The 6,537 occurrences of bastard

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,336   ~   ~   ~

On his death, in 1458, he bequeathed his Spanish kingdom, together with Sicily and Sardinia, to his brother, and left the fruits of his Italian conquest to his bastard, Ferdinand.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,775   ~   ~   ~

With the same end in view, when the legitimate line of the Bentivogli was extinguished, Cosimo hunted out a bastard pretender of that family, presented him to the chiefs of the Bentivogli faction, and had him placed upon the seat of his supposed ancestors at Bologna.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,893   ~   ~   ~

[15] Meanwhile a bastard son of Giuliano's was received into the Medicean household, to perpetuate his lineage.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,982   ~   ~   ~

Giulio, the bastard son of the elder Giuliano, was fourteen.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,098   ~   ~   ~

Giulio, the Pope's bastard cousin, was made cardinal.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,119   ~   ~   ~

Giuliano died in 1516, leaving only a bastard son Ippolito.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,120   ~   ~   ~

Lorenzo died in 1519, leaving a bastard son Alessandro, and a daughter, six days old, who lived to be the Queen of France.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,123   ~   ~   ~

The honours and pretensions of the Medici devolved upon three bastards--on the Cardinal Giulio, and the two boys, Alessandro and Ippolito.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,137   ~   ~   ~

The bastards he was rearing were but children.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,167   ~   ~   ~

Still the burghers, mindful of their ancient liberties, were galled by the yoke of a Cortonese, sprung up from one of their subject cities; nor could they bear the bastards who were being reared to rule them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,190   ~   ~   ~

When the Florentines knew what was happening in Rome, they rose and forced the Cardinal Passerini to depart with the Medicean bastards from the city.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,886   ~   ~   ~

They may not like the bastard progeny of the various mistresses they adored--of a Science which they enthroned above instead of subordinating to humanistic values, of a brutal Imperialism which the so-called Conservatives among them set up in place of the truly humane devotion of which man is capable, of the sickening humanitarianism which appears in retrospect to have been merely an excuse for absolute indolence--but they certainly have forfeited the right to censure it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,074   ~   ~   ~

The only character Shakespeare added to those he found ready to his hand was that of James Gurney, who enters with Lady Falconbridge after the scene between the Bastard and his brother, says four words, and departs for ever.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,080   ~   ~   ~

It is obvious that Shakespeare's sole motive in introducing Gurney is to provide an occasion for the Bastard's characteristic, though not to a modern mind quite obvious, jest, based on the fact that Philip was at the time a common name for a sparrow.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,081   ~   ~   ~

The Bastard, just dubbed Sir Richard Plantagenet by the King, makes a thoroughly natural jibe at his former name, Philip, to which he had just shown such breezy indifference.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,082   ~   ~   ~

The jest could not have been made to Lady Falconbridge without a direct insult to her, which would have been alien to the natural, blunt, and easygoing fondness of the relation which Shakespeare establishes between the Bastard and his mother.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,089   ~   ~   ~

In Act III, scene ii., Warburton's emendation of 'airy' to 'fiery' had in Coleridge's day been received into the text of the Bastard's lines:-- 'Now by my life, this day grows wondrous hot; Some airy devil hovers in the sky.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,160   ~   ~   ~

Again, the Folio text of the meeting between the Bastard and Hubert in Act V., when Hubert fails to recognise the Bastard's voice, runs thus:-- 'Unkinde remembrance: thou and endles night, Have done me shame: Brave Soldier, pardon me That any accent breaking from thy tongue Should scape the true acquaintaince of mine eare.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,164   ~   ~   ~

He is overwrought by his knowledge of 'news fitting to the night, Black, fearful, comfortless, and horrible,' and by his long wandering in search of the Bastard:-- 'Why, here I walk in the black brow of night To find you out.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,449   ~   ~   ~

The Miss Mortimer, who spoke Parisian French, took him aback with her symbolists; but he evened matters up with a goodly measure of the bastard lingo of the Canadian _voyageurs_, and left her gasping and meditating over a proposition to sell him twenty-five pounds of sugar, white or brown.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,077   ~   ~   ~

