Vulgar words in Irish Race in the Past and the Present (Page 1)

This book at a glance

bastard x 2
buffoon x 1
            

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,504   ~   ~   ~

The king, according to the apostle of Ireland - and his words have become a canon of the Irish Church - "has to judge no man unjustly; to be the protector of the stranger, of the widow, and the orphan; to repress theft, punish adultery, not to keep buffoons or unchaste persons; not to exalt iniquity, but to sweep away the impious from the land, exterminate parricides and perjurers; to defend the poor, to appoint just men over the affairs of the kingdom, to consult wise and temperate elders, to defend his native land against its enemies rightfully and stoutly; in all things to put his trust in God."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,909   ~   ~   ~

By the battle of Hastings, which William gained in 1066, over King Harold, who was slain in it, the former became sovereign of England, and instead of the appellation of 'the Bastard,' by which he had been hitherto known, he now obtained the surname of 'the Conqueror.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,947   ~   ~   ~

By the medium of those inquisitions, they were found, one and all, to be bastards.

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