O Livro Vermelho de Jung para o Nosso Tempo em Busca Da Alma Sob Condições Pós Modernas 1st Edition Murray Stein Thomas Arzt

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O Livro Vermelho de Jung para o nosso

tempo Em busca da alma sob


condições pós modernas 1st Edition
Murray Stein Thomas Arzt
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Answer

20.
What word is that, of two syllables, to which if you prefix one
letter, two letters, or two other letters, you form, in each instance, a
word of one syllable?
Answer

21.
What was the favorite salad at the South, in the spring of 1861?
Answer

22.

There was a thing, ’twas two days old


Ere Adam was, of yore;
Before that thing was five weeks old,
Adam was years four-score.

Answer

23.

What’s that which on four limbs doth move


When first it sees the light,
But walks erect on two at noon,
And creeps on three at night?
Answer

24.

A sailor launched a ship of force,


A cargo put therein, of course;
No goods had he he wished to sell;
Each wind did serve his turn as well;
To neither port nor harbor bound,
His greatest wish to run aground.

Answer

25.

A merry maid, whose pleasant name


Was my sweet FIRST. Under a tree
She sat, and sang my THIRD, as free
As the wild crows, that without dread,
My SECOND called above her head.
Anon she turned, (with a last look
Above, below,) unto her book—
My WHOLE the author. Guess the same.

Answer

26.
The three most forcible letters in our alphabet?
Answer
27.
The two which contain nothing?
Answer

28.
The four which express great corpulence?
Answer

29.
The four which indicate exalted station?
Answer

30.
The three which excite our tears?
Answer

31.
What foreign letter is an English title?
Answer
32.
What foreign letter is a yard and a half long?
Answer

33.
What letter will unfasten an Irish lock?
Answer

34.
When was B the first letter of the alphabet, while E and O were
the only vowels?
Answer

35.
What letter is always more or less heavily taxed?
Answer

36.
What letter is entirely out of fashion?
Answer
37.
Why is praising people like a certain powerful opiate?
Answer

38.
Prove that a man has five feet.
Answer

39.

WHAT AM I?
I was once the harbinger of good to prisoners.
I add to the magnitude of a mighty river.
I am a small portion of a large ecclesiastical body.
I represent a certain form of vegetable growth.
A term used by our Lord in speaking to His disciples.
A subordinate part of a famous eulogy.
I am made useful in connection with the Great Western Railway.
Answer

40.

5005E1000E,

5005E1000E.
The name of a modern novel.
Answer

41.

Two words in French are often spoken;


Of home and love the fondest token:
But, strange to say it, one of these
Is English, from beyond the seas;
And though the thing seems quite absurd,
It means the same as t’other word.

Answer

42.

You fain would win fair Julia’s heart—


“Have I the power?” you’d ask her,
But, from your lips the words won’t part—
“’Tis not an easy task, Sir!”
“I know ’tis not, for one so shy.”
“Well, how shall I begin, Sir?”
“Be what you ask her,” I reply,
“And, ten to one, you’ll win, Sir!”

Answer

43.
My FIRST is company; my SECOND shuns company; my THIRD calls
together a company; and my WHOLE entertains company.
Answer
44.

My FIRST is a sound, of tranquillity telling,—


A cozy and complaisant sound for your dwelling.
A place which for criminals fittest is reckoned,
Yet where saints find ineffable peace, is my SECOND.
Or, where niggardly natures, who hunger and thirst
For the wealth of this world, keep their hearts, is my FIRST;
While my SECOND’S a measure you’ll know at a glance,
For ’tis shortest in Flanders, and longest in France.

Oh! my WHOLE is a name widely known, well beloved,


A name blessed on earth, and in Heaven approved;
Crowned by Faith and Good Works with so holy a light
That angels, themselves, thrill with joy at the sight.

