The 6,537 occurrences of bastard

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 367   ~   ~   ~

Postpone you can not, nor advance Success or failure that's to be; All fortune, being born of chance, Is bastard-child to destiny.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,881   ~   ~   ~

I heard the other day of a pretty trick of a bookseller, who has published some d----d nonsense, swearing the bastards to me, and saying he gave me five hundred guineas for them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,716   ~   ~   ~

He is right in defending Pope against the bastard pelicans of the poetical winter day, who add insult to their parricide, by sucking the blood of the parent of English _real_ poetry,--poetry without fault,--and then spurning the bosom which fed them."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,935   ~   ~   ~

If there have been since individual fallings-off; those have been caused by that kind of after-thoughts which are the bastard offspring of selfishness.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 535   ~   ~   ~

But truth it is (as diuers authors agrée) that he held continuall warre against them, and also against the Picts, the which were allied with the Saxons: for as in the Scotish histories is conteined, euen at the first beginning of his reigne, the two kings of the Scots and Picts séemed to enuie his aduancement to the crowne of Britaine, bicause they had maried the two sisters of the two brethren, Aurelius Ambrosius, and Vter Pendragon, that is to say, Loth king of Picts had married Anne their eldest sister, and Conran king of Scots had in mariage Alda their yoonger sister, so that bicause Arthur was begotten out of wedlocke, they thought it stood with more reason, that the kingdome of the Britains should haue descended vnto the sisters sonnes, rather than to a bastard, namelie Loth the Pictish king, which had issue by his wife Anna, sore repined at the matter.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 720   ~   ~   ~

Moreouer he begat of certeine concubines (which he kept) six bastard sonnes, Oga, Aleric, Ettha, Osbale, Segor, and Segother.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,533   ~   ~   ~

He had by his wife Segburga, that was daughter vnto Anna king of the Eastangles, a daughter named Eartongatha, a professed nunne within the monasterie of Briege or Cala in France: for in those daies, bicause there were not manie monasteries builded within this land, a great number of Englishmen, that tooke vpon them the profession of a religious life, got them ouer vnto abbeies in France, and there professed themselues moonks: and manie there were which sent their daughters ouer to be professed nuns within the nunneries there, and speciallie at Briege, Cala, and Andelie: amongst other, there were Sedrike the lawfull daughter, and Edelburgh the bastard daughter of the said king Anna, both which in processe of time were made abbesses of the said monasterie of Briege.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,061   ~   ~   ~

* * * * * _Alfride (the bastard) king of Northumberland, his life and death, Iohn archbishop of Canturburie resigneth his see, Lother king of Kent dieth of a wound, Edrike getteth the regiment thereof but not without bloudshed, Ceadwalla wasteth Kent being at strife in it selfe, his brother Mollo burned to death; Withred made king of Kent, he vanquisheth his enimies, Inas king of Westsaxons is made his friend, Suebhard and Nidred vsurpers of the Kentish kingdome, the age and death of Theodore archbishop of Canturburie, Brightwald the first archbishop of the English nation; the end of the British regiment, and how long the greatest part of this Iland was vnder their gouernement._ THE XXXVIJ.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,066   ~   ~   ~

This Alfride was the bastard sonne of king Oswie, and in his brothers daies (either willinglie, or by violent means constreined) he liued as a banished man in Ireland, where applieng himselfe to studie, he became an excellent philosopher.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,518   ~   ~   ~

Nay, I almost wish him success against all countries but this,--were it only to choke the Morning Post, and his undutiful father-in-law, with that rebellious bastard of Scandinavian adoption, Bernadotte.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,228   ~   ~   ~

He heard them talking to each other, and recognised with joy the bastard Pushto that he had picked up from one of his father's grooms lately dismissed.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 222   ~   ~   ~

In Shakespeare's tragedy of King Lear, it was the traitorous and cruel treatment received by old Gloster from his bastard son Edmund which makes true the lines: The gods are just, and of our pleasant vices Make instruments to scourge us.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 224   ~   ~   ~

Now God has no bastards to turn again and rend their Maker.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 228   ~   ~   ~

But if ye be without chastisement, whereof all are partakers, then are ye bastards, and not sons."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,910   ~   ~   ~

'The true Lancashire,' said Young in 1770, 'were Longhorns, and in Derbyshire were a bastard sort of Lancashires.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,618   ~   ~   ~

