The 3,550 occurrences of whore
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,871 ~ ~ ~
Thus Thamar is mentioned, who is censured for her sin with her father-in-law; Rahab who was a whore; Ruth who was a foreigner; and Bethsabee, the wife of Urias, who was an adulteress.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,194 ~ ~ ~
Babylon's whore Rak'd from the grave, and bak'd by hanches, then Serv'd up in _coffins_ to unholy men: Defil'd with superstition like the Gentiles Of old, that worship'd onions, roots, and lentils.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,238 ~ ~ ~
Soon after the election of Mr. Adams, which he had strongly opposed, Mr. Poinsett was again appointed Minister to Mexico, whore he remained until the summer of 1829.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 202 ~ ~ ~
But why do they not leav out y also, which signifies not more, but les than e: And why is not i and e cast out of praise and raise, and e from wife and strife, which adorn the words no more than Beauty-spots do a Whore's Face: And why is not w for a black Patch, cast awa from know and blow, as well as da, and wa hav cast awa their Pock arr-y; and why is not w to do, where there's need; that 'ton need no mock 'tuthr wi' the los, and wi' the load of w: Now indeed we have cast awa ugh from though, and although, when som sound is of them, and not left gh out in bright, light, thought, where they signify no more than a chip, or herb Gohn in poredg: Ha!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 250 ~ ~ ~
O u u, as hone, stone, doore, through, wo, whore, fore, more.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,517 ~ ~ ~
_'Tis Pity she's a Whore_, by John Ford.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 725 ~ ~ ~
In the nervous language of the Bible--(hear it, men and women, without shrinking from the words)--that poor girl was "the seed of the adulterer and the whore:" born in a brothel, amongst outcasts from a better mass of life--brought up from the very cradle amid sounds and scenes of utter vice (whereof we dare not think or speak one moment of the many years she dwelt continuously among them)--educated solely as a profligate, and ignorant alike of sin, righteousness, and a judgment to come--had she then a chance of good, or one hopeful thought of being better than she was?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,136 ~ ~ ~
"No, no," said this wicked blasphemer, "I will make you see that, which you cannot beleue:" and hauing lessoned his foole, in his conceiued follie, the next day he procured the gentleman thyther, who seing the Ladies minion, going out of her chamber (which many times lay seuerally from her husband) could not refraine weeping, lamenting the ill fortune of his Lord, who thinkinge that he had had an honest wyfe, was abused with an impudent and vnshamefast whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,288 ~ ~ ~
Wherefore, Ianique, if from my youth thou diddest euer loue me, shew now the same to me by effect, in a matter whereunto thy helpe is moste necessary: for I am so outraged in my mischiefe, as I do enuie the miserablest creatures of the world, remayning no more in me to continue life in wailing and continuall sighes, but the title of a vile and abhominable whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,436 ~ ~ ~
And all the meane people being gathered in this sort together, the lorde tourning him self vnto his wife, saied vnto her: "Come hither thou vnshamefast, vile, and detestable whore, like as thou hast had a harte so traiterous and vnfaithfull, to bring this infamous ruffian in the night into my castell, not only to robbe and dispoile me of mine honour, which I preferre and esteme more then life: but also (whiche is more to be abhorred) to infring and breake for euer, the holie and precious bande of mariage, wherewithall wee be vnited and knit together.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,318 ~ ~ ~
The Incubus's in the shapes of proper men satisfy the desires of the Witches, and the Succubus's serve for whores to the Wizards.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,423 ~ ~ ~
'[722] 'The Incubus's in the shapes of proper men satisfy the desires of the Witches, and the Succubus's serve for Whores to the Wizards.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,278 ~ ~ ~
It is a strange thing to go to the Casinos and see the coarse whores and apprentices in bespattered morning dresses, pea-jackets, and bonnets, twirl round clumsily and indecently to the divine airs played in the Gallery; 'the music yearning like a God in pain' indeed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 510 ~ ~ ~