Answer

45.
Dr. Whewell being asked by a young lady for his name “in cipher,”
handed her the following lines:

You 0 a 0, but I 0 thee,—


Oh, 0 no 0, but oh, 0 me;
And O, let my 0 no 0 go,
But give 0 0 I 0 you so!

Answer

46.
Why was the execution of Charles the First voluntary on his part?
Answer

47.
How is Poe’s “Raven” shown to have been a very dissipated
bird?
Answer

48.
Set down four 9’s so as to make one hundred.
Answer

49.
The cc 4 put 00000000.
si
Answer

50.
John Doe to Richard Roe, Dr.
To 2 bronze boxes $3 00
1 wooden do 1 50
1 wood do 1 50
——

This bill was canceled by the payment of $1.50. How?


Answer
51.
When was Cowper in debt?
Answer

52.
What animal comes from the clouds?
Answer

53.

My FIRST is one of mystic three,


Who go where goes true Liberty;
Sets with the sun, with him to rise,
Lives in the flame and with it dies;
Fades with the leaf that earthward flies.

My SECOND cleaves the morning air,


Floats through the evening still and fair;
Now soars beyond the mountain crest,
Now flutters downward to its rest,
Now broods upon some hidden nest.

My WHOLE long since the prairie trod,


Now rests beneath the prairie-sod;
Yet still upon the river stands,
And calls the stranger to the lands
Which Reminichia’s[1] cliff commands.

Answer
54.

I saw a peacock with a fiery tail


I saw a blazing comet pour down hail
I saw a cloud all wrapt with ivy ’round
I saw a lofty oak creep on the ground
I saw a beetle swallow up a whale
I saw the foaming sea brimful of ale
I saw a pewter cup sixteen feet deep
I saw a well full of men’s tears that weep
I saw wet eyes in flames of living fire
I saw a house as high as the moon and higher
I saw the glorious sun at deep midnight
I saw the man who saw this wondrous sight!

An incredulous friend actually ventured to doubt the above plain


statement of facts, but was soon convinced of its literal truth.
Answer

55.
Charles the First walked and talked half an hour after his head
was cut off.
Answer

56.
At the time of a frightful accident, what is better than presence of
mind?
Answer
57.
Why was the year preceding 1871 the same as the year following
it?
Answer

58.
Why do “birds in their little nests agree?”
Answer

59.
What did Io die of?
Answer

60.
Why did a certain farmer out West name his favorite rooster
ROBINSON?
Answer

61.
How do sailors know there’s a man in the moon?
Answer
62.
How do sailors know Long Island?
Answer

63.
What does a dog wear in warm weather, besides his collar?
Answer

64.

If you transpose what ladies wear,


’Twill plainly show what bad men are:
Again, if you transpose the same,
You’ll see an ancient Hebrew’s name:
Change it again and it will show,
What all on earth desire to do.

Answer

65.

Two brothers, wisely kept apart,


Together ne’er employed;
Though to one purpose we are bent,
Each takes a different side.

To us no head nor mouth belongs,


Yet plain our tongues appear;
With them we never speak a word,
Without them, useless are.

In blood and wounds we deal, yet good


In temper we are proved;
From passion we are always free,
Though oft with anger moved.

We travel much, yet prisoners are,


And close confined, to boot;
Can with the swiftest horse keep pace,
Yet always go on foot.

Answer

66.
Translate:
Je suis capitaine de vingt-cinq soldats; et, sans moi, Paris serait
pris.
Answer

67.
Je suis ce que je suis, et je ne suis pas ce que je suis. Si j’étais
ce que je suis, je ne serais pas ce que je suis.
Answer

68.

Mus cucurrit plenum sed


Contra meum magnum ad!
Answer

69.
Mens tuum ego!
Answer

70.
The title of a book: Castra tintinnabula Poëmata.
Answer

71.
Motto on a Chinese box: Tu doces!
Answer

72.

Answer
73.
Translate:
Quis crudus enim lectus, albus, et spiravit!
Answer

74.
Ecrivez: “J’ai grand appétit,” en deux lettres.
Answer

75.

