The 6,537 occurrences of bastard
View the definition of "bastard" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 368 ~ ~ ~
And as for the window, she declared that she had never spoken at it to the Bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 378 ~ ~ ~
From that time, however, the Bastard no longer employed the page or any other child, but sent an old servant of his, who, laying aside all fear of the death which, as he well knew, was threatened by the Queen against all such as should interfere in this matter, undertook to carry his master's letters to Rolandine.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 385 ~ ~ ~
Then the King's confessor was sent for, and he, having put the pieces together on a table, read the whole of the letter, in which the truth of the marriage, that had been so carefully concealed, was made manifest; for the Bastard called Rolandine nothing but "wife."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 389 ~ ~ ~
But he was minded to die rather than accuse his master, and asked for a confessor; and when he had eased his conscience as well as might be, he said to them-- "Good sirs, I pray you tell the Bastard, my master, that I commend the lives of my wife and children to him, for right willingly do I yield up my own in his service.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 392 ~ ~ ~
Finding, however, that he answered nothing, they drew him out again, and made report of his constancy to the Queen, who on hearing of it declared that neither the King nor herself were so fortunate in their followers as was this gentleman the Bastard, though he lacked even the means to requite them.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 395 ~ ~ ~
The Queen, having learnt the truth of the marriage from the Bastard's letter, sent for Rolandine, whom with a wrathful countenance she several times called "wretch" instead of "cousin," reproaching her with the shame that she had brought both upon her father's house and her mistress by thus marrying without her leave or commandment.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 435 ~ ~ ~
However, her governess was not taken from her, and through her Rolandine acquainted the Bastard with all that had befallen her, and asked him what he would have her do.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 439 ~ ~ ~
"Yes, sire," said the Bastard, "but by word of mouth alone; however, if it please you, we'll make an ending of it."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 440 ~ ~ ~
The King bent his head, and, without saying anything more, returned straight towards the castle, and when he was nigh to it summoned the Captain of his Guard, and charged him to take the Bastard prisoner.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 441 ~ ~ ~
However, a friend who knew and could interpret the King's visage, warned the Bastard to withdraw and betake himself to a house of his that was hard by, saying that if the King, as he expected, sought for him, he should know of it forthwith, so that he might fly the kingdom; whilst if, on the other hand, things became smoother, he should have word to return.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 442 ~ ~ ~
The Bastard followed this counsel, and made such speed that the Captain of the Guards was not able to find him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 459 ~ ~ ~
The Bastard, who was so deeply beholden to her, as you have seen, fled to Germany where he had many friends, and there showed by his fickleness that he had sought Rolandine less from true and perfect love than from avarice and ambition; for he fell deeply in love with a German lady, and forgot to write to the woman who for his sake was enduring so much tribulation.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 464 ~ ~ ~
When this servant had returned from his journey, he told her that the Bastard was indeed deeply in love with a German lady, and that according to common report he was seeking to marry her, for she was very rich.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 466 ~ ~ ~
Those who knew the cause of her sickness, told her on behalf of her father that, with this great wickedness on the part of the Bastard before her eyes, she might now justly renounce him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 470 ~ ~ ~
And the Divine Goodness, which is perfect charity and true love, took pity upon her grief and long suffering, in such wise that a few days afterwards the Bastard died while occupied in seeking after another woman.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,386 ~ ~ ~
She feigned sickness, in order that she might wear a cloak and so conceal her condition; and having a bastard brother, in whom she had more trust than in any one else, and upon whom she had conferred many benefits, she sent for him when the time of her confinement was drawing nigh, told him her condition (but without mentioning her son's part in it), and besought him to help her save her honour.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,394 ~ ~ ~
Meanwhile her bastard brother, finding that the daughter left in his charge had grown to be a tall maiden of perfect beauty, resolved to place her in some distant household where she would not be known, and by the mother's advice she was given to Catherine, Queen of Navarre.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,024 ~ ~ ~
This maiden, who was called Frances, had a bastard sister whom her father dearly loved, and whom he had married to the young Prince's butler, who maintained her in as excellent a condition as that of any of her family.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 204 ~ ~ ~
