Vulgar words in Love Eternal (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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"Damn you, what do you mean, you little minx?" he asked.
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Then the door opened and a big, burly man, with a red face and a jovial, rolling eye, appeared with startling suddenness and ejaculated: "Damn Ranson, damn Richards, or damn them both, with the Son thrown in!
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I repeat, damn Ranson, Richards and Son; damn the parson, damn Helen--no, I won't say that, for she is dead--and especially damn the whippersnapper.
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"I don't mind about Ranson, Richards and Son, or anybody else, but I don't quite see why you should damn me, who, I am sure, never wished to give you any trouble."
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"Damn it!
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If I weren't afraid of making you cocky, I'd tell you what they say about you down at that Sandhurst shop, where I have an old pal or two."
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"Damn her lack of Christian feeling, and damn yours and your impudence too, you half-drowned church rat!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,901 ~ ~ ~
"Well, my pretty pair of cooing turtle-doves," went on Sir John in a sort of shout, addressing himself to them, "be so good as to stop that, or I think I shall wring both your necks, damn you."
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Sir John was the first to take the lists, saying: "Perhaps you will explain, Isobel, why I found you, as I thought, kissing this young fellow--like any village slut beneath a hedge."
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Like your village slut, I kissed this man because he is my lover whom I mean to marry.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,054 ~ ~ ~
Justice may say fie and the sky may be rude, and anything else may happen, but we've dished our lives and theirs, my friend, and--damn you!
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"Too long a journey," he said, "it would knock him up.