Monosyllabic I, and a reptile, I trow;


But, cut me in twain, I form syllables two.
I’m English, I’m Latin, the one and the other;
And what’s Latin for one half, is English for t’other.

Answer

76.

Ever running on my race,


Never staying in one place,
Through the world I make my tour
Everywhere at the same hour.
If you please to spell my name,
Backward, forward, ’tis the same.

Answer
77.
In my FIRST my SECOND sat; my THIRD and FOURTH I ate; and yet I
was my WHOLE.
Answer

78.

TONIS A DRESTO MARE.


O Mare! Eva si formæ,
Formæ ure tonitru;
Iambicum as amandum,
Olet Hymen promptu!
Mihi his vetas annæ se,
As humano erebi;
Olet mecum, mare, to te,
Or Eta Beta Pi.

Alas, plano more meretrix;


Mi ardor vel uno,
Inferiam ure artis base
Tolerat me urebo.
Ah me! ve ara scilicet
To laudu vimin thus.
Hiatu as arandum sex—
Illuc Ionicus!

Heu! sed heu! vixin, imago,


Mi missis mare sta!
O cantu redit in mihi
Hibernus arida?

Everi dafur heri si;


Mihi resolves indu;
Totius, olet Hymen cum
Accepta tonitru!

Answer

79.

From these five squares take three of the


fifteen sides, and leave three squares.
Answer

80.

Divide this figure into four equal and


uniform parts.
Answer

81.

Four things there are all of a height,


One of them crooked, the rest upright.
Take three away, and you will find
Exactly ten remains behind:
But, if you cut the four in twain,
You’ll find one-half doth eight retain.

Answer

82.
To divide eight gallons of vinegar equally between two persons;
using only an eight-gallon, a five-gallon, and a three-gallon
measure?
Answer

83.
A certain miller takes “for toll” one tenth of the meal or flour he
grinds. What quantity must he grind in order that a customer may
have just a bushel of meal after the toll has been taken?
Answer

84.
To prove that two are equal to one:
Let x = a: Then, x2 = ax,
x2 − a2 = ax − a2,
(x + a)(x − a) = a(x − a),
x + a = a,
2a = a,
2 = 1. Q. E. D.
Where is the fallacy?
Answer

85.
As two Arabs, who had for sole provision, the one five, and the
other three loaves of bread, were about to take their noonday meal
in company, they were joined by a stranger who proposed to
purchase a third part of their food. In payment he gave them, when
their repast was finished, eight pieces of silver, and they, unable to
agree as to the division of the sum referred the matter to the nearest
Cadi, who gave seven pieces to the owner of the five loaves, and but
one piece to the owner of the three loaves. And the Cadi was right.
Answer

86.
A man went to a store and bought a pair of boots for six dollars.
He put down a ten dollar bill, and the merchant having no change,
sent for it to a neighboring bank, and gave it to him. Later in the day
one of the bank clerks came in to say that the ten dollar bill was a
bad one, and insisted that the merchant should make it right, which
he did. Now, how much did he lose by the whole transaction?
Answer

87.
A man bought twelve herrings for a shilling; some were two
pence apiece, some a halfpenny, and some a farthing. How many
did he buy of each kind?
Answer

88.

My FIRST is the last of me;


My SECOND is not so much;
And my WHOLE is entirely destitute of my FIRST.

Answer

89.

There is a word of plural number,


A foe to peace and tranquil slumber;
Now, any word you chance to take,
Adding an s will plural make;
But if you add an s to this,
How strange the metamorphosis!
Plural is plural then no more,
And sweet what bitter was before.

Answer

90.

“Charge, Chester, charge! On, Stanley, on!”


Were the last words of Marmion.
Had I been in Stanley’s place,
When Marmion urged him to the chase,
You then would very soon descry,
What brings a tear to every eye.

Answer

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