She talked a bastard English gibberish which was an anguish to hear, so the pocket-miner resolved to smoke a pipe and depart without rudeness.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,469   ~   ~   ~

If the Welse should procreate a bastard line this day, it would be the way of the Welse, and you would be a daughter of the Welse, and in the face of hell and heaven, of God himself, we would stand together, we of the one blood, Frona, you and I."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 125   ~   ~   ~

Unfortunately, the Hellenism that was brought to Palestine was not the lofty culture, the eager search for truth and knowledge, that marked Athens in the classical age; it was a bastard product of Greek elegance and Oriental luxury and sensuousness, a seeking after base pleasures, an assertion of naturalistic polytheism.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 667   ~   ~   ~

With the enthusiasm of a Maccabee, if with other weapons, he fought against the bastard culture, which meant self-indulgence and the excessive attention to the body, the idol-worship, the degraded ideas of the Divine power, and the disregard of truth and justice, that were current in the pagan society about him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,003   ~   ~   ~

Only when it became hardened into dogma, fixed not only as good doctrine, but as the only saving doctrine, as the tree of life opposed to the Torah, the tree of death--only then did it become anti-Jewish, and appear as a bastard offspring of the Hebraic God-idea and Greek culture.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 607   ~   ~   ~

What is to be inferred from the Prince's words and those of his bastard brother Don John?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 172   ~   ~   ~

Too often, here in America, the most comfortable room in the house is given up to a sort of bastard collection of gilt chairs and tables, over-elaborate draperies shutting out both light and air, and huge and frightful paintings.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 907   ~   ~   ~

But slavery will endure no test of reason or logic; and yet its advocates, like Douglas, use a sort of bastard logic, or noisy assumption, it might better be termed, like the above, in order to prepare the mind for the gradual, but none the less certain, encroachments of the Moloch of slavery upon, the fair domain of freedom.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,109   ~   ~   ~

And if you can do this in free Kansas, and it is allowed to stand, the next thing you will see is ship-loads of negroes from Africa at the wharf at Charleston; for one thing is as truly lawful as the other; and these are the bastard notions we have got to stamp out, else they will stamp us out.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,671   ~   ~   ~

They said the bastard[120] was over bold.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,588   ~   ~   ~

The houses were no longer characteristically French, but a bastard Swiss.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,852   ~   ~   ~

The great noblemen and gentlemen of the Court were filled with the desire for extravagant display, and built such clumsy piles as Wollaton and Burghley House, importing French and German artisans to load them with bastard Italian Renaissance detail.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,076   ~   ~   ~

The only words of something like truth he spoke, were against that bastard and discreditable system, purporting to be a "self-supporting system," concocted by adventurers and land-jobbers for achieving fortunes at the cost, and to the ruin, of the unsuspecting emigrating public, and to the signal detriment and dishonour of the state.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 947   ~   ~   ~

The greatest daring to a man dishonest, Is but a Bastard Courage, ever fainting.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,916   ~   ~   ~

It is said that Longespée (a son of his by Madame Rosamund) and Geoffrey (another bastard), with Bohun and De Lacy and some more, tried to hinder him in this design, wherein (said they) he set out to be a second Thyestes; but they might as well have bandied words with destiny.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,928   ~   ~   ~

There were old Gilles and young Gilles with their men; eight of the King's own choosing, namely, Drago de Merlou, Armand Taillefer, the Count of Ponthieu, Fulk Perceforest, Fulk D'Oilly, Gilbert FitzReinfrid, Ponce the bastard of Caen, and a butcher called Rolf, to whom the King, mocking all chivalry, gave the gilt spurs before he started.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,181   ~   ~   ~

They held a hasty conference, Geoffrey his bastard, the Marshal, the Bishop: these and the French ambassadors.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,231   ~   ~   ~

He left a wife in prison, two sons in arms against him, and many bastards.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,603   ~   ~   ~

But Count John took no Cross, nor did Geoffrey the bastard of Anjou.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,812   ~   ~   ~

I hate you above all people in the world, mother of a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,670   ~   ~   ~

"So they are; if their parents don't take care of them, and provide for them, nobody else will, as you say, neighbour, except when they have a Fitz put to their name, which tells you they are royal bastards, and of course unlike anybody else's."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,389   ~   ~   ~

She is clearly guilty, but as one or two witnesses said the poor wench hinted an intention to poison herself, the jury gave that bastard verdict, Not proven .

