The 430 occurrences of arse

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He would sit down betwixt two stools, and his arse to the ground --would cover himself with a wet sack, and drink in eating of his soup.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,017   ~   ~   ~

He would bite their ears, and they would scratch his nose--he would blow in their arses, and they would lick his chaps.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,107   ~   ~   ~

In shitting yes'day I did know The sess I to my arse did owe: The smell was such came from that slunk, That I was with it all bestunk: O had but then some brave Signor Brought her to me I waited for, In shitting!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 317   ~   ~   ~

The Bald Arse or Peeled Breech of the Widows.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 963   ~   ~   ~

Everybody then taking heed, and hearkening with great silence, the Englishman lift up on high into the air his two hands severally, clunching in all the tops of his fingers together, after the manner which, a la Chinonnese, they call the hen's arse, and struck the one hand on the other by the nails four several times.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,666   ~   ~   ~

For they do nothing but dote, and better were it for them to rub their arse against a thistle than to waste away their time thus in disputing of that whereof they know not the original; for the resolution is easy, neither need we to inquire any further than that the said baths came by a hot piss of the good Pantagruel.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,689   ~   ~   ~

You shall have the rest of the history at Frankfort mart next coming, and there shall you see how Panurge was married and made a cuckold within a month after his wedding; how Pantagruel found out the philosopher's stone, the manner how he found it, and the way how to use it; how he passed over the Caspian mountains, and how he sailed through the Atlantic sea, defeated the Cannibals, and conquered the isles of Pearls; how he married the daughter of the King of India, called Presthan; how he fought against the devil and burnt up five chambers of hell, ransacked the great black chamber, threw Proserpina into the fire, broke five teeth to Lucifer, and the horn that was in his arse; how he visited the regions of the moon to know whether indeed the moon were not entire and whole, or if the women had three quarters of it in their heads, and a thousand other little merriments all veritable.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,298   ~   ~   ~

Yea, but have a special care, quoth Panurge, when thou comest to put thy nose within mine arse, that thou forget not to pull off thy spectacles.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 509   ~   ~   ~

Hark ye, friend of mine, answered the other; with the fleece of these your fine Rouen cloth is to be made; your Leominster superfine wool is mine arse to it; mere flock in comparison.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 623   ~   ~   ~

Set them together, said Panurge, then blow in their arses, it will be a bagpipe.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 956   ~   ~   ~

Poor Panurge having with the full contents of the inside of his doublet plentifully fed the fish, greedy enough of such odious fare, sat on the deck all in a heap, with his nose and arse together, most sadly cast down, moping and half dead; invoked and called to his assistance all the blessed he- and she-saints he could muster up; swore and vowed to confess in time and place convenient, and then bawled out frightfully, Steward, maitre d'hotel, see ho!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,500   ~   ~   ~

The head of the larynx, like a The arse-gut, like a monk's vintage-basket.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,575   ~   ~   ~

His arse-hole, like a crystal look- His neck, like a talboy.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,046   ~   ~   ~

This spoke, he lugs out his trusty sword, Kiss-mine-arse (so he called it) with both his fists, and cut the Sausage in twain.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,291   ~   ~   ~

We would kiss his bare arse without boggling at it, and eke his two pounders; for he has a pair of them, the holy father, that he has; we find it so by our fine decretals, otherwise he could not be pope.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,437   ~   ~   ~

Insomuch that Snip was condemned to make good the stuffs to all his customers; and to this day poor Cabbage's hair grows through his hood and his arse through his pocket-holes.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,266   ~   ~   ~

The retentive faculty of the nerve which restrains the muscle called sphincter ('tis the arse-hole, an it please you) was relaxated by the violence of the fear which he had been in during his fantastic visions.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,197   ~   ~   ~

Their chins were close-shaved, and their feet iron-shod; and to show they did not value fortune, Benius made them shave and poll the hind part of their polls as bare as a bird's arse, from the crown to the shoulder-blades; but they had leave to let their hair grow before, from the two triangular bones in the upper part of the skull.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,203   ~   ~   ~

The hind part of their faces were always uncovered, as are our faces, which made them either go with their belly or the arse foremost, which they pleased.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,128   ~   ~   ~

Which done, she ordered him to sit down between two stools placed there for that purpose, his arse upon the ground.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 294   ~   ~   ~

