Et si cette force s'étendait jusqu'à
certains noms, devenus par elle si différents des autres, comment en
restant plus près de moi, en me bornant à Albertine elle-même,
pouvais-je m'étonner, qu'émanant d'une fille probablement pareille à
toute autre, cette force
irrésistible
sur moi, et pour la production de
laquelle n'importe quelle autre femme eût pu servir, eût été le
résultat d'un enchevêtrement et de la mise en contact de rêves, de
désirs, d'habitudes, de tendresses, avec l'interférence requise de
souffrances et de plaisirs alternés?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Proust - A La Recherche du Temps Perdu - Albertine Disparue - b |
|
The ball had entered my shoulder,
and I knew not whether it had
remained
there or passed through; at any
rate I had no means of extracting it.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Mary Shelley - Frankenstein |
|
_Far and few, far and few,
Are the lands where the
Jumblies
live.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Lear - Nonsense |
|
Honoured
father, long
Have I desired to ask thee of the death
Of young Dimitry, the tsarevich; thou,
'Tis said, wast then at Uglich.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Pushkin - Boris Gudonov |
|
We Have Created the Night
We have created the night I hold your hand I watch
I sustain you with all my powers
I engrave in rock the star of your powers
Deep furrows where your body's goodness fruits
I recall your hidden voice your public voice
I smile still at the proud woman
You treat like a beggar
The madness you respect the simplicity you bathe in
And in my head which gently blends with yours with the night
I wonder at the stranger you become
A stranger
resembling
you resembling everything I love
One that is always new.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Paul Eluard - Poems |
|
Quam ieiuna pium desideret ara cruorem,
Doctast amisso Laudamia viro, 80
Coniugis ante coacta novi dimittere collum,
Quam veniens una atque altera rursus hiemps
Noctibus in longis avidum saturasset amorem,
Posset ut abrupto vivere coniugio,
Quod scirant Parcae non longo tempore adesse, 85
Si miles muros isset ad Iliacos:
Nam tum Helenae raptu primores Argivorum
Coeperat ad sese Troia ciere viros,
Troia (nefas) commune
sepulcrum
Asiae Europaeque,
Troia virum et virtutum omnium acerba cinis, 90
Quaene etiam nostro letum miserabile fratri
Attulit.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Catullus - Carmina |
|
In this sense, the Egyptians remain eternal prisoners of
externality
to Hegel, like the Chinese, whose language and writing form one giant system of barriers and dis turbances that render impossible the fulfilled moment in which the spirit, distancelessly atten dant on itself, hears itself speak.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sloterdijk - Derrida, an Egyptian |
|
Better it is of him by fame to hear,
Than to behold him by
approaching
near.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Ariosoto - Orlando Furioso |
|
Après la mort de Swann, Odette qui étonna tout le
monde par une douleur profonde,
prolongée
et sincère, se trouvait
être une veuve très riche.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Proust - A La Recherche du Temps Perdu - Albertine Disparue - a |
|
This apologetic extends to the Suharto
invasion
and occupation of East Timor.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Manufacturing Consent - Chomsky |
|
Straight
on; follow your nose.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aristophanes |
|
Hippia, though wife to a senator, accompanied a gladiator to Pharos
and the Nile, and the
infamous
walls of Lagos.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Satires |
|
Once more
impetuous
dost thou bend thy way,
To give to Greece the long divided day?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Iliad - Pope |
|
The nightingale paints a couple of dainty word-
pictures when she
describes
her coming and going.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v01 |
|
fact that
suitable
music played to any scene,
action, event, or surrounding seems to disclose
to us its most secret meaning, and appears as
the most accurate and distinct commentary upon
it; as also the fact that whoever gives himself
up entirely to the impression of a symphony
seems to see all the possible events of life and
the world take place in himself: nevertheless
upon reflection he can find no likeness between
the music and the things that passed before his
mind.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - v01 - Birth of Tragedy |
|
They come with a gladdening shout,
They come with a tear of joy -
Father and daughter, youth and maid,
Mother and
blooming
boy.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v28 - Songs, Hymns, Lyrics |
|
Look how we can, or sad or merrily,
Interpretation
will misquote our looks,
And we shall feed like oxen at a stall,
The better cherish'd, still the nearer death.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Shakespeare |
|
He sensed that there was nothing more suspect than a fear of the truth that passed itself off as a critical consciousness, and nothing more perverse than an inability to
recognize
that which confused itself with ?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Peter-Sloterdijk-Thinker-on-Stage |
|
They know not
grief who in their souls have not a great
capacity
for love
-- (pause).