The _Arabian_, _Barbary_, or his Bastard, are esteemed the best for this Use, these excelling _Fennets_, tho' they are good too.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,459 ~ ~ ~
The bastard peace which he has authorised Turkey to conclude, conceals a new revolution in Crete: such is his will.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 783 ~ ~ ~
One detachment was sent to occupy Bastard's Nek, another defile to the west of Plessis Poort.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,097 ~ ~ ~
Moreover, no reform of what is radically false can be effectual, and ancient psychology is a bastard conception, doomed to perish from the contradictions which it involves."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 672 ~ ~ ~
You know, that bastard took me, once, just one-tenth as badly, with a fake U.S. North & Cheney Navy flintlock 1799 Model that had been made out of a French 1777 Model."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,254 ~ ~ ~
"That God-damned two-faced Jesuitical bastard!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 518 ~ ~ ~
And thus, if thou be not of humaine kinde, A Bastard on both sides needes must thou be; Our Lawes allow no land to basterdy: By natures Lawes we thee a bastard finde.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 519 ~ ~ ~
Then hence to heauen, vnkind, for thy childs part: Goe bastard goe, for sure of thence thou art.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 28,327 ~ ~ ~
For this reason bastards, by reason of their base origin, were excluded from the _ecclesia,_ i.e.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 136 ~ ~ ~
O but--Brother 'gainst brother!--'twas hard!--Now I come with a will To baste the false bastard of France, the hide of the tanyard and mill!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 188 ~ ~ ~
_The hide of the tanyard_; See the story of Arlette or Herleva, the tanner's daughter, mother to William 'the Bastard.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 964 ~ ~ ~
The King's return seemed to the people the harbinger of a real liberty, instead of that bastard Commonwealth which had insulted them with its name' (Hallam: _Const.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 33 ~ ~ ~
All Children of Protestant Parents, Declared Bastards by Catholicism.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 240 ~ ~ ~
All Children of Protestant Parents Are Declared Bastards by Catholicism.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 242 ~ ~ ~
Catholicism further declares that your darling child, which is the fruit of your marriage, is nothing more nor less than a common bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 247 ~ ~ ~
It is strange to me, indeed, that America, which is and should be by every law of justice and right, a Protestant nation, is so unconcerned and so listless over the insults that Catholicism daily offers Protestantism, for if it is not a most damnable insult to stigmatize your offspring as bastards, then we are unable to discern and distinguish between a brazen insult and a flattering compliment.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 249 ~ ~ ~
Now, if the offspring of that dear old mother is a bastard, then she is nothing more nor less than a common whore, and you cannot arrive at any other rational conclusion.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 250 ~ ~ ~
This is only reasoning from intelligent deductions; therefore, whenever Catholicism calls the children of Protestant parents bastards simply because these parents were not united in wedlock by a Catholic priest, they villify the sacred name of father and mother, and trail in the slime of disgrace the sweet memories of that sturdy old father and that angelic old Protestant mother.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 253 ~ ~ ~
We have in this country scores--yea, hundreds of Protestant fathers and mothers who allow their children to attend Catholic schools, when those who are teaching them in these Catholic institutions brazenly, flagrantly and openly declare that those children are the offspring of immorality, as they do not hesitate to say that all children are bastards whose parents were not married by the priestcraft; but still these Protestant parents allow their children to be taught by those who villify and defame their parents' names.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 261 ~ ~ ~
Arouse, ye men and women of America, or else the time will come when you will not be permitted to make a protest; when your wives and mothers are declared whores by Catholicism, and your fathers and brothers are declared whore-mongers and your children bastards!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 416 ~ ~ ~
In Ecuador the Catholic Church has such a complete hold upon the inhabitants that they will not allow Protestantism taught, and the consequence of her tyranny is that out of every 100 children born in that country, seventy-five are bastards or illegitimate and have no idea of their father, and the immorality of the priestcraft is so vile that their actions are absolutely passed over without notice, as there is scarcely a single priest to be found in that country but who is the father of from ten to twenty-five and thirty children; but still the Roman Church continues to forbid her priests to wed, when they know full well that celibacy in the Catholic Church is the cause of all of this degeneracy.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,389 ~ ~ ~