II With such a companion, a green-stall to keep, To swig porter all day, on a flock-bed to sleep, [4] I was so good-natur'd, so bobbish and gay, [5] And I still was as smart as a carrot all day: But now I so saucy and churlish am grown, So ragged and greasy, as never was known; My Nancy is gone, and my joys are all fled, And my arse hangs behind me, as heavy as lead.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 300   ~   ~   ~

I cry, while I'm all over smart, For I'm bit by the arse, while I'm stung to the heart.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,734   ~   ~   ~

His leg kicks out sky-high, and his arse gapes open.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,898   ~   ~   ~

Moreover, you have taught boasting and quibbling; the wrestling schools are deserted and the young fellows have submitted their arses to outrage,[496] in order that they might learn to reel off idle chatter, and the sailors have dared to bandy words with their officers.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,294   ~   ~   ~

The tract or sermon, 'An Effectual Shove to the heavy-arse Christian', was, according to the title-page, written by William Bunyan, minister of the gospel in South Wales, and "printed for the author" in London in 1768.]]

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,951   ~   ~   ~

And good Mr. Governour, as another old Proverb says, do not let the Kettle call the Pot black-arse!-- _Fil_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 12,919   ~   ~   ~

For sure thy Figure ne'er was seen before, Such Arse-like Breasts, stiff neck, with all thy Store, Are certain Antidotes against a Whore.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 674   ~   ~   ~

I smote off his leg by the hard arse, As soon as I met him there.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,172   ~   ~   ~

Think ye in her arse there is any shame?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,747   ~   ~   ~

I know well then I should break my neck, And, by God, then had I the worse side; Yet had I liever be by the nose tied In a wench's arse somewhere, Rather than I would stand in that great fear, For to go up to heaven--nay, I pray you, let be.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,450   ~   ~   ~

What, I do but claw mine arse, sir, by your leave.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,674   ~   ~   ~

Foh, by St Saviour, I never kissed a worse; Ye were as good kiss All-Hallows' arse; For, by All-Hallows, yet me-thinketh, That All-Hallows' breath stinketh.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,192   ~   ~   ~

His arse maketh buttons now, and who lusteth to feel, Shall find his heart creeping out at his heel, Or else lying hidden in some corner of his hose, If it be not already dropped out of his nose.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,390   ~   ~   ~

For a man may see, thou whoreson goose, Thou wouldest lese thine arse, if it were loose!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 642   ~   ~   ~

And now is religion a rider, a roamer by the street, A leader of lovëdays,[1] and a loudë[2] beggar, A pricker on a palfrey from manor to manor, An heap of houndës at his arse as he a lord were.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 641   ~   ~   ~

And now is religion a rider, a roamer by the street, A leader of lovëdays,[1] and a loudë[2] beggar, A pricker on a palfrey from manor to manor, An heap of houndës at his arse as he a lord were.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,312   ~   ~   ~

In the year 1106, it was for the second time injured by fire, [Footnote: "L'anno 1106, uscito fuoco d'una casa privata, arse parte del palazzo."--_Sansovino_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,918   ~   ~   ~

He'll do nothing all day long but sit on his arse, as my mother did when she made pouts: And then a' looks a' this fashion, and thus and thus again; and then, what do ye?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,374   ~   ~   ~

Artaxerxes III is succeeded by Arses in Persia.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,379   ~   ~   ~

Arses is succeeded by Darius III (Codomannus) in Persia.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,806   ~   ~   ~

elevated to the throne of Persia his son Arses, who had a brief reign, being dethroned and murdered by his father.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,267   ~   ~   ~

Pur vi passai; che ne l'incendio m' arse, Nè dal ferro mi fu l'andar conteso: Vernò in quel punto, ed annottò: fe' il giorno E la serenità poscia ritorno.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,507   ~   ~   ~

ARSE'TES (3 _syl._), the aged eunuch who brought up Clorinda, and attended on her.--Tasso, _Jerusalem Delivered_ (1575).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,668   ~   ~   ~

The Eunuch Arse'tes (3 _syl_.)

