The 3,550 occurrences of whore
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,941 ~ ~ ~
Whores are trick'd up to take the Eyes of many but we are well enough drest, if we do but please our own Husbands.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,944 ~ ~ ~
_Xa._ Why, as the Maggot bites, sometimes at the Tavern, sometimes upon his Whores, sometimes a gaming.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,329 ~ ~ ~
Why, whatsoever I got of Pay, Plunder, Sacrilege, Rapine and Theft, was spent in Wine, Whores and Gaming.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,892 ~ ~ ~
All Whores can't attain to that, and if thou shouldst, what Employment is more impious, and more like the Devil himself?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,920 ~ ~ ~
I perceive you're a religious Whore, that relievest Mendicants.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,925 ~ ~ ~
In that Book, Paul, that can't lie, told me, that _neither Whores nor Whore-mongers shall obtain the Kingdom of Heaven_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,926 ~ ~ ~
When I read this, I began thus to think with myself: It is but a small Matter that I look for from my Father's Inheritance, and yet I can renounce all the Whores in the World, rather than be disinherited by my Father; how much more then ought I to take Care, lest my heavenly Father should disinherit me?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,933 ~ ~ ~
And I wondring that for so many whoring Tricks he enjoin'd me so small a Penance, he answer'd me very pleasantly, My Son, says he, if you truly repent and change your Life, I don't lay much Stress upon the Penance; but if thou shalt go on in it, the very Lust itself will at last punish thee very severely, although the Priest impose none upon thee.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,601 ~ ~ ~
On the other hand_, Polygamus _has brought old Age upon him, by the Intemperance of his Youth, by Drinking, Whoring, Gaming, running in Debt; he had had eight Wives._ Pampirus, _he becomes a Merchant; but consumes all he has by Gaming; then he becomes a Canon; then a Carthusian; after that a Benedictine; and last of all, turns Soldier._ Eusebius, _he gets a good Benefice and preaches._ EUSEBIUS, PAMPIRUS, POLYGAMUS, GLYCION, HUGUITIO, _and_ HARRY _the Coachman._ _Euseb._ What new Faces do I see here?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,765 ~ ~ ~
_Eu._ Indeed I don't wonder, Mr. Cock, that you are no fatter, and that you have brought old Age upon you to that Degree; for nothing brings on old Age faster, than excessive and hard Drinking, keeping late Hours, and Whoring, extravagant Love of Women, and immoderate Venery.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,779 ~ ~ ~
They both took an Oath of Secrecy, after the Manner of those that are initiated into mysterious Secrets; and presently Money is paid down for the Artist to buy Pots, Glasses, Coals, and other Necessaries for furnishing the Laboratory: This Money our Alchymist lavishes away on Whores, Gaming, and Drinking.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,425 ~ ~ ~
_Eu._ You quote the worst Author in the World, _Fabulla_, the Fashion; 'tis the Fashion to do amiss, to game, to whore, to cheat, to be drunk, and to play the Rake.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 481 ~ ~ ~
"They took him back with them into their Country where he found a Tribe, whore Native Language was Welsh, though the Dialect was a little different from his own, which he soon came to understand.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 105 ~ ~ ~
So does youth's calm and chaste beatitude Touch the black mouth of Love, the ancient whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 487 ~ ~ ~
Vile, filthy whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 99 ~ ~ ~
In short, the Drunkenness, Whoring, Insolence, and Dulness that has appear'd under a Black Coat on the Stage, have made the Men of the same Colour of it keep within Bounds: And that a Man might not teize them with the Representation, they have endeavour'd to appear in as differing a Form as possible.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 891 ~ ~ ~
_The Honest Whore_.--There is in the second part of this play, where Bellafront, a reclaimed harlot, recounts some of the miseries of her profession, a simple picture of honor and shame, contrasted without violence, and expressed without immodesty; which is worth all the _strong lines_ against the harlot's profession, with which both parts of this play are offensively crowded.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,015 ~ ~ ~
[Footnote: "'Tis Pity she's a Whore."]
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,312 ~ ~ ~
_Honest Whore_.]
