Vulgar words in Sir George Tressady — Volume II (Page 1)
This book at a glance
|
~ ~ ~ Sentence 325 ~ ~ ~
"But if we have any luck--damn it!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 576 ~ ~ ~
He described the scheme, but in such a way as rather to damn it than praise it; and as for the Bill itself, which he had undertaken to compare with former Factory Bills, when he sat down he left it, indeed, in a parlous case--a poor, limping, doubtful thing, quite as likely to ruin the East End as to do it a hand's turn of good.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 685 ~ ~ ~
"If they cotch Mr. Butterford, they'll make 'im pay up smart for lettin yer do such a thing as make knickers in 'is 'ouse.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 691 ~ ~ ~
"An, yer know, if I can't make the knickers at 'ome, I can't make 'em awy from 'ome.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,165 ~ ~ ~
A pause; then a thick voice said, in an emphatic undertone: "Damn the carriage!--go away!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,168 ~ ~ ~
"Damn Lady Tuam!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,290 ~ ~ ~
"No--you prefer making love to Lady Maxwell!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,970 ~ ~ ~
"Because she was fagged and unhappy in London, and her husband had gone to take his mother abroad, after first doing Maxwell a great kindness," said Marcella,--not, however, without embarrassment, as Betty saw,--"and I want you to be kind to her."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,034 ~ ~ ~
"How like her!" she thought to herself, "to forget the wife's existence to begin with, and then to make love to her by way of warding off the husband!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,267 ~ ~ ~
Some lamps in the porch of the shaft and along the main roadway were burning as usual, and the "journey" of trucks, from which the "hookers-on" and engine-men had escaped at the first sign of danger, was standing laden in the entrance of the mine.