Flory felt uncomfortable in his
presence
from the start.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orwell - Burmese Days |
|
Surely the
gestures
of murmuring priests must contain some deep meaning--
Impatient acolytes wait, anxiously hoping for light.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Goethe - Erotica Romana |
|
But everybody, perhaps, has not noticed the singular fashion in
which, once more, this yoking of almost domestic minutiae with
public affairs passes itself off, in
contrast
with the strident dis-
cord of Poetaster and The Mayor of Quinborough.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v05 |
|
Here he says
absolute knowing freely releases itself into the world of metaphysical thought, not because it has attained a unity between the two moments within the being of the subject, but because it has
overcome
all illusion that there is such a phenomenon.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Education in Hegel |
|
"*- The poetic
screenplays
of 1800and their ability to gather up space and time could not be more beautifully described.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
KittlerNietzche-Incipit-Tragoedia |
|
Armida in the
Christian
Camp
II.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Stories from the Italian Poets |
|
It is not by deposing Goethe or Byron
that we shall destroy either
sceptical
or anarchical indifference
amongst us.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Literary and Philosophical Essays- French, German and Italian by Immanuel Kant |
|
The ‘British shell' no longer suggests
artillery
or oysters;
the 'turtles' have no savour of the tureen; and nothing interferes
with our appreciation of the dewy eyes of Pity and the golden
hair of Peace, when the sense of incongruity is, as Coleridge says
of the sense of disbelief, 'suspended.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v10 |
|
Ah, how shall you know the dreary sorrow at the
North Gate,
With Rihoku's name forgotten,
And we
guardsmen
fed to the tigers.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Ezra-Pound-Lustra |
|
No worse condition is of mortal man
Than his who wanders; for the poor man, driv'n
By woe and by misfortune homeless forth,
A
thousand
mis'ries, day by day, endures.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Odyssey - Cowper |
|
"
The second shall be that noble
imitation
of Drayton [74] (if it was not
rather a coincidence) in the lines TO JOANNA.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Biographia Literaria copy |
|
drawing,
something
like a Degas pastel describing the woman and the world around the axis o f this drawn out hair, the hair drawn for us here in these lines.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Brett Bourbon - 1996 - Constructing a Replacement for the Soul |
|
And the
handkerchief
of French lace
Which you held to your face--
Had a small tear left a stain?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Wilde - Poems |
|
Generated for (University of
Chicago)
on 2014-08-20 04:05 GMT / http://hdl.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hamilton - 1834 - Life on Hamilton - v1 |
|
+ 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 |
|
”
answered
the Cossack, striking him with his sabre; and he cleft
him from the shoulder almost to the heart.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Lermontov - A Hero of Our Time |
|
You will see me any morning in the park
Reading the comics and the
sporting
page.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Eliot - Prufrock and Other Observations |
|
For what is more
unlikely
445 than that that should die whereby we have immortality?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Calvin Commentary - Acts - b |
|
The balance of
private good and general welfare is at the bottom of
civilized
morals;
but the morals of the Heroic Age are founded on individuality, and on
nothing else.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Lascelles Abercrombie - The Epic |
|
,(And it is for this reason, as well as from the sense of his
creative
powers, that the great man has so intense a self- consciousness.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Weininger - 1903 - Sex and Character |
|
We sat against the
wall fingering our caps (a tramp feels indecently exposed with his cap off), and turning
pink and trying to mumble
something
when the lady addressed us.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orwell - Down and Out in Paris and London |
|
Chloe
shared in all his toil, neglecting her own flock, that she might be of
greater assistance to him, which caused Daphnis to
attribute
the beauty
of his herd entirely to her.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Scriptori Erotici Graeci |
|
come down to us, were written for
delivery
by the
plaintiff or the defendant in person.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Demosthenese - 1869 - Brodribb |
|
This suggests that there were various alternative versions of the history and contemporary