~   ~   ~   Sentence 253   ~   ~   ~

get up you slack-arse poet, I want to have a word with you."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 398   ~   ~   ~

The dead do's well at all times, Yet Gowts will hang an arse a long time (Master) The Pox, or English Surfeits if we had 'em; Those are rich marle, they make a Church-yard fat, And make the Sexton sing, they never miss, Sir.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 34   ~   ~   ~

But what a number were executed presently vpon this statute, you would wonder: yet not withstanding all would not preuaile: but still they wandred, as before vp and downe, and meeting once in a yeere at a place appointed: sometimes at the Deuils arse in peake in Darbishire, and otherwhiles at Ketbrooke by Blackeheath, or elsewhere, as they agreed still at their meeting.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,882   ~   ~   ~

Arses kaupii 2.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,930   ~   ~   ~

quoth the M. Whow comes it to passe then, quoth the Capycin, that ye kisse your wifs mouth and not hir arse, whey have ye more respect for hir mouth then hir arse, since they are both of on mater?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,396   ~   ~   ~

Mnêmon, his son 405 Okhos (Uvasu), son of Artaxerxes 362 Arses, his son 339 Darius III.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 402   ~   ~   ~

Lets face it, you were pretty much an arse-hole to those who knew you.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,400   ~   ~   ~

When their guard was over, they were, as Mr. Gilburn expresses it in his last speech, as bare as a bird's arse, so no time was to be lost, and accordingly that very night they made their second expedition.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,631   ~   ~   ~

but thou shalt no more be vexed with the tedious drivel of a petty dealer in ass's dung, some blackguard, belike, that came hither from the country because he was dismissed the service of some petty squire, clad in romagnole, with belfry-breeches, and a pen in his arse, and for that he has a few pence, must needs have a gentleman's daughter and a fine lady to wife, and set up a coat of arms, and say:--'I am of the such and such,' and 'my ancestors did thus and thus.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,309   ~   ~   ~

_Val._ Along with me then, never hang an arse, widow.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,543   ~   ~   ~

But herein they rather disgrace than adorn their persons, as by their niceness in apparel, for which I say most nations do not unjustly deride us, as also for that we do seem to imitate all nations round about us, wherein we be like to the polypus or chameleon; and thereunto bestow most cost upon our arses, and much more than upon all the rest of our bodies, as women do likewise upon their heads and shoulders.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 709   ~   ~   ~

_Published by the Navarre Society, London._] What a pleasure is it for him that he sees Mistris _Do-all_ attending the Midwife, and giving her all manner of warmed beds and other Clouts, the number and names whereof are without end; and that Mistris _Swift-hand_ & Mistris _Fair-arse_ are tumbling all things topsie-turvy forsooth to seek and prepare in a readiness all those things that are most necessary for the Child; but little doth he think that they do it more to be peeping into every hole and corner, and to have a full view of all the Child-bed linnen, then out of needfull assistance?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 796   ~   ~   ~

Their eys will fly into every nook and corner; nay the very house of Office must be extraordinary neat and clean; for Mistris _Foul-arse_, Gossip _Order-all_, and Goody _Dirty-buttocks_, will be peeping into every crevise and cranny: And because they will do it forsooth, according to their fashion, they make a shew as if they must go to the necessary Chamber, with a Letter to _Gravesend_, only to take an inspection whether it be as cleanly there as it is upon the Gossipping Chamber where all the Guests are.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,558   ~   ~   ~

'Tis true, you will meet with some jeering prattle-arses, that will say, is this that brave couple, that there was such a noise made of when they were married!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 33   ~   ~   ~

Others too curious will _innoc_ _Ulate_ their Plants on _Medlars_ Stock, (_i.e._ as Tongues in Vulgar pass, They graft it on an _Open-arse_;) But Gardeners, Virtuosi, all, Say this is most _unnatural_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,292   ~   ~   ~

If you don't know the Use of them, they are good to wipe your Arse with.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,276   ~   ~   ~

_Anthony_ turn'd the Matter off very well, saying that he had given the prime Honour to the Mouth for no other Reason, but because he knew that the other Man would name some other Part, if it were but out of Envy to thwart him: A few Days after, when they were both invited again to an Entertainment, _Anthony_ going in, finds his Antagonist, talking with some other Persons, while Supper was getting ready, and turning his Arse towards him, lets a great Fart full in his Face.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 900   ~   ~   ~

arse, ass.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 627   ~   ~   ~

Quell'invida d'ogni delizia mia, del suo sposo dimentica, arse di gelosia.... Me l'ha rapito.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 872   ~   ~   ~