He proceeds: "Stabbing, whoring, flesh-eating (it was in Lent) ... altogether there is an orgie worthy of the Venusberg."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 791 ~ ~ ~
A contemporary writer[13] describes them as the curse of Germany, and stigmatizes them as "unchristian, God-forsaken folk, whose hand is ever ready in striking, stabbing, robbing, burning, slaying, gaming, who delight in wine-bibbing, whoring, blaspheming, and in the making of widows and orphans."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,306 ~ ~ ~
'I saw her far beyond the moor Away to be the Earl o' Bran's whore.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,651 ~ ~ ~
'O whare is a' my merry young men, Whom I gi' meat and fee, To pu' the thistle and the thorn, To burn this wile whore wi'?'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,299 ~ ~ ~
'Shee is a bitch & a witch, & a whore bold; King, in thine owne hall thou art a cuchold.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,557 ~ ~ ~
"It is not much to be wondered at," continued Tom, "for here we are in the midst of the very persons whose occupations, if such they may be termed, ought most to be avoided; for Covent Garden, and Drury Lane, with their neighbourhoods, are at all times infested with swindlers, sharpers, whores, thieves, and depredators of all descriptions, for ever on the look out.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,779 ~ ~ ~
"And what would you 'sinuate by that?" demanded Kate;--"What do you 'sinuate by that, Ma'am?--I acknowledge that I'm both a whore and a thief--what then?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 227 ~ ~ ~
_From innumerable Windows._ Like _Mars_ I'll fight, like _Antony_ I'll love, I'll drink like _Bacchus_, and I'll whore like _Jove_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 301 ~ ~ ~
Hang me, if I will _hang_ for any Woman, For most of them alike are very common; I'd sooner trudge as I have done before, Than hang upon a d----d confounded Whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 321 ~ ~ ~
_Underwritten._ For Money one may whore, And I'll say no more.---- R. T. _At the same Place._ I am a young Thing, just come from my Mammy.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 465 ~ ~ ~
Thrice was I reckon'd for my Meat; Thrice was I reckon'd for Miss _Milly_'s treat; Thrice was I reckon'd for my dirty Boots; Thrice was I reckon'd for not having Roots; Thrice was I reckon'd by the lazy Fellows; And thrice I swore, I wish'd them at the Gallows; And if I come here any more, Then call me a Son of a Whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 595 ~ ~ ~
So wise a Law would doubtless tend To prove our Senate, Learning's Friend; Whilst Trade, and such like fond Chimeras, Might wait more fit and leisure _Æra's._ _From a Window at the _Dolphin_ Inn in _Southampton_._ The Wedding-Night past, says Sir _John_ to his Mate, Faith Madam I'm bit (tho' I find it too late) By your d - - - n'd little Mouth, or else I'm a Whore's Son, For the Cross underneath's quite out of Proportion.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 598 ~ ~ ~
_From A Boghouse at the _White Hart_, Petersfield._ Were this Place to be view'd by a Herald of Note, He would find a new Charge for the next new-bought Coat, Which _Guillim_ ne'er thought of, nor one of the Herd, _Viz._ a Wall erect Argent, _Gutte de T----d._ And as a Reward, for improving the Art, He should bear on a Fess (if he paints it) a F - - - t. _Underwritten._ A Pox on your writing, I thought you were sh - - - - g, My great Gut has giv'n me such Twitches: Had you scribled much more, I'm a Son of a Whore, If I should not have don't in my Breeches.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 658 ~ ~ ~
_By my Lord's Gentleman._ _Written in the first Leaf of _Arbor Vitæ_._ Two D - - - s, and a Doctor, 'tis said, wrote this Piece, Who were modest as Whores, and witty as Geese.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 660 ~ ~ ~
_At the _Red Lyon_ at _Egham_, and in the Windows at many other Places._ _Cornutus_ call'd his Wife both Whore and Slut, Quoth she, you'll never leave your Brawling--but-- But, what?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 661 ~ ~ ~
quoth he: Quoth she, the Post or Door; For you have Horns to But, if I'm a Whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 281 ~ ~ ~
As Tradition informs us, Ben Johnson was acquainted with the House; and in some Time, when he found strange People there, and the Sign changed, he wrote the following Lines._ When _Hope_ and _Prudence_ kept this House, The _Angel_ kept the Door; Now _Hope_ is dead, And the _Angel_ fled, And _Prudence_ turn'd a Whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,138 ~ ~ ~
