Vulgar words in The Shadow of a Crime - A Cumbrian Romance (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 387 ~ ~ ~
People were hurrying about from door to door and knocking up the few remaining sleepers.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,476 ~ ~ ~
"If this blockhead here," with a lurch of the head backwards to where the blacksmith rode behind, "hasn't blundered in his 'reckonings,' we'll bag the game yet."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,586 ~ ~ ~
Push on--follow the man--heed this blockhead no longer."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,716 ~ ~ ~
While that gentleman had been jogging along homewards he had been fostering uncomfortable sentiments of spite respecting the "laal hussy" who had betrayed him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,789 ~ ~ ~
"It were that, damn me, it were--the schoolmaster there, he knows it."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,753 ~ ~ ~
Then he got up, and shrieked out something--it was something against myself; he called me a bastard, that's the fact.