In the city of Rome, which is the home of popes, there are 39 cardinals, 35 archbishops, 1,469 priests, 2,832 monks and friars, 2,000 nuns and 1,000 ecclesiastical students, making in all 7,576 teachers of this abomination; and for every 4,375 children born in the city of Rome, 3,160 are bastards, and for every 750 people in the city of Rome, there is a murder committed during the year; thus you will see that this herd of Catholic teachers are not only teachers of immorality and degradation, but are also responsible for murder, as such a pestilence of immorality will lead to murder.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,398 ~ ~ ~
I have endeavored to give the Protestant reader to understand that his offspring are considered bastards, and their parents persons who live in immorality, by not belonging to the Roman Catholic Church and being married by the priestcraft.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,003 ~ ~ ~
He has been a rabid Republican, perhaps, or he has belonged, at least, to the party which put up in Madrid in conspicuous letters, "The bastard race of the Bourbons is for ever fallen.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,148 ~ ~ ~
"I have wept over her grave; those who wage this war against humanity are bastards, the real sons and daughters of that sweet old Germany are here in America--they have come to their foster-mother, and they love her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,328 ~ ~ ~
It was after them that I denounced you to the eighty-three departments as an ambitious man who only cared for parade, a slave of the court similar to those marshals of the league to whom revolt had given the _bâton_, and who, looking upon themselves as bastards, were desirous of becoming legitimate; but all of a sudden you embrace each other, and proclaim yourselves mutually fathers of your country!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,476 ~ ~ ~
He was the natural son of the Nabob by a person called Munny Begum, who, for the corrupt gifts the circumstances of which we have recited, had, in prejudice of the lawful issue of the Nabob, been raised to the _musnud_; but as bastard slips, it is said in King Richard, (an abuse of a Scripture phrase,) do not take deep root, this bastard slip, Nujim ul Dowlah, shortly died, and the legitimate son, Syef ul Dowlah, succeeded him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 311 ~ ~ ~
The railings, in particular, were horrible bastards to get clean, covered in ten or thirty coats of enamel of varying colors and toxicity.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,853 ~ ~ ~
That bloody hurt, you bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 131 ~ ~ ~
The man appointed by the Crown as guardian to this child proved an inhuman monster, and after ill-treating the lad in every conceivable manner, eventually murdered him and tried to substitute a bastard boy of his own in his place.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 596 ~ ~ ~
The swearing revenues of the town of Cork will be given for ever, by the bank, to the support of poor clergymen's widows; and those of Ringsend will be allowed to the maintenance of sailors' bastards.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,725 ~ ~ ~
There as likewise another great advantage in my scheme, that it will prevent those voluntary abortions, and that horrid practice of women murdering their bastard children, alas, too frequent among us, sacrificing the poor innocent babes, I doubt, more to avoid the expense, than the shame, which would move tears and pity in the most savage and inhuman breast.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,817 ~ ~ ~
To these we are to add a standing army of twenty thousand English; which, together with their trulls, their bastards, and their horse-boys, will, by a gross computation, very near double the count, and be very sufficient for the defence and grazing of the kingdom, as well as to enrich our neighbours, expel popery, and keep out the Pretender.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,524 ~ ~ ~
As the whole fund for supporting this hospital is raised only from the inhabitants of the city, so there can be hardly any thing more absurd, than to see it mis-employed in maintaining foreign beggars and bastards, or orphans, whose country landlords never contributed one shilling towards their support.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,577 ~ ~ ~
The revenues which have since been raised by parliament, are wholly paid by the city, without the least charge upon any other part of the kingdom; and therefore nothing could more defeat the original design, than to misapply those revenues on strolling beggars, or bastards from the country, which bear no share in the charges we are at.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,013 ~ ~ ~
"You never had a bastard by Tom the waterman; you never stole a silver tankard; you were never whipped at the cart's tail."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 900 ~ ~ ~
The reason wherefore shee this Examinate did so bewitch the said _Robinson_ to death, was: for that the said _Robinson_ had chidden and becalled this Examinate, for hauing a Bastard-child with one _Seller_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,288 ~ ~ ~
We're puttin' these bastards down."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,330 ~ ~ ~
And while you're in his area, learn all you can from whatever sources; but watch yourself with that bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,663 ~ ~ ~
When the _Variétés'_ company was expelled from the little theatre of the Palais Royal, it became the scene of all manner of bastard performances.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 176 ~ ~ ~