situation
of Buddhism in Vietnam current at that time.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Thiyen Uyen Tap |
|
I would not have this wind lift my golden hair,
or bare my white bosom in this air, or let the light
disclose
my
sacred nakedness.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Khalil Gibran - Poems |
|
exert your mettle,
To get auld
Scotland
back her kettle;
Or faith!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Robert Burns - Poems and Songs |
|
We have more opportunities to
communicate
than ever before in the history of homo sapiens.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Gumbrecht - Infinite Availability - On Hyper-Communication and Old Age |
|
, Essays on the
Monetary
History of the United States.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Arthur Schlesinger - Colonial Merchants and the American Revolution |
|
Being obliged one day to go out on par ticular business, he desired Abraham to
superintend
for him.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Universal Anthology - v07 |
|
Thus should we ever have sung; yea and this, the grandest and divinest
hymn of all:--
Great is God, for that He hath given us a mind to
apprehend
these
things, and duly to use them!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Epictetus |
|
dreadful
price of being to resign
All that is dear _in_ being!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Coleridge - Lyrical Ballads |
|
"
--Yet when we came back, late, from the
Hyacinth
garden,
Your arms full, and your hair wet, I could not
Speak, and my eyes failed, I was neither
Living nor dead, and I knew nothing, 40
Looking into the heart of light, the silence.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
T.S. Eliot - The Waste Land |
|
Within a short time, no less than seven very holy monks died there, and were buried, while a cemetery was laid out,
enclosing
their sacred relics.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v5 |
|
The Danes have
wroughte
mee myckle woe ynne syghte,
Inne kepeynge mee from Birtha's armes so longe.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Thomas Chatterton - Rowley Poems |
|
Obviously they
have been caused by someone who has very
carelessly
scraped round
the edges of the sole in order to remove crusted mud from it.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Arthur Conan Doyle - Adventures of Sherlock Holmes |
|
I thank you and accept your
generous
offer.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Mary Shelley - Frankenstein |
|
This
bloody jealousy of city against city, of party against
party, this murderous greed of those little wars,
the tiger-like triumph over the corpse of the slain
enemy, in short, the incessant renewal of those
Trojan scenes of struggle and horror, in the spec-
tacle of which, as a genuine Hellene, Homer stands
before us absorbed with delight—whither does this
naive
barbarism
of the Greek State point?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - v02 - Early Greek Philosophy |
|
" Herein is indicated such type of 'non-seeing' (as
described
above) and not the non-seeing (blindness) or
ignorance of those who, with eyes shut like the born blind, see nothing owing to the bafflement=" of 'pratyayas ' and non-mentalisation of phenomena.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Bhavanakrama-Stages-of-Meditation-by-Kamalashila |
|
Weaver, his publisher, he writes
"I am really one of the greatest engineers, if not the greatest, in the world besides being a musicmaker,
philosophist
and heaps of other things.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Brett Bourbon - 1996 - Constructing a Replacement for the Soul |
|
The wood, of no great
height, there forms a grove; the strawberry tree
overshadows
the grass;
rosemary, and laurels, and swarthy myrtles give their perfume.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Ovid - Art of Love |
|
There only remained of his fortune the twenty
thousand pounds
deposited
at Barings, and this amount he owed to his
friends of the Reform Club.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne |
|
--He broke his glasses, said Father Arnall, and I
exempted
him from
work.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce |
|
Truly they seek the living among the dead,
and the
immortal
Molière among the sweepings of attorneys’ offices.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Letters to Dead Authors - Andrew Lang |
|
That she usurped the arms and royal style this realm and that she made
renunciation
that usurped pre tence?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Complete Collection of State Trials for Treason - v01 |
|
We encourage the use of public domain
materials
for these purposes and may be able to help.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Liddell Scott -1876 - An Intermediate Greek English Lexicon |
|
There the deepest
experience
of all Greeks, which
they conceal beneath great silence,--we do not .