Now as his bastard son came to the place, the king asked him how he liked the maner of hunting, wherto he answered; "Verie well if it like your grace, for that that liketh you, ought not to displease me."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 715   ~   ~   ~

When king Cnute had established things, as he thought stood most for his suertie, he called to his remembrance, that he had no issue but two bastard sonnes Harold and Sweno, begotten of his concubine Alwine.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 841   ~   ~   ~

some name earle of Hampton, he had two bastard sonnes, Harold and Sweno.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 859   ~   ~   ~

* * * * * _Variance amongest the peeres of the realme about the roiall succession, the kingdome is diuided betwixt Harold the bastard sonne and Hardicnute the lawfullie begotten son of king Cnute late deceassed, Harold hath the totall regiment, the authoritie of earle Goodwine gardian to the queenes sonnes, Harold is proclaimed king, why Elnothus did stoutlie refuse to consecrate him, why Harold was surnamed Harefoot, he is supposed to be a shoomakers sonne, and how it came to passe that he was counted king Cnutes bastard; Alfred challengeth the crowne from Harold, Goodwine (vnder colour of friendlie interteinment) procureth his retinues vtter vndooing, a tithing of the Normans by the poll, whether Alfred was interessed in the crowne, the trecherous letter of Harold written in the name of queéne Emma to hir two sons in Normandie, wherevpon Alfred commeth ouer into England, the vnfaithfull dealing of Goodwine with Alfred and his people, teaching that in trust is treason, a reseruation of euerie tenth Norman, the remanent slaine, the lamentable end of Alfred, and with what torments he was put to death; Harold banisheth queene Emma out of England he degenerateth from his father, the short time of his reigne, his death and buriall._ THE XIIIJ.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 965   ~   ~   ~

For Normandie in that season was gouerned by the French king, by reason of the minoritie of duke William, surnamed the bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,159   ~   ~   ~

Let him not peep or steal, or skulk up and down with the air of a charity-boy, a bastard, or an interloper, in the world which exists for him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,372   ~   ~   ~

Lord Monson a creve aussi, and Tommy Alston, who has left a will in favour of his bastards, which will occasion lawsuits.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 411   ~   ~   ~

Richard the second had also issue Richard the third, and Robert, which Robert by a concubine had issue William, surnamed the bastard, that was now duke of Normandie, and after the death of his coosine king Edward, made claime (as is said) to the crowne of England.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 422   ~   ~   ~

Whilest Harold went about thus to steale the peoples good willes, there came ouer vnlooked for sundrie ambassadours from William the bastard duke of Normandie, with commission to require him to remember his oth sometime made to the said William in the time of his extremitie, which was, that he the said Harold should aid him in the obteining of the crowne of England, if king Edward should happen to die without issue.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 603   ~   ~   ~

Richard the fourth of that name, duke of Normandie, eldest sonne to Richard the third, died without issue, and then his brother Robert succéeded in the estate, which Robert begat vpon Arlete or Harleuina daughter to a burgesse of Felais, William surnamed the bastard, afterward duke of Normandie, and by conquest king of England.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 991   ~   ~   ~

The common native pumpkin forms a bastard sort in the same way, but that is considered very inferior.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,065   ~   ~   ~

Mparahala horns measured three feet long and three inches in diameter at the base: this is the yellow kualata of Makololo, bastard gemsbuck of the Dutch.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,130   ~   ~   ~

If I melt lead and iron and copper and silver and gold in the same pot, I get a bastard metal, do I not?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 671   ~   ~   ~

The subjection of the south-west was assured by the marriage of the mercenary leader, Falkes de Bréauté, to the mother of the infant Earl of Devon, and by the grant of Cornwall to the bastard of the last of the Dunstanville earls.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 798   ~   ~   ~

At their head were William Longsword, Earl of Salisbury, the bastard great-uncle of the little king, and William, the young marshal, the eldest son of the Earl of Pembroke.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 815   ~   ~   ~

On his nearing the shore, Wilkin of the Weald and Oliver, a bastard of King John's, burnt the huts of the French engaged in watching the castle.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,085   ~   ~   ~

The futility of marriage alliances in modifying policy was already made clear by the attitude of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, the husband of Henry's bastard sister Joan.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,092   ~   ~   ~