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Catullus - Lamb - A Comedy in Verse |
|
' 525
And ther-with-al, his meyne for to blende,
A cause he fond in toune for to go,
And to
Criseydes
hous they gonnen wende.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Chaucer - Troilius and Criseyde |
|
Some of his simpler poems are
included
here, however.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Amy Lowell - Chinese Poets |
|
all ages, and particularly the
Christian age, much labour has been spent trying reduce men this one-sided activity:
Whence comes the
morbidness
and unnaturalness which repudiates these compounds
ideological
?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - Works - v14 - Will to Power - a |
|
With the exception of Irish
questions, and those which
concerned
the working classes, a single
speech on Mr.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Autobiography by John Stuart Mill |
|
But the tillers of rth have only need to break,
Year after year, the clods with the rounded share,
And life is the fruit their
diligent
labors bear
For the land at large, and the babes at home, and the
beeves
In the stall, and the generous bullocks.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v26 - Tur to Wat |
|
Comments
positions-such as the "bipolar viewpoint"-one wonders,furthermore, whetherhe
shootswithliveammunitionorjust
withblanks.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nolte - 1979 - [What Fascism Is Not- Thoughts on the Deflation of a Concept]- Comment |
|
The equivalence consists in this : in-
stead of an
advantage
directly compensatory of his
injury (that is, instead of an equalisation in money,
## p.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - v13 - Genealogy of Morals |
|
It was not enough to have compelled
Antiochus
to abandon Greece.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Napoleon - History of Julius Caesar - a |
|
» Il se rappela les becs de gaz qu’on éteignait
boulevard des Italiens quand il l’avait rencontrée contre tout espoir
parmi les ombres errantes dans cette nuit qui lui avait semblé presque
surnaturelle et qui en effet--nuit d’un temps où il n’avait même pas à
se demander s’il ne la
contrarierait
pas en la cherchant, en la
retrouvant, tant il était sûr qu’elle n’avait pas de plus grande joie
que de le voir et de rentrer avec lui,--appartenait bien à un monde
mystérieux où on ne peut jamais revenir quand les portes s’en sont
refermées.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Proust - A La Recherche du Temps Perdu - Du Côté de Chez Swann - v1 |
|
Wherefore love,
With loss of other object, forc'd me bend
Mine eyes on
Beatrice
once again.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dante - The Divine Comedy |
|
This enabled me to see straight
down, but I had been unable to fix a similar window above me and so I
could expect to see no objects
directly
overhead.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
The Literary World - Seventh Reader |
|
Augustin, who had formerly seen Emeritus at
Carthage,
recognized
him, hurried over to him, saluted him, and at once
suggested a friendly talk.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Bertrand - Saint Augustin |
|
The
narrative
continues:
QUEEN ESTHER answered: If I have found favor in thy sight,
O king, and if it please the king, let my life be granted me
at my petition, and my people at my request; for we are sold, I
and my people, to be destroyed, to be slain, to perish.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v16 to v20 - Phi to Qui |
|
Now the Critique of Pure Speculative Reason proves that this is incapable of solving satisfactorily the most weighty problems that are proposed to it, although it does not ignore the natural and important hints
received
from the same reason, nor the great steps that it can make to approach to this great goal that is set before it, which, however, it can never reach of itself, even with the help of the greatest knowledge of nature.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
The-Critique-of-Practical-Reason-The-Metaphysical-Elements-of-Ethics-and-Fundamental-Principles-of-the-Metaphysic-of-Morals-by-Immanuel-Kant |
|
All those relentless Mars
untimely
slew,
And left me these, a soft and servile crew,
Whose days the feast and wanton dance employ,
Gluttons and flatterers, the contempt of Troy!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Iliad - Pope |
|
I brought her into
Plymouth; and here another
instance
of luck.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Austen - Persuasion |
|
"Yes, they said a good many things of the kind,
according
to their
age and their reason.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Fairy Tales of Hans Christian Andersen |
|
For this you should recognise the nature of the
appearances
and of the grasping at them to be truly existent things.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Wang-ch-ug-Dor-je-Mahamudra-Eliminating-the-Darkness-of-Ignorance |
|
A few steps only beyond the firs that stretch
their branches, angular and wild and white like forks of light-
ning, into the air of the ravine, and we are in an arable country
of the most perfect richness: the swathes of its corn glowing and
burning from field to field; its pretty hamlets all vivid with fruit-
