The 6,537 occurrences of bastard

View the definition of "bastard" on The Online Slang Dictionary

Offensiveness score: 60.13% out of 30 votes
Cast your vote: (coming soon)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Page 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,895   ~   ~   ~

A child born before espousals is a bastard and may not inherit, even if his father is the husband.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,980   ~   ~   ~

The mother and reputed father of any bastard who has been left to be kept at the parish where born must pay weekly for the upkeep and relief of such child, so that the true aged and disabled of the parish get their relief and to punish the lewd life.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,970   ~   ~   ~

The constable and churchwardens together collected money for the parish, looked after the needy, and kept in close touch with the overseers of the poor, who cared for the sick and old, found work for the idle, took charge of bastards, apprenticed orphan children, and provided supplies for the workhouse.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,046   ~   ~   ~

Lewd women, having bastards, chargeable to the parish, shall be committed to the house of correction to be punished and set to work for one year.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,062   ~   ~   ~

Mothers concealing the death of a bastard baby shall suffer as for murder, unless one witness proves the child was born dead.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,681   ~   ~   ~

Churchwardens could seize the goods and chattels of putative fathers and mothers deserting bastard children.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,783   ~   ~   ~

St.; aids; alderman; ale; alehouses; Alfred; alienate; aliens; allegiance; alms; amerce; America; Anabaptist; ancient; Anglo-Saxons; Anglo-Saxon Chronicles; annulment; apothecaries; apparel laws; appeal; appellate; apprentices; appurtance; archbishop; architect; Aristotle; Arkwright, Richard; arraign; arson; Arthur; Articles of Religion; artificer; artisan; assault; assay; assign; assize; assizes; assumpsit; astrology; at pleasure; atheism; attainder; attaint; attorneys; babies; bachelor; Bachelor of Arts; back-berend; Bacon, Francis; Bacon, Roger; bacteriology; bail; bailiff; baker; ballads; Bank of England; bankruptcy; Baptist; bar; barber; barber-surgeon; bargain and sale; barons; baron court; barristers; bastard; bath; battery; beadle; beating; Becket; beer; beggar; benefit of clergy; benevolence; Beowulf; bequeath, bequest; Bible; bigamy; bill; bill of attainder; bill of exchange; Bill of Rights; billet; Birmingham; bishops; Black Death; Blackstone, William; blinding; blodwite; blood-letting; Book of Common Prayer; bordars; borough; Boston; bot; Boyle, Robert; Bracton, Henry de; brass; brawling; breach; breach of the peace; bread; Brewster; bribery; brick; bridge; Bristol; brokers; Bullock, case of; burgess; burglary; burh; burial; burning; butcher; butler; Calais; Calvin; Cambridge University; canals; cannon; capitalism; carbon dioxide; carpenter; carriages; carucage; carver; castle; castle-guard; cathedral; Catholics; cattle; cavaliers; Cecil, William; censorship; ceorl; certiorari; challenge; champerty; chancellor; chancery; Chancery Court; charter; chattel; Chaucer, Geoffrey; chemistry; chevage; Chief Justice; Chief Justiciars; child; child abuse; children; childwyte; Christian; chivalry; Christmas; church; Church of England; church sanctuary; Cicero; circuit; citizen; city; civil; civil courts; civil war; claim; clans; class; clergy; clerics; cloth-maker; coaches; coal; coffee houses; coin; Coke, Edward; College of Physicians and Surgeons; colonies; commission; common land; common law; Commons, House of; Commonwealth; compurgation; compurgator; confession; Congregationalists; Conqueror; consideration; constable; constitution; contract; conventile; conveyance; conviction; cooper; Copernicus; copper; copyhold; copyrights; cordwainer; Coronation Charter; coroner; corporation; corruption of the blood; council; counterfeit; county; county courts; courtesy; Court of Common Pleas; Court of High Commission; Court of King's Bench; courtesy; court martial; covenant; coverture; Coventry; craft; craft guild; Cranmer, Thomas; creditor; crime; criminal; Cromwell, Oliver; Cromwell, Thomas; crown; cupbearer; curfew; currier; custody; customary tenant; customs; damages; danegeld; Danes; darrein presentment; daughter; death; death penalty; debt, debtors; deceased; decree; deed; deer; defamation; defendant; demesne; denizen; deodand; descendant; Descartes, Renee; desertion; detinue; devise; dispensary; disseisin; dissenter; distraint; distress; divorce; doctorate; dog; Doomsday Book; doublet; dower; dowery; Drake, Francis; drover; drunkenness; duel; during good behavior; duties; dwelling; dyers; earl; East India Company; Easter; ecclesiastic; Edith; education; Eleanor, wife of Edward I; Eleanor, wife of Henry II; election; electricity; Elizabeth, wife of Henry VII; embroiderer; enclosure; English; engrose; Episcopal Church; equity; equity court; Erasmus; escape from gaol; escheat, escheator; escuage; esquire; established church; estate; estate administration; estate tail; Euclid; Exchequer; excommunication; excise tax; executor; export; extent; eyre; factory; fair; father; fealty; fee; fee simple; fee tail; felony; feme covert; feme sole; feoff; Fermat, Pierre; feudal; feudal tenures; fihtwite; fine; fire; fire-fighters; fishermen, fishmonger; flint; flogging; flying shuttle; folkmote; food riots; footmen; forced loans; forced marriage; forestall; Forest Charter; forestall; forests; forfeit; forgery; forms of action; fornication; fortifications; foster-lean; France; frank-almoin; Franklin, Benjamin; frankpledge; fraternity; fraud; freedom of speech; freehold, freeholder; freeman; freemason; freewoman; friar; frith guild; fuller; fustian; fyrd; fyrdwite; gage; Galilei, Galileo; gambling; games; gaols; Gaol Distemper; Gawaine; gentleman; gentry; geology; Georgia; German, Christopher St., gift; Gilbert, William; guildhall; guilds; gin; Glanvill; glass; Glorious Revolution; gloves; God; godfather; gold; Goldsmiths; Good Parliament; goods; government; grain; grammar schools; grand assize; grand jury; Grand Tour; grants; grave; gravitation; Greek; Gresham, Thomas; grithbrice; guardian, guardianship; Guenevere; hair; hall; Halley, Edmond; hamsocne; hand-habbende; harboring; Harrington, James; Harvard College; health; heir; heresy; heriot; hidage; hide; High Commission Court; Hilda; hillforts; holidays, holydays; homage; homicide; Hooke, Robert; horse; horse racing; hospitals; house-breaking; house-holder; House of Commons; House of Lords; houses; houses of correction; hue and cry; humanism, humors; hundred rolls; Huygens, Christian; hundred; hundred courts; hunt; husband; hustings court; hut; illegitimacy; illness; illuminators; impeach; import; imprisonment; incest; income tax; Independents; indenture; indictment; industry; infangthef; inflation; inheritance; innkeeper; Inns of Court; inoculation; inquest; insurance; interest; interrogatory; intestate; iron; itinerant; jail; Jesus; Jews; Joan of Arc; joint tenants; joint-stock companies; jointure; Jones, Inigo; journeyman; judge; jurisdiction; jurors; jury; justice; justices in eyre; justices of assize; Justices of the Peace; justiciar; Kent county; Keplar, Johannes; kill; kin, kindred; king; King Alfred the Great; King Charles I; King Charles II; King Edward I; King Edward the Confessor; King George III; King Henry I; King Henry II; King Henry VII; King Henry VIII; King James I; King James II; King John; King Richard the Lion-Hearted; King William and Mary; King William I, The Conqueror; king's peace; knight; knight's fee; knights' guild; knitting; laborer; ladies; land; landlord; land-owner; larceny; lastage; Latin; law merchant; lawsuit; lawyer; Laxton; lay; leap year; lease; leather; leet court; legacy; legislation; legitimacy; Leibniz, Christian; Leicester; letters; libel; Liberi Quadripartitus; library; license; life; life-estate; lighthouse; limb; linen; Lion of Justice; literacy; literature; Littleton, Thomas; livery; Lloyds; Locke, John; London; Long Parliament; longitude; lord; Lords, House of; loriner; lottery; loyalty; machine; magistrates; Magna Carta; magnate; maiden; mail; majic; malicious prosecution; maintenance; Manchester; manor; manor courts; manufacturing; manumission; Marco Polo; market; marriage; marriage agreement; marriage portion; marshall; marquise; Massachusetts; Master of Arts; masters; Matilda; Mayflower; mayor; Maypole; mead; measures; meat; medicine; melee; member; merchandise; merchant; merchant adventurers; merchant guilds; merchet; Merciless Parliament; mercy; Merton; mesne; Methodists; microscope; Middlesex; midwives; military service; militia; miller; minister; minor; minstrels; miskenning; moat; Model Parliament; monarchy; monasteries; money; moneyer; monks; monopoly; moot; More, Thomas; morgen-gift; morning gift; mort d'ancestor; mortgage; mortmain; mother; murder; mutilation; Napier, John; navy; Newcastle- on-Tyne; New England; New Model Army; newspapers; Newton, Issac; New World; nobility; noblemen, nobles; nonconformists; Normans; novel disseisin; nuisance; nun; Oakham, William; oaths; offender; oil; one hundred year war; open field system; ordeal; ordinance; orphans; outlaw; Oxford University; oxygen; papists; parent; parishes; Parliament; Parliament of Saints; partition; party; Pascal, Blaise; passport; patents; pauper; pawn; Peasant's Revolt; peers; peine forte et dure; penalty; penitentiary; Penn, William; Pennsylvania; penny; per stirpes; perjury; personal injury; personal property; petit serjeanty; petition; Petition of Right; physicians; Piers Plowman; pigherds; pilgrim; pillory; pipe rolls; piracy; pirate; plague; plaintiff; Plato; plays; pleading; pleas; police; pontage; poor; pope; popery; population; port; portreeve; portsoken ward; posse; possess; postal system; post mortem; pottery; praecipe in capite; pressing; Presbyterians; prescription; presentment; priest; printing; prison; Privy Council; privy seal; probable cause; probate; proclamation; promise under seal; promissory note; property; prosecutor; prostitutes; protectorate; Protestants; Puritans; purveyance; putting out system; Quakers; quaranteen, quarter sessions; queen; Queen Elizabeth I; Queen Mary; Queen's Bench; quo warranto; rack; Ralegh, Walter; rape; Ray, John; real action; recognition; reeve; reformation; regrate; release; relief; religion; remainder; renaissance; rent; replevin; residence; Restoration; reversion; revolt; reward; rights; riot; riot act; roads; robbery; Robin Hood; Roemer, Olaus; Roman law; Root and Branch Petition; roundheads; royal court; Royal Navy; Royal Society; royalists; Rump Parliament; Russia; sacrament; sacrifice; sailor; sake and soke; sale; salt; saltworks; sanctuary; Sandwich; Saxon; scaetts; scavage; scholar; school; science; scolds; scot; scrofula; scutage; seal; seamen; searchers; search warrant; sedition, seditious; seisin; self- defense; self-help; Separatists; serf; serjeanty; servant; service; servitude; settlement; sewer; Shakespeare, William; shaving; sheep; Shelley's case; sheriff; sheriff's turn; shillings; ships; shipwreck; shire; shire courts; shire-gemot; shoemaker; Short Parliament; shrine; sickness; silver; Slade's case; slander; slave; slingshot; smallpox; smith; Smithfield; socage; sokemen; soldiers; solicitor; son; Spanish Armada; speedy pursuit; spinning; spinning jenny; spinning wheel; spinsters; spouse; St. Augustine; St. Germain; St. Lazarus; St. Paul's Church; statute of laborers; squire; staple; Star Chamber Court; strangers; steam; steel; stengesdint; Stevinus; steward; stock-and-land lease; stocking-frame knitters; stocks; stolen goods; stone; Stonehenge; straw; streets; subtenants; successor; sue; suit; summary; summon; Sunday; Supporters of the Bill of Rights Society; surety; surgery; surname; swearing; swords; tale; tallage; tanner; tavern; tax; tea; team; Ten Commandments; tenancies; tenancy, tenant; tenants in common; tenement; tenure; term; testament; Thames, River; theft; thegn; Theodore; theology; theow; thermometer; Thirty Years' War; tile; tiler; tin; title; tolls; tories; Torricelli, Evangelista; tort; torture; tournament; Tower Hill; Tower of London; town; town-reeve; trades, tradesmen; transportation; treason, high and petit; treasure trove; treasury; trespass; trespass on the case; trial by combat (battle); trover; turnpike; twelve; tyne; umbrella, Unitarians; university; usury; use-trust; vagrants, vagrancy; vassal; verderer; verdict; vessels; vikings; vill; villages; villeinage; villeins; vintner; Virginia; wall; Wallis, John; War of the Roses; ward, wardship; wardmoot; wardrobe; warrantor, warranty; waste; water; watermen; watermill; waterwheel; Watt, James; wealthy; weapon; weaving, weavers; webs; wed; wedding; weights; weir; well; wer, wergeld; Wesley, John; Westminster; whigs; whipping; White Tower; Whitsuntide; widows; wife; wife-beating; wills; Winchester; windmills; window tax; wine; witch; witchcraft; wite; witan; witanagemot; witnesses; wives; Wolsey, Thomas; Wyclif, John; woman-covert; women; wool; wounding; writs; writs of assistance; writs of error; Year Books; yeomanry, yeomen