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,779 ~ ~ ~
You keep no whore, sir?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 207 ~ ~ ~
hoar, whore, haw.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 102 ~ ~ ~
It is alike incredible and certain that the writer of such exquisite and blameless verse as that in which the finer scenes of "Old Fortunatus" and "The Honest Whore" are so smoothly and simply and naturally written should have been capable of writing whole plays in this headlong and halting fashion, as helpless and graceless as the action of a spavined horse or a cripple who should attempt to run.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 415 ~ ~ ~
Of all Dekker's works, "The Honest Whore" comes nearest to some reasonable degree of unity and harmony in conception and construction; his besetting vice of reckless and sluttish incoherence has here done less than usual to deform the proportions and deface the impression of his design.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 443 ~ ~ ~
In style and versification the patriotic and anti-Catholic drama which bears the Protestant and apocalyptic title of "The Whore of Babylon" is still, upon the whole, very tolerably spirited and fluent, with gleams of fugitive poetry and glimpses of animated action; but the construction is ponderous and puerile, the declamation vacuous and vehement.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 867 ~ ~ ~
This comedy in which we first find him associated with Middleton is well written and well contrived, and fairly diverting--especially to an idle or an uncritical reader: though even such an one may suspect that the heroine here represented as a virginal virago must have been in fact rather like Dr. Johnson's fair friend Bet Flint; of whom the Great Lexicographer "used to say that she was generally slut and drunkard; occasionally whore and thief" (Boswell, May 8, 1781).
~ ~ ~ Sentence 901 ~ ~ ~
The lazy, slovenly, impatient genius of Dekker flashes out by fits and starts on the reader of the play in which he has expressed his English hatred of Spain and Popery, his English pride in the rout of the Armada, and his English gratitude for the part played by Queen Elizabeth in the crowning struggle of the time: but his most cordial admirer can hardly consider "The Whore of Babylon" a shining or satisfactory example of dramatic art.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 966 ~ ~ ~
The subordinate part taken by Middleton in Dekker's play of "The Honest Whore" is difficult to discern from the context or to verify by inner evidence: though some likeness to his realistic or photographic method may be admitted as perceptible in the admirable picture of Bellafront's morning reception at the opening of the second act of the first part.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,660 ~ ~ ~
"Honest Whore, The," Webster's part in, 21; Dekker's, 74, 75; Middleton's and Rowley's, 183.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,921 ~ ~ ~
"Whore of Babylon, The," 168.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 434 ~ ~ ~
I am a king's son, and thou art born of nought; thou oughtest not in any spot to have free man's abode, for so was all the adventure, thy mother was a whore, for she knew not ever the man that begat thee on her, nor haddest thou any father among mankind.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,415 ~ ~ ~
Indeed here are no Publick Whores allowed by Authority.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,421 ~ ~ ~
And tho I think they be all Whores, yet they abhor the Name of Vesou, which is Whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,440 ~ ~ ~
Neither do they reckon their Wives to be Whores for lying with them that are as good or better than themselves.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,891 ~ ~ ~
If any thing be stole out of their grounds or Plantations fruit or the like, they will cry out aloud, This was done by some low-cast begotten Rogue, or She was a whore to some inferior rank who dressed it; and this Language they will continue for half an hour together, tho they know not who hath done it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,991 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 271 ~ ~ ~
Last year, a lad hence by his parents sent With other cattle to the city went; Where having cast his coat, and well pursued The methods most in fashion to be lewd, Return'd a finish'd spark this summer down, Stock'd with the freshest gibberish of the town; A jargon form'd from the lost language, wit, Confounded in that Babel of the pit; Form'd by diseased conceptions, weak and wild, Sick lust of souls, and an abortive child; Born between whores and fops, by lewd compacts, Before the play, or else between the acts; Nor wonder, if from such polluted minds Should spring such short and transitory kinds, Or crazy rules to make us wits by rote, Last just as long as every cuckoo's note: What bungling, rusty tools are used by fate!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 972 ~ ~ ~
When food and raiment now grew scarce, Fate put a period to the farce, And with exact poetic justice; For John was landlord, Phyllis hostess; They keep, at Stains, the Old Blue Boar, Are cat and dog, and rogue and whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,259 ~ ~ ~
Him let her marry for his face, And only coat of tarnish'd lace; To turn her naked out of doors, And spend her jointure on his whores; But, for a parting present, leave her A rooted pox to last for ever!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,575 ~ ~ ~
[7] You for the news are ne'er to seek; While we, perhaps, may wait a week; You happy folks are sure to meet A hundred whores in every street; While we may trace all Dublin o'er Before we find out half a score.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,003 ~ ~ ~
To Dublin he comes, to the bagnio he goes, And orders the landlord to bring him a whore; No scruple came on him his gown to expose, 'Twas what all his life he had practised before.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,005 ~ ~ ~
