Vulgar words in Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, July 4, 1917 (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 447 ~ ~ ~
Mr. DAWSON MILWARD has made a deserved reputation as the strong silly ass.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 482 ~ ~ ~
); wants an England rescued from the Puritans on the one hand and the mere musical comedians on the other; an England chaste because freer, less ignorant; good beer in easeful inns; the village or township as the unit of government and of fellowship; a return to music and the dance, not as a plasmon-fed high-brow proposition but as the natural expression of a joy of life returned; a clear fount of honour; a representative House of Commons; justice, respect, common sense and responsibility instead of charity; some place other than the streets for our young men and maidens to make love in; a recognition of crime as mainly a social, not an individual, disease; a law simplified and scales of justice not weighted against the poor; and a host of other good and wise and nearly possible things.