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,511   ~   ~   ~

And when the blameless and gentle Hero is smitten down with cruel falsehood, and even her father is convinced of her guilt, he is the first to suspect that "the practice of it lies in John the bastard."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,625   ~   ~   ~

The fact is, most of our enthusiasms and antipathies are the bastard offspring of a pure æsthetic sense and a permanent disposition or a transitory mood.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 397   ~   ~   ~

Since classical learning is compulsory with us, this bastard admiration is much more often excited with respect to the Greek and Latin poets.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,821   ~   ~   ~

"God lay me deid i' my sins gien he be onything but a bastard Cawm'ell!" she asseverated with a laugh of demoniacal scorn.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,082   ~   ~   ~

In parts of the United Kingdom, such as South Wales, where gas coal is dear, and anthracite and bastard coals are cheap, water gas highly carbureted will entirely supplant coal gas, with a saving of fifty per cent.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,171   ~   ~   ~

Illegitimates or Bastards also furnish strong proof of the correctness of this our leading doctrine.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,479   ~   ~   ~

A Abstention, 137 Abstinence, 52 Abuse After Marriage, 202 Abortion or Miscarriage, 253 Abortion, Causes and Symptoms, 253 Abortion, Home Treatment, 254 Abortion, Prevention of, 254 Abortion, The Sin of Herod, 257 Abortion, The Violation of all Law, 256 Absence of Physician, 300 Abraham a Polygamist, 133 A Broken Heart, 159 Aboriginal, Australian, 162 Admired and Beloved, 28 Advantages of Wedlock, 135 Advice to Newly Married Couples, 201 Advice to Married and Unmarried, 181 Advice to Bridegroom, 201 Advice to Young Mothers, 286 Advice to Young Married People, 435 Advice to Young Men, 437 Adultery in the Heart, 409 After Birth, 300 Affectionate Parents, 227 Amenorrhoea, 355 Amativeness or Connubial Love, 122 Animal Passions, 434 Animal Impulse, 227 Apoplexy, 365 Artificial Impregnation, 270 Arms, Beautiful, 131 Assassin of Garfield, 294 Asking an Honest Question, 61 Associates, Influence of, 11 Authority of the Wife, 267 B Bad Company, The Result of, 13 Bad Society, 381 Bad Dressing, 409 Bad Books, 421 Bad Breath, 365 Bathing, Rules for, 371-373 Bath, The, 83 Barber's Shampoos, 107 Bad Breast, 322 Bastards or Illegitimates, 224 Beginning of Life, 5 Begin at Right Place, 7 Begin Well, 17 Beauty and Style, 27 Beauty a Dangerous Gift, 27 Beautiful Women, Beware of, 27 Beauty in Dress, 89 Beauty, 91-92 Beauty Which Perishes Not, 92 Beauty, Sensible Hints to, 95 Beautiful Arms, 131 "Be Ye Fruitful and Multiply", 201 Beautiful Children, How to Have, 288 Birth, Conditions of, 229 Biliousness, 279, 357, 363 Bites and Stings of Insects, 359 Bloom and Grace of Youth, 97 Black-heads, and Flesh Worms, 112 Blue Feelings, 159 Bleeding, 364 Both Puzzled, 77 Bodily Symmetry, 100, 105 Boils, 364 Breath, The, 86 Broad Hips, 130 Breach of Confidence, 191 Bride, The, 199 "Bridal Tour", 200 Breasts, Swelled and Sore, 348 Burns, 13, 355, 359 Busts, Full, 130 Bunions, 364 Bubo Treatment, 468 C Care of the Person, 84 Care of the Hair, 107 Cause of Family Troubles, 217 Calamities of Lust, 416-419 Causes of Sterility, 251 Causes of Divorce, 258-262 Care of New-Born Infant, 315 Cataracts of the Eyes, 355 Causes of Prostitution, 412 Celibacy, Disadvantages of, 138 Chinese Marriage System, 133 Children, Healthy and Beautiful, 222-227 Children, Idiots, Criminals and Lunatics, 222 Children's Condition Depends on Parents, 225 Children, All, May Die, 226 Children, Too Many, 229 Children, Foolish Dread of, 241 Character Lost, 9 Character, Formation of, 11 Character, Essence, 12 Character Exhibits Itself, 15 Character, Beauty of, 18 Child, An Honored, 19 Character, School of, 23 Child, The, is Father of the Man, 24 Character, Female, Influence of, 30 Children, Fond of, 62 Character, Influence of Good, 73 Character is Property, 74 Child Bearing without Pain, 304, 479 Chickenpox, 346, 363 Chapped Hands, 355, 356 Chilblains, 359 Child Training, 396 Chastity and Purity, 400 Character, How to Read, 473 Civilization, 18 Circumcision, 394 Cigarette Smoking, Effects of, 445, 450 Clap-Gonorrhoea, 464 Clap-Gonorrhoea Treatment, 466 Corsets, 101-103 Corset, Egyptian, 104 Coloring for Eyelashes and Eyebrows, 108 Confidence, 122 Connubial Love, 122 Concubinage and Polygamy, 133 Courtship and Marriage, 148 Court Scientifically, 166 Consummation of Marriage, 202 Conception, 239 Conception, Its Limitations, 240 Conceptions and Accidents of Lust, 256 Courtship and Marriage, 267 Control, Self, 12 Coarseness, 24 Correspondence, 36 Conversation, 79 Conception or Impregnation, 269 Conception, The Proper Time for, 289 Colic, 318, 338, 356 Convulsions, Infantile, 319 Constipation, To Prevent, 323, 339 Coughs, Colds, etc., 360 Cold Water for Diseases, 369 Cook for the Sick, How to, 375 Cramps, 277, 356 Croup, How to Treat, 343 Crimping Hair, 109 Criminals and Heredity, 399 Crowning Sin of the Age, 411 Cuts, 358, 360 Cultivate Modesty, 210 Cultivate Personal Attractiveness, 210 Cultivate Physical Attractiveness, 211 Curse of Manhood, The, 433 D Day Dreaming, 26 Dangerous Diseases, 257 Danger in Lack of Knowledge, 403 Deformities, 98 Development of the Individual, 98 Desertion and Divorce, 187 Desire, Stimulated by Drugs, 250 Desire Moderated by Drugs, 250 Deformities, 264 Desire, Want of, 205 Deafness, How to Cure, 362 Devil's Decoys, The, 419 Disadvantages of Celibacy, 138 Diseased, Parents, 144 Disrupted Love, 159 Divorces, 166 Distress during Consummation, 202 Diseases, Heredity and Transmission of, 263 Diseases of Pregnancy, 274 Diseases of Infants and Children, 338 Diarrhoea, 340, 363 Diphtheria, 346 Diseases of Women and Treatment, 349, 480-485 Disinfectant, 360 Digestibility of Food, 374 Dietetic Recipes, 375 Diseases of Women, 483 Dictionary of Medical Terms, 486 Drink, 16 Dress, 88 Dress Affects Our Manners, 90 Drugs which Stimulate Desire, 250 Drugs which Moderate Desire, 250 Drug Habit, The, 441 Dude of the 17th Century, 87 Duration of Pregnancy, 296 Dyspepsia Cure, 360 E Early Marriages, 351, 410 Education of Child in the Womb, 292 Effects of Cigarette Smoking, 