In the nervous language of the Bible--(hear it, men and women, without shrinking from the words)--that poor girl was "the seed of the adulterer and the whore:" born in a brothel, amongst outcasts from a better mass of life--brought up from the very cradle amid sounds and scenes of utter vice (whereof we dare not think or speak one moment of the many years she dwelt continuously among them)--educated solely as a profligate, and ignorant alike of sin, righteousness, and a judgment to come--had she then a chance of good, or one hopeful thought of being better than she was?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 539 ~ ~ ~
Being cold the teams sot out for the Lake--about 40 of the Kings waggons--this afternoon their was a Lobster[86] Corperel married to a Road Island whore--our men came in from Fort Miller.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 203 ~ ~ ~
In truth thou affectest I know not what hot-blooded whore: this thou art ashamed to own.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 315 ~ ~ ~
Varus drew me off to see his mistress as I was strolling from the Forum: a little whore, as it seemed to me at the first glance, neither inelegant nor lacking good looks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 701 ~ ~ ~
Who can witness this, who can brook it, save a whore-monger, a guzzler, and a gamester, that Mamurra should possess what long-haired Gaul and remotest Britain erstwhile had.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 703 ~ ~ ~
Then thou'rt a whore-monger, a guzzler, and a gamester.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 706 ~ ~ ~
Then thou'rt a whore-monger, a guzzler, and a gamester.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 921 ~ ~ ~
That Ametina, worn-out whore, Me for a myriad oft would bore, That strumpet of th' ignoble nose, To leman, rakehell Formian chose.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 945 ~ ~ ~
Stand all round her dunning with demands, 10 "Return (O rotten whore!)
~ ~ ~ Sentence 947 ~ ~ ~
Our noting books (O rotten whore!)
~ ~ ~ Sentence 955 ~ ~ ~
Cry all together in a higher key "Restore (O rotten whore!)
~ ~ ~ Sentence 956 ~ ~ ~
our noting books, Our noting books (O rotten whore!)
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,376 ~ ~ ~
Wont thou at peasant-girls to jape He-whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,767 ~ ~ ~
Mentula whores.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,768 ~ ~ ~
By the mentule he is be-whored: certes.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,945 ~ ~ ~
were fair, but at the gifties to clutch Fraudfully, viler seems than greed of greediest harlot Who with her every limb maketh a whore of herself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 39,226 ~ ~ ~
Whore, n. [jwor] Puta.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,562 ~ ~ ~
Never did Earl that ever wore coronet fly into a pitch of more uncontrollable rage, than did my right honourable father: and in the ardour of his reply, he adopted my mother's phraseology, to inform her, that if there was a whore and bastard connected with his house, it was herself and her brat.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,381 ~ ~ ~
I think thee, then, a man That dares as much as a wilde horse or tyger, 440 As headstrong and as bloody; and to feed The ravenous wolfe of thy most caniball valour (Rather than not employ it) thou would'st turne Hackster to any whore, slave to a Jew, Or English usurer, to force possessions 445 (And cut mens throats) of morgaged estates; Or thou would'st tire thee like a tinkers strumpet, And murther market folks; quarrell with sheepe, And runne as mad as Ajax; serve a butcher; Doe any thing but killing of the King.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,382 ~ ~ ~
450 That in thy valour th'art like other naturalls That have strange gifts in nature, but no soule Diffus'd quite through, to make them of a peece, But stop at humours, that are more absurd, Childish and villanous than that hackster, whore, 455 Slave, cut-throat, tinkers bitch, compar'd before; And in those humours would'st envie, betray, Slander, blaspheme, change each houre a religion, Doe any thing, but killing of the King: That in thy valour (which is still the dunghill, 460 To which hath reference all filth in thy house) Th'art more ridiculous and vaine-glorious Than any mountibank, and impudent Than any painted bawd; which not to sooth, And glorifie thee like a Jupiter Hammon, 465 Thou eat'st thy heart in vinegar, and thy gall Turns all thy blood to poyson, which is cause Of that toad-poole that stands in thy complexion, And makes thee with a cold and earthy moisture, (Which is the damme of putrifaction) 470 As plague to thy damn'd pride, rot as thou liv'st: To study calumnies and treacheries; To thy friends slaughters like a scrich-owle sing, And to all mischiefes--but to kill the King.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,697 ~ ~ ~