ful orchards and flowery gardens, and goodly with steep-roofed
storehouse and barn; its well-kept, hard, park-like roads rising
and falling from hillside to hillside, or disappearing among brown
banks of moss and thickets of the wild raspberry and rose, or
gleaming through lines of tall trees, half glade, half avenue,
where the gate opens—or the gateless path turns trustedly aside,
unhindered, into the garden of some statelier house, surrounded
in rural pride with its golden hives, and carved granaries, and
irregular domain of latticed and
espaliered
cottages, gladdening
to look upon in their delicate homeliness-delicate, yet in some
sort rude: not like our English homes- trim, laborious, formal,
irreproachable in comfort; but with a peculiar carelessness and
## p.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v21 - Rab to Rus |
|
I am here, whom thou hast call'd
By
challenge
forth; make good thy vaunt, or yield.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Narrative and Lyric Poems (first series) for use in the Lower School by Stevenson |
|
(Er
ergreift
das Schloss.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Goethe - Faust- Der Tragödie erster Teil |
|
The tyrant
accordingly
came out to meet him.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Polyaenus - Strategems |
|
Florence Kelley
once said: "No man since Lincoln has understood
the common people as Louis
Brandeis
does.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Louis Brandeis - 1914 - Other People's Money, and How Bankers Use It |
|
By turns I shiver and flush with heat, and Thedora
is greatly
disturbed
about me.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dostoevsky - Poor Folk |
|
, intercourse
with an unmarried woman or widow, who was neither in the relation of
concubine nor a person of
disreputable
life.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge Medieval History - v2 - Rise of the Saracens and Foundation of the Western Empire |
|
It is
an honour to poets and great men, that you think of them as parts of
nature; and anything of trick and fashion wounds you in them, as much as
when you see
venerable
yews clipped into miserable peacocks.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Biographia Literaria |
|
Without meaning to offer a systematic deduction and
justification
of a closed typology, we can distinguish purely induc- tively: news and documentary reports (chapter 5), advertising (chap- ter 7), and entertainment (chapter 8).
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Luhmann-Niklas-the-Reality-of-the-Mass-Media |
|
org/access_use#pd-us
We have
determined
this work to be in the public domain in the United States of America.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Child Verse |
|
Whether or not current folk-
lorists are any more faithful to the "folk" than were the
Brothers
Grimm,
the identification lives on (Ellis 1983; Tatar 1992).
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childens - Folklore |
|
His jocose humour, his courage and strength, his power from the rank be has amongst others, may inspire me with
sentiments
of this kind, but still inner respect for him is wanting.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
The-Critique-of-Practical-Reason-The-Metaphysical-Elements-of-Ethics-and-Fundamental-Principles-of-the-Metaphysic-of-Morals-by-Immanuel-Kant |
|
Of this I became convinced some years ago by computing at
that time the number of those in one small class of English society (the
class of men distinguished for talents, or of eminent station) who were
known to me, directly or indirectly, as opium-eaters; such, for instance,
as the eloquent and
benevolent
---, the late Dean of ---, Lord ---, Mr.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
De Quincey - Confessions of an Opium Eater |
|
9, Exodus; but how their
possession
was burned with fire, is20' not read at all.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Augustine - Exposition on the Psalms - v4 |
|
30
It has already been stated that the footless bird, which some term
the cypselus,
resembles
the swallow; indeed, it is not easy to
distinguish between the two birds, excepting in the fact that the
cypselus has feathers on the shank.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aristotle |
|
Wagner almost
discovered
the magic which can
be wrought even now by means of music which is
both incoherent and elementary.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - v08 - The Case of Wagner |
|
You are
Andromeda
Hi!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orwell - A Clergyman's Daughter |
|
How they sighed, our fathers, when they saw
on the wall
brightly
furbished, dried-up swords!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - v11 - Thus Spake Zarathustra |
|
gotra) that goes from one coarse flesh and blood em- bodiment to another, meeting the
physical
genes of fathers and mothers in human or other animal forms born in mammalian womb, reptilian or avian egg, insect moisture, or magical environment.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Thurman-Robert-a-F-Tr-Tsong-Khapa-Losang-Drakpa-Brilliant-Illumination-of-the-Lamp-of-the-Five-Stages |
|
The Greek love romances lie according to the time of their action
in the geography of the
colonies