After Conrad's death, in 1254, there was still Frederick's strenuous bastard, Manfred, to be reckoned with in Naples and Sicily.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,831   ~   ~   ~

Five or six of the competitors had no better ground of right than descent from bastards of the royal house, especially from the numerous illegitimate offspring of William the Lion.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,894   ~   ~   ~

He had, in fact, performed a signal service to Scotland in vindicating its unity; and by maintaining the rigid doctrines of Anglo-Norman jurisprudence, he rescued it from the vague philosophy which Bruce called natural law, and the recrudescence of Celtic custom that gave even bastards a hope of the succession.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,970   ~   ~   ~

One Madog, probably a bastard son of Llewelyn, son of Griffith, raised all Gwynedd, took possession of Carnarvon castle, and closely besieged the other royal strongholds.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,633   ~   ~   ~

Sir Walter Manny devastated the Flemish island of Cadzand, taking away with him as prisoner the bastard brother of the Count of Flanders.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,885   ~   ~   ~

At last his bastard brother, Henry of Trastamara, rose in revolt against him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 726   ~   ~   ~

"Mother's willen, only she did say you was so took up with the lil'un you wouldn't take no account of Vassie, seeing she'm only a bastard like the rest of us.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 730   ~   ~   ~

"John-James," he began almost diffidently, "you mustn't talk like that about bastards--as though it made any difference to me.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,145   ~   ~   ~

"Only that a fellow with a pack of bastard brothers must have had just the father and mother to teach him...." There was a moment's silence; the boys all felt intensely uncomfortable, not so much even at Hilaria's presence as at this sudden nakedness of thought and emotion.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,152   ~   ~   ~

That's why Ruan's being brought up a gentleman--because he's the only one who's not a bastard."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,079   ~   ~   ~

[322:1] At this time, though an increasing taste for inactivity and solitude betokened the growth of a bastard Christianity, and though various other circumstances were indicative of tendencies to adulterate religion, either by reducing it to a system of formalism, or by sublimating it into a life of empty contemplation, there were still abundant proofs of the existence of a large amount of healthy and vigorous piety.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,275   ~   ~   ~

But you can't deny that you heard me talking of the thing night after night at the club, when I have no doubt you hadn't even begun on your bastard imitation.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,659   ~   ~   ~

I love the language, that soft bastard Latin Which melts like kisses from a female mouth, And sounds as if it should be writ on satin, With syllables which breathe of the sweet South, And gentle liquids gliding all so pat in, That not a single accent seems uncouth, Like our harsh northern whistling, grunting guttural, Which were obliged to hiss, and spit and sputter all.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,502   ~   ~   ~

For each, there long exists an assured province which is not invaded by the other; while, between the two, lies a debateable land, ruled by a sort of bastards, who owe their complexion to physicism and their substance to anthropomorphism, and are M. Comte's particular aversions-metaphysical entities.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,504   ~   ~   ~

The territories of the bastards are all annexed to science; and even Theology, in her purer forms, has ceased to be anthropomorphic, however she may talk.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,569   ~   ~   ~

_The Bastard_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,615   ~   ~   ~

Pierre was snoring, and I kicked him till he rolled over and swore in bastard French.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,686   ~   ~   ~

I sang the words boldly, but in bastard French with clipped accents.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,346   ~   ~   ~

A kind of bastard Italian.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 394   ~   ~   ~