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,013   ~   ~   ~

It is not that Holland House is fine as a building; on the contrary, it has a tumble-down look; and, although decorated with the bastard Gothic of James I.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,515   ~   ~   ~

I should be a bastard to the time [385] did I not tell our fare.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,559   ~   ~   ~

's reign, a kind of bastard Grecian [391] -very fanciful and pretty though.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 96   ~   ~   ~

In his _True Born Englishman_, Defoe spoke very contemptuously of families that professed to have come over with "the Norman bastard," defying them to prove whether their ancestors were drummers or colonels; but apparently he was not above the vanity of making the world believe that he himself was of Norman-French origin.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 333   ~   ~   ~

'Tis that from some French trooper they derive, Who with the Norman bastard did arrive; The trophies of the families appear, Some show the sword, the bow, and some the spear Which their great ancestor, forsooth, did wear.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 580   ~   ~   ~

The truth of the matter is that as the blacks are the underdogs, the half-breed becomes a racial and social bastard, as indeed he is openly named in South Africa, a man condemned before he is tried, handicapped from birth in a way that would drag down and keep under most of those who shout loudest about their racial superiority.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,526   ~   ~   ~

But the cruelty which he exercised on the mother of Cacil Aerio, bastard son to King Boliefe, so far exasperated those princes and the neighbouring people, that they conspired the death of all the Portuguese, who were to be found in those quarters.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,351   ~   ~   ~

We may consider Dutch a harsh tongue, and prefer that all foreigners should learn English; but our dislike of Dutch is as nothing compared with Dutch dislike of French as expressed in some verses by Bilderdyk when the tyranny of Napoleon threatened them:-- Begone, thou bastard-tongue!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 987   ~   ~   ~

He did, however, actually nominate in April his bastard brother, Don John of Austria, the famous victor of Lepanto, as Requesens' successor.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,811   ~   ~   ~

The Netherland or Low-German tongue thus became gradually debased and corrupted by the introduction of bastard words and foreign modes of expression.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,231   ~   ~   ~

II.--THE MURDER OF IPPOLITO DE' MEDICI After the final extinction of the Florentine Republic, the hopes of the Medici, who now aspired to the dukedom of Tuscany, rested on three bastards--Alessandro, the reputed child of Lorenzo, Duke of Urbino; Ippolito, the natural son of Giuliano, Duke of Nemours; and Giulio, the offspring of an elder Giuliano, who was at this time Pope, with the title of Clement VII.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,233   ~   ~   ~

He now determined to rule Florence from the Papal chair by the help of the two bastard cousins I have named.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 182   ~   ~   ~

_Of a bold abusive Wit._ He talks madly, _dash, dash,_ without any fear at all, and never cares how he _bespatters_ others, or defiles himself; nor ceases he till he has quite run himself out of breath; when no wonder, if to fools he seems to get the start of those who wisely pick out their way, and are as fearful of abusing others as themselves: He has the _Buffoons_ priviledge, of saying or doing anything without exceptions, and he will call a jealous man _Cuckold_, a childe of doubtful birth _Bastard_, and a _Lady_ of suspected honor a _Whore_, and they but laugh at it; and all _Scholars_ are _Pedants_; and _Physicians_, _Quacks_ with him, when to be angry at it is the avowing it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 701   ~   ~   ~

Hinojosa was likewise informed that Vela Nunnez had the charge of a bastard son of Gonzalo Pizarro of twelve years old, who was found by the viceroy at Quito, and was now sent away to Panama, in the hope that the merchants of Panama might ransom him at a high price to acquire the good will of Gonzalo.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,675   ~   ~   ~

Only bastards should fear that fate, and criticism would indeed be fatal to a bastard philosophy, to one that does not spring from practical reason and has no roots in life.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 784   ~   ~   ~