of great Greece or within the
boundaries of the hellenistic-oriental world from Byzantium to Egypt,
from Sicily to Babylon.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Elizabeth Haight - Essays on Greek Romances |
|
I have a right to share in sorrow, and he who can look at the loveliness
of the world and share its sorrow, and realise something of the wonder of
both, is in
immediate
contact with divine things, and has got as near to
God's secret as any one can get.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Wilde - De Profundis |
|
Kant, in his Third Critique, no longer thinks of this
correlation
as an imitation of products but in
79
terms of a parallel action, an analogy.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Niklas Luhmann - Art of the Social System |
|
+ Refrain from
automated
querying Do not send automated queries of any sort to Google's system: If you are conducting research on machine translation, optical character recognition or other areas where access to a large amount of text is helpful, please contact us.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Liddell Scott -1876 - An Intermediate Greek English Lexicon |
|
Columkille
; tracts on St.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v1 |
|
All
this was favourable to the cause of
rational
liberty; since, in the contest of argument, there was little fear
but truth would ultimately gain an advantage over
error.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hunt - Fourth Estate - History of Newspapers and Liberty of Press - v1 |
|
Like Rustin, Meyer sustained that the
totalizing
psy- che requests that its procedures and its version of the world should be institutionalized and made natu- ral.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
The Totalitarian Mind - Fischbein |
|
Since it is a given that one defilement
attached
itself to a path, this defilement cannot be expelled by this same path; and since it is a given also that a path is opposed to a defilement, it is certain that this defilement does not attach itself to this path.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Abhidharmakosabhasyam-Vol-3-Vasubandhu-Poussin-Pruden-1991-PDF-Search-Engine |
|
As a general rule, the painter must stick to his
easel, the
sculptor
must carve, the musician must score or play or
sing, the actor must act, - each with no more than the merest coquet-
tings with sister arts.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v03 - Bag to Ber |
|
During his
confinement
here, some persons promised to get him a genteel place as a
reward for his information against Captain St.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Caulfield - Portraits, Memoirs, of Characters and Memorable Persons - v3 |
|
I don't
know why it is that other people's children are so nice to me, and that
my own have so little
consideration
for me.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Man and Superman- A Comedy and a Philosophy by Bernard Shaw |
|
you must be a very wicked woman, and
deserve that
punijhment
which the law
will inflicl.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Tales of the Hermitage |
|
This content
downloaded
from 128.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nolte - 1974 - The Relationship between "Bourgeois" and "Marxist" Historiography |
|
Vetch felt his strength
deserting
him, and his brain overpow-
ered by fatigue.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v07 - Cic to Cuv |
|
Than e're was loved a
heartless
jade.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Catullus - Stewart - Selections |
|
On the other hand, I have been re-perusing with the best
energies
of my
mind the TIMAEUS of Plato.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Biographia Literaria copy |
|
Yes, there are faults, Fuscinus, that disgrace
The noblest
qualities
of birth and place;
Which, like infectious blood, transmitted, run,
In one eternal stream, from sire to son.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Satires |
|
But I find this law of
one to one
peremptory
for conversation, which is the practice and
consummation of friendship.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v06 to v10 - Cal to Fro |
|
It would not be unlike
Donne to give a word a
startlingly
condensed force.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Donne - 2 |
|
With a shout I called
attention
to the fact, and it became immediately
obvious to all.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Poe - 5 |
|
When I finished my drawing, night was
beginning
to fall.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
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| Source: |
Gustavo Adolfo Becuqer |
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He hath raised up,
then, a
testimony
in Jacob, and hath set a law in Israel.
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| Question: |
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| Source: |
Augustine - Exposition on the Psalms - v4 |
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I thought, ere now,
To have been lord of Siegendorf, and parted
In haste, though even the
elements
appear 500
To fight against me, and this sudden flood
May keep me prisoner here till----
[_He pauses and looks at_ WERNER: _then resumes_.