Who knows how then his godlike banished gaze Turned haply from its goal of natural days And homeward hunger for the clear French clime, Toward English earth, whereunder now the Accursed Rots, in the hate of all men's hearts inhearsed, A carrion ranker to the sense of time For that sepulchral gift of stone and lime By royal grace laid on it, less of weight Than the load laid by fate, Fate, misbegotten child of his own crime, Son of as foul a bastard-bearing birth As even his own on earth; Less heavy than the load of cursing piled By loyal grace of all souls undefiled On one man's head, whose reeking soul made rotten The loathed live corpse on earth once misbegotten?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,407 ~ ~ ~
When I picked it up, I was astonished to find a Snipe with the plumage of a Woodcock, and showed it to a friend of mine, who is a good practical ornithologist, but he was as much puzzled as myself to give it a name; so not being able to find a description of it in any books to which we had access, we jumped to the conclusion that it was a hybrid between the Snipe and the Woodcock, and called it a bastard Woodcock.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 775 ~ ~ ~
It is possible she might wish to depose her legitimate son, her only legitimate son, and to depose him for the sake of a bastard son of her husband's,--to exalt him at the expense of the former, and to exalt, of course, the mother of that bastard at her own expense, and to her own wrong.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,818 ~ ~ ~
You will find that they considered her as a great agent and instrument of all the corruption there; and that this whole transaction, by which the bastard son of Munny Begum was brought forward to the prejudice of the legitimate son of the Nabob, was considered to be, what it upon the very face of it speaks itself to be, corrupt and scandalous.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,845 ~ ~ ~
They state to you this horrible and venal transaction, by which the government was set to sale, by which a bastard son was elevated to the wrong of the natural and legitimate heir, and in which a prostitute, his mother, was put in the place of the honorable and legitimate mother of the representative of the family.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,853 ~ ~ ~
For though neither the young Nabob nor his mother ought to have been raised to the stations in which they were placed, and were placed there for the purpose of facilitating the receipt of bribes, yet the order of Nature was preserved, and the mother was made the guardian of her own son: for though she was a prostitute and he a bastard, yet still she was a mother and he a son; and both Nature and legitimate disposition with regard to the guardianship of a son went together.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 750 ~ ~ ~
And thou, Allfather Odin, hast thou come on a bastard brood?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 123 ~ ~ ~
Those in the north still retain the original native furniture, wooden bowls, and whale-bone water buckets, large and small lamps and kettles of bastard marble, and are more unvitiated, therefore more to be depended upon than the others.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 563 ~ ~ ~
To deem so, to dream so, Would bid the world proclaim The dastards for bastards, Not heirs of England's fame.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 569 ~ ~ ~
Your Graces, whose faces Bear high the bastard's brand, Seem stronger no longer Than all this honest land.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 60 ~ ~ ~
It would suffice for that for them to make a few concessions to the stern laws of necessity; for them to know how to duplicate their being, to have within themselves two natures, the poet ever dreaming on the lofty summits where the choir of inspired voices are warbling, and the man, worker-out of his life, able to knead his daily bread, but this duality which almost always exists among strongly tempered natures, of whom it is one of the distinctive characteristics, is not met with amongst the greater number of these young fellows, whom pride, a bastard pride, has rendered invulnerable to all the advice of reason.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,688 ~ ~ ~
Nobody thinks o' tryin' agrimony,--water agrimony--some calls it water hemp an' bastard agrimony--'tis a thing that flowers in this month an' the next,--a brown-yellow blossom on a purple stalk, an' ye find it in cold places, in ponds an' ditches an' by runnin' waters.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,189 ~ ~ ~
Half-mortal, half-immortal was each steed, The bastard birth of that celestial breed, Which cunning Circe from a mortal mare Raised to her sire the Sun-god.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,375 ~ ~ ~
Shall the Trojans claim The realm, and bastards dare the Latin race to shame?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,391 ~ ~ ~
Here brave Antiphates, the first in view (The bastard offspring of Sarpedon great, Borne by a Theban) with his dart he slew; Swift through the yielding air the Italian cornel flew.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,025 ~ ~ ~
It is not known that William Burns was aware before his death that his eldest son had sinned in rhyme; but we have Gilbert's assurance, that his father went to the grave in ignorance of his son's errors of a less venial kind--unwitting that he was soon to give a two-fold proof of both in "Rob the Rhymer's Address to his Bastard Child"--a poem less decorous than witty.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,648 ~ ~ ~