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Nietzsche - Works - v15 - Will to Power - b |
|
I have other
questions
or need to report an error
Please email the diagnostic information to help2018 @ pglaf.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dostoesvky - The Devils |
|
If you
do not charge
anything
for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sara Teasdale - River to the Sea |
|
GD}
He could
controll
the times & seasons, & the days & years
She could controll the spaces, regions, desart, flood & forest
But had no power to weave a Veil of covering for her Sins
She drave the Females all away from Los
And Los drave all the Males from her away
They wanderd long, till they sat down upon the margind sea.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Blake - Zoas |
|
" is an old form of greeting
and well worn with use; so
therefore
I embrace you, because you have not
crept like tortoises, but have come rushing here in all haste.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aristophanes |
|
was it, as Hohenlohe
suggests
in his Diary
(January 14, 1895, ii.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Robertson - Bismarck |
|
How does the Federal
Government
proceed to collect its
revenues?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Beard - 1931 - Questions and Problems in American Government - Syllabus by Erbe |
|
"
We ask; is there
anything
more?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Children's Rhymes and Verses |
|
As
mediated
it is brought into relation with death, with that which is other to itself, and in this case it is where something is brought into relation with nothing.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Education in Hegel |
|
[267] Pisthetaerus and
Euelpides
now both return with wings.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Aristophanes |
|
Her mind was so much
weakened
that she
still fancied present exertion impossible, and therefore it only
dispirited her more.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Austen - Sense and Sensibility |
|
hlen mit
Schauern
die glu?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Trakl - Dichtungen |
|
Therefore
they replied to the envoys that when such great wars were breaking out, they could scarcely protect their own territory, let alone come to the assistance of others.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Memnon - History of Heracleia |
|
Quand viendra le matin livide,
Tu
trouveras
ma place vide,
Ou jusqu'au soir il fera froid.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Baudelaire - Fleurs Du Mal |
|
So it is that mind is
naturally
radiant.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dudjom Rinpoche - Fundamentals and History of the Nyingmapa |
|
Ce pays ne peut e^tre
mis au premier rang, ni pour la guerre, ni pour les arts, ni pour
la
liberte?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Madame de Stael - De l'Allegmagne |
|
The life of the flesh is failing minute by minute, and yet the desire of the flesh is growing;
property
gotten is snatched off by an instant end, yet the eagerness in getting is not ended the more; but when death withdraws the wicked, then indeed their desires are ended with their life.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
St Gregory - Moralia - Job |
|
So hath Trade
withered
up Love's sinewy prime,
Men love not women as in olden time.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Sidney Lanier |
|
This notion was
expressed
in the famous aphorism from the preface to the Philosophy of History to the effect that "everything that is rational is real, and everything that is real is rational.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Fukuyama - End of History |
|
With a
Frontispiece
by WILLY POGANY.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Tagore - Creative Unity |
|
Evangelical charity, meekness, piety, and all that class
of virtues distinguished particularly by the name of
Christian
virtues
do not seem necessarily to include abilities; yet a soul possessed of
these amiable qualities, a soul awakened and vivified by these
delightful sympathies, seems to hold a nearer commerce with the skies
than mere acuteness of intellect.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Malthus - An Essay on the Principle of Population |
|
36
Saturday
Evening Post, Oct.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Soviet Union - 1952 - Soviet Civilization |
|
For the Greek gods, in spite of the white and red of their fair fleet
limbs, were not really what they
appeared
to be.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Wilde - De Profundis |
|
'You stay with us, Trotwood, while you remain in
Canterbury?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Dickens - David Copperfield |
|
=--There is not enough of love and goodness in the
world to throw any of it away on
conceited
people.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Human, All Too Human- A Book for Free Spirits by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche |
|
Hence, it was found in the Dialectic of the Pure Speculative Reason that the two appar- ently
opposite
methods of obtaining for the conditioned the un- conditioned were not really contradictory, e.
| 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 |
|
9900 (#308) ###########################################
9900
CATULLE MENDÈS
(1843-)
He writings of Catulle Mendès are
representative
of the
cameo-art in literature.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Warner - World's Best Literature - v17 - Mai to Mom |
|
The high profits of British stock, however, may contribute towards
raising the price of British
manufacture
in many cases as much, and in
some perhaps more, than the high wages of British labour.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Ricardo - On The Principles of Political Economy, and Taxation |
|
The speech is continued with a
farewell
to the wild creatures, and to the wells and rivers of Syracuse.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Theocritus - Idylls |
|
Since Reinhart Koselleck,
scholars
in Germany have tended to associate important changes in the decades before and after 1800 with the metaphor of the 'saddle period.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Gumbrecht - Steady Admiration in an Expanding Present - Our New Relationship to Classics |
|
I was bound
Motionless
and faint of breath
By loveliness that is her own eunuch.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Pound-Ezra-Umbra-The-Early-Poems-of-Ezra-Pound |
|
inde pater diuum sancta cum coniuge natisque
aduenit caelo, te solum, Phoebe, relinquens,
unigenamque simul cultricem montibus Iri: 300
Pelea nam tecum pariter soror aspernata est,
nec
Thetidis
taedas uoluit celebrare iugalis.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Latin - Catullus |
|
Holiday Shopping
After the
holidays
we went down town,
And in the rain we walked around.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Childrens - Children's Rhymes and Verses |
|
tzlich, die
Erkenntnis
beno?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Weininger - 1923 - Tod |
|
Hunterian
Club
Publ.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v05 |
|
The tone of the jar- gon has something in it of the seriousness of the augurs, arbitrarily independent from their context or conceptual content, conspiring with
whatever
is sacred.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Adorno-Jargon-of-Authenticity |
|
his
strength had left him; and in a few moments the sound of
drumming
hoofs grew fainter and died away.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Orwell - Animal Farm |
|
It is a Great Bliss that is
experienced
although it cannot be identified (as this or that).