A Avmarle Aincourt Audeley Adgillam Argentoune Arundell Auenant Abell Auuerne Aunwers Angers Angenoun Archere Anuay Asperu Albeuile Andeuile Amouerduile Arcy and Akeny Albeny Aybeuare Amay Aspermound Amerenges B Bertram Buttecourt Brebus and Byseg Bardolfe Basset and Bigot Bohun Bailif Bondeuile Brabason Baskeruile Bures Bounilaine Bois Botelere Bourcher Brabaion Berners Braibuf Brande and Bronce Burgh Bushy Banet Blondell Breton Bluat and Baious Browne Beke Bickard Banastre Baloun Beauchampe Bray and Bandy Bracy Boundes Bascoun Broilem Broleuy Burnell Bellet Baudewin Beaumont Burdon Berteuilay Barre Busseuile Blunt Beaupere Beuill Barduedor Brette Barrett Bonret Bainard Barniuale Bonett Barry Bryan Bodin Beteruile Bertin Bereneuile Bellewe Beuery Busshell Boranuile Browe Beleuers Buffard Botelere Bonueier Boteuile Bellire Bastard Bainard Brasard Beelhelme Braine Brent Braunch Belesuz Blundell Burdet Bagot Beauuise Belemis Beisin Bernon Boels Belefroun Brutz Barchampe C Camois Camuile Chawent Chauncy Conderay Coluile Chamberlaine Chamburnoun Comin Columber Cribett Creuquere Corbine Corbett Chaundos Chaworth Cleremaus Clarell Chopis Chaunduit Chantelow Chamberay Cressy Curtenay Conestable Cholmeley Champney Chawnos Comiuile Champaine Careuile Carbonelle Charles Chereberge Chawnes Chaumont Caperoun Cheine Curson Couille Chaiters Cheines Cateray Cherecourt Cammile Clerenay Curly Cuily Clinels Chaundos Courteney Clifford D Denauille Dercy Diue Dispencere Daubeny Daniell Denise and Druell Deuans Dauers Dodingsels Darell Delaber Delapole Delalinde Delahill Delaware Delauache Dakeny Dauntre Desny Dabernoune Damry Daueros Dauonge Duilby Dalauere Delahoid Durange Delee Delaund Delaward Delaplanch Damnot Danway Dehense Deuile Disard Doiuille Durant Drury Dabitot Dunsteruile Dunchampe Dambelton E Estrange Estuteuile Engaine Estriels Esturney F Ferrerers Foluille Fitz Water Fitz Marmaduke Fleuez Filberd Fitz Roger Fauecourt Ferrers Fitz Philip Filiot Furniueus Furniuaus Fitz Otes Fitz William Fitz Roand Fitz Pain Fitz Auger Fitz Aleyn Fitz Rauff Fitz Browne Fouke Freuil Front de Boef Facunberge Fort Frisell Fitz Simon Fitz Fouk Filioll Fitz Thomas Fitz Morice Fitz Hugh Fitz Henrie Fitz Waren Fitz Rainold Flamuile Formay Fitz Eustach Fitz Laurence Formibaud Frisound Finere and Fitz Robert Furniuale Fitz Geffrey Fitz Herbert Fitz Peres Fichet Fitz Rewes Fitz Fitz Fitz John Fleschampe G Gvrnay Gressy Graunson Gracy Georges Gower Gaugy Goband Gray Gaunson Golofre Gobion Grensy Graunt Greile Greuet Gurry Gurley Grammori Gernoun Grendon Gurdon Gines Griuil Greneuile Glateuile Gurney Giffard Gouerges Gamages H Haunteney Haunsard Hastings Hanlay Haurell Husee Hercy Herioun Herne Harecourt Henoure Houell Hamelin Harewell Hardell Haket Hamound Harcord I Iarden Iay Ieniels Ierconuise Ianuile Iasperuile K Kaunt Karre Karrowe Koine Kimaronne Kiriell Kancey Kenelre L Loueny Lacy Linneby Latomer Loueday Louell Lemare Leuetot Lucy Luny Logeuile Longespes Louerace Longechampe Lascales Lacy Louan Leded Luse Loterell Lornge Longevule Loy Lorancourt Loions Limers Longepay Laumale Lane Louetot M Mohant Mowne Maundeuile Marmilon Moribray Moruile Miriell Manlay Malebraunch Malemame Mortimere Mortimaine Muse Marteine Mountbother Mountsoler Maleuile Malet Mounteney Monfichet Maleherbe Mare Musegros Musard Moine Montrauers Merke Murres Mortiuale Monchenesy Mallory Marny Mountagu Mountford Maule Monhermon Musett Meneuile Manteuenant and Manfe Meapincoy Maine Mainard Morell Mainell Maleluse Memorous Morreis Morleian Maine Maleuere Mandut Mountmarten Mamelet Miners Mauclerke Maunchenell Mouet Meintenore Meletak Manuile Mangisere Maumasin Mountlouel Mawreward Monhaut Meller Mountgomerie Manlay Maulard Mainard Menere Martinast Mare Mainwaring Matelay Malemis Maleheire Moren Melun Marceans Maiell Morton N Noers Neuile Newmarch Norbet Norice Newborough Neiremet Neile Normauile Neofmarch Nermitz Nembrutz O Oteuell Olibef Olifant Osenel Oisell Olifard Orinall Orioll P Pigot Pery Perepount Pershale Power Painell Perche and Pauey Peurell Perot Picard Pinkenie Pomeray Pounce Pauely Paifrere Plukenet Phuars Punchardoun Pinchard Placy Pugoy Patefine Place Pampilioun Percelay Perere and Pekeny Poterell Peukeny Peccell Pinell Putrill Petiuoll Preaus Pantolf Peito Penecord Preudirlegast Perciuale Q Qvinci Quintiny R Ros Ridell Riuers Riuell Rous Rushell Raband Ronde Rie Rokell Risers Randuile Roselin Rastoke Rinuill Rougere Rait Ripere Rigny Richemound Rochford Raimond S Souch Sheuile Seucheus Senclere Sent Quintin Sent Omere Sent Amond Sent Legere Someruile Siward Saunsovere Sanford Sanctes Sauay Saulay Sules Sorell Somerey Sent Iohn Sent George Sent Les Sesse Saluin Say Solers Saulay Sent Albin Sent Martin Sourdemale Seguin Sent Barbe Sent Vile Souremount Soreglise Sanduile Sauncey Sirewast Sent Cheueroll Sent More Sent Scudemore T Toget Tercy Tuchet Tracy Trousbut Trainell Taket Trussel and Trison Talbot Touny Traies Tollemach Tolous Tanny Touke Tibtote Turbeuile Turuile Tomy and Taverner Trencheuile Trenchelion Tankeruile Tirell Triuet Tolet Trauers Tardeuile Turburuile Tineuile Torell Tortechappell Trusbote Treuerell Tenwis Totelles V Vere Vernoun Vescy Verdoune Valence Verdeire Vauasour Vendore Verlay Valenger Venables Venoure Vilan Verland Valers Veirny Vauurvile Veniels Verrere Vschere Veffay Vanay Vian Verneys Vrnall Vnket Vrnafull Vasderoll Vaberon Valingford Venicorde Valiue Viuille Vancorde and Valenges W Wardebois Ward Wafre Wake Wareine Wate Watelin Wateuil Wely Werdonell Wespaile Wiuell [Sidenote: _Sim.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 481   ~   ~   ~