The dean, and his landlord, a jolly comrade, Resolved for a fortnight to swim in delight; For why, they had both been brought up to the trade Of drinking all day, and of whoring all night.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,010 ~ ~ ~
And precedents we can produce, if it please ye: Then why should the dean, when whores are so cheap, Be put to the peril and toil of a rape?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,018 ~ ~ ~
The dean he was vex'd that his whores were so willing; He long'd for a girl that would struggle and squall; He ravish'd her fairly, and saved a good shilling; But here was to pay the devil and all.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,114 ~ ~ ~
Come, tell us, has she play'd the whore?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,563 ~ ~ ~
By the multitude of those who deal in rhymes, from half a sheet to twenty, which come out every minute, there must be at least five hundred poets in the city and suburbs of London: half as many coffeehouse orators, exclusive of the clergy, forty thousand politicians, and four thousand five hundred profound scholars; not to mention the wits, the railers, the smart fellows, and critics; all as illiterate and impudent as a suburb whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,627 ~ ~ ~
The god, who favour'd her request, Assured her he would do his best: But Venus had been there before, Pleaded the bishop loved a whore, And had enlarged her empire wide; He own'd no deity beside.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,638 ~ ~ ~
You'll find him swear, blaspheme, and damn (And every moment take a dram) His ghastly visage with an air Of reprobation and despair; Or else some hiding-hole he seeks, For fear the rest should say he squeaks; Or, as Fitzpatrick[5] did before, Resolve to perish with his whore; Or else he raves, and roars, and swears, And, but for shame, would say his prayers.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,020 ~ ~ ~
Thus every poet, in his kind, Is bit by him that comes behind: Who, though too little to be seen, Can teaze, and gall, and give the spleen; Call dunces, fools, and sons of whores, Lay Grub Street at each other's doors; Extol the Greek and Roman masters, And curse our modern poetasters; Complain, as many an ancient bard did, How genius is no more rewarded; How wrong a taste prevails among us; How much our ancestors outsung us: Can personate an awkward scorn For those who are not poets born; And all their brother dunces lash, Who crowd the press with hourly trash.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,001 ~ ~ ~
I say in confidence--think it o'er: Thou art just once for all a whore; Why, be one, then, outright.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 538 ~ ~ ~
a son of a whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 249 ~ ~ ~
_Shr._ No, no, Mr. _Knapsack_, I'm as moderate at that Sport, as any Man; I must own, when a pretty Lady comes betimes in a Morning to my Master, and he, poor Gentleman, is in a dead Sleep with hard Drinking, I do now and then take her into the next Room, play the Fool with her a little till my Master wakes, then give her a Dram of Surfeit-Water, and put her to Bed to him, now there's Safety in such an Amour, for my Master hasn't his Mistresses from a profess'd Baud; I have found him out a conscientious old Gentlewoman, that's one of the sober Party, and acquainted with most Citizens Daughters, that have as much Inclination to turn Whores as a Chamber-Maid out of Place, and the old Lady is so passionately fond of my Master, because he was once so charitable to do her the Favour, she sends him the choicest of all her Ware--but to pick up a dirty Drab in the Eighteen-penny-Gallery, with a rusty black Top-knot, a little Flower in her Hair, a turn'd Smock, and no Stockings, the Jade wou'd poyson you like Eighteen-penny-Wine.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 515 ~ ~ ~
wou'd you make a Whore of me Sir _Harry_?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 517 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 518 ~ ~ ~
have a care, Child, who you reflect upon, a Lady of two hundred a Year, a Whore; Whores are Creatures that wear Pattens and Straw-hats.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 519 ~ ~ ~
I'd fain hear any body call a kept Mistress, Whore, while there's Law to be had, if I were she, I'd make 'em severely pay for't.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 626 ~ ~ ~
Ay, and behind the Scenes too amongst the pretty Actresses; I must have you a smart Youth, understand the finish'd Vices o'the Town, learn to swear like a Gentleman of Ten Thousand a Year, few Men of Estates are bred to Conversation, game like a desp'rate younger Brother, several embroider'd Suits are known to live by't, drink abundantly to prevent dull-thinking, and Whore lustily to encourage the Dispensary that gives the poor Physick for nothing.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 627 ~ ~ ~
Mr. _Shrimp_ here knows the World; and, I warrant, for cogging a Die, bullying a Coward, bilking a Hackney Coachman, and storming a Nest of Whores in _Drury-lane_, not a Master of Arts in either University can come near him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 636 ~ ~ ~
Ay, and Sugar, my brave Boy, thou shall't have any thing; we'll be merry as mony'd Sailors over a Bowl o'Rum Punch, fluster'd as their Whores, and frolicksom, 'till we have spent all, drink Confusion to all Grand-mothers, and if the old Cat pretends to Ptysick it much longer, we'll get an Act of Parliament to poyson her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 726 ~ ~ ~
A Race of Side-Box-Beaus, that love soft easie Chairs, Down-Beds, and taudry Night-Gowns; I admire those renown'd Emperors, that chop Peoples Heads off for their Diversion, and the glorious King of _France_, that makes his Family Kings whenever he pleases; that gives People yearly Pensions to bellow out his praise; whose Edicts fly about like Squibs and Crackers, and as much laughs at Parliaments and Councils, as a Whore of Distinction does at the _Reforming-Society._ La.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,163 ~ ~ ~
with three Women; and searching a little further, under a fat Whores Petticoats, we found this little Gentleman, [_Pointing to_ Shrimp.]
