Vulgar words in Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 45: August/September 1666 (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 75 ~ ~ ~
And here we talked of the ill-humour of my wife, which I did excuse as much as I could, and they seemed to admit of it, but did both confess they wondered at it; but from thence to other discourse, and among others to that of my Lord Bruncker and Mrs. Williams, who it seems do speake mighty hardly of me for my not treating them, and not giving her something to her closett, and do speake worse of my wife, and dishonourably, but it is what she do of all the world, though she be a whore herself; so I value it not.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 326 ~ ~ ~
Sir W. Coventry took the opportunity of the business between the Duke of Yorke and the Duchesse, and said to my Lord Chancellor, that he had rather be drawn up Holborne to be hanged, than live to see his father pissed upon (in these very terms) and any decree of his reversed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 669 ~ ~ ~
Strange with what freedom and quantity I pissed this night, which I know not what to impute to but my oysters, unless the coldness of the night should cause it, for it was a sad rainy and tempestuous night.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 676 ~ ~ ~
Here I saw a bastard of the late King of Sweden's come to kiss his hands; a mighty modish French-like gentleman.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 678 ~ ~ ~
Another time, he and Pinchbacke and Dr. Goffe, now a religious man, Pinchbacke did begin a frolick to drink out of a glass with a toad in it that he had taken up going out to shit, he did it without harm.