_Cler._ Some informer, Bloud-hound to mischiefe, usher to the hang-man, 95 Thirstie of honour for some huge state act, Perceiving me great with the worthy Guise, And he (I know not why) held dangerous, Made me the desperate organe of his danger, Onely with that poore colour: tis the common 100 And more then whore-like tricke of treacherie And vermine bred to rapine and to ruine, For which this fault is still to be accus'd; Since good acts faile, crafts and deceits are us'd.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 155 ~ ~ ~
Yet whore you may; And that's no breach of any vow to heaven: Pollute the nuptial bed with _michall_ sin."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,230 ~ ~ ~
20 The whore stands to be bought for each man's money, And seeks vild wealth by selling of her coney.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,247 ~ ~ ~
Nor doth her face please, but her husband's love: I know not what men think should thee so move [366] She is not chaste that's kept, but a dear whore: [367] Thy fear is than her body valued more.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,305 ~ ~ ~
men point at me for a whore, Shame, that should make me blush, I have no more."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,782 ~ ~ ~
He is a gull whose indiscretion Cracks his purse-strings to be in fashion; He is a gull who is long in taking roote In barraine soyle where can be but small fruite; He is a gull who runnes himselfe in debt For twelue dayes' wonder, hoping so to get; He is a gull whose conscience is a block, Not to take interest, but wastes his stock; He is a gull who cannot haue a whore, But brags how much he spends upon her score; He is a gull that for commoditie Payes tenne times ten, and sells the same for three; He is a gull who, passing finicall, Peiseth each word to be rhetoricall; And, to conclude, who selfe-conceitedly Thinks al men guls, ther's none more gull then he.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,789 ~ ~ ~
Yet doth not his particular humour shun The common stews and brothels of the town, 10 Though all the world in troops do thither run, Clean and unclean, the gentle and the clown: Then why should Rufus in his pride abhor A common seat, that loves a common whore?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,798 ~ ~ ~
Quintus the dancer useth evermore His feet in measure and in rule to move: Yet on a time he call'd his mistress whore , And thought with that sweet word to win her love.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,833 ~ ~ ~
Liber doth vaunt how chastely he hath liv'd Since he hath been in town, seven years [472] and more, For that he swears he hath four only swiv'd, A maid, a wife, a widow, and a whore: Then, Liber, thou hast swiv'd all womenkind, For a fifth sort, I know, thou canst not find.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,872 ~ ~ ~
Cosmus hath more discoursing in his head Than Jove when Pallas issu'd from his brain; And still he strives to be deliverèd Of all his thoughts at once; but all in vain; For, as we see at all the playhouse-doors, When ended is the play, the dance, and song, A thousand townsmen, gentlemen, and whores, Porters, and serving-men, together throng,- So thoughts of drinking, thriving, wenching, war, And borrowing money, ranging in his mind, 10 To issue all at once so forward are, As none at all can perfect passage find.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,944 ~ ~ ~
I am as good a man, 10 And better too by many a quality, For vault, and dance, and fence, and rhyme I can: You keep a whore at your own charge, men tell me; Indeed, friend Cineas, therein you excel me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,952 ~ ~ ~
[505] The MS. adds- "You keepe a whore att your [own] charge in towne; Indeede, frend Ceneas, there you put me downe."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,984 ~ ~ ~