The gossips liked this fare so well that she never wanted company; wine had she of all sorts, muskadine, sack, malmsey, claret, white and bastard; this pleased her neighbours well, so that few that came to see her, but they had home with them a medicine for the fleas.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,513   ~   ~   ~

As early as the time of Henry III the barons proclaimed with one voice that they would not have the laws of England altered in favour of a rule--the legitimation of bastards by the subsequent marriage of their parents--which in one form or another has been adopted in Western Christendom, and even in the neighbouring kingdom of Scotland.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,012   ~   ~   ~

If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons--if ye are without chastisement, then are ye bastards and not sons."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,236   ~   ~   ~

Opposite the passage in which Boswell reports Johnson as palliating infidelity in a husband by the remark, that the man imposes no bastards on his wife, she writes: "Sometimes he does.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 355   ~   ~   ~

"Morindus, the bastard son of Danius, began to reigne in Britain: he (as our Chronicles saye) fought with a kynge, who came out of Germanye, and arrived here, and slew hym with all his power.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,383   ~   ~   ~

[9] and [10] Richard and Roger, m. 2 bastard daus.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 29   ~   ~   ~

Here he made a fatal blunder because he alienated churchmen who believed in the divine right of kings, all whose sense of decency was outraged by the prospect of a bastard's elevation to the throne, and the supporters of William of Orange, husband of Mary, the elder daughter of James, and the great opponent of Louis XIV.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,986   ~   ~   ~

Wilt thou say that she hated thee, and that the bastard race is hateful forsooth to those of noble birth?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,115   ~   ~   ~

1058 LADY NAIRNE: _The Laird o' Cockpen._ =Latin.= That soft bastard Latin, Which melts like kisses from a female mouth.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,736   ~   ~   ~

=Observation.= For he is but a bastard to the time That doth not smack of observation.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,166   ~   ~   ~

1424 RICHARD SAVAGE: _The Bastard,_ Line 7.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,305   ~   ~   ~

--He That kills himself to avoid misery, fears it; And at the best shows but a bastard valor.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,725   ~   ~   ~

Latin, that soft bastard, 1059.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,405   ~   ~   ~

Valor, fear to do base things is, 1986. shows but a bastard, 1817.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,077   ~   ~   ~

They make him a bastard, a debauchee, and a fool.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,043   ~   ~   ~

The authentic professor of histrionic art may even have been addressed occasionally by his illicit opponent in something like Edmund's very words: Why bastard?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,050   ~   ~   ~

Legitimate Edgar, I must have your land; Our father's love is to the bastard Edmund As to the legitimate: fine word "legitimate."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,983   ~   ~   ~

But when it arrived, my brother was already dead, for which reason we did not then deliver the fortress, as a bastard son had succeeded him, whom the Ternatans, with the help of the king of Tydore, elevated as king, although he had no right to the throne.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,177   ~   ~   ~

They waited until the morning, and when it dawned they saw that the galley had already set its bastard, [286] and was sailing toward China with the wind astern, and they could not follow it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,875   ~   ~   ~

The other children, born of other women, whom we call bastards, they called _asiao yndepat_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,877   ~   ~   ~

Even if any one had no legitimate child at his death, the bastard could not inherit at all, but the property went to the nearest relatives of the deceased.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,240   ~   ~   ~

This plant is the safflower or bastard saffron (_Certhamus tinctorius_); its flowers are used in making a red dye.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 8,290   ~   ~   ~

Artemisiae, Astragali, Statices, Rosa, bastard indigo, Cerasus.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,035   ~   ~   ~

This is the bastard cedar of Jamaica, or Orme d'Amerique, and Bois d'Orme of the French, which may be found described by Lunan, in the first volume of his "Hortus Jamaicensis," page 59, under the name of _Bubroma Guazuma_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,494   ~   ~   ~

In Mississippi many varieties are grown, principally those known as flint and bastard flint.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 9,736   ~   ~   ~

of bastard cardamoms are annually exported from Siam, "We imported about 300 tons in 1849.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 10,093   ~   ~   ~

