Vulgar words in The Strange Adventures of Captain Dangerous, Vol. 3 - Who was a sailor, a soldier, a merchant, a spy, a slave - among the moors... (Page 1)

This book at a glance

ass x 2
bastard x 1
brain x 1
buffoon x 2
hussy x 1
            
jackass x 1
slut x 1
            

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 358   ~   ~   ~

A Beggar on Horseback is bad enough; but Goodness deliver us from a Beggar on an Andalusian Jackass!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 959   ~   ~   ~

Some few of the Commonalty also managed to squeeze themselves in--amongst others, your humble Servant, John Dangerous, who was now reckoned no better than a Rascal Buffoon.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,070   ~   ~   ~

Poison yourself then, _mio caro_, if you see no other way of getting out of the Scrape; but pray remember this; That he who has poison about him, and only enough for one, is an Ass.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,090   ~   ~   ~

"I will work the Mine of my Manhood," I cried out in the Chaise, "to the last Vein of the Ore. _Vive la Joie!_" Yet in my innermost heart did I wish myself once more with Captain Blokes as the daring Supercargo of the dear old _Marquis_, or else a Peaceful Merchant at Amsterdam, giving good advice to the Rogues and Sluts in the Rasphuys.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,150   ~   ~   ~

For the Common People there are Jugglers, Rope-dancers, Fortune-tellers, and other Buffoons, who have stages in the Square of St. Mark, where, at all times during the Carnival, 'tis almost impossible to pass along, owing to the crowd of Masqueraders.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,270   ~   ~   ~

It matters little to me whether France, or Spain, or even Heretic England gets hold of this scorching Rock, with its Swarms of Hussies and Rascals; only I prefer amusing myself, and fighting the Turks, to meddling in Politics, and running the risk of a life-long dungeon in the Castle of St.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,322   ~   ~   ~

I was in such a Mad Rage as to be near Braining the Captain of the Speronare with a Marline-Spike, and would have assuredly blown out the Brains of the first Moor that boarded us, had not the Italian Captain and his Mate seized each one of my arms, and by Main Force wrested my Weapons from me.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,391   ~   ~   ~

Fortunately for me the Interpreter, to whom I had given a hint of ultimate Reward, deposed that I could not speak twenty words of Maltese (which is a kind of Bastard Italian); and he told me that if it had been discovered that I was in any way Connected with the Order, I should surely have been Impaled; the Dey being then in a towering rage with the Knights, one of whose commanders had just captured one of his finest Brigantines, and Dressed Ship, as he humorously put it, by hanging every Man-Jack of the Crew at the Yard-arm, and the Algerine Captain at the Mizen.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,716   ~   ~   ~

The least punishment for a man who has broken the Seventh Commandment is to ride through the streets upon an Ass, with his face towards the Tail, to receive a certain number of Blows upon the Soles of his Feet, and to pay a Fine in proportion to his Estate.

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