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Wang-ch-ug-Dor-je-Mahamudra-Eliminating-the-Darkness-of-Ignorance |
|
"
Then, gazing, I beheld the long-drawn street
Live out, from end to end, full in the sun,
With Austria's thousand; sword and bayonet,
Horse, foot, artillery,--cannons rolling on
Like blind slow storm-clouds gestant with the heat
Of undeveloped lightnings, each bestrode
By a single man, dust-white from head to heel,
Indifferent as the
dreadful
thing he rode,
Like a sculptured Fate serene and terrible.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Elizabeth Browning - 4 |
|
By not one of the circle was he listened to with such unbroken,
unalloyed enjoyment as by his wife, who was really
extremely
happy to
see him, and whose feelings were so warmed by his sudden arrival as to
place her nearer agitation than she had been for the last twenty years.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Austen - Mansfield Park |
|
Were it
not, thinkest thou, for thy little one's temporal and eternal welfare
that she be taken out of thy charge, and clad soberly, and disciplined
strictly, and
instructed
in the truths of heaven and earth?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Hawthorne - Scarlett Letter |
|
IX
"A father broods: 'Would I had set him
To some humble trade,
And so slacked his high fire,
And his
passionate
martial desire;
Had told him no stories to woo him and whet him
To this due crusade!
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Thomas Hardy - Poems of the Past and Present |
|
It reminds one
somewhat
of the Homeric rhapsodists, or the medieval jongleurs.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
Peter Vay - Korea of Bygone Days |
|
Death of thy Soule, those Linnen cheekes of thine
Are
Counsailers
to feare.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
|
| Answer: |
|
| Source: |
shakespeare-macbeth |
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Hark to that mingled scream
Rising from
workshop
and mill--
Hailing some marvelous sight;
Mighty breath of the hours,
Poured through the trumpets of steam;
Awful tornado of time,
Blowing us whither it will!
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
George Lathrop - Dreams and Days |
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To them, to you, the
loveliness
of your land is, and was, a thing to live
for.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Letters to Dead Authors - Andrew Lang |
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" Take care
that what you say is not only true, but that it
cannot mean
anything
but the truth.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Childrens - Psalm-Book |
|
Itwassimultane-
ouslynationaland
internationalr,eactionaryand revolutionary, bourgeoisand populist,modernand antimodern.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Nolte - 1979 - [What Fascism Is Not- Thoughts on the Deflation of a Concept]- Comment |
|
_The author's name first
appeared
on the title-page of the Seventh
Edition_.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Oscar Wilde - Poetry |
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"There," said Candide, "is the
preceptor
of the royal family.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Candide by Voltaire |
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Only a hand was stretched out to the people
from the straw, a hand, livid, wide-open, dead,
>- that
quiyerecj
35 if in farewell,"
1
I
?
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Poland - 1915 - Poland, a Study in National Idealism - Monica Gardner |
|
Since the overthrow of
communism
in Hungary, thefts and other felonies have nearly tripled and there has been a 50 percent increase in homi- cides (NPR, 2/24/92).
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Blackshirts-and-Reds-by-Michael-Parenti |
|
I like to leave that
same world in quiet
possession
of that idea; but
there enters very little of the reality of such a
motive into that trouble I give myself; the truth
is, that I am obliged to it, and this is the reason.
| Guess: |
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| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Treitschke - 1915 - Confessions of Frederick the Great |
|
Here is a formal male group :
The young men look upon their seniors, They
consider
the elderly mind
And observe its inexplicable correlations.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Ezra-Pound-Lustra |
|
Miss
Pepperdine
sighed as
the door closed upon them.
| Guess: |
|
| Question: |
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| Answer: |
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| Source: |
Fletcher - Lucian the Dreamer |
|