The second sort, called _vanilla simarona_, or bastard, is a little smaller than the preceding, of a less deep brown hue, drier, less aromatic, destitute of efflorescence.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 11,887   ~   ~   ~

The seeds of bastard saffron (_Carthamus tinctorius_) yield oil.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 14,667   ~   ~   ~

The Indian root or bastard ipecacuan (_Asclepias curassavica_) has medicinal properties.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,548   ~   ~   ~

), on the tea culture at Darjeeling, 116 Camphor, on the collection of, 633 obtained from the roots of the cinnamon, 389 _Cannabis indica_, 643 Camwood, 447 Canada, production of maple sugar in, 206 West, grain exports of, 251 Canadian yellow root, 626 Canary Isles, millet exported from, 306 moss, 486 seed, 311 Candleberry myrtle, 540 Candlewood, 539 Candles made of cinnamon suet, 390 Candle tree, 521, 538 Cane sugar, composition of, 136, 155, 157 _Canella alba_, 396 Canna, species of, 355 _Canothus Americanus_, used as tea, 80 Caoutchouc, 539 Capa, a term in Cuba for good tobacco, 614 Cape aloes, manufacture of, 631 weed, 486 Capsicum, 428 _Carapa_, species yielding oil, 518 oil, 441, 519 _guianensis_, 512 Caracas, large produce of cacao in, 13 Caraveru, a red pigment, 444 Carraway seed oil, 437, 566 Cardomoms, bastard, 419 plants furnishing, 419 _Carduus Virginianus_, 376 Carob bean, 312, 313 Carolina rice, shipments of, 285 Carrageen, 379 Carrots, average weight per bushel in New Brunswick, 253 _Carthamus tinctoria_, 450 oil from, 512 Caruto, a name for the Lana dye, 444 Carver's treatise on tobacco culture, 607 _Carum carui_, 566 _Caryophyllus aromaticus_, 397 _Caryota urens_, 314 Cascarilla bark, 396 Cashew bark, 495 nut oil, 512 Cassareep, an antiseptic, 339, 343, 369 Cassava cakes, 342 culture of, 367 fecula of, 330 flour exports from St. Lucia, 369 meal, 341 roots, information respecting, 9 starch, yield per acre, 370 Cassia, a rival to cinnamon, 391 _auriculata_, 494 bark of China, superiority of, 393, 394 buds, 396 _lignea_, 394, 396 statistics of imports and consumption of, 394 Castor oil, 510, 511, 527, 536, 542, 563 Catechu or Cutch, 579 tannin in, 495 Cattle, consumption of Indian corn by, 271 Catty, a Chinese weight, 400 Cayenne, nutmeg introduced, 412 pepper grown in, 427 pepper, 429 pottage, 429 _Celastrus paniculatus_, 521 Celebes, coffee grown in, 62 production of coffee in, 41 rice culture in, 302 tobacco, 621 Centrifugal machine for sugar, 140 _Cephælis Ipecacuanhæ_, 641 _Ceratonia siliqua_, 312, 313 Cereal grasses, 216 _Ceroxyion andicola_, 541 _Cersium virginianum_, 376 _Cetraria islandica_, 343, 379 Ceylon arrowroot, 353 cardamoms, 419, 421 coco-nut culture in, 556 culture of rice in, 295 Ceylon, exports of castor oil from, 545 adapted for indigo culture, 475 gamboge, 639 the great seat of cinnamon culture, 383 pepper exported from, 426 imports of _Terra Japonica_, 502 moss, 379 produce of tobacco in, 619 production of coffee in, 41 tea plant introduced, 95 Value of the betel nuts exported, 579 Chay-root, 449, 478 _Chamarops Palmetto_, 495 Chandu, the prepared extract of the opium, 585 _Chenopodium quinon_, 310 Cherrots, Manilla, 619 Chesnuts, consumed in France, 361 Chest of opium, about 140 lbs., 58 Chick pea, 312 the inspissated juice of the poppy, 582 Chicory, extensive consumption of, 37 Chillies, growth of, 428 Chimo, powdered potatoes, 361 China, population of, 86 shipments of tea from, 84 Chinese arrowroot, 352 _Chironia sapinda_, 521 _Chloranthus_, flowers used to flavor tea, 85 Chocolate nuts, 11 imported, 35 paste, as prepared by the Marienna, 18 Christison (Prof.), analysis of gamboge, 640 Chiretta, 641 Chrysoptranic acid, 488 _Cibotium Billardieri_, 380 Cigars, consumption of, 596 duty received on, 597 large consumption of in New York, 599 profit on manufacture of, 612 number exported from Cuba, 614 exported from Siam, 619 Cinchona bark, 635 Cinnamon, 382 export duty on, 391 oil, 565 properties of good, 387 statistics of export from Ceylon, 390, 391 suet, 522 varieties of the tree, 386 Citronella oil, 565, 573 Clagett and Co.'s (Messrs.) tobacco circulars, 601 Clarifying cane juice, 155 Clark, (Mr.) on a new variety of tobacco, 613 Classification and arrangement adopted in the work, 5 _Claytonia acutiflora_, 371 Clerihew's coffee apparatus, 52 Climate suited for various plants, 9 Clove bark, 383 Cloves, 397 oil, 390, 398 statistics of, 411 varieties of the tree, 398 where grown, 402 Cobres a first quality of indigo, 456 Coca plant, 576 _Cocculus indicus_, 576 _palmatus_, 638 Cochin China, coco nut oil exported from, 556 culture of rice, 298 exports of cinnamon, 393 tea considered inferior, 94 Cochineal, value of the dye stuff, 440 Cocoa, see Cacao, 9 fat, 519 nut butter, 560 information respecting, 9 oil, 527 palm, 547 _Cocos nucifera_, 547 _fusiformis_, 519 or eddoes, 364 Cocum oil, 521 Coffee, adulteration of, and substitutes for, 37 consumption of, 39, 596 cultivation in Ceylon, 46 in Africa, 77 in India, 44 information respecting, 9 manures suited for, 50 tree, description of, 43 production in various countries, 41 produce per tree and per acre, 69, 481 leaf, suited for making a beverage by infusion, 78 Dr. Hooker's opinion thereon, 79 plantation, beauty of, 67 prices of, in London, 47 signs of its being properly cured, 71 trade, progress of, 36 Coimbatore, culture of tobacco in, 618.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 15,556   ~   ~   ~