in obsidione coram ciuitate Eboraci:" that is, "I William surnamed Bastard, doo giue and grant to thee my nephue Alane earle of Britaine, and to thine heires for euer, all those townes and lands that latelie were earle Eadwines in Yorkeshire, with the knights fees and other liberties and customes, so freelie and honourablie as the said Eadwine held the same.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,441   ~   ~   ~

Nowadays many of us are inclined to regard the historical drama as a bastard form and to agree with Maeterlinck in dismissing even the most meritorious attempts as "artificial poems that arise from the impossible marriage of past and present."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 173   ~   ~   ~

I must have it; A bastard have I by her, and that cock Will have, I fear, sharp spurs, if he crow after Him that trod for him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 261   ~   ~   ~

CARDINAL Before the morrow sun hath rode Half his day's journey, will send home his Queen As one that stains his bed, and can produce Nothing but bastard issue to his crown.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 556   ~   ~   ~

Let him out of his mess of kingdoms cut out but one, and lay Sicily, Aragon or Naples or any else upon your trencher <25>, and you will praise bastard <26> for the sweetest wine in the world, and call for another quart of it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 595   ~   ~   ~

Her bastard son they said The King being dead, should claim and wear the crown, And whatsoever children you shall bear, To be but bastards in the highest degree, As being begotten in adultery.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 608   ~   ~   ~

Besides a guesse <29> Is hereby made of any faction That shall combine against you, which the King seeing, If then he will not rouse him like a dragon To guard his golden fleece, and rid his harlot And her base bastard hence, either by death, Or in some traps of state ensnare them both, Let his own ruins crush him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,109   ~   ~   ~

Shall then that strumpet And bastard breathe quick vengeance in my face, Making my Kingdom reel, my subjects stagger In their obedience, and yet live?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,506   ~   ~   ~

Bastard Ð sweet Spanish Wine.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 285   ~   ~   ~

Hamline the kings bastard brother married the countesse of Warren, the widow of William earle of Mortaigne bastard sonne to king Stephan.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,463   ~   ~   ~

