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- The Riddle Manual
- =================
-
- WARNING! Answers are posted at the bottom of this list!
- Don't look unless you _really_ want to. (Last update 8/91)
-
- What has roots as nobody sees,
- Is taller than trees,
- Up, up it goes,
- And yet never grows?
-
- Thirty white horses on a red hill,
- First they champ,
- Then they stamp,
- Then they stand still.
-
- Voiceless it cries,
- Wingless it flutters,
- Toothless bites,
- Mouthless mutters.
-
- An eye in a blue face
- Saw an eye in a green face.
- "That eye is like to this eye"
- Said the first eye,
- "But in low place,
- Not in high place."
-
- It cannot be seen, cannot be felt,
- Cannot be heard, cannot be smelt.
- It lies behind stars and under hills,
- And empty holes it fills.
- It comes first and follows after,
- Ends life, kills laughter.
-
- A box without hinges, key, or lid,
- Yet golden treasure inside is hid.
-
- Alive without breath,
- As cold as death;
- Never thirsty, ever drinking,
- All in mail never clinking.
-
- This thing all things devours:
- Birds, beast,trees, flowers;
- Gnaws iron, bites steel;
- Grinds hard stones to meal;
- Slays king, ruins town,
- And beats high mountain down.
-
- You feel it, but never see it and never will.
-
- You must keep it after giving it.
-
- As light as a feather, but you can't hold it for ten minutes.
-
- Has a mouth but does not speak, has a bed but never sleeps.
-
- Runs smoother than any rhyme, loves to fall but cannot climb!
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- You break it even if you name it!
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- It passes before the sun and makes no shadow.
-
- You feed it, it lives, you give it something to drink, it dies.
-
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- A red drum which sounds
- Without being touched,
- And grows silent,
- When it is touched.
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- Two horses, swiftest travelling,
- Harnessed in a pair, and
- Grazing ever in places
- Distant from them.
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- A harvest sown and reaped on the same day
- In an unplowed field,
- Which increases without growing,
- Remains whole though it is eaten
- Within and without,
- Is useless and yet
- The staple of nations.
-
- If you break me
- I do not stop working,
- If you touch me
- I may be snared,
- If you lose me
- Nothing will matter.
-
- All about, but cannot be seen,
- Can be captured, cannot be held
- No throat, but can be heard.
-
- I go around in circles,
- But always straight ahead
- Never complain,
- No matter where I am led.
-
- Lighter than what
- I am made of,
- More of me is hidden
- Than is seen.
-
- If a man carried my burden,
- He would break his back.
- I am not rich,
- But leave silver in my track.
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- My life can be measured in hours,
- I serve by being devoured.
- Thin, I am quick
- Fat, I am slow
- Wind is my foe.
-
- Weight in my belly,
- Trees on my back,
- Nails in my ribs,
- Feet I do lack.
-
- You can see nothing else
- When you look in my face
- I will look you in the eye
- And I will never lie.
-
- I am always hungry,
- I must always be fed,
- The finger I lick
- Will soon turn red.
-
- Three lives have I.
- Gentle enough to soothe the skin,
- Light enough to caress the sky
- Hard enough to crack rocks.
-
- Glittering points
- That downward thrust,
- Sparkling spears
- That never rust.
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- Each morning I appear
- To lie at your feet,
- All day I follow
- No matter how fast you run,
- Yet I nearly perish
- In the midday sun.
-
- Keys without locks
- Yet I unlock the soul.
-
- Something wholly unreal, yet seems real to I
- Think my friend, tell me where does it lie?
-
- I am so simple,
- That I can only point
- Yet I guide men
- All over the world.
-
- The first ones are from the Hobbit. "Red Drum", "Two horses", and "A
- harvest" are from a trilogy called Bard, the last three I made up,
- and the rest are from SSI's excellant D&D computer games and Sierra's
- Conquest of Camelot.
- Guitian Master of Winter
- BILLERMA@XAVIER
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- A beggar's brother went out to sea and drowned.
- But the man who drowned had no brother.
- What was the relationship between the man who drowned and the beggar?
-
- First will be last
- Last will be first
- and all in between will also be cursed
- open the door, and the thing will be there
- so be carefull and beware !
-
- speak, friend, and enter !
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Man of old, it is told
- Would search until he tired,
- Not for gold, ne'er be sold,
- But what sought he was fire.
-
- Man today, thou mayst say,
- Has quite another aim,
- In places deep, he did seek,
- To find me for his gain!
-
- What am I?
- -------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: Wee Willie <s892804@MINYOS.XX.RMIT.OZ.AU>
- Subject: A dozen more riddles.
- To: John Billerman <BILLERMA@XAVIER.BITNET>
- compiled by Dan Judd.
-
-
- 1. For our ambrosia we were blessed,
- by Jupiter, with a sting of death.
- Though our might, to some is jest,
- we have quelled the dragon's breath.
- Who are we?
-
- 2. Colored as a maiden tweaked,
- time was naught when I began;
- through the garden I was sneaked,
- I alone am the fall of man.
- What am I?
-
- 3. Early ages the iron boot tread,
- with Europe at her command.
- Through time power slipped and fled,
- 'til the creation of new holy land.
- Who am I?
-
- 4. One thin, one bold,
- one sick, one cold.
- The earth we span,
- to prey upon man.
- Who are we?
-
- 5. One where none should be,
- or maybe where two should be,
- seeking out purity,
- in the kings trees.
- What am I?
-
- 6. He who makes it does not keep it.
- He who takes it does not know it.
- He who knows it does not want it.
- He who gathers it must destroy it.
- What is it?
-
- 7. One tooth to bite,
- he's the forests foe.
- One tooth to fight,
- as all Norse know.
- What is it?
-
-
-
-
- 8. This creature, part man and part tree,
- hates the termite as much as the flea.
- His tracks do not match,
- and his limbs may detach,
- but he's not a strange creature to see.
- What is it?
-
- 9. The part of the bird
- that is not in the sky,
- which can swim in the ocean
- and always stay dry.
- What is it?
-
- 10. Dead and bound,
- what once was free.
- What made no sound,
- now sings with glee.
- What is it?
-
- 11. The root tops the trunk
- on this backward thing,
- that grows in the winter
- and dies in the spring.
- What is it?
-
- 12. Touching one, yet holding two,
- it is a one link chain
- binding those who keep words true,
- 'til death rent it in twain.
- What is it?
-
- ========================================================
- Answers? Well OK, if you _really_ want them. In order:
- mountain
- teeth
- wind
- daisy in field of grass, big eye is sun (stupid one.)
- darkness
- eggssesss
- fish
- time
- heart
- your word
- your breath
- river
- water
- silence
- air?
- fire
- heart
- eyes
- war
- hope
- air? wind?
- wheel
- ice
- snail
- candle
- boat, but I accepted cave as an answer
- mirror
- fire
- water
- iceicles, teeth or stalactites?
- shadow
- piano, harpsichord
- in the mind
- compass.
- the beggars was his sister
- (Beats me)
- oil? diamonds?
- 1. Bees
- 2. An Apple
- 3. Italy (Rome)
- 4. The Four Horsemen of Apocolypse
- 5. A Unicorn
- 6. Counterfiet Money
- 7. An Axe
- 8. A Man With A Wooden Leg
- 9. A Shadow
- 10. A Wooden, Stringed Instrument
- 11. An Icicle
- 12. A Wedding Ring
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