), his experiments on Cassava starch, 370 Gloves made from bark, 376 Gluten contained in various grain crops, 264 definition of, 234 Gluten, composition of, 221 Glycirrhiza, 643 _Glyrine Apios_, 371 _subterranea_, 371 Glycerine, 643 _Glycirrhiza glabra_, 642 _Gnizotia oleifera_, 535 Gohyan, an Indian name for upland rice, 282 Gold of pleasure oil, 509 cake of, 564 Gomuti palm sugar, 136 315 _Gomatus saccharifer_, 314 Goor, the Indian name for half-made sugar, 308 Gorham's (Prof.) analysis of maize, 264 Gourds used for packing aloes, 630 _Gracelaria lichenoides_, 379 Graham (Dr.), on gamboge, 639 Gram, the Indian name for the _Ervum lens_, and _Cicer arietinum_, 312 Grain crops, 217 produce per acre in England, 219 of Paradise, 419, 420 average prices of in New Brunswick, 254 Grape sugar, properties of, 136 sugar, analysis of, 155 Grater for rasping arrowroot, 338 Grenada, cost of cultivating sugar in, 189 Great Exhibition, results of, 2 Green tea, mode of manufacturing, 113 tea, imports of the last 15 years, 82 Griffith (Dr.) on tea plants in Assam, 111 Groundnut oil, 511 Guano, not much required in tropical countries, 7 Guayaquil, large exports of cocoa from, 13 _Guazuma ulmifolia_, 164 Guillemen's (M.) report on the tea plantations of Brazil, 128 Guiana, cost of cultivating sugar in, 189 Guinea pepper, 429 grains, 420 yam, 331, 334, 335, 337, 362 corn, 306 Gums used by the dyers, 453 Gum tree of Australia, 494 Gun stock tree, 164 _Gunnera scabra_, 495 Gunny bags, rough canvas bags, 392 Guntang, an Indian dry measure of rather more than 15 pounds, 297 Guaco, or snake plant, 627 as a fertilizer, 278 _Gynerium saccharoides_, 136 _Gyrophora murina_, 486 _Hamatoxylon campechianum_, 484 Hamilton (Dr.), on oil of ben, 523 notices by, 617 Havana tobacco, classification of, 613 exports of tobacco from, 614 shipments of sugar from, 147 Hayti, exports of tobacco, 615 exports of ginger, 418 coffee from, 67 indigo from, 460 Hazel nut, oil from, 510 _Hebradendron Cambogoides_, 451, 639 Heather, dye from, 453 Hectare, a French land measure, equal to about 2½ acres, 204 Hectolitre, a French measure 192¼ bushel's Helot's lichen test, 452 Herreria sarsaparilla, 646 _Heliconia humilis_, 320 Hemlock tree, bark of, 494 Hemp seed oil, 509 Henna, a dye stuff, 486 Hepatic aloes, 630 Herring's palm kernel oil, 525 Hernandez (Mr.) on Cuba tobacco, 608 _Heuchera Americana_, 494 _Hibiscus rosa sinensis_, 494 Hingalee, the best Bengal tobacco, 617 Hino bark, 606 Hogs, large consumption of maize by, 271 Holcomb (Mr.) on the wheat crop of America, 245 _Holcus avenaceus_, 307 _spicatus_, 366 _saccharatum_, 306 Holland, tea sent to, 86 Honduras, export of indigo from, 460 Hooker (Dr.) on brick tea, 92 Hops, cascarilla bark used to adulterate, 397 Horse gram, 312 Hungary, production of beet sugar in, 197 _Hura crepitans_, 512, 626 Husking rice, 290 Hydraulic press for coco nut oil, 557 press, 329 _Hydrastica canadensis_, 625 _Hymenoea Courbaril_, 313 _Hyperanthera Moringa_, 523 Hypericum, species of, furnishes gamboge, 454, 640 Iceland moss, 343, 379 Illepe oil, 537, 511 _Ilex Paraguayensis_, indigenous to Brazil, 130 description of, 133 _Illicum anisatum_, 438 Impey (Dr.) on Malwa opium, 587 on Indian drugs, 626 Implements of colonial agriculture few and simple, 6 requisite for manufacturing tea, 115 