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,637 ~ ~ ~
--The desolating judgments of the reigning Mediator, having brought those nations to "hate the whore," they become the willing and zealous agents of her destruction, as appears, (ch.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,129 ~ ~ ~
And there came one of the seven angels, which had the seven vials, and talked with me, saying unto me, Come hither; I will show unto thee the judgment of the great whore, that sitteth upon many waters; 2.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,132 ~ ~ ~
"The great whore" is the symbol of the idolatrous church of Rome, which broke her marriage covenant with Christ.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,231 ~ ~ ~
And he saith unto me, The waters which thou sawest, where the whore sitteth, are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,233 ~ ~ ~
15.--"The waters," controlled by "the whore," are the multitudes whom the apostate church of Rome commands to volunteer in the wars of the kings against the Lamb.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,235 ~ ~ ~
And the ten horns which thou sawest upon the beast, these shall hate the whore, and shall make her desolate and naked, and shall eat her flesh, and burn her with fire.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,255 ~ ~ ~
They just do to the "great whore, whatsoever God's hand and counsel determined before to be done."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,404 ~ ~ ~
For true and righteous are his judgments: for he hath judged the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her fornication, and hath avenged the blood of his servants at her hand.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,473 ~ ~ ~
The kings of the earth also have fostered the pride and profligacy of the great whore, instead of the bride of the Lamb.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,110 ~ ~ ~
When the angel proposed to show him the "scarlet whore," he "carried him into the wilderness," intimating that such is the _only position_ in which the "mystery of the woman, and of the beast that carrieth her," can be clearly seen or perfectly understood.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,005 ~ ~ ~
And you can tell your whore of a daughter she's a widow, not a wife!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 86 ~ ~ ~
Sanchio: Of which Hospital thou wilt sweat in; wilt thou Never leave whoring?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 616 ~ ~ ~
Michael Perez: Is she a Whore too?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 618 ~ ~ ~
Michael Perez: She has serv'd me faithfully, A Whore and Thief?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 729 ~ ~ ~
Michael Perez: I'll go to a Conjurer but I'll find this Pol-cat, This pilfering Whore: a plague of Vails, I cry, And covers for the impudence of Women, Their sanctity in show will deceive Devils, It is my evil Angel, let me bless me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 742 ~ ~ ~
I left this _Chaos_, And to the Chirurgions went, he will'd me stay, For says he learnedly, if he be tipled, Twenty to one he whores, and then I hear of him, If he be mad, he quarrels, then he comes too.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,216 ~ ~ ~
still young thou art, But not the least bit shrewd or smart, Thy business thus to slight: So this advice I bid thee heed-- Now that thou art a whore indeed, Why, be one then, outright!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,397 ~ ~ ~
A house of penitent whores.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 66 ~ ~ ~
xiii: 2, not only to the representative of the beast or the Pope of Rome, but also to the ten horns of the beast, or kings, that is monarchs, who hate the whore, that is the Apostatized Church, the people who have apostatized from truth and justice, and whom monarchs make desolate and naked, and eat their flesh and burn them with fire, REVEL.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,025 ~ ~ ~
The partner, may be he or she, who remains obstinate, remains in the great whore of the 17th chapter of the Revelation, is an adulterer or adulteress in the spiritual sense, and certainly with whoredom or other abominations he or she became so endarkened, that when the partner progressed so far, as to comprehend our Heavenly message, the destroying devil will detain him or her from the truth made manifest in our message.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,028 ~ ~ ~
