Vulgar words in Finn The Wolfhound (Page 1)

This book at a glance

bastard x 1
damn x 2
jackass x 5
            

Page 1

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,346   ~   ~   ~

Once, too, he was startled into momentary horror of some human trap of the Professor's invention; and his speed approached that of flying, under the spur of a laughing jackass's raucous cachinnation.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,395   ~   ~   ~

Just then a laughing jackass started a hoarse chuckle above Finn's head, and a big white cockatoo, startled by the jackass, flew screaming out from the branches of a grey gum, with the agonized note in its cry which these birds seem to favour at all seasons, and quite irrespective of the nature of their occupations at the moment.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,413   ~   ~   ~

As it was, the big snake, the huge eagle, the screaming cockatoo, the nerve-shaking cachophony of the jackass, and the half-flying progress of the big wallaby, all combined with the huge wildness of the country and its vegetation to oppress Finn with the sense of being a lone outcast, an outlier in a foreign land which was full of sinister possibilities.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,566   ~   ~   ~

And then, in a lower tone, "My oath, but some one's handled you pretty damn meanly before to-day, I reckon.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,957   ~   ~   ~

"Ger-r-router that, damn ye!" he growled at poor Jess when she crept towards him with watchful, affectionate eyes.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,102   ~   ~   ~

Lesser creatures succumbed under the blinding stabs of Finn's feet; and once he leaped, like a cat, clear into the lower branches of a bastard oak tree, and pinned a 'possum into instant death before swinging back to earth on the limb's far side.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,109   ~   ~   ~

It was as though a blight had descended upon the countryside, and the only living thing Finn saw that morning, besides the crows, was a laughing jackass on the stump of a blasted stringy-bark tree, who jeered at him hoarsely as he passed.

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