Imports of arrowroot, 351, 354 arnotto, 449 cacao, from America and the West Indies, 35 cloves, 401 cinchona bark, 636 tea into Great Britain, 82 tobacco, 597 coco-nut oil, 562 palm oil, 525, 527 pimento, 431 opium, 580 nutmegs, 414 pepper, 428 castor oil, 544 sago, 318 indigo, 477 coffee, 37 Import commerce, our principal, articles furnished by the Vegetable Kingdom, 4 Incense wood, 439 Indigo, details of, 453 plants yielding, 442 information respecting, 10 mode of manufacturing, 457 production of in India, 474 in Natal, 463 _Indigofera_, species of, 453 India, tea culture in, 98 culture of indigo in, 463 Indiana, tobacco culture in, 607 Indian aloes, 630 berries, 576 corn, imports of, 263 information respecting, 9 analysis of, 264 sources of supply, 262, 263 starch, 343 meal imported, 218 yield per acre, 356 compared with Guinea corn, 307 meal, composition of, 307 opium, 586 root, 625 shot, 345 Indian corn, weight of, 280 madder, 484 Intoxicating liquors made from Cassava, 369 Iodine, 378 Ipecacuan, bastard, 653 641 _Ipomoea batatas_, 365 _brachypodo_, 522 _Jalapa_, 641 Ireland, tobacco consumed in, 596 cost of producing beet root sugar in, 193 Irish rock moss, 379 Iron, quantity of, in tobacco, 617 bark tree, 506 Irrigation for the tea plant never practised in China, 122 _Isatis Indigotica_,104 _tinctoria_, 452 Jaggery sugar, 555 Japanese camphor, 633 tobacco, 620 Japan, tea culture, 94 _Jatropha curcas_, oil from, 512 Jacobson's (Mr.) work on tea culture in Java, 102 Jalap, 641 Jamaica, cost of cultivating sugar in, 189 culture of coffee in, 67 culture of Guinea corn, 306 decline of sugar production, 148, 149 exports of coffee from, 73 ginger, 415, 417 sarsa, 646, 47 Jameson (Dr.) on the culture of tea in India, 106 Java, cinnamon cultivated in, 383, 392 clove does not succeed there, 399 coffee exported to the United States, 63 coco-nut oil exported from, 556 cost of producing sugar in, 189 culture of coffee in, 53 culture of rice in, 299 cultivation of indigo in, 476 gambier grown in, 502 nutmegs exported from, 413 pepper grown in, 422-23 production of coffee in, 41 statistics of, 300 statistics of indigo exported, 476 statistics of tea culture in, 102 sugar culture in, 152 tea plantations, 94 tobacco, 621 Jack fruit tree, 319 Janipha, starch in, 331 _Manihot_, 315 Jasmine oil, 570, 574 _Jatropha gossypyfolia_, 625 _cureas_, oil from, 523 Jellies, clearness of, 337 Jesuit's bark, 635 Joar, the Indian name of the _Sorghum vulgare_ or millet, 304, 306 Job's tears, 304 Johnson (Dr.) on manufacture of rose water, 570 (Mr.) on indigo culture, 466 (Prof.) analyses of grain crops, 264 (Prof.) on grain crops of New Brunswick, 253 Jones's process for making rice starch, 344 Jumowah, irrigated sowings, 468 Juniperus, oil of, 565 Kafir bread, 319 Kamas root, an edible, 376 Kanari kernels made into cakes, 547 oil, 546 Katjang oil, produce of the ground nut, 515, 299 Kawan, the Java tallow tree, 511 Kashmir, culture of rice in, 295 Kemmayes, an Arabian truffle, 381 Kew Gardens, tea plant grows in, 101 Kekune oil, 539 Kentucky tobacco, statistics of, 598, 600 Keora oil, 565 Khoonte, the Indian name for a second cutting, 471 Kiln-drying madder, 481 of bread stuffs, 221, 229 Kilogramme, a French weight, equal to 21bs.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 245   ~   ~   ~

