Vulgar words in Essays in English Literature, 1780-1860 (Page 1)

This book at a glance

bastard x 1
buffoon x 4
            

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 515   ~   ~   ~

Even if the "boozing buffoon" had been a boozing buffoon and nothing more, Hogg, who confesses with a little affected remorse, but with evident pride, that he once got regularly drunk every night for some six weeks running, till "an inflammatory fever" kindly pulled him up, could not have greatly objected to this part of the matter.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,307   ~   ~   ~

It is certain that many of Hogg's friends, and, in his touchy moments he himself, considered that great liberty was taken with him, if not that (as the _Quarterly_ put it in a phrase which evidently made Wilson very angry) he was represented as a mere "boozing buffoon."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,340   ~   ~   ~

He must be prepared not only for constant and very scurrilous flings at "Cockneys" (Wilson extends the term far beyond the Hunt and Hazlitt school, an extension which to this day seems to give a strange delight to Edinburgh journalists), but for the wildest heterodoxies and inconsistencies of political, literary, and miscellaneous judgment, for much bastard verse-prose, for a good many quite uninteresting local and ephemeral allusions, and, of course, for any quantity of Scotch dialect.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,342   ~   ~   ~

He will pretty certainly, with the _Quarterly_ reviewer, set their characters down as boozing buffoons, and decline the honour of an invitation to Ambrose's or The Lodge, to Southside or the tent in Ettrick Forest.

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