445-450 Egyptian Dancer, An, 20 Eruptions on the Skin, 272 Etiquette, Rules on, 49 Etiquette of Calls, 56 Etiquette in Your Speech, 57 Etiquette of Dress and Habits, 58 Etiquette on the Street, 59 Etiquette Between Sexes, 60 Eugenic Baby Party, 75 Eunuchs, 407 Evidence of Conception, 269 Expectant Mother, The, 284 Exciting the Passions in Children, 404 Exposed Youth, 427 Excesses by Married Men, 434 Eye Wash, 355 F Fame, 18 Family Group, Blessing the, 19 Family Government, 76 False Beautifiers, 129 False Appearance, 131 Family Troubles, Cause of, 217 Families, Small, 232 Fallopian Tubes, 237 Fake Medical Advice, 240, 250 Fainting, 281 Falling of the Womb, 350 Fast Young Men, 435 Female Character, Influence of, 30 Female Beauty, 129 Feet, Small, 130 Female Organs, Conditions of, 204 Female Magnetism, 235 Female Sexual Organs, 235 Feeding Infants, 319 Fevers, 327 Feet with Bad Odor, 354 Felon, 358, 364 Female Organs of Creative Life, 385 First Love, 185 First Conjugal Approach, 203 Flirting, 166, 168 Flirting and Its Dangers, 190 Form, Male and Female, 98 Former Customs, 162 Fondling and Caressing, 168 Folly of Follies, 217 Foetal Heart, 273 Follies of Youth, 468 Free Lovers, 133 Frequency of Intercourse, 208 Full Busts, 130 G Garden of Eden, 133 Gathered Breast, 322 Generosity, 126 Generative Organs, Male, 234 Generative Organs, Female, 236 Girls, Save the, 380 Gland, The Penal, 235 Gland, The Prostate, 235 Gladstone, 8 Gleet, Symptoms and Treatment of, 468 Good Character, 73 Gout, 362 Gonorrhoea (Clap), 464 Gonorrhoea (Clap), Remedy for, 466 Grace, 28 Gray Hair, 110 Grave-Yard Statistics, 226 Grossness of Sensuality, 419 H Hawaiian Islands and Marriage, 163 Harlot's Woes, A, 431 Habits, 17 Hair and Beard, 85 Hand in Hand, 92 Hair, The Care of, 107-111 Hate-Spats, 154 Hap-Hazard Marriages, 218 Hair, How to Remove, 360 Harlot's Mess of Meat, The, 418 Harlot's Influence, 431 Health a Duty, 7 Helps to Beauty, 95 Heart, A Broken, 159 Healthy Wives and Mothers, 183 Hereditary Descent, 224 Healthy People-Most Children, 226 Heartburn, 276, 357 Headache, 280, 355, 360, 363 Health Rules for Babies, 314 History of Marriage, 132 Hints on Courtship and Marriage, 148-153 Hints in Choosing a Partner, 162 Hives, 354, 360 Home Ties, 6, 22 Home, The Best Regulated, 14 Honesty or Knavery, 17 Home Power, 23 Home Makes the Man, 23 Home the Best of Schools, 25 Homely Men, 128 Honeymoon, How to Perpetuate, 209 Home Treatment, Diseases of Children, 338 Home Treatment of the Secret Habit, 455 How to Write Letters, 34-47 How to Write Love Letters, 37 How to Write Social Letters, 39 How to Determine Perfect Human Figure, 99 How to be a Good Wife, 210 How to be a Good Husband, 212 How to Calculate Time of Labor, 295 How to Keep a Baby Well, 330-335 How to Cook for the Sick, 375 How Many Girls are Ruined, 190 How to Overcome "Secret Habit", 389 How to Tell a Victim of the "Secret Habit", 451 How to Tell Children the Story of Life, 390-395, 401-403 Hot Water for all Diseases, 368 Husband, Whom to Choose for a, 144 Husband's Brutality, 412 Hymen or Vaginal Valve, 202, 203, 236 Hysteria, 349 I Ignorance, 24 Illicit Pleasures, 207 Illegitimates or Bastards, 224 Illegitimates, Character of, 225 Impulse, 14 Impolite, 70 Improper Liberties, 168 Improvement of the Race, 232 Impotence and Sterility 248 Impotence, Lack of Sexual Vigor, 251 Improper Liberties During Courtship, 267 Impregnation or Conception, 269, 283 Impregnation Artificial, 270 Immorality, Disease and Death, 416 Independence, The Growth of, 6 Influences, 18 Integrity, 19 Influence, The Mother's, 21 Influence of Women, 30 Intelligence, 126-131 Intercourse, Proper, 205 Indulgence, The Time for, 207 Intercourse, Frequency of, 208 Intercourse During Pregnancy, 207, 283 Infanticide, 255 Infantile Convulsions, 319 Indigestion, 328 Infant Teething, 336 Inflammation of Womb, 349 Inhumanities of Parents, 396 Itching of External Parts, 279 J Jealousy, 156 Jealousy-Its Cause and Cure, 219 Juke Family, The, 243 K Kalmuck Tartar and Marriage, 163 Keep the Boys Pure, 429 Kindness, 28 Kissing, 168 Knowledge is Safety, 3 L Ladies' Society, 61 Lady's Dress in Days of Greece, 100 Lacing, 104 Large Men, 126 Lack of Knowledge, 267 Letter Writing, 34-47 Letters, Social, 39 Leucorrhoea, 247, 349 Lessons for Parents, 312 Life Methods, 18 Licentiousness, Beginning of, 151 Limitation of Offspring, 242 Liver-Spots, 281 Love Letters, 37 Love, 114-117 Love, Power and Peculiarities of, 118 Love, Turkish Way of Making, 120 Love and Common Sense, 123 Love-Spats, 154 Love for the Dead, 160 Loss of Desire, 205 Longevity, 367 Loss of Maiden Purity, 404 Low Fiction, 421 Lost Manhood Restored, 459 Lung Trouble, 326 Lustful Eyes, 410 M Marriage Excesses, 208 Matrimonial Infelicity, 217 Male Sexual Organs, 234 Maternity a Diadem of Beauty, 262 Marks and Deformities, 264 Maternity, Preparation for, 266 Marrying Too Early, 288 Marry, Time to, 351 Man Unsexed, 407 Marriage Bed Resolutions, 427 Man's Lost Powers, 436 Man, The Ideal, 14 Masculine Attention, 62 Maternal Love, 24 Manners, Table, 63 Male Form, 98 Marriage, History of, 132 Marriage, 134 Marriages, Too Early, 136-144 Maids, Old, 140-143 Marry, When and Whom to, 144 Marrying First Cousins, 146 Marriage, Hints on, 148 Marriages, Unhappy, 151 Matrimonial Pointers, 171 Marriage Securities, 174 Marrying for Wealth, 181 Marriage, Time for, 191 Marriage and Motherhood, 192 Marriage, Consummation of, 202 Manhood Wrecked and Rescued, 461 Magnetism, 470-472 Men Haters, 62 Membership in Society, 66 Mental Derangements, 264 Menstruation During Pregnancy, 270 Menstruation During Nursing, 352 Measles, 328, 345, 363 Menstruation, 351, 385 Men Demand Purity, 427 Miscarriage, 207, 253, 283 Miscarriage, Causes and Symptoms, 253 Miscarriage Home Treatment, 254 Miscarriage Prevention, 254 Middle Age, 436 Mistakes Often Fatal, 7 Mistakes of Parents, 185 Moderation, 243 Morning Sickness and Remedy, 271, 282 Modified Milk, 329 Moral Degeneracy, 414 Moral Manhood, 414 Moral Lepers, 433 Moral Principle, 16 Mother's Influence, 21 Mother, A Devoted, 22 Mohammedanism, 133 Mormonism, 133 Monogamy (Single Wife), 134 Motherhood, 150 Morganic Marriages, 162 Murder of the Innocents, 255 Mumps, 345, 358 N Name, A Good, 18 Name, An Empty or an Evil, 20 Nature's Remedy, 233 Natural Waist, 105 Newly Married Couples, Advice to, 201 Neuralgia, 356, 360 Need of Early Instruction, 380 Non-Completed Intercourse, 