Then he swills around at hotel bars, stays with some of his lady whores, and then comes back here and expects me to pull him into shape again, to make his nose a little less red.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 47 ~ ~ ~
_Sep._ For whore's I grant you, When they are out of date, till then are safe too, Or all the Gallants of the Court are Eunuchs, And for mine own defence I'le only add this, I'le be admitted for a wanton tale To some most private Cabinets, when your Priest-hood (Though laden with the mysteries of your goddess) Shall wait without unnoted: so I leave you To your pious thoughts.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 386 ~ ~ ~
_Sce._ 'Twas my blind fortune, My Souldiers told me, by the weight 'twas wicked: Would I had carried _Milo's_ Bull a furlong, When I brought in this Cow-Calf: he has advanced me From an old Souldier, to a bawd of memory: O, that the Sons of _Pompey_ were behind him, The honour'd _Cato_, and fierce _Juba_ with 'em, That they might whip him from his whore, and rowze him: That their fierce Trumpets, from his wanton trances, Might shake him like an Earth-quake.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 321 ~ ~ ~
The Business of a Dramatick Poet is to _copy Nature_, and represent things as they are; Let our Peers give over _whoring_ and _drinking_; the Citizens, _Cheating_; the Clergy, their _Quarrels, Covetousness and Ambition_; the Lawyers, their _ambi-dextrous dealings_; and the Women _intriguing_, and the stage will reform of Course.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,602 ~ ~ ~
'I do that, by our Lord,' said Rolf, 'since by these deeds of thine my wife and children will starve, or she become a whore.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 182 ~ ~ ~
_Of a bold abusive Wit._ He talks madly, _dash, dash,_ without any fear at all, and never cares how he _bespatters_ others, or defiles himself; nor ceases he till he has quite run himself out of breath; when no wonder, if to fools he seems to get the start of those who wisely pick out their way, and are as fearful of abusing others as themselves: He has the _Buffoons_ priviledge, of saying or doing anything without exceptions, and he will call a jealous man _Cuckold_, a childe of doubtful birth _Bastard_, and a _Lady_ of suspected honor a _Whore_, and they but laugh at it; and all _Scholars_ are _Pedants_; and _Physicians_, _Quacks_ with him, when to be angry at it is the avowing it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 926 ~ ~ ~
Long were they not in bed, But one knocked at the door, And said, Up, rise, and let me in: This vexed both knave and whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 930 ~ ~ ~
At last the bawd arose And opened the door, And saw Discretion cloth'd in rug, Whose office hates a whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 165 ~ ~ ~
Wh has a sound accounted peculiar to the English, which the Saxons better expressed by hw , as, what , whence , whiting ; in whore only, and sometimes in wholesome , wh is sounded like a simple h .
~ ~ ~ Sentence 487 ~ ~ ~
Mr. Penny muttered a period about Germany in England, with a more distant echo of Hanoverian whores and deformed firebrands.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,868 ~ ~ ~
The principal are _Old Fortunatus_, _The Honest Whore_, and _Satiro-Mastix, or, The Humorous Poet Untrussed_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,870 ~ ~ ~
In the Honest Whore are found those beautiful lines so often quoted: ... the best of men That e'er wore earth about him was a sufferer; A soft, meek, patient, humble, tranquil spirit; The first true gentleman that ever breathed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,445 ~ ~ ~
[45] One of these sons of violence, Bradshaw of Brazen-nose, took occasion, before his patrons at Wigan, to profane the 14th verse of the 15th chapter of Jeremiah, from thence proving that Lady Derby was the scarlet whore and the whore of Babylon whose walls he made as flat and thin as his own discourse.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 916 ~ ~ ~
XXIX Forthwith he gave in charge unto his Squire, That scarlot whore to keepen carefully; Whiles he himselfe with greedie great desire 255 Into the Castle entred forcibly, Where living creature none he did espye; Then gan he lowdly through the house to call: But no man car'd to answere to his crye.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,093 ~ ~ ~
He speaks of Naples himself as being a country of poets, whores, and scoundrels; and Southey does not attempt to mince words, for in vigorous terms he describes England's "alliances to superannuated and abominable governments of the Continent."
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