Vulgar words in The Gringos (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 343 ~ ~ ~
"Damn him, I tried to tell him!" groaned Bill, his face hidden behind his palms.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 349 ~ ~ ~
"No, damn 'em, they won't let me near him," said Bill, ashamed of his violence.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 400 ~ ~ ~
"If my company doesn't damn you beyond all hope, you may get out of the scrape.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 457 ~ ~ ~
The kid said: 'None of your damn business!'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 562 ~ ~ ~
He once more shifted the wad of tobacco, as a preliminary to expectorating gravely into the sand floor, and pronounced his sentence with a promptness that savored of relish: "The verdict of the jury is that we hang Jack Allen for killin' Texas and Rawhide, and for bein' a mean, ornery cuss, anyway."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 603 ~ ~ ~
"Oh, damn you and your Committee!" gritted Bill Wilson, out of the bitterness that filled him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 689 ~ ~ ~
"He'll go and get his light put out--and he won't help Jack a damn bit," he told himself miserably, and went in.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 762 ~ ~ ~
"Oh, damn the Committee!--as Bill remarked after the trial."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 770 ~ ~ ~
"I wouldn't give two pesos for this buckskin, but we're going to add horse-stealing to our other crimes; and while it's all right to damn the Committee, it's just as well to do it at a distance, just now, old man."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,077 ~ ~ ~
I know to an inch just where it will land--oh, damn the luck--It was some of those fellows camped by the orchard, and when I find out which--" "Keep your head on, anyway," advised Dade more equably.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,296 ~ ~ ~
"Damn!" he said viciously, as if his vocabulary was so inadequate to voice his emotions that the one expletive would do as well as any to cover his meaning; and sat down heavily in a cushioned chair.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,323 ~ ~ ~
Take any odds they offer, damn 'em.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,911 ~ ~ ~
Why don't you kick me for being such a selfish cuss?"