411 Nocturnal Emissions and Home Treatment, 459 Nurseries, 24 Nuptial Chamber, 202-204 Nursing, 321 Nursing Sick Children, 325 Nude in Art, The, 422 O Obscene Literature, 421 Offspring, The Improvement of, 222 Old Maids, 140-143 Ornaments, 94 Our Secret Sins, 409 Ovaries, 237-238 Over-indulgence, 251 Over-Worked Mothers, 285 P Parents Must Obey, 226 Parents, Feeble and Diseased, 241 Palpitation of the Heart, 281 Pains and Ills in Nursing, 321 Parents Must Teach Children, 391 Passions in Children, 404 Passionate Men, 127 Parents, Diseased, 144 Parents' Participation, 224 Penal Gland, 235 Personal Purity, 31, 415 Penmanship, 34 Personality of Others, 70 Person, Care of the, 81 Perfect Human Figure, 99 Penalties for lost Virtue, 432 Physical and Moral Degeneracy, 414 Physical Deformities, 98 Physical Perfection, 99 Physical Relations of Marriage, 192 Phimosis, Symptoms and Treatment, 469 Piles, 280, 362 Pimples or Facial Eruptions, 111 Plea for Purity, A, 380 Plain Words to Parents, 390 Pleasures, Illicit, 207 Population Limited, 232 Poison Ivy, 359 Poison Sumach, 359 Policy of Silence in Sex Matters, 416 Pollution, Sinks of, 12 Pollution, Sow, 15 Politeness, 70 Polygamy, 133-162 Popping the Question, 195 Poisonous Literature, 421 Pox-Syphilis, 464 Pox-Symptoms and Treatment, 467 Prevention of Conception, 233, 239, 240-241 Prevention, Nature's Method, 243 Prenatal Influences, 244 Prostate Gland, 235 Producing Boys or Girls at Will, 252 Preparation for Maternity, 266 Pregnancy Signs and Symptoms, 270 Pregnancy, Diseases of, 274 Pregnancy, Duration of, 296 Prescription for Diseases, 355 Prickly Heat, Cure for, 373 Principle Moral, 10 Prisons, 19 Practical Rules on Table Manners, 63 Prostitution, 137,381 Proposing, A Romantic Way, 198 Proper Intercourse, 205 Pregnancy, Restraint During, 207 Preparation for Parenthood, 225 Prostitution of Men, 427 Private Talk to Young Men, 437 Puberty, Virility and Hygienic Laws, 406 Purity, 62 Puberty, 144 Puritanic Manhood, 425 Pure Minded Wife, 435 Q Quacks and Methods Exposed, 250, 453, 457 Quickening, 271 Quinsy, 365 R Reputation, Value of, 9 Reputation, Selling out Their, 19 Religion in Women, 131 Restraint During Pregnancy, 207 Revelation for Women, 247 Remedies for Sterility, 249 Remedies for Diseases, 355 Recruiting Office for Prostitution, 380 Remedy for "Secret Habit", 394 Rebuking Sensualism, 410 Remedies for the Social Evil, 440 Remedies for Diseases of Women, 483-485 Rival the Boys, 27 Ring Worm, 362 Rights of Lovers, 168 Right of Children to be Born Right, 464 Roman Ladies, 29 Road to Shame, The, 430 Rules on Etiquette, 49-64 Rules on Table Manners, 63 Ruin and Seduction, 152 Rules for the Nurse, 366 Ruined Sister, A, 431 S Save the Girls, 380 Save the Boys, 390 Scientific Theories of Life, 238 Scarlet Fever, 328, 343, 363 Schedule for Feeding Babies, 329 Sexual Passions, 407 Sexual Exhaustion, 411 Secret Diseases, 413 Seeing Life, 419 Sexual Impotency, The Remedy, 461 Secret Diseases, 464 Seed of Life, 225 Sexual Organs, Male, 234 Sexual Organs, Female, 235 Seducer, The, 190 Self Abuse or "Secret Habit", 389 Sex Instruction for Children, 380, 390, 400 Sexual Propensities, 400 Self-Control, 12 Self-Denial, Practice, 15 Selfishness, 24 Self-Forgetfulness, 72 Sensible Helps to Beauty, 95-114 Sexual Excitement, 126 Sexual Vigor, 127 Seduction and Ruin, 152 Seducer, A, 168 Sensuality and Unnatural Passion, 202-208 Sexual Life, Rightly Beginning, 205 Sexual Proprieties and Improprieties, 206 Separate Beds, 206 Sexual Control, 208-241 Shall Sickly People Raise Children, 233 Shall Pregnant Women Work, 285 Shy People, 72 Signs and Symptoms of Labor, 297 Signs of Virility, 408 Signs of Excesses, 410 Sisterhood of Shame, The, 418, 425 Slaves of Injurious Drugs, 441 Sleeplessness, 281 Small Families, 232 Small and Weakly Men, 126 Sore Nipples, 321 Society Evils, 384 Society, Govern, 24 Social Letters, 39 Social Duties, 65 Society, Membership in, 66 Soiled Garments, 85 Soft Men, 27 Solomon and Polygamy, 133 Society Rules and Customs, 191 Sowing Wild Oats, 417 Social Evil, 410 Speech, Improved by Reading, 57 Special Safeguards in Confinement, 299 Sprains, 359 Startling Sins, 423 Sterility in Females, 237 Sterility, 248 Sterility, Remedies for, 249 Sterility common to women, 251 Stomachache, 326 Stabs, 358 Story of Life for Children, 401 Stranger, Silken Enticements of, 28 Style of Beauty, 91 Summer Complaint, 340 Success or Failure, 276 Swollen Legs During Pregnancy, 276 Symptoms of the "Secret Habit", 451 Syphilitic Poison, 465 Syphilis (Pox), 464, 467 Syphilis (Pox) Treatment of, 468 Syphilis, Recipe for, 468 Syringes, Whirling Spray, 246 T Table Manners, 63 Tables for Feeding a Baby, 329 Teeth, 85 Test of Virginity, 202, 237 Teething, 336, 310 Teach Sex Truths to Children, 401, 416 Temples of Lust, 425 Thinking only of Dress, 81 Throat Troubles, 354 Tight Lacing, 104 Time to Marry, 351 Too Many Children, 229 Toothache, 280 True Kind of Beauty, 129 Twins, 205 Twilight Sleep, 479 U Unwelcome Child, 258 Union of the Sexes, The, 400 Unchastity, 409 Unfaithfulness, 423 Unjust Demands, 428 Underclothing, 85 Uniformed Men, 128 Unhappy Marriages, 151 Urethra, 231 Urethra, Stricture of-Symptoms and Treatment, 469 V Vaginal Cleanliness, 246 Vice or Virtue, 6 Virtues, Root of all the, 12 Virtue, A New, 19 Virginity, Test of, 202, 237 Vile Women, 382 Vomiting, 363 Vulgar Desire, 428 Vulgar, Society of the, 11 W Warning, 6 Waist, Natural, 105 Wasp Waists, 181 Warts, Cure for, 364 Wealth, 73 Wedlock, Advantages of, 135 Wedding Rings, 167 Wedding, The Proper Time, 199 Weaning, 318 Wens, 364 What Women Love in Men, 126 What Men Love in Women, 129 When and Whom to Marry, 311 Why Children Die, 226 When Conception Takes Place, 269 Whites, The, 277 What a Mother Should Know, 326 Whooping Cough, 344, 360 Why Girls Go Astray, 381 What is Puberty, 406 When Passion Begins, 407 Wife, How to be a Good, 210 Words, Power of, 15 Woman, The Best Educator, 25 Women, Young, 26 Women, Influence of, 30 Woman Haters, 61 Woman the Perfect Type of Beauty, 92 Woman's Love, 116 Women who Makes Best Wives, 178 Worms and Remedy, 341 Womb, inflammation of, 349 Womb Falling of, 350 Y Young Mothers, Advice to, 286 Young Man's Personal Appearance, 86 Youth, Bloom and Grace of, 97 Youthful Sexual Excitement, 126 [Linked Index, ToC ] HYPERLINKED INDEX.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,480   ~   ~   ~