_2 Sold._ Hang not an arse.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,945   ~   ~   ~

Then Reigned _Artaxerxes Ochus_ twenty one years; _Arses_, or _Arogus_, two years, and _Darius Codomannus_ four years, unto the battel of _Arbela_, whereby the _Persian_ Monarchy was translated to the _Greeks_, _Octob._ 2.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 123   ~   ~   ~

The young Lady, who was extreamly troubled at her late Disappointment, and her Husbands cruel Usage, and perceiveing that these things was feizable, she took the offer'd Counsel; and the Old Bawd having soon stript herself, and releas'd the young Lady, took her place in the Pond, whilst she went forth to the Bawds Apartment, and there met with her Gallant, who at first by her Garb took her for the Bawd, but was well pleas'd to find himself mistaken: And being told how matters stood, they made use of their time; and esteem'd themselves much beholden to the Bawd, by whose contrivance they thus come together; whilst she did greater Pennance, and under-went more Pain to procure their Pleasure, then they were then aware of: For the old Gentleman not being Satisfied in that Revenge he had taken on his Wife, for her making him a Cuckold; resolved to punish her farther, and so rises out of his Bed, and goes down to the side of the Pond; and there calls her a thousand Whores and Strumpets; Did not I (says he) take you in a manner without a Smock to your Arse, and desired no Portion with you, on purpose that you might be a dutiful and kind Wife, and maintain'd you as well as any Lady in the Land?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 619   ~   ~   ~

But he knocking again, up comes the Mistress, who seeming to take him for a Woman, ask'd him, _What he would have?_ He answer'd, _Such a Woman to whom he'd lent his Cloaths_; but she not only made her self Ignorant of the matter, but call'd him _Bitch, Whore, Cheat, Pick-Pocket_, and all to nought, concluding her Harmonious Harrangue in this manner, _Ye dirty Drab, don't think to put your Cheats upon me: You came in here with a Spruce Young Man, and for ought I know you have Pick'd his Pocket, and sent him away, and now you go about to Cheat me of my Reckoning; but that shan't do ye _Whore_, for I'll have my Reckoning quickly, or else I'll Strip your Gown off your Arse_; but the poor Rogue having no Money to pay, she forthwith stript him of his Mant: And thus half Naked, in a Petticoat slit up to the Breeches; an old broken pair of Stays, and a few Ragged Head-Cloaths, he was kick'd down Stairs into the Street.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,171   ~   ~   ~

Where sold he bargains, whip-stitch, kiss my arse, Promis'd a play, and dwindled to a farce?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,886   ~   ~   ~

338 he poisoned Ochus, and placed upon the throne his youngest son, Arses, at the same time assassinating all the brothers of the new monarch.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,888   ~   ~   ~

But Arses, though subservient for a year or two, began, as he grew older, to show that he had a will of his own, and was even heard to utter threats against his benefactor whereupon Bagoas, accustomed now to crime, secured himself by a fresh series of murders.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,889   ~   ~   ~

He caused Arses and his infant children to be assassinated, and selected one of his friends, Codomannus, the son of Arsanes, to fill the vacant throne.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 221   ~   ~   ~

Looking Good She has: Terrific tits, Beautiful boobs, Loverly lungs, Magnificent mammaries, Nice nipples, and a cute arse!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 95   ~   ~   ~

"Come and tak' th' arse to meadow for your brother, instead of wasten' the marnen'.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 207   ~   ~   ~

+liberty.+ Gods bodi how commeth this gere to pas I am cast out at the cartes arse 230 The worlde is nothing as it was For I am here refused +Health+ Why be you angry that we doo agree Then are ye not wyse, for ifye loue me I will loue hym agayne, so it should be Or els I were mysaduised +yllibert+ Then of my loue ye set no store My company I see well ye looked notfore Farewell I wyll get me out of the doore yet I am your betters and so am I called.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 231   ~   ~   ~

360 One of their purces I did aspy Out of his sleue where it dyd lye And one wynked on me with his eye But ther began the sporte Their false falsehode, and I crafty wyt got the purse loe, heare I haue it I ran my way and let hym syt Smoke and shitten arse together.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,573   ~   ~   ~

