Vulgar words in Bressant (Page 1)

This book at a glance

bastard x 1
country bumpkin x 2
            

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 95   ~   ~   ~

A picnic once in a while--sleigh-ride in winter--sewing-bees--dance at--at Abbie's; and all in the company of a set of country bumpkins, like Bill Reynolds, and awkward farmers' daughters!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,740   ~   ~   ~

She avoided looking Sophie in the face while the lies were coming out of her mouth (if they were real lies, and not a bastard kind of truth, good while spoken, and the next moment degenerating into falsehood).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,107   ~   ~   ~

Perhaps it was the moonlight, glinting on Bill's immovable eye-glasses, that gave extraordinary impressiveness to his words; or it may have been Bressant's reflection, that this young country bumpkin, sullied with drink, coarse and ignorant though he was, would have probably found his sense of equality in no way diminished, had he known more of the facts to which the present catastrophe was a sequel; at all events, he made no further objections.

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