[This hasty and not very decorous effusion, was originally entitled "The Poet's Welcome; or, Rab the Rhymer's Address to his Bastard Child."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,659 ~ ~ ~
An' if the wives an' dirty brats E'en thigger at your doors an' yetts, Flaffan wi' duds an' grey wi' beas', Frightin' awa your deuks an' geese, Get out a horsewhip or a jowler, The langest thong, the fiercest growler, An' gar the tattered gypsies pack Wi' a' their bastards on their back!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,845 ~ ~ ~
_Edinburgh, Dec. 20th, 1786._ MY DEAR FRIEND, I have just time for the carrier, to tell you that I received your letter; of which I shall say no more but what a lass of my acquaintance said of her bastard wean; she said she "did na ken wha was the father exactly, but she suspected it was some o' the bonny blackguard smugglers, for it was like them."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,491 ~ ~ ~
[Footnote 176: Paradise Lost, b. iv] [Footnote 177: "Rob the Rhymer's Welcome to his Bastard Child."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,518 ~ ~ ~
The second, a bastard Newfoundland with a dash of the bloodhound, and just emerging from puppyhood, soon told us the reason why he was sold for a song.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,003 ~ ~ ~
The sullen, grey-eyed old man had taken on the aspect of a ferret; the fat woman was like that awful wretch who meets the pale girl in Hogarth's "Marriage à la Mode;" the bastard gipsy smiled in "leary" fashion, as if he were coming up for the second round of a fight, and knew that he had it all own way.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 393 ~ ~ ~
Nay, let Heav'n answer this one Fact alone, Mounting a Bastard _Jephtha_ on a Throne.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 85 ~ ~ ~
The pure Berbers, likewise, are much less sensual than their bastard descendants, who seem, indeed, to have no idea of pleasure but in its grossest shape.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,836 ~ ~ ~
But unfortunately the Comte de Dunois' prophetess was captured at the siege of Compiègne by a bastard of Vendôme, and Saintrailles' prophet was captured by Talbot.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,670 ~ ~ ~
Therefore it seems good to me--subject to your good pleasure--that there should be made for me a man's dress and that I should be escorted by my uncle, the bastard, each mounted on a stout horse.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,674 ~ ~ ~
They set out on their journey, the fair Katherine and her uncle, the bastard, without any other companion.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,675 ~ ~ ~
Katherine, who was dressed in the German fashion very elegantly, was the master, and her uncle, the bastard, was the serving man.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,006 ~ ~ ~
So it was ordered that he should remain priest, and married, and curé also; and that he should live with his wife as a married man, honourably and without reproach, and that his children should be legitimate and not bastards, although their father was a priest.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,608 ~ ~ ~
The lady was,--scandal averred--Mariette d'Enghien, the mother of the brave and handsome Comte de Dunois, known in French history as "the bastard of Orléans."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,282 ~ ~ ~
Swinburne could write-- "We shall see Buonaparte the bastard Kick heels with his throat in a rope."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 400 ~ ~ ~
Probably Perez was nothing of the sort; he was the bastard of a man of his own name, and his alleged mistress, the widow of Gomez, may even have circulated the [Pg 35] other story to prove that her relations with Perez, though intimate, were innocent.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,796 ~ ~ ~
People held that he was a bastard of a king of Portugal, says Madame du Hausset.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,492 ~ ~ ~
Proud of the wounds and the kisses of women he had enjoyed in lavish abundance in this campaign, at once so heroic and so gallant and gay, he informed the Canon without more ado, that following in the steps of Bonaparte, the French were going to march round the world, upsetting Thrones and Altars in every land, giving the girls bastards and ripping up the bellies of all fanatics.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 262 ~ ~ ~
JUDITH: Fancied 'twas Jim, your son-- My bastard brat?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,041 ~ ~ ~
Your man and mine were born in lawful wedlock: And sober, honest, dutiful sons they've proved: While our two bastards, Ruth and ... JUDITH: Never been A better daughter!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,154 ~ ~ ~
Diniz, his bastard son, for whose legitimation he had made this same struggle with Rome, follows Affonso III., in 1279, and with him begins the wider life of Portugal, her navy and her literature, her agriculture, justice, and commerce.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,197 ~ ~ ~
Ferdinand's bastard brother, John, Master of the Knights of Aviz, and father of Henry the Navigator, was the leader of the national party, and Leonor had in vain tried to get rid of him, silent and dangerous as he was.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,162 ~ ~ ~
All this the Prince bore, but when he heard that his bastard brother of Braganza, who had betrayed and maligned and ruined him, was on the march to plunder his estates, like an outlaw's, he collected a few troops and barred his way.
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