), his unfortunate wars in the Delta, the conquest of Egypt (342) and the reconstitution of the empire._ _The Eastern world: Elam, Urartu, the Syrian kingdoms, the ancient Semitic states decayed and decaying--Babylon in its decline--The Jewish state and its miseries--Nehemiah, Ezra--Egypt in the eyes of the Greeks: Sais, the Delta, the inhabitants of the marshes--Memphis, its monuments, its population--Travels in Upper Egypt: the Fayum, Khemmis, Thebes, Elephantine--The apparent vigour and actual feebleness of Egypt._ _Persia and its powerlessness to resist attack: the rise of Macedonia, Philippi --Arses (337) and Darius Codomannos (336)--Alexander the Great--The invasion of Asia--The battle of Granicus and the conquest of the Asianic peninsula--Issus, the siege of Tyre and of Gaza, the conquest of Egypt, the foundation of Alexandria--Arbela: the conquest of Babylon, Susa, and Ecbatana--The death of Darius and the last days of the old Eastern world._ [Illustration: 199.jpg PAGE IMAGE] [Page 200 and 201 need to be rescanned] CHAPTER II--THE LAST DAYS OF THE OLD EASTERN WORLD _The Median wars--The last native dynasties of Egypt--The Eastern world on the eve of the Macedonian conquest._ [Drawn by Boudier, from one of the sarcophagi of Sidon, now in the Museum of St. Irene.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,794   ~   ~   ~

He therefore poisoned Ochus, to avoid being assassinated or put to the torture, and placed on the throne Arses, the youngest of the king's sons, while he caused the remaining royal children to be put to death (336).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,804   ~   ~   ~

His son Arses was at first content to be a docile instrument in the hands of Bagoas; but when the desire for independence came to him with the habitual exercise of power, and he began to chafe at his bonds, the eunuch sacrificed him to his own personal safety, and took his life as he had done that of his father in the preceding year (336).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,182   ~   ~   ~

Thou comes--they rattle i' their ranks At ither's arses!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 229   ~   ~   ~

O, for a, nort[h]erly, as paredg, [h]arses, carn, amang.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,182   ~   ~   ~

Arse, n. [árs] Culo, trasera, nalgas.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,511   ~   ~   ~

_Blunt._ Think of a Million, Rogue, and do not hang an Arse thus.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 12,113   ~   ~   ~

Skoles stinks so deadly, that his breeches loath His dampish buttocks furthermore to clothe; Cloy'd they are up with arse; but hope, one blast Will whirl about, and blow them thence at last.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 12,344   ~   ~   ~

The staff is now greas'd; And very well pleas'd, She cocks out her arse at the parting, To an old ram goat That rattles i' th' throat, Half-choked with the stink of her farting.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,569   ~   ~   ~

They come to us out of their pigstyes in the country, clad in homespun frieze, with their bag-breeches and pen in arse, and as soon as they have gotten a leash of groats, they must e'en have the daughters of gentlemen and right ladies to wife and bear arms and say, "I am of such a family" and "Those of my house did thus and thus."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,378   ~   ~   ~

There be all the queens in the world, even, I may say, to the Sirreverence of Prester John, who hath his horns amiddleward his arse; see you now?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 439   ~   ~   ~

[9] The wily saint employed a condemned criminal as a bait, lured the dragon from its den, then made the sign of the cross over it, and dragged it, unresisting, by his holy stole into the town, "où elle fut arse et bruslez."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,171   ~   ~   ~

"_Item_, dit qu'elle a demandé à ses voix s'elle sera arse, et que les dictes voix luy ont répondu que elle se actende à nostre sire, et il luy aidera.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,944   ~   ~   ~

[Footnote 245: An arse wispe, _penicillum_, -li, vel _anitergium_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 509   ~   ~   ~

The report runs thus: "Alice _de W, qui fuit de l'age de xiij ans, fuit arse per judgment, pur ceo que el'avoit tue sa Maistres, & pur tant ceo fuit adjudge treason, &c._;" and it appears that the case turned upon the question of accountability, by reason of the tender age of the culprit.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,008   ~   ~   ~

