Vulgar words in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 329, March, 1843 (Page 1)
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He leaped from his horse, and nodding his head, exclaimed--"Noúker Mémet Rasoúl has knocked up the old cropped[21] stallion, in trying to leap him over a ditch seven paces wide."
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"But were you not at work just now, obstinate blockhead?
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"Go home," exclaimed that gentleman, "and pray to be shaved, you shtoopid ass."
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A certain rude power, a sort of unhealthy energy, has enabled the writer to throw an interest round pickpockets and murderers; and if this interest were legitimately produced, by the exhibition of human passions modified by the circumstances of the actor--if it arose from the development of one real, living, thinking, doing, and suffering man's heart, we could only wonder at the author's choice of such a subject, but we should be ready to acknowledge that he had widened our sphere of knowledge--and made us feel, as we all do, without taking the same credit for it to ourselves that the old blockhead in France does, that being human, we have sympathies with all, even the lowest and wickedest of our kind.
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Ass, dolt, miscalculator, quack, pretender, how many hast thou befooled, thou father of multifarious fools?
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Theology and physics are so profoundly incompatible, their conceptions have a character so radically opposed, that before renouncing the one to employ exclusively the other, the mind must make use of intermediate conceptions of a bastard character, fit, for that very reason, gradually to operate the transition.