Return to Original Alphabetical Index A A Broken Heart, 159 Aboriginal, Australian, 162 Abortion, Causes and Symptoms, 253 Abortion, Home Treatment, 254 Abortion, Prevention of , 254 Abortion, The Sin of Herod, 257 Abortion, The Violation of all Law, 256 Abortion or Miscarriage, 253 Abraham a Polygamist, 133 Absence of Physician, 300 Abstention, 137 Abstinence, 52 Abuse After Marriage, 202 Admired and Beloved, 28 Advantages of Wedlock, 135 Advice to Bridegroom, 201 Advice to Married and Unmarried, 181 Advice to Newly Married Couples, 201 Advice to Young Married People, 435 Advice to Young Men, 437 Advice to Young Mothers, 286 Adultery in the Heart, 409 Affectionate Parents, 227 After Birth, 300 Amativeness or Connubial Love, 122 Amenorrhoea, 355 Animal Impulse, 227 Animal Passions, 434 Apoplexy, 365 Arms, Beautiful, 131 Artificial Impregnation, 270 Asking an Honest Question, 61 Assassin of Garfield, 294 Associates, Influence of, 11 Authority of the Wife, 267 B Bad Books, 421 Bad Breast, 322 Bad Breath, 365 Bad Company, The Result of, 13 Bad Dressing, 409 Bad Society, 381 Barber's Shampoos, 107 Bastards or Illegitimates, 224 Bath, The, 83 Bathing, Rules for, 371-373 "Be Ye Fruitful and Multiply", 201 Beautiful Arms, 131 Beautiful Children, How to Have, 288 Beautiful Women, Beware of, 27 Beauty, 91-92 Beauty, Sensible Hints to, 95 Beauty a Dangerous Gift, 27 Beauty and Style, 27 Beauty in Dress, 89 Beauty Which Perishes Not, 92 Begin at Right Place, 7 Begin Well, 17 Beginning of Life, 5 Biliousness, 279 , 357 , 363 Birth, Conditions of, 229 Bites and Stings of Insects, 359 Black-heads, and Flesh Worms, 112 Bleeding, 364 Bloom and Grace of Youth, 97 Blue Feelings, 159 Bodily Symmetry, 100 , 105 Boils, 364 Both Puzzled, 77 Breach of Confidence, 191 Breasts, Swelled and Sore, 348 Breath, The, 86 "Bridal Tour", 200 Bride, The, 199 Broad Hips, 130 Bubo Treatment, 468 Bunions, 364 Burns, 13 , 355 , 359 Busts, Full, 130 C Calamities of Lust, 416-419 Care of the Hair, 107 Care of New-Born Infant, 315 Care of the Person, 84 Cataracts of the Eyes, 355 Cause of Family Troubles, 217 Causes of Divorce, 258-262 Causes of Prostitution, 412 Causes of Sterility, 251 Celibacy, Disadvantages of, 138 Character, Beauty of, 18 Character, Essence, 12 Character, Female, Influence of, 30 Character, Formation of, 11 Character, How to Read, 473 Character, Influence of Good, 73 Character, School of, 23 Character Exhibits Itself, 15 Character is Property, 74 Character Lost, 9 Chapped Hands, 355 , 356 Chastity and Purity, 400 Chickenpox, 346 , 363 Chilblains, 359 Child, An Honored, 19 Child Bearing without Pain, 304 , 479 Child, The, is Father of the Man, 24 Child Training, 396 Children, All, May Die, 226 Children, Fond of, 62 Children, Foolish Dread of, 241 Children, Healthy and Beautiful, 222-227 Children, Idiots, Criminals and Lunatics, 222 Children, Too Many, 229 Children's Condition Depends on Parents, 225 Chinese Marriage System, 133 Cigarette Smoking, Effects of, 445 , 450 Circumcision, 394 Civilization, 18 Clap-Gonorrhoea, 464 Clap-Gonorrhoea Treatment, 466 Coarseness, 24 Cold Water for Diseases, 369 Colic, 318 , 338 , 356 Coloring for Eyelashes and Eyebrows, 108 Conception, 239 Conception, Its Limitations, 240 Conception, The Proper Time for, 289 Conceptions and Accidents of Lust, 256 Conception or Impregnation, 269 Concubinage and Polygamy, 133 Confidence, 122 Connubial Love, 122 Constipation, To Prevent, 323 , 339 Consummation of Marriage, 202 Control, Self, 12 Conversation, 79 Convulsions, Infantile, 319 Cook for the Sick, How to, 375 Correspondence, 36 Corset, Egyptian, 104 Corsets, 101-103 Coughs, Colds, etc., 360 Court Scientifically, 166 Courtship and Marriage, 148 , 267 Cramps, 277 , 356 Criminals and Heredity, 399 Crimping Hair, 109 Croup, How to Treat, 343 Crowning Sin of the Age, 411 Cultivate Modesty, 210 Cultivate Personal Attractiveness, 210 Cultivate Physical Attractiveness, 211 Curse of Manhood, The, 433 Cuts, 358 , 360 D Danger in Lack of Knowledge, 403 Dangerous Diseases, 257 Day Dreaming, 26 Deafness, How to Cure, 362 Deformities, 98 , 264 Desertion and Divorce, 187 Desire, Stimulated by Drugs, 250 Desire, Want of, 205 Desire Moderated by Drugs, 250 Development of the Individual, 98 Devil's Decoys, The, 419 Diarrhoea, 340 , 363 Dictionary of Medical Terms, 486 Dietetic Recipes, 375 Digestibility of Food, 374 Diphtheria, 346 Disadvantages of Celibacy, 138 Diseased, Parents, 144 Diseases, Heredity and Transmission of, 263 Diseases of Infants and Children, 338 Diseases of Pregnancy, 274 Diseases of Women, 483 Diseases of Women and Treatment, 349 , 480-485 Disinfectant, 360 Disrupted Love, 159 Distress during Consummation, 202 Divorces, 166 Dress, 88 Dress Affects Our Manners, 90 Drink, 16 Drug Habit, The, 441 Drugs which Moderate Desire, 250 Drugs which Stimulate Desire, 250 Dude of the 17th Century, 87 Duration of Pregnancy, 296 Dyspepsia Cure, 360 E Early Marriages, 351 , 410 Education of Child in the Womb, 292 Effects of Cigarette Smoking, 445-450 Egyptian Dancer, An, 20 Eruptions on the Skin, 272 Etiquette, Rules on, 49 Etiquette Between Sexes, 60 Etiquette in Your Speech, 57 Etiquette of Calls, 56 Etiquette of Dress and Habits, 58 Etiquette on the Street, 59 Eugenic Baby Party, 75 Eunuchs, 407 Evidence of Conception, 269 Excesses by Married Men, 434 Exciting the Passions in Children, 404 Expectant Mother, The, 284 Exposed Youth, 427 Eye Wash, 355 F Fainting, 281 Fake Medical Advice, 240 , 250 Falling of the Womb, 350 Fallopian Tubes, 237 False Appearance, 131 False Beautifiers, 129 Fame, 18 Families, Small, 232 Family Government, 76 Family Group, Blessing the, 19 Family Troubles, Cause of, 217 Fast Young Men, 435 Feeding Infants, 319 Feet, Small, 130 Feet with Bad Odor, 354 Felon, 358 , 364 Female Beauty, 129 Female Character, Influence of, 30 Female Magnetism, 235 Female Organs, Conditions of, 204 Female Organs of Creative Life, 385 Female Sexual Organs, 235 Fevers, 327 First Conjugal Approach, 203 First Love, 185 Flirting, 166 , 168 Flirting and Its Dangers, 190 Foetal Heart, 273 Folly of Follies, 217 Follies of Youth, 468 Fondling and Caressing, 168 Form, Male and Female, 98 Former Customs, 162 Free Lovers, 133 Frequency of Intercourse, 208 Full Busts, 130 G Garden of Eden, 133 Gathered Breast, 322 Generative Organs, Female, 236 Generative Organs, Male, 234 Generosity, 126 Girls, Save the, 380 Gladstone, 8 Gland, The Penal, 235 Gland, The Prostate, 235 Gleet, Symptoms and Treatment of, 468 Good Character, 73 Gonorrhoea (Clap), 464 Gonorrhoea (Clap), Remedy for, 466 Gout, 362 Grace, 28 Grave-Yard Statistics, 226 Gray Hair, 110 Grossness of Sensuality, 419 H Habits, 17 Hair, How to Remove, 360 Hair, The Care of, 107-111 Hair and Beard, 85 Hand in Hand, 92 Hap-Hazard Marriages, 218 Harlot's Influence, 431 Harlot's Mess of Meat, The, 418 Harlot's Woes, A, 431 Hate-Spats, 154 Hawaiian Islands and Marriage, 163 Headache, 280 , 355 , 360 , 363 Heart, A Broken, 159 Heartburn, 276 , 357 Health a Duty, 7 Health Rules for Babies, 314 Healthy People-Most Children, 226 Healthy Wives and Mothers, 183 Helps to Beauty, 95 Hereditary Descent, 224 Hints in Choosing a Partner, 162 Hints on Courtship and Marriage, 148-153 History of Marriage, 132 Hives, 354 , 360 Home, The Best Regulated, 14 Home Ties, 6 , 22 Home Power, 23 Home Makes the Man, 23 Home the Best of Schools, 25 Home Treatment, Diseases of Children, 338 Home Treatment of the Secret Habit, 455 Homely Men, 128 Honesty or Knavery, 17 Honeymoon, How to Perpetuate, 209 Hot Water for all Diseases, 368 How Many Girls are Ruined, 190 How to be a Good Husband, 212 How to be a Good Wife, 210 How to Calculate Time of Labor, 295 How to Cook for the Sick, 375 How to Determine Perfect Human Figure, 99 How to Keep a Baby Well, 330-335 How to Overcome "Secret Habit", 389 How to Tell a Victim of the "Secret Habit", 451 How to Tell Children the Story of Life, 390-395 , 401-403 How to Write Letters, 34-47 How to Write Love Letters, 37 How to Write Social Letters, 39 Husband, Whom to Choose for a, 144 Husband's Brutality, 412 Hymen or Vaginal Valve, 202 , 203 , 236 Hysteria, 349 I Ignorance, 24 Illegitimates, Character of, 225 Illegitimates or Bastards, 224 Illicit Pleasures, 207 Immorality, Disease and Death, 416 Impolite, 70 Impotence, Lack of Sexual Vigor, 251 Impotence and Sterility, 248 Impregnation Artificial, 270 Impregnation or Conception, 269 , 283 Improper Liberties, 168 Improper Liberties During Courtship, 267 Improvement of the Race, 232 Impulse, 14 Independence, The Growth of, 6 Indigestion, 328 Indulgence, The Time for, 207 Infant Teething, 336 Infanticide, 255 Infantile Convulsions, 319 Inflammation of Womb, 349 Influence, The Mother's, 21 Influence of Women, 30 Influences, 18 Inhumanities of Parents, 396 Integrity, 19 Intelligence, 126-131 Intercourse, Frequency of, 208 Intercourse, Proper, 205 Intercourse During Pregnancy, 207 , 283 Itching of External Parts, 279 J Jealousy, 156 