Ambrose Wild sage Arse-smart Water pepper Ass-ear Comfrey Ass's foot Coltsfoot Aaron's board Spirea Bairn-wort Daisy Ball-weed Centaury Ban-wort Violet Base-rocket Burdock Beard-tree Hazel Bedlam Cowslip Oxlip Beggar's buttons Burdock Beggar's needle Shepherd's needle Bell-bloom Daffodil Benewithe Woodbine Biddy's eyes Pansy Bird's eye Germander Speedwell Blaver Corn blue-bottle Bleed wort Wild red poppy Bleeding heart Wallflower Blood wort Blood-veined dock Blow-ball Dandelion Bobbin and Joan Cuckoo-pint Bog violet Butter wort Brain berry Blackberry Bride wort Meadow sweet Bulls and Cows Cuckoo-pint Bunny mouth Snapdragon Butter and eggs Daffodil Calf's snout Scarlet Pimpernel Candlegrass Goose grass, cleavers Carnadine Carnation Catstail Horsetail Catch weed Cleavers Cheese rennet Yellow bedstraw Choke weed Corn convolvulus Ditto Dodder Christmas rose Hellebore Call me near Sweet William Corn bind Corn convolvulus Cow's Langwort Mullein Crow flower Crow's foot / Wild Ranunculus Crow's toe Crow's foot / Wild Ranunculus Cuckoo's meat Wood sorrel Cuckoo spice Wood sorrel Culver wort Columbine Death's herb Deadly nightshade Dick-a-silver Periwinkle Dog-fennel Corn chamomile Dead men's fingers Early purple orchis Eggs and bacon Bird's foot trefoil Ears wort Mouse ear Lug wort Mouse ear Five fingers Oxlip Flea dock Butter bur Flybane Catch fly Fuller's thistle Teasel Gander gorse Rag wort Gnat flower Fly orchis Goose tongue Sneeze wort Gracy-day Daffodil Hairiff Cleavers Hare's eye Wild Campion Headache Corn poppy Hell weed Corn convolvulus Hen gorse Rest harrow Holy Ghost's root Angelica Horse daisy Ox-eye-daisy Horse thyme Wild thyme Humblock Hemlock (Humelock, 13th Century) John that goes to bed at noon Pimpernel Kettle case Purple orchis Ketlock Cherlock King's finger Smaller purple orchis Lad-love-lass Southern wood Lady's cushion Thrift Lily royal Penny royal Love in idleness Pansy Louse wort Marsh red rattle Lad's love Southern wood Maiden's love Southern wood Medwort Meadow sweet Muckweed Goose foot Maiden hair Quake grass Nap at noon Purple goat's beard Navel wort Cotyledon umbelicus Neck weed Hemp Ox tongue Bug loss Penny weed Yellow rattle Pick-pocket Shepherd's purse Pincushion Sweet Scabious Pixy stool Toad stool Poor man's pepper Stone crop Poverty weed Purple cow-wheat Pudding grass Penny royal Red shanks Water pepper Rattle penny Yellow rattle Rust burn Rest harrow Sallow Willow Shepherd's rod Teasel Shoes and Stockings Lady's slipper Stike-pile Stork's bill Toad pipes Horsetail Turk's cap Monk's hood Wall pepper Sedum acre Water grass Water cress Withywind Convolvulus Wood sour Wood sorrel Yellow bottle Corn marygold APPENDIX II.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,488   ~   ~   ~

He has had air and exercise, i.e., has been whipped at the cart's tail; or, as it is generally expressed, at the cart's arse.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,794   ~   ~   ~

In 338 Bagoas killed the king and all his sons but the youngest, Arses (_q.v._), whom he raised to the throne; two years later he murdered Arses and made Darius III.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,784   ~   ~   ~

Pied Fly-catcher-- Arses kaupi , Gould.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,344   ~   ~   ~

Fabius slays Thuris and Butes and Maris and Arses, and the long-haired Adherbes, and the gigantic Thylis, and Sapharus and Monæsus, and the trumpeter Morinus.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,456   ~   ~   ~

Yer may talk about your oshun wave, but I ain't taking any, no, not though there was diamonds on the sea beach the other side and 'ot-'arse roses fer nothink.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 508   ~   ~   ~

"What a fucker you are, Percy; only to think I never had you before to day.--My mouth, my tongue, my bosom, my cunt, even my arse, shall be all your; now I spend--Fuck--shove your balls into your mother, she is all yours, Percy."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 611   ~   ~   ~

Sometimes she withdrew her fingers, all dripping with my mother's copious emissions, and tried to insert them by the side of my prick in the maternal arse-hole, but only succeeded in getting one up alongside of Mr. Pego; this was a lovely idea and tended even more to excite me.

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