The preservation of this faith is of more consequence than the duties on _red lead_, or _white lead_, or on broken _glass_, or _atlas-ordinary_, or _demy-fine_, or _blue-royal_, or _bastard_, or _fools cap_, which you have given up, or the three-pence on tea which you retained.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,740   ~   ~   ~

I do not mean that little, selfish, pitiful, bastard thing which sometimes goes by the name of a family in which it is not legitimate and to which it is a disgrace;--I mean even that public and enlarged prudence, which, apprehensive of being disabled from rendering acceptable services to the world, withholds itself from those that are invidious.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 675   ~   ~   ~

The white world's vermin and filth: All the dirt of London, All the scum of New York; Valiant spoilers of women And conquerers of unarmed men; Shameless breeders of bastards, Drunk with the greed of gold, Baiting their blood-stained hooks With cant for the souls of the simple; Bearing the white man's burden Of liquor and lust and lies!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 324   ~   ~   ~

"We don't carry guineas about, nor give 'em to our bastards."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 334   ~   ~   ~

"Bastard?" he said.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 343   ~   ~   ~

But "bastard"?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,826   ~   ~   ~

"Ruth, dear--what is a bastard?"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 156   ~   ~   ~

Bastards received half shares.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,635   ~   ~   ~

The lady of Lathom must first be consulted; but probabilities were strongly against the supposition that she would tamely submit to this infringement on the rights of her child by the interposition of a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 754   ~   ~   ~

XXIV For all he taught the tender ymp, was but° To banish cowardize and bastard feare; His trembling hand he would him force to put 205 Upon the Lyon and the rugged Beare; And from the she Beares teats her whelps to teare; And eke wyld roaring Buls he would him make To tame, and ryde their backes not made to beare; And the Robuckes in flight to overtake, 210 That every beast for feare of him did fly and quake.

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