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| Question: |
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| Source: |
Byron |
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How often do I close my eyes
And know my spirit is fled afar;
Never such sadness that my heart
Is far from where my lover lies;
Yet when the clouds of morning part,
How swiftly all my
pleasure
flies.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Troubador Verse |
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And it's
comfortable
to hold!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Jose Zorrilla |
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Alow, aloft, no lull--all life,
But far aside its whirls are keeping,
As
wishfully
to let its strife
Spare still the mother vainly weeping
O'er baby, lost not long, a-sleeping.
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Victor Hugo - Poems |
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Descartes, for a long period, was at the
head of French philosophers; and if his
physics had not been
confessedly
erroneous,
perhaps his metaphysics would have pre-
served a more lasting ascendant.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Madame de Stael - Germany |
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Monika Zobel
The True Fate of the Bremen Town
Musicians
as Told by Georg Trakl
They haul the donkey, the largest, to the mill first.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Trakl - The True Fate of the Bremen Town Musicians as Told by Georg Trakl |
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One way to solve the release timing problem when throwing a stone or a spear would be to compute the necessary
contractions
of individual muscles on the fly, while the arm was in motion.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Richard-Dawkins-Unweaving-the-Rainbow |
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The Curve Of Your Eyes
The curve of your eyes embraces my heart
A ring of sweetness and dance
halo of time, sure
nocturnal
cradle,
And if I no longer know all I have lived through
It's that your eyes have not always been mine.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Paul Eluard - Poems |
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And when she was
quite a little thing, and used to say her
prayers going up to bed, the Angels would
come to her and just 'whip' her right up
the stairs in an
instant!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Childrens - Children's Sayings |
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You shall have very useful and
cheering
discourse
at several times with two several men, but let
all three of you come together and you shall not have one new
and hearty word.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v09 - Dra to Eme |
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" The virile deeds of women
recorded
in the epics, especially those of Boiardo and Ariosto, show the ideal of the time.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Weininger - 1903 - Sex and Character |
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' We are a long way
from Vergil here; as we are when the poet
complains
that
Caxton's translation does not do justice to what is hidden under
the cluddes of dirk poetry.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v02 |
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15:34 And they put him in ward, because it was not
declared
what
should be done to him.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
bible-kjv |
|
70
When thou art there,
consider
what this chace
Mispent by thy beginning at the face.
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Donne - 1 |
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]
The Perjur'd Free Mason Detected; And yet The Honour and
Antiquity
of
the Society of Free Masons Preserv'd and Defended.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v09 |
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I have written this, which you will deliver to the Governor, that everything may be settled; and when he has understood it,
whatever
is his inclination, he will favor me with it.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Edmund Burke |
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a
year, but her mother, being an Irishwoman,
prevailed
on her husband to visit Dublin, where he settled, and purchased a public place in that city, with the remnant of money he had saved from the sale of his estate ; Sarah, being an only child, received a good educa tion in reading, writing, and such other learning
proper for a female above the lower order.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Caulfield - Portraits, Memoirs, of Characters and Memorable Persons - v4 |
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The kine are couched upon the dewy grass;
The horse alone, seen dimly as I pass,
Is
cropping
audibly [1] his later meal: [C]
Dark is the ground; a slumber seems to steal 5
O'er vale, and mountain, and the starless sky.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Wordsworth - 1 |
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And these controlling hands, so far as policy formulation and execution are concerned, are found at the peak of the pyramid and are manipulated without
significant
check from its base.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Brady - Business as a System of Power |
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hoping thereby that learning and religion might
flourish
more
in her own Sex than heretofore, having such opportunities to serve the Lord
without distractions.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v07 |
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WIth no hawks left there on theIr perches, And no clothes there m the presses,
And left hIs trunk wIth Raquel and Vidas, That bIg box of sand, wIth the pawn-brokers, To get pay for hIs menIe,
Breakmg hIs way to ValencIa
Ignez da Castro murdered, and a wall
Here strIpped, here made to stand
Drear waste, the pIgment flakes from the stone, Or plaster flakes,
Mantegna
pamted the wall Sxlk tatters, "Nee Spe Nee Metu 'J
I2
?
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound |
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geous ceremony, he claimed for himself the sur- Sulla had completed his reforms by the begin-
name of Felix, as he
attributed
his success in life ning of B.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
William Smith - 1844 - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities - c |
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