The same yeare died Reignold earle of Cornwall, bastard sonne to king Henrie the first without heirs male, by reason whereof the king tooke into his hands all the inheritance of lands and liuings which he held within England, Normandie and Wales, except certeine portions which the daughters of the same earle had by assignement allotted to them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,631   ~   ~   ~

Moreouer, king Henrie, to auoid further slander, placed for bishop in the see of Lincolne a bastard son which he had named Geffrey, after he had kept that bishoprike in his hands so long till he had almost cleerelie destroied it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,830   ~   ~   ~

This yeare also, Geffrey the kings bastard sonne, who was the elect of Lincolne, and had receiued the profits of that bishoprike, by the space of seuen years, and had his election confirmed by the pope in the feast of the Epiphanie at Marlebridge, [Sidenote: _R.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,279   ~   ~   ~

He had also two bastard sonnes by a concubine, the one named William, & the other Geffrey.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 91   ~   ~   ~

Paruus._] Geffrey the kings bastard brother vnto the archbishoprike of Yorke, who was the 32. in number that had gouerned the same, Geffrey de Lucie to Winchester, one Hubert Walter to Salisburie, and Richard archdeacon of Elie, and the kings treasurer to the see of London.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 287   ~   ~   ~

Wherevpon the lords of the Ile elected one Tancred to their king, a bastard sonne of Roger sometime king of that land, and grandfather to this last decessed king William.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 751   ~   ~   ~

The point of Pulo is covered with the arau tree (casuarina) or bastard-pine, as some have called it, which never grows but in the seasand and rises fast.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,069   ~   ~   ~

The pliable and delicate bark of which clothing is made is procured from a tree called kalawi, a bastard species of the bread-fruit.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,655   ~   ~   ~

Kayu arau (Casuarina littorea) is often termed a bastard-pine, and as such gave name to the Isle of Pines discovered by Captain Cook.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,766   ~   ~   ~

1710, c. 12. concealment by the mother of the death of a bastard child is made murder.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,788   ~   ~   ~

Solon made no law against, parricide, supposing it impossible any one could be guilty of it; and the Persians, from the same opinion, adjudged all who killed their reputed parents to be bastards: and although parental, be yet stronger than filial affection, we admit saticide proved on the most equivocal testimony, whilst they rejected all proof of an act, certainly not more repugnant to nature, as of a thing impossible, improvable.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,566   ~   ~   ~

The cornice, too, is a bastard Ionic, without modillions or dentils.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 249   ~   ~   ~

Thus a bastard system of federo-republicanism will rise on the ruins of the true principles of our revolution.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,459   ~   ~   ~

You intend that your children and her children shall be-bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,133   ~   ~   ~

Yet with it, I doubt not, some naked black fellow by the banks of the Thames has hunted the mammoth among unbroken forest two hundred thousand years ago and more; with it he has faced the angry cave bear and the original and only genuine British lion (for everybody knows that the existing mongrel heraldic beast is nothing better than a bastard modification of the leopard of the Plantagenets).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 130   ~   ~   ~

Why, we have plenty of those sorts too, and--worse; but the most charming infidelity of the day, a bastard deism in fact, often assumes a different form,--a form, you will be surprised to hear it, which embodies (as many say) the essence of genuine Christianity!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,442   ~   ~   ~

Mr. Newman sometimes follows closely in Mr. Parker's steps in the exercise of this bastard toleration, this spurious charity; though, in justice, I must say, he does not go his length.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 477   ~   ~   ~

The favorite theme in the writings of Shelley is "Eros," love of the individual, of the race, of nature, and in this he follows Christ, in whose system of Philosophy, Love is ever the pre-dominating idea which permeates mankind with its beneficial effects, and will, when the bastard tinsel with which the truths of the Nazarene are hidden, be replaced by that pure gold which it is impossible to trace in the enunciations of any previous philosopher.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,560   ~   ~   ~

_Alexander_ the great having conquered all the _Persian_ Empire, and some part of _India_, died at _Babylon_ a month before the summer Solstice, in the year of _Nabonassar_ 425: and his captains gave the monarchy to his bastard brother _Philip Aridæus_, a man disturbed in his understanding; and made _Perdiccas_ administrator of the kingdom.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 47   ~   ~   ~