Jealousy-Its Cause and Cure, 219 Juke Family, The, 243 K Kalmuck Tartar and Marriage, 163 Keep the Boys Pure, 429 Kindness, 28 Kissing, 168 Knowledge is Safety, 3 L Lacing, 104 Ladies' Society, 61 Lack of Knowledge, 267 Lady's Dress in Days of Greece, 100 Large Men, 126 Lessons for Parents, 312 Letter Writing, 34-47 Letters, Social, 39 Leucorrhoea, 247 , 349 Licentiousness, Beginning of, 151 Life Methods, 18 Limitation of Offspring, 242 Liver-Spots, 281 Longevity , 367 Loss of Desire, 205 Loss of Maiden Purity, 404 Lost Manhood Restored, 459 Love, 114-117 Love, Power and Peculiarities of, 118 Love, Turkish Way of Making, 120 Love and Common Sense, 123 Love for the Dead, 160 Love Letters, 37 Love-Spats, 154 Low Fiction, 421 Lung Trouble, 326 Lustful Eyes, 410 M Magnetism, 470-472 Maids, Old, 140-143 Male Form, 98 Male Sexual Organs, 234 Man, The Ideal, 14 Man Unsexed, 407 Manhood Wrecked and Rescued, 461 Manners, Table, 63 Man's Lost Powers, 436 Marks and Deformities, 264 Marriage, 134 Marriage, Consummation of, 202 Marriage, Hints on, 148 Marriage, History of, 132 Marriage, Time for, 191 Marriage and Motherhood, 192 Marriage Bed Resolutions, 427 Marriage Excesses, 208 Marriage Securities, 174 Marriages, Too Early, 136-144 Marriages, Unhappy, 151 Marry, Time to, 351 Marry, When and Whom to, 144 Marrying First Cousins, 146 Marrying for Wealth, 181 Marrying Too Early, 288 Masculine Attention, 62 Maternal Love, 24 Maternity, Preparation for, 266 Maternity a Diadem of Beauty, 262 Matrimonial Infelicity, 217 Matrimonial Pointers, 171 Measles, 328 , 345 , 363 Membership in Society, 66 Men Demand Purity, 427 Men Haters, 62 Menstruation, 351 , 385 Menstruation During Nursing, 352 Menstruation During Pregnancy, 270 Mental Derangements, 264 Miscarriage, 207 , 253 , 283 Miscarriage, Causes and Symptoms, 253 Miscarriage Home Treatment, 254 Miscarriage Prevention, 254 Middle Age, 436 Mistakes of Parents, 185 Mistakes Often Fatal, 7 Moderation, 243 Modified Milk, 329 Morning Sickness and Remedy, 271 , 282 Mohammedanism, 133 Monogamy (Single Wife), 134 Moral Degeneracy, 414 Moral Lepers, 433 Moral Manhood, 414 Moral Principle, 16 Morganic Marriages, 162 Mormonism, 133 Mother, A Devoted, 22 Motherhood, 150 Mother's Influence, 21 Mumps, 345 , 358 Murder of the Innocents, 255 N Name, A Good, 18 Name, An Empty or an Evil, 20 Natural Waist, 105 Nature's Remedy, 233 Need of Early Instruction, 380 Neuralgia, 356 , 360 Newly Married Couples, Advice to, 201 Nocturnal Emissions and Home Treatment, 459 Non-Completed Intercourse, 411 Nude in Art, The, 422 Nuptial Chamber, 202-204 Nurseries, 24 Nursing, 321 Nursing Sick Children, 325 O Obscene Literature, 421 Offspring, The Improvement of, 222 Old Maids, 140-143 Ornaments, 94 Our Secret Sins, 409 Ovaries, 237-238 Over-indulgence, 251 Over-Worked Mothers, 285 P Pains and Ills in Nursing, 321 Palpitation of the Heart, 281 Parents, Diseased, 144 Parents, Feeble and Diseased, 241 Parents Must Obey, 226 Parents Must Teach Children, 391 Parents' Participation, 224 Passionate Men, 127 Passions in Children, 404 Penal Gland, 235 Penalties for lost Virtue, 432 Penmanship, 34 Perfect Human Figure, 99 Person, Care of the, 81 Personal Purity, 31 , 415 Personality of Others, 70 Phimosis, Symptoms and Treatment, 469 Physical and Moral Degeneracy, 414 Physical Deformities, 98 Physical Perfection, 99 Physical Relations of Marriage, 192 Piles, 280 , 362 Pimples or Facial Eruptions, 111 Plain Words to Parents, 390 Plea for Purity, A, 380 Pleasures, Illicit, 207 Poison Ivy, 359 Poison Sumach, 359 Poisonous Literature, 421 Policy of Silence in Sex Matters, 416 Politeness, 70 Pollution, Sinks of, 12 Pollution, Sow, 15 Polygamy, 133 , 162 Popping the Question, 195 Population Limited, 232 Pox-Symptoms and Treatment, 467 Pox-Syphilis, 464 Practical Rules on Table Manners, 63 Pregnancy, Diseases of, 274 Pregnancy, Duration of, 296 Pregnancy, Restraint During, 207 Pregnancy Signs and Symptoms, 270 Prenatal Influences, 244 Preparation for Maternity, 266 Preparation for Parenthood, 225 Prescription for Diseases, 355 Prevention, Nature's Method, 243 Prevention of Conception, 233 , 239 , 240-241 Prickly Heat, Cure for, 373 Principle Moral, 10 Prisons, 19 Private Talk to Young Men, 437 Producing Boys or Girls at Will, 252 Proper Intercourse, 205 Proposing, A Romantic Way, 198 Prostate Gland, 235 Prostitution, 137 , 381 Prostitution of Men, 427 Puberty, 144 Puberty, Virility and Hygienic Laws, 406 Pure Minded Wife, 435 Puritanic Manhood, 425 Purity, 62 Q Quacks and Methods Exposed, 250 , 453 , 457 Quickening, 271 Quinsy, 365 R Rebuking Sensualism, 410 Recruiting Office for Prostitution, 380 Religion in Women, 131 Remedy for "Secret Habit", 394 Remedies for Diseases, 355 Remedies for Diseases of Women, 483-485 Remedies for Sterility, 249 Remedies for the Social Evil, 440 Reputation, Selling out Their, 19 Reputation, Value of, 9 Restraint During Pregnancy, 207 Revelation for Women, 247 Right of Children to be Born Right, 464 Rights of Lovers, 168 Ring Worm, 362 Rival the Boys, 27 Road to Shame, The, 430 Roman Ladies, 29 Ruin and Seduction, 152 Ruined Sister, A, 431 Rules for the Nurse, 366 Rules on Etiquette, 49-64 Rules on Table Manners, 63 S Save the Boys, 390 Save the Girls, 380 Scarlet Fever, 328 , 343 , 363 Schedule for Feeding Babies, 329 Scientific Theories of Life, 238 Secret Diseases, 413 , 464 Seducer, A, 168 Seducer, The, 190 Seduction and Ruin, 152 Seed of Life, 225 Seeing Life, 419 Self Abuse or "Secret Habit", 389 Self-Control, 12 Self-Denial, Practice, 15 Self-Forgetfulness, 72 Selfishness, 24 Sensible Helps to Beauty, 95-114 Sensuality and Unnatural Passion, 202-208 Separate Beds, 206 Sex Instruction for Children, 380 , 390 , 400 Sexual Control, 208 , 241 Sexual Excitement, 126 Sexual Exhaustion, 411 Sexual Impotency, The Remedy, 461 Sexual Life, Rightly Beginning, 205 Sexual Organs, Female, 235 Sexual Organs, Male, 234 Sexual Passions, 407 Sexual Propensities, 400 Sexual Proprieties and Improprieties, 206 Sexual Vigor, 127 Shall Pregnant Women Work, 285 Shall Sickly People Raise Children, 233 Shy People, 72 Signs and Symptoms of Labor, 297 Signs of Excesses, 410 Signs of Virility, 408 Sisterhood of Shame, The, 418 , 425 Slaves of Injurious Drugs, 441 Sleeplessness, 281 Small and Weakly Men, 126 Small Families, 232 Social Duties, 65 Social Evil, 410 Social Letters, 39 Society, Govern, 24 Society, Membership in, 66 Society Evils, 384 Society Rules and Customs, 191 Soft Men, 27 Soiled Garments, 85 Solomon and Polygamy, 133 Sore Nipples, 321 Sowing Wild Oats, 417 Special Safeguards in Confinement, 299 Speech, Improved by Reading, 57 Sprains, 359 Stabs, 358 Startling Sins, 423 Sterility, 248 Sterility, Remedies for, 249 Sterility common to women, 251 Sterility in Females, 237 Stomachache, 326 Story of Life for Children, 401 Stranger, Silken Enticements of, 28 Style of Beauty, 91 Success or Failure, 276 Summer Complaint, 340 Swollen Legs During Pregnancy, 276 Symptoms of the "Secret Habit", 451 Syphilis (Pox), 464 , 467 Syphilis, Recipe for, 468 Syphilis (Pox) Treatment of, 468 Syphilitic Poison, 465 Syringes, Whirling Spray, 246 T Table Manners, 63 Tables for Feeding a Baby, 329 Teach Sex Truths to Children, 401 , 416 Teeth, 85 Teething, 336 , 340 Temples of Lust, 425 Test of Virginity, 202 , 237 Thinking only of Dress, 81 Throat Troubles, 354 Tight Lacing, 104 Time to Marry, 351 Too Many Children, 229 Toothache, 280 True Kind of Beauty, 129 Twilight Sleep, 479 Twins, 205 U Unchastity, 409 Underclothing, 85 Unfaithfulness, 423 Unhappy Marriages, 151 Uniformed Men, 128 Union of the Sexes, The, 400 Unjust Demands, 428 Unwelcome Child, 258 Urethra, 231 Urethra, Stricture of-Symptoms and Treatment, 469 V Vaginal Cleanliness, 246 Vice or Virtue, 6 Vile Women, 382 Virginity, Test of, 202 , 237 Virtue, A New, 19 Virtues, Root of all the, 12 Vomiting, 363 Vulgar, Society of the, 11 Vulgar Desire, 428 W Waist, Natural, 105 Warts, Cure for, 364 Warning, 6 Wasp Waists, 181 Wealth, 73 Weaning, 318 Wedding, The Proper Time, 199 Wedding Rings, 167 Wedlock, Advantages of, 135 Wens, 364 What a Mother Should Know, 326 What is Puberty, 406 What Men Love in Women, 129 What Women Love in Men, 126 When and Whom to Marry, 311 When Conception Takes Place, 269 When Passion Begins, 407 Whites, The, 277 Whooping Cough, 344 , 360 Why Children Die, 226 Why Girls Go Astray, 381 Wife, How to be a Good, 210 Woman, The Best Educator, 25 Woman Haters, 61 Woman the Perfect Type of Beauty, 92 Woman's Love, 116 Women, Influence of, 30 Women, Young, 26 Women who Makes Best Wives, 178 Womb Falling of, 350 Womb, inflammation of, 349 Worms and Remedy, 341 Words, Power of, 15 Y Young Man's Personal Appearance, 86 Young Mothers, Advice to, 286 Youth, Bloom and Grace of, 97 Youthful Sexual Excitement, 126 [Transcriber's Note: Most probable typos in the original paper book have been retained as printed, e.g.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,311   ~   ~   ~

