
|
, to the west of Aleppo) and
defeated
and killed him after a violent battle.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Arab-Historians-of-the-Crusades |
|
By OIling a
vocabulary
and "yle packed with well.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hart-Clive-1962-Structure-and-Motif-in-Finnegans-Wake |
|
Senseandnonsensecanfigureasanontological limit because we enact this limit as the form o f our activities; that is we constitute this limit in our language games and their failure through the way in which our
activities
(physical, linguistic, interpersonal and so on) mean to and for us.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Brett Bourbon - 1996 - Constructing a Replacement for the Soul |
|
cient
conditions
for maintaining peace without one-sided concessions or wealth transfers.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Schwarz - Committments |
|
This effect can be accomplished by any optical, acoustic, or
narrative means that ensures
everythingcan
be painted or narrated, so long as space and time provide the necessary stability.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Niklas Luhmann - Art of the Social System |
|
33
Although
they achieved only mixed results, they contributed to the growth of antirevolutionary sentiments in several European capitals.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Revolution and War_nodrm |
|
Homeward bound with the tidings of all that terrible winter,
Letters written by Alden, and full of the name of Priscilla,[18] 85
Full of the name and the fame of the Puritan maiden
Priscilla!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Narrative and Lyric Poems (first series) for use in the Lower School by Stevenson |
|
VI
God
fashioned
the ship of the world carefully
With the infinite skill of an All-Master
Made He the hull and the sails,
Held He the rudder
Ready for adjustment.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Stephen Crane - Black Riders |
|
The system of anonymous reviewing in
periodicals
under the
guidance and control of responsible editors, themselves men of
strong individuality, soon led to the review acquiring a distinct
personality of its own.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v12 |
|
The pain from its sting is more severe than that caused by the others, for the instrument that causes the pain is larger, in
proportion
to its own larger size.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aristotle copy |
|
He ended his
entreaty
to her with a plea that she ask Zeus to aid the Trojans (against the Greeks!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Voices of Ancient Greece and Rome_nodrm |
|
On the Central Plain they are
fighting
now, 40 what means will we have to meet again?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Du Fu - 5 |
|
A LITTLE BOY LOST
'Nought loves another as itself,
Nor
venerates
another so,
Nor is it possible to thought
A greater than itself to know.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Blake - Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience |
|
If I lay here dead
XXIV Let the world's sharpness like a clasping knife
XXV A heavy heart, Beloved, have I borne
XXVI I lived with visions for my company
XXVII My own Beloved, who hast lifted me
XXVIII My
letters!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sonnets from the Portugese |
|
That
Augustine
exposed himself to his contem- poraries and posterity so radically through his work, not least by virtue of his epochal Confessiones, which made him the patriarch of a literature of self-revelation, is the result of a theological process that the bishop of Hippo waged—victoriously—against himself.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sloterdijk - Art of Philosophy |
|
And yet I curse the sun for his red gladness,
I that have known strath, garth, brake, dale,
And every run-away of the wood through that great
madness,
Behold me
shrivelled
as an old oak's trunk
And made men's mock'ry in my rotten sadness !
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Pound-Ezra-Umbra-The-Early-Poems-of-Ezra-Pound |
|
\
IS-
If you have understood in all their depths — and
I demand that you should grasp them
profoundly
and understand them profoundly — the reasons for
the impossibility of its being the business of the
healthy to nurse the sick, to make the sick healthy,
it follows that you have grasped this further
necessity — the necessity of doctors and nurses
L
## p.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - v13 - Genealogy of Morals |
|
Niên hiệu Đại Bảo thứ 3 (1442), bắt đầu mở rộng Nho khoa, anh tài
được
chọn tuyển vinh thăng, kỷ cương được chấn chỉnh, làm rạng rỡ đời trước, để lại khuôn mẫu cho đời sau, chính từ đó mà cơ đồ được khôi phục mở mang.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
stella-02 |
|
hark, it sighs
And
trembles
on the string.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Poems |
|
Cá làm, đành vảy
Irưởc
đỉ,
Cạo cbo sạch sẽ, vỉ kỶ chột sau.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Phong-hoá-tân-biên-phụ-Huấn-nữ-ca.ocr |
|
Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation
Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine
readable
form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sara Teasdale |
|
Unauthenticated
Download Date | 10/1/17 7:36 AM 334 ?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Du Fu - 5 |
|
Are we
degenerate?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Poland - 1881 - Poets and Poetry of Poland |
|
56 They even suppose somewhat of sanctity and prescience to be
inherent
in the female sex; and therefore neither despise their counsels, 57 nor disregard their responses.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Tacitus |
|
But the
principal
English editors of Shake-
speare, beginning with Rowe, will be discussed in a later chapter (xi), while
the chapter succeeding it (XII) will be devoted to the consideration of Shake-
speare's reputation and influence abroad, and especially in France and
Germany, from the seventeenth century onwards.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v05 |
|
No gentle
beauty
hereabouts
