Vulgar words in My Friend Smith - A Story of School and City Life (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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"Of course not," I cried, feeling very miserable; "of course I'm an ass, but I'd sooner be back at Stonebridge House than here."
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Another hustled me as I brushed past and sent me knocking up against Jack, who, if he hadn't stood steady, would have knocked up against some one else, and so pretty certainly have provoked an assault.
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"Why, that _was_ the joke, you blockhead!
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What's the use of making an ass of yourself?"
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I'll teach you to call me--" "A howling jackass," put in the Field-Marshal, whose chief vocation it seemed to be to goad on his irate guest.
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"Yes, I'll teach you to call me a howling jackass!" cried Whipcord, turning short round on me, and catching me by the throat.
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I never called you a howling jackass!" cried I, in astonishment and alarm.
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Conceited ass that I was!
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Ass that I had been!
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"Why you old ass, that's not Peace and Plenty, it's a Storm at Sea."
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"Don't be an ass, Doubleday!"
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But that's no reason why you should make a regular all-round ass of yourself in the way you're doing."
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"You look fagged," said he, as I took his arm.