The Black-and-Tans, who, like the Most High, are no respecters of persons, called on the judge to descend, using the quaint colloquial formula: "Come down, you Irish bastard; put up your hands."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,313   ~   ~   ~

The comedy of a judge's being addressed as an Irish bastard did not strike him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,358   ~   ~   ~

It is not merely that somebody or other was called "You Irish bastard," but that the wrong person was called "You Irish bastard."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,382   ~   ~   ~

And never was it so full of a number of things as since a Coalition Government came into power--queer, delightful things, for instance, like policemen who call judges "bastard," as who should say: "Cheerio, old thing!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 550   ~   ~   ~

You perhaps know that _the children born under the handfasting engagement were reckoned lawful children, and not bastards_, though the parents did afterwards resile.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 106   ~   ~   ~

ye villainous pack, Ye slaves of the Saxon, ye blind bastard bunch!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,158   ~   ~   ~

In spite of what had been now ruled by the Church concerning her, there were always those, both in the French and English camps, who called her a witch; and we, who heard so many flying rumours, wondered greatly what view the redoubtable La Hire took of this matter, and Dunois, the Bastard of Orleans, as he was often called.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,237   ~   ~   ~

"Are you he whom men call the Bastard of Orleans?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 333   ~   ~   ~

Just after Dorin's break-through, Dioneza, who was now forty-eight, was raped and brutally murdered by Canon's bastard son, Canis Topler.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,048   ~   ~   ~

"You bastard!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,926   ~   ~   ~

"This was done," wrote the French commander, the Duke of Berwick, a bastard of the house of Stuart, "in order that the English government may be able to show the next Parliament that nothing has been neglected to diminish the navy of Spain."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,599   ~   ~   ~

Did William the Norman Bastard, or any of his Taillefers, _Ironcutters,_ manage so?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,864   ~   ~   ~

Sweep away thy constitutional, sentimental and other cobwebberies; look eye to eye, if thou still have any eye, in the face of this big burly William Bastard: thou wilt see a fellow of most flashing discernment, of most strong lionheart;-- in whom, as it were, within a frame of oak and iron, the gods have planted the soul of 'a man of genius!'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 125   ~   ~   ~

Hee, not pleased with the expression, swore she would make the court believe hee was a bastard, at which shee laughed, and passed on."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,060   ~   ~   ~

It is a bastard species of ebony[1], in which the prevailing black is stained with stripes of rich brown, approaching to yellow and pink.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,434   ~   ~   ~

That he is a better Christian, with his "bastard Christianity," than the most of us shovel-hatted?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,532   ~   ~   ~

I rode over Surrey,-- with a leather valise behind me and a mackintosh before; very singular to see: over Sussex, down to Pevensey where the Norman Bastard landed; I saw Julius Hare (whose _Guesses at Truth_ you perhaps know), saw Saint Dunstan's stithy and hammer, at Mayfield, and the very tongs with which he took the Devil by the nose;--finally I got home again, a right wearied man; sent my horse off to be sold, as I say; and finished the writing of my Lectures on Heroes.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,222   ~   ~   ~

In his best play, _Antony_, which exhibits the struggle of a bastard to establish himself in the so-called best society, Dumas brought the discussion home to his own country and his own period.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,229   ~   ~   ~

It has dealt with courtesans (_La Dame Aux Camélias_), demi-mondaines (_Le Demi-Monde_), erring wives (_Frou-Frou_), women with a past (_The Second Mrs. Tanqueray_), free lovers (_The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmith_), bastards (_Antony_; _Le Fils Naturel_), ex-convicts (_John Gabriel Borkman_), people with ideas in advance of their time (_Ghosts_), and a host of other characters that are usually considered dangerous to society.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,132   ~   ~   ~

In the time of Artemidorus, however, the trade of Egypt on the coast of Africa had reached as low down as the Southern Horn; that this trade was still in its infancy, is apparent from a circumstance mentioned by Strabo, on the authority of Artemidorus; that at the straits the cargo was transferred from ships to boats; bastard cinnamon, perhaps casia lignea or hard cinnamon, is specified as one of the principal articles which the Egyptians obtained from the coast of Africa, when they passed the straits of Babelmandeb.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 89   ~   ~   ~

It has, philologically, the awkward disadvantage of being a bastard term compounded of Greek and Latin elements, but its significance--sexual attraction to the same sex--is fairly clear and definite, while it is free from any question-begging association of either favorable or unfavorable character.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 282   ~   ~   ~

When I read of men who were bastards the idea of a woman having a child in that way gives me this sensation.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,872   ~   ~   ~

Our sexual morality is thus, in reality, a bastard born of the union of property-morality with primitive ascetic morality, neither in true relationship to the vital facts of the sexual life.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,423   ~   ~   ~

It is true, however, that the bastard children may deprive them of their property.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,765   ~   ~   ~

Bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,689   ~   ~   ~

What was it?--'Twas fame to be lash'd by his pen: For had he not pointed me out, I had slept till E'en doomsday, a poor insignificant reptile; Half lawyer, half actor, pert, dull, and inglorious, Obscure, and unheard of--but now I'm notorious: Fame has but two gates, a white and a black one; The worst they can say is, I got in at the back one: If the end be obtain'd 'tis equal what portal I enter, since I'm to be render'd immortal: So clysters applied to the anus, 'tis said, By skilful physicians, give ease to the head-- Though my title be spurious, why should I be dastard, A man is a man, though he should be a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,773   ~   ~   ~

to see the dunghill bastard brood Survive in thee, and make the proverb good?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,010   ~   ~   ~

poor old England, how wilt thou be master'd; For, take which you please, it must needs be a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,296   ~   ~   ~

Some have whispered to you that she is my bastard half-sister; some, my cast-off mistress: I now inform you that she is my wife, whom I married fifteen years ago--Bertha Mason by name; sister of this resolute personage who is now, with his quivering limbs and white cheeks, showing you what a stout heart men may bear.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 828   ~   ~   ~

The club was heterogen'ous By strangers seen as A refuge for destitute _bons mots_-- _Dépôt_ for leaden jokes and pewter pots; Repertory for gin and _jeux d'esprit_, Literary pound for vagrant rapartee; Second-hand shop for left-off witticisms; Gall'ry for Tomkins and Pitt-icisms;[3] Foundling hospital for every bastard pun; In short, a manufactory for all sorts of fun!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,789   ~   ~   ~

I have compounded two or three rapes; and let out to hire as many bastards to beggars.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 737   ~   ~   ~

Herein, O Pain, abides the praise For which my song I raise; But even the bastard good of intermittent ease How greatly doth it please!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,093   ~   ~   ~

Whether there were as then any more earls of Douglas, to whom the land returned, or not, I cannot tell; for I, sir John Froissart, author of the book, was in Scotland in the earl's castle of Dalkeith, living earl William, at which time he had two children, a son and a daughter; but after there were many of the Douglases, for I have seen a five brethren, all squires, bearing the name of Douglas, in the king of Scotland's house, David; they were sons to a knight in Scotland called sir James Douglas, and they bare in their arms gold, three oreilles gules, but as for the heritage, I know not who had it: as for sir Archambault Douglas, of whom I have spoken before in this history in divers places, who was a valiant knight, and greatly redoubted of the Englishmen, he was but a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,953   ~   ~   ~

The other order of knighthood in England, and the most honourable, is that of the garter, instituted by King Edward the Third, who, after he had gained many notable victories, taken King John of France, and King James of Scotland (and kept them both prisoners in the Tower o£ London at one time), expelled King Henry of Castille, the bastard, out of his realm, and restored Don Pedro unto it (by the help of the Prince of Wales and Duke of Aquitaine, his eldest son, called the Black Prince), he then invented this society of honour, and made a choice out of his own realm and dominions, and throughout all Christendom of the best, most excellent, and renowned persons in all virtues and honour, and adorned them with that title to be knights of his order, giving them a garter garnished with gold and precious stones, to wear daily on the left leg only; also a kirtle, gown, cloak, chaperon, collar, and other solemn and magnificent apparel, both of stuff and fashion exquisite and heroical to wear at high feasts, and as to so high and princely an order appertaineth....