If Gella's beauty be examinèd, She hath a dull dead eye, a saddle nose, An ill-shap'd face, with morphew overspread, And rotten teeth, which she in laughing shows; Briefly, she is the filthiest wench in town, Of all that do the art of whoring use: But when she hath put on her satin gown, Her cut [512] lawn apron, and her velvet shoes, Her green silk stockings, and her petticoat Of taffeta, with golden fringe around, 10 And is withal perfum'd with civet hot, Which doth her valiant stinking breath confound,- Yet she with these additions is no more Than a sweet, filthy, fine, ill-favour'd whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,996 ~ ~ ~
When I dare swear he dares adventure more Than the most brave and most [514] all-daring wight That ever arms with resolution bore; He that dare touch the most unwholesome whore That ever was retir'd into the spittle, And dares court wenches standing at a door (The portion of his wit being passing little); He that dares give his dearest friends offences, Which other valiant fools do fear to do, 10 And, when a fever doth confound his senses, Dare eat raw beef, and drink strong wine thereto: [Pg 231] He that dares take tobacco on the stage, [515] Dares man a whore at noon-day through the street, Dares dance in Paul's, and in this formal age Dares say and do whatever is unmeet; Whom fear of shame could never yet affright, Who dares affirm that Sylla dares not fight?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,043 ~ ~ ~
When Francus comes to solace with his whore, He sends for rods, and strips himself stark naked; For his lust sleeps, and will not rise before, By whipping of the wench, it be awakèd.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,100 ~ ~ ~
Philo, the lawyer, [537] and the fortune-teller, The school-master, the midwife, [538] and the bawd, The conjurer, the buyer and the seller Of painting which with breathing will be thaw'd, Doth practise physic; and his credit grows, As doth the ballad-singer's auditory, Which hath at Temple-Bar his standing chose, And to the vulgar sings an ale-house story: First stands a porter; then an oyster-wife Doth stint her cry and stay her steps to hear him; 10 Then comes a cutpurse ready with his [539] knife, And then a country client presseth [540] near him; There stands the constable, there stands the whore, And, hearkening [541] to the song, mark [542] not each other; [Pg 238] There by the serjeant stands the debitor, [543] And doth no more mistrust him than his brother: This [544] Orpheus to such hearers giveth music, And Philo to such patients giveth physic.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,124 ~ ~ ~
Fuscus is free, and hath the world at will; Yet, in the course of life that he doth lead, He's like a horse which, turning round a mill, Doth always in the self-same circle tread: First, he doth rise at ten; [545] and at eleven He goes to Gill's, where he doth eat till one; Then sees a play till six; [546] and sups at seven; [Pg 239] And, after supper, straight to bed is gone; And there till ten next day he doth remain; And then he dines; then sees a comedy; 10 And then he sups, and goes to bed again: Thus round he runs without variety, Save that sometimes he comes not to the play, But falls into a whore-house by the way.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,993 ~ ~ ~
Although God say, there shall be no whore of the daughters of Israel, neither shall there be a whorekeeper of the sonnes of Israel: yet these men say all manner of whoredom is not forbidden.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 17 ~ ~ ~
Let _Bawdy-Baths_ be us'd no more; Nor _Smoaky-Stoves_ but by the whore Of _Babilon_: since _Happy-Fate_ Hath _Blessed_ us with _Chocolate_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 777 ~ ~ ~
would you make your mother a whore, and me a cuckold, as the saying is?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,405 ~ ~ ~
That jade, Gipsy, that was with us just now in the cellar, is the arrantest whore that ever wore a petticoat; and I 'm dying for love of her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,430 ~ ~ ~
Ay, a damned son of a whore of Babylon, that came over hither to say grace to the French officers, and eat up our provisions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,440 ~ ~ ~
ay, and perverted, my dear friend: for, I 'm afraid, he has made her a whore and a papist!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,731 ~ ~ ~
Look'ee, madam, don't think that my anger proceeds from any concern I have for your honour, but for my own, and if you can contrive any way of being a whore without making me a cuckold, do it and welcome.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 671 ~ ~ ~