to enchant us to delay.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v27 - Wat to Zor |
|
"They are up stairs with my sister: they will be down in a few
moments, I dare say," had been Anne's reply, in all the
confusion
that
was natural; and if the child had not called her to come and do
something for him, she would have been out of the room the next moment,
and released Captain Wentworth as well as herself.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Austen - Persuasion |
|
When
Churchill
said the British would fight on the beaches, he spoke for the British and not for a mercenary army.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Schelling - The Diplomacy of Violence |
|
" Gray said the journal was "a
dialogue
between a
green goose and a hero.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v04 - Bes to Bro |
|
28o Germany's
Protestant
Freedom
pire.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Treitschke - 1915 - Germany, France, Russia, and Islam |
|
[Malone and Ramsden go out very
amicably
through the
little gate.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Man and Superman- A Comedy and a Philosophy by Bernard Shaw |
|
And so the slaves crammed them into the baskets of good omen, until the usual signal of the
termination
of the feast sounded.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Athenaeus - Deipnosophists |
|
The birds awake to soar
While many sleep and snore,
And now I am up again
That
something
1 may do with my pen.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Children's Rhymes and Verses |
|
I
challenge
any one here to race with me.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aesop's Fables by Aesop |
|
Trebeck and Lady
Charlotte
Duncan ?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v23 - Sha to Sta |
|
The Lawes Of Nature Oblige In
Conscience
Alwayes,
But In Effect Then Onely When There Is Security The Lawes of Nature
oblige In Foro Interno; that is to say, they bind to a desire they
should take place: but In Foro Externo; that is, to the putting them
in act, not alwayes.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hobbes - Leviathan |
|
A History of England from the
Earliest
Times to
the Revolution in 1688.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Napoleon - History of Julius Caesar - b |
|
And so, until
delirious
borne
I con that thing, -- "forgiven," --
Till with long fright and longer trust
I drop my heart, unshriven!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Dickinson - Two - Complete |
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“You are always
jesting!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Lermontov - A Hero of Our Time |
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In the light of the curious day it looks
pitifully
dark.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Tagore - Creative Unity |
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also
_mahasu_
break, hammer and construct.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Epic of Gilgamesh |
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The explanation I offer to this
apparent
anomaly seems per-
fectly satisfactory from a scientific point of view.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v11 - Fro to Gre |
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Therefore
those who are under another's power can give alms.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Summa Theologica |
|
Vachel Lindsay's "I
Know All This When Gipsy Fiddles Cry" is a revised version of the poem
of that name which was printed in _The
Enchanted
Years_.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
American Poetry - 1922 |
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He has to protect them, protect his
hsxAs—
against
whom ?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Nietzsche - v13 - Genealogy of Morals |
|
Whether the true solution belongs to the sphere of
psychology or of physiology is a
question
that remains unanswered.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Orr - Famous Affinities of History, Romacen of Devotion |
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All
charming
people, I fancy, are spoiled.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Oscar Wilde |
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I will
renounce
this magic and repent.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
World's Greatest Books - Volume 17 - Poetry and Drama |
|
They are not
homicides
then.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Cicero- Letters to and from Cassius |
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[To enthusiastic fits of
admiration
for the young and the beautiful,
such as Burns has expressed in this letter, he loved to give way:--we
owe some of his best songs to these sallies.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Robert Burns |
|
Sed veritati interea invigilandum est,
modusque
servandus, ut
certa ab incertis, diem a nocte, distinguamus.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
|
Generated for Christian Pecaut (University of
Chicago)
on 2014-12-24 15:01 GMT / http://hdl.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Children's Rhymes and Verses |
|
The reception of Trakl's work in their poetry shows continuity in aesthetic discourse across political and geographical divisions in the era of National Socialism, as well as
important
historical links to the poetry of the Modernist period.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Trakl - ‘. . Und Gassen enden schwarz und sonderbar’- Poetic Dialogues with Georg Trakl in the 1930s and 40s |
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After the disappointments of the day, welcome once more, Charles,
to the
comforts
of a clean room and a good fire.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Oliver Goldsmith |
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And once I marked his flight go round and round,
As where some flower lay
withering
on the ground.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Robert Burns- |
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