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,053   ~   ~   ~

Ranulph, the monk of Chester, telleth of general survey made in the fourth, sixteenth, and nineteenth of the reign of William Conqueror, surnamed the Bastard, wherein it was found that (notwithstanding the Danes had overthrown a great many) there were to the number of 52,000 towns, 45,002 parish churches, and 75,000 knights' fees, whereof the clergy held 28,015.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,054   ~   ~   ~

He addeth moreover that there were divers other builded since that time, within the space of a hundred years after the coming of the Bastard, as it were in lieu or recompense of those that William Rufus pulled down for the erection of his New Forest.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,243   ~   ~   ~

But as that of London was translated to Canterbury by Augustine, and that of York remaineth (notwithstanding that the greatest part of his jurisdiction is now bereft him and given to the Scottish archbishop), so that of Caerleon is utterly extinguished, and the government of the country united to that of Canterbury in spiritual cases, after it was once before removed to St. David's in Wales, by David, successor to Dubritius, and uncle to King Arthur, in the 519 of Grace, to the end that he and his clerks might be further off from the cruelty of the Saxons, where it remained till the time of the Bastard, and for a season after, before it was annexed to the see of Canterbury.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,355   ~   ~   ~

This also offended many, that they should, after their deaths, leave their substances to their wives and children, whereas they consider not that in old time such as had no lemans nor bastards (very few were there, God wot, of this sort) did leave their goods and possessions to their brethren and kinsfolks, whereby (as I can shew by good record) many houses of gentility have grown and been erected.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,419   ~   ~   ~

Neither do I mean this of small wines only, as claret, white, red, French, etc., which amount to about fifty-six sorts, according to the number of regions from whence they came, but also of the thirty kinds of Italian, Grecian, Spanish, Canarian, etc., whereof vernage, catepument, raspis, muscadell, romnie, bastard lire, osy caprie, clary, and malmesey, are not least of all accompted of, because of their strength and valour.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,903   ~   ~   ~

Of such outlandish horses as are daily brought over unto us I speak not, as the jennet of Spain, the courser of Naples, the hobby of Ireland, the Flemish roile and the Scottish nag, because that further speech of them cometh not within the compass of this treatise, and for whose breed and maintenance (especially of the greatest sort) King Henry the Eighth erected a noble studdery, and for a time had very good success with them, till the officers, waxing weary, procured a mixed brood of bastard races, whereby his good purpose came to little effect.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,940   ~   ~   ~

With the same also we begin our dinners each day after other; and, because it is somewhat hard of digestion, a draught of malvesey, bastard, or muscadel, is usually drank after it, where either of them are conveniently to be had; otherwise the meaner sort content themselves with their own drink, which at that season is generally very strong, and stronger indeed than it is all the year beside.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,315   ~   ~   ~

Only wood is the chief want to such as study there, wherefore this kind of provision is brought them either from Essex and other places thereabouts, as is also their coal, or otherwise the necessity thereof is supplied with gall (a bastard kind of mirtus as I take it) and seacoal, whereof they have great plenty led thither by the Grant.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,806   ~   ~   ~

If the bastard brother of the King of Spain did not exhibit any large measure of ability as a leader on this occasion, he was perhaps none the less the right man in the right place, as he had about him so winning a way, he was so striking and gallant a figure, that the hearts of all under his command went out to him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 872   ~   ~   ~

Not so ill fought for a bastard!'"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,017   ~   ~   ~

"Here live bastard tribes and mongrel nations; wrangling and murdering to prove their freedom.--Refill, my lord."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 474   ~   ~   ~

I am not aware of any contemporary authority for the names of the three dukes; and a difficulty in the way of assigning them by conjecture is, that in the poem they are called "three bastard dukes."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 478   ~   ~   ~

's bastard sons besides Monmouth would have been old enough in 1671 to be actors in such a fray.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 479   ~   ~   ~

Sir Walter Scott, in his notes on _Absalom and Achitophel_, referring to the poem, gives the assault to Monmouth and some of his brothers; but he did so, probably, without considering dates, and on the strength of the words "three bastard dukes."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 484   ~   ~   ~

Were it certain that three dukes were engaged in this fray, and were we not restricted to "bastards," I should say that Monmouth, Albemarle, and Richmond (who married the beautiful Miss Stuart, and killed himself by drinking) would probably be the three culprits.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 485   ~   ~   ~

As regards Albemarle, he might perhaps have been called bastard without immoderate use of libeller's licence.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,657   ~   ~   ~

He chuckled over the Suffolk phrase 'a chance child,' for a bastard (alluding to one such of his acquaintance in old days).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 919   ~   ~   ~

He was well natured, but soon angry, calling his servants bastard and cuckoldy knaves, in one of which he often spoke truth to his own knowledge, and sometimes in both, though of the same man.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,547   ~   ~   ~

She'll never forget that the child--her child--is a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,491   ~   ~   ~

Suddenly, from a low earthwork hastily raised in the shadow of the fortress wall, and masked by bushes, burst a withering fire of chain-shot from cannon and culverin, of slighter missiles from falcon and bastard and saker, caliver and harquebus.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 152   ~   ~   ~

A stern, unfeeling bastard of a father.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 331   ~   ~   ~

The only way to stop them, or at least hinder them until the rest of the quadrant wakes up, sees these bastards for what they are and sends out real armies to stop them, is to strike at all points, especially the top, and be just as cold and unfeeling as they are."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,787   ~   ~   ~

"Bastard," he muttered beneath his breath.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,889   ~   ~   ~

Poor bastards."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,937   ~   ~   ~

That your father was a racist bastard who didn't love you, or any one or anything else?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,863   ~   ~   ~

At best she was the unwilling mistress of a bastard animal.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,540   ~   ~   ~

Let the red bastards come!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,726   ~   ~   ~

"Have the bastards broken through?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,861   ~   ~   ~

BASTARDS.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,122   ~   ~   ~

It was THAT bastard," pointing, "and Hesse that---" He never finished the sentence.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,243   ~   ~   ~

We're going to fight those red bastards if we have to do it alone.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,418   ~   ~   ~

"Bastards!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 36   ~   ~   ~

From the literary point of view, it is a near descendant--collateral, if not direct, and anyhow based on the same English empirical humour of life--of Thomas Overbury's _A Wife_ (1614--only one unique copy of this is known to exist), John Earle's _Microcosmographie_ (1628), in prose, and Thomas Bastard's _Chrestoleros_* (1598), in verse.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,501   ~   ~   ~

"And now when I thought most of peace and honour, thy hand is heavy upon me, and hath humbled me, according to thy former loving-kindness, keeping me still in thy fatherly school, not as a bastard, but as a child.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,745   ~   ~   ~

Thus land became a kind of bastard freehold:--The tenant held a certainty, while he conformed to the agreement; or, in other words, the custom of the manor--And the Lord still possessed a material control.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,729   ~   ~   ~

Some of them, therefore, hint at your early marriages as a great evil, and a clergyman named Malthus has seriously proposed measures for checking you in this respect; while one of the correspondents of the Board of Agriculture complains of the increase of bastards, and proposes severe punishment on the parents!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,957   ~   ~   ~

Now how was it that these fat, these bastard-propagating rascals succeeded in making the people do this?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 26   ~   ~   ~

_The tenth Comfort of Whoring Answer'd._ T'is true we Harlots work by various means, And act our Parts behind too diff'rent Scenes; Sometimes we do a Bastard lay to those, That never did so much as touch our Cloaths; Perhaps too ne'er were in our Company, So Guineas get by this same Subtilty; And many times a Pocket too we pick, For at no mischief will a Strumpit stick; For once a Woman's bad, there's no relief By being only Whore, but also Thief.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 383   ~   ~   ~

And the lawful children were being dishonoured in their halls, and a bastard race was rising.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,468   ~   ~   ~

In saying this he was understating rather than overstating the case, since a very cursory inspection of the State papers will reveal the fact that the mistresses and bastards of every English King, from Charles II.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,777   ~   ~   ~

The five physicians, who had tried first one remedy and then another; the rustic physician whose nostrum had kept life within the king for some unexpected days; the ladies who had waited upon the relatives of the king; some of the relatives themselves; Villeroy, guardian of the young king soon to be; the bastard, and the wife of that bastard, who hoped for the king's shoes; the mistress of his earlier years, for many years his wife--Maintenon, that peerless hypocrite of all the years--all these passed, and hesitated, and looked, waiting, as did the hungry crowds in Paris toward the Seine, until the double sun should set, and the crawling thumbs at last should find their shelter.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 117   ~   ~   ~

{7} Knox had only to keep his eyes and ears open, to observe the clerical ignorance and corruption which resulted in great part from the Scottish habit of securing wealthy Church offices for ignorant, brutal, and licentious younger sons and bastards of noble families.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 668   ~   ~   ~

the Lord James Stewart, Mary's bastard brother, Prior of St. Andrews and of Pittenweem, was still very young.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 675   ~   ~   ~

The Duke's bastard brother, again, the Archbishop, sharing his family ambition, was in no mood for burning heretics.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,068   ~   ~   ~

The clergy were to live cleanly, and not to keep their bastards at home.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,047   ~   ~   ~

It certainly secured a thoroughly moral clergy, till, some twelve years later, the nobles again thrust licentious and murderous cadets into the best livings and the bastard bishoprics, before and during the Regency of Morton.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,253   ~   ~   ~

In his eyes Anglicanism was "a bastard religion," "a mingle-mangle now commanded in your kirks."

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Page 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66