So it fortuned (fie vpon that vnfortunate word of Fortune) yt this whore, this quean, this curtizan, this common of ten thousand, so bribing me not to bewray her, had giuen me a great deale of counterfeit gold, which she had receiued of a coiner to make awaie a little before.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 700 ~ ~ ~
Rings which he borrowed of a light curtizan that he vsed to, hee woulde faine to bee taken from her fingers, and in summe, so handled the matter, that _Castaldo_ exclaimd, Out whore, strumpet, sixe penny hackster, away with her to prison.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,035 ~ ~ ~
My owne mother gaue I a box of the eare to, and brake her neck down a pair of stairs, because she would not go in to a gentleman, when I bad her: my sister I solde to an olde Leno, to make his best of her: anie kinswoman that I haue, knew I shee were not a whore, my selfe would make her one: thou art a whore, thou shalt bee a whore in spite of religion or precise ceremonies.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,139 ~ ~ ~
From thence he brings the art of atheisme, the art of epicurising, the art of whoring, the art of poysoning, the art of Sodomitrie.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,256 ~ ~ ~
I would spend my soule willingly, to haue this triple headed Pope with all his sin-absolued whores, and oile-greased priests borne with a blacke sant on the deuills backes in procession to the pit of perdition.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,257 ~ ~ ~
Would I might sinke presently into ye earth, so I might blow vp this Rome, this whore of _Babylon_ into the aire with my breath.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 488 ~ ~ ~
Describe the Cunning of a jilting Whore, From the ill Arts herself has us'd before; Thus let her write, but _Paraphrase_ no more.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 863 ~ ~ ~
_Belv._ That's thy Joy, a cheap Whore.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,012 ~ ~ ~
I know not in what Danger it were indeed, if the Jilt should pretend she's in love with him, for 'tis a kind believing Coxcomb; otherwise if he part with more than a Piece of Eight-- geld him: for which offer he may chance to be beaten, if she be a Whore of the first Rank.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,078 ~ ~ ~
_Fred._ Pox 'tis some common Whore upon my Life.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,079 ~ ~ ~
_Blunt._ A Whore!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,084 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,085 ~ ~ ~
_Belv._ Why yes, Sir, they are Whores, tho they'll neither entertain you with Drinking, Swearing, or Baudy; are Whores in all those gay Clothes, and right Jewels; are Whores with great Houses richly furnisht with Velvet Beds, Store of Plate, handsome Attendance, and fine Coaches, are Whores and errant ones.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,086 ~ ~ ~
_Will._ Pox on't, where do these fine Whores live?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,087 ~ ~ ~
_Belv._ Where no Rogue in Office yclep'd Constables dare give 'em laws, nor the Wine-inspired Bullies of the Town break their Windows; yet they are Whores, tho this _Essex_ Calf believe them Persons of Quality.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,100 ~ ~ ~
what Impudence is practis'd in this Country?-- With Order and Decency Whoring's established here by virtue of the Inquisition-- Come let's be gone, I'm sure we're no Chapmen for this Commodity.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,224 ~ ~ ~
_Fred._ Yes, to your Lodging, if you will, but not in here.-- Damn these gay Harlots-- by this Hand I'll have as sound and handsome a Whore for a Patacoone.-- Death, Man, she'll murder thee.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,327 ~ ~ ~
Nay, to love such a Shameroon, a very Beggar; nay, a Pirate-Beggar, whose Business is to rifle and be gone, a No-Purchase, No-Pay Tatterdemalion, an _English_ Piccaroon; a Rogue that fights for daily Drink, and takes a Pride in being loyally lousy-- Oh, I could curse now, if I durst-- This is the Fate of most Whores.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,536 ~ ~ ~
_Blunt._ 'Tis a rare Girl, and this one night's enjoyment with her will be worth all the days I ever past in Essex.-- Would she'd go with me into _England_, tho to say truth, there's plenty of Whores there already.-- But a pox on 'em they are such mercenary prodigal Whores, that they want such a one as this, that's free and generous, to give 'em good Examples:-- Why, what a House she has!
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