"You're just a bastard!" screamed the child, while her playmates took up the cry.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,195   ~   ~   ~

And he recognized me and yelled 'Bastard!' after me.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,595   ~   ~   ~

She had no conception of the higher life, and to her mind the inner mysticism was a jumble of confused nonsense--the blind leading the blind, for whom the ultimate ditch was a bastard theosophy.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 345   ~   ~   ~

The brave Dunois--Bastard of Orleans--in command of the French in that city, had ere this sent two knights, Villars and Jamet de Tilloy, to hear all details about the Maid, whose advent was so eagerly looked forward to.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,204   ~   ~   ~

* * * * * The archer who had captured Joan of Arc was in the pay of the Bastard of Wandome, or Wandoune, and this Wandome was himself in the service of John de Ligny, a vassal of the Duke of Burgundy, and a cadet of the princely house of Luxembourg.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,633   ~   ~   ~

With Dunois (Bastard of Orleans) Alençon is one of the most prominent of the French leaders who appear in Shakespeare's play, in the first part of _Henry VI_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,642   ~   ~   ~

Next to Alençon's evidence came that of the famous Bastard of Orleans, the Count de Dunois, one of the most engaging and sympathetic figures of the whole age of chivalry.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,643   ~   ~   ~

John of Orleans was the natural son of the Duke of Orleans, and, as Fabre says of him, he 'glorified the appellation of Bastard.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,644   ~   ~   ~

Indeed, the Bastard's name deserves to be handed down in his country's annals with as much glory as that of his great English rival and foe, Talbot, in those of the English.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,650   ~   ~   ~

Dunois, Bastard of Orleans as he is always called, bore the following titles, as recited by the chronicler: 'l'illustrieuse prince Jean Comte de Dunois et de Longueville, lieutenant-général de notre seigneur le roi.'

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,784   ~   ~   ~

to Rheims, 85 Cusquel, Peter, burgher of Rouen, 284 Dacier, Abbot of Saint Corneille of Compiègne, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 148, 222 Daniel, English writer, 300 Darmesteter, M., cited, 300 Daron, Peter, attorney, 283 Daval, William, priest, at the trial for rehabilitation, 281 David, Jesuit priest, 291 De Champcoux, John, burgher of Orleans, 273 De Commy, Cosmé, burgher of Orleans, 273 Delachambre, William, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 149; at the trial for rehabilitation, 278; Joan of Arc's doctor, _ib._ Delavigne, Casimir, his poems on Joan of Arc, 307 Desjardins, Abel, biographer of Joan of Arc, 299 Desnoyers, dramatist, 308 Desprès, John, 257 Domremy, birthplace of Joan of Arc, 3 Du Bellay, French writer, cited, 285, 289 Dubesert, canon at Rouen, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 148; at the trial for rehabilitation, 282 Duchemin, canon, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 148 Du Duc, Fronton, his tragedy on Joan of Arc, 306 Du Fay, Geoffrey, knight, 261 Dufresnoy, Abbé Longlet, his Life of Joan of Arc, 292 Du Lys, Charles, descendant of the Arc family, 290 Dumas, Alexandre, his Life of Joan of Arc, 297 Dunois, Bastard of Orleans, commander of the French troops in Orleans, 36, 40; interview with Joan of Arc at Reuilly, 51; goes to Blois to bring up reinforcements, 54; attacks the Tournelles, 62, 75; testifies to the military talents of Joan, 95; at the trial for rehabilitation, 266 Durement, Abbot of Fécamp, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 148 Edward III.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,798   ~   ~   ~

