Page:Mallarmé - Œuvres complètes, 1951.djvu/1167

La bibliothèque libre.
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60. Verbes auxiliaires : interrogation. 1. Who has the best end of the string ? 2. Hast thou dived so deep in the water to bring up a potsherd ? 3. Are you there with your bears ? 4. Is the wind in the quarter ? 5. Can a mill go with the water that is past ? 6. Is there no mean but fast or feast ? 7. When is my pet always best ? When asleep. 8. Is it an emperor’s business to catch mice ? g. Had I some fish ?...... 10. Has the day eyes ? has the night ears. 61. — Verbes auxiliaires : négation. 1. A crowd is not company. 2. Garlands are not for evcry brow. 3. They are not ail saints that use holy water. 4. It is an ill dog that is not worth the whistling. 5. High ways and streets hâve not ail the thieves. 6. He that has nothing is not contented. 7. If thou hast not a capon, feed on an onion. 8. Stars are not seen by sunshine. g. Arthur was not but whilst he was. 10................................... 62. — Auxiliaires. Emploi de to be a la place d’Avoir français. 1. There are no fans in hell. 2. There was never a cake but had its make. 3. In every fault there is follv. 4. It is vain to cast your nest where there is no fish. 5. There ivould be 110 great, were there no little ones. 6. There are none so deaf as thosc that won’t hear. 7- ...........................:...... 8. Where there are reeds, there is water. g. If there were no knaves and fools, ail the world would be alike. 10. While there is life. there is hope. 62. — Auxiliaires. Emploi de to be a la place d’Avoir français (2e SÉRIE D’EXEMPLES). 1. She was so hungry she could not stay for the parson to say grâce. 2. To blush at a vice shows the world you are ashamed of it.