Vulgar words in What Will He Do with It? — Complete (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 956 ~ ~ ~
Have I an ass's head?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,200 ~ ~ ~
On the return of the Stuart, Ralph ran off with the daughter of the Roundhead to whom his estates had been given, and, after getting them back, left his wife in the country, and made love to other men's wives in town.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,804 ~ ~ ~
Let me in; knock up somebody, break open the larder.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 13,497 ~ ~ ~
He would have fain carried off also both the horses; but the ostler, surly at being knocked up at so early an hour, might not have surrendered the one ridden by Jasper, without Jasper's own order to do so.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 13,849 ~ ~ ~
By this time his horse was knocked up, and his own chronic pains began to make themselves acutely felt; so that, when, a little farther on, he came to a wayside inn, he was glad to halt; and after a strong drain, which had the effect of an opiate, he betook himself to bed, and slept till the noon was far advanced.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 13,854 ~ ~ ~
Shabbily forlorn were that man's habiliments--turned and re-turned, patched, darned, weather-stained, grease-stained--but still retaining that kind of mouldy, grandiose, bastard gentility, which implies that the wearer has known better days; and, in the downward progress of fortunes when they once fall, may probably know still worse.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 15,579 ~ ~ ~
"George, you are right," cried Darrell; "and I was a blockhead and blunderer, as man always is when he mistakes a speck in his telescope for a blotch in the sun of a system."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 16,657 ~ ~ ~
They buy from him the child of parents whore they had evidently, by their letters, taxed themselves to the utmost, and in vain, to save from absolute want!