Salisbury, commands the English forces before Orleans, 40; mortally wounded, 42 Saulx, canon, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 148 Savoy, Duke of, 106 Scales, Lord, at siege of Orleans, 42 Schiller, his _Jungfrau von Orleans_, 307 Sequier, Dominican monk, 32; questions Joan, 33; at the trial for rehabilitation, 263 Shakespeare and the character of Joan of Arc, 301, 309 Sionne, Etienne de, curate, 260 Sismondi, historian, 296 Solera, 309 Sorel, Agnes, 52 Soumet, dramatic poet, 308 Southey, cited, 306; his heroic poem on Joan of Arc, 307 Stafford, Lord, visits Joan of Arc in prison, 142 Sterling, John, 300 Stern, Daniel, French authoress, 308 Stow, historian, 299 Stuart, John, Constable of Scotland, killed at the battle of the Herrings, 45 Stuart, William, brother of the Constable of Scotland, killed at the battle of the Herrings, 45 Suffolk, William de la Pole, Earl of, commands the English forces before Orleans, 43; confronts the French at Jargeau, 75; defeated and captured, 77 Talbot, Lord, at the siege of Orleans, 42; withdraws his forces, 67; joins hands with Fastolfe, 78; defeated and taken prisoner, 80 Talbot, William, attendant on Joan of Arc, 149, 157 Taquel, Nicolas, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 144; at the trial for rehabilitation, 280 Thépelin de Viteau, Jeannette, god-mother of Joan of Arc, 258 Theroude, Abbot of Mortemer, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 148 Thevenin le Royer, of Domremy, 261 Théverien, Jeannette, godmother of Joan of Arc, 258 Thibault, Gobert, 32, 264 Thierry, Reginald, court physician, 274 Thou, James de, burgher of Orleans, 273 Tilloy, Jamet de, French knight, 36 Tiphanie, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 149, 278 Touraine, James de, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 146 Toutmouillé, John, apprises Joan of Arc of her fate, 243; at the trial for rehabilitation, 281 Tremoïlle, George de la, minister of Charles VII., 23; tries to thwart Joan of Arc in her mission, 24, 30, 55, 112; alarmed at her ever-growing popularity, 83; accompanies the King to Rheims, 85, 128 Troyes, the treaty of (1420), 1 Troyes, John de, senior of the Faculty of Theology in the University of Paris, 224 University of Paris, aid in the prosecution of Joan of Arc, 130; constitution of the, 134; recommend the removal of Joan to Paris, 140; their decision regarding her guilt, 224 Vaillant, Peter, burgher of Orleans, 273 Vaux, Pasquier de, canon, one of the tribunal on the trial of Joan of Arc, 148 Venderès, Nicolas de, canon of Rouen, assessor at the trial of Joan of Arc, 147, 222, 225 Vendôme, Comte de, Chamberlain to Charles VII., 27, 75; accompanies the King to Rheims, 85 Verdi, 307 Vernon, Raoul Roussel de, reporter at the trial of Joan of Arc, 147 Versailles, Pierre de, 35 Veuillot, on Wallon's Life of Joan of Arc, 298 Viennne, Colet de, escorts Joan of Arc to Chinon, 19 Villars, French knight, 36 Villaume, biographer of Joan of Arc, 299 Villon, François, his lines on Joan of Arc, 302, 308 Viole, Aignan, advocate, 274 Virey, his tragedy on Joan of Arc, 306 Virgile, Polydore, French writer, 290 Viriville, Vallet de, 291 Volant, John, burgher of Orleans, 272 Voltaire, cited, 285; his _Pucelle_, 306, 309 Wallon, historian, cited, 46, 126, 210, 211, 227, 297 Wandome, the Bastard of, 128 Warwick, Earl of, visits Joan of Arc in prison, 142; threatens Isambard de la Pierre for his sympathy with her, 196; demands that she should be saved from a natural death, 214; enraged at the prospect of her release, 235 Waterin, playmate of Joan of Arc, 259 Waverin, English officer, cited for the English loss at the battle of Patay, 80 Winchester, Henry Beaufort, Bishop of, arrives in Paris with his army, 101; retains Peter Cauchon to prosecute Joan of Arc, 132; his scheme for this purpose, 137; at the abjuration of Joan, 229; weeps over her fate, 248 Xaintrailles, 40, 47; accompanies Charles VII.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 35   ~   ~   ~

Hence they no sooner land on the shores of America than they endeavor to clip the musical and rich brogue of fatherland, to make room for the bastard barbarisms and vulgar slang of Yankeedom.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,025   ~   ~   ~

He has a lighter and more superficial nature, and there is a certain genuine gaiety in him which makes one smile not unsympathetically as one listens to his first soliloquy, with its cheery conclusion, so unlike Iago's references to the powers of darkness, Now, gods, stand up for bastards!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,911   ~   ~   ~

I read again (V. v. 7): bastard Margarelon Hath Doreus prisoner, And stands colossus-wise, waving his beam, Upon the pashed corses of the kings.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,229   ~   ~   ~

Bastard = bastardo.

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