The 6,537 occurrences of bastard

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

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,337   ~   ~   ~

What a gilded crowd of princes and paramours, harlots and bastards, struts, fumes and intrigues through these Memoirs!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,356   ~   ~   ~

31, Hôtel d'Albret, where goody Scarron used to visit Madame de Montespan and where she was appointed governess to the royal bastards; 25, Hôtel de Lamoignon, once occupied by Diana of France, daughter of Henry II., and where Malesherbes was born.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,533   ~   ~   ~

The Bastards in the west and the Tembus in the east were known to be eager to defend the Queen's country against invasion.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,278   ~   ~   ~

Bastards, The, 281.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 275   ~   ~   ~

If they undertook to marry Protestants, the marriages were declared illegal, and the children bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,983   ~   ~   ~

Kutchin and Bastard Loucheux at Fort Good Hope 95 Kutchin at Peel River and La Pierre's House 337 Kutchin on the Yukon (six tribes) 842 Nahanie at Fort Good Hope 8 Nahanie at Fort Halkett (including Mauvais Monde, Bastard Nahanie, and Mountain Indians) 332 Nahanie at Fort Liard 38 Nahanie at Fort Norman 43 --- 421 Nahanie at Fort Simpson and Big Island (Hudson Bay Company's Territory) 87 Slave, Dog Rib, and Hare at Fort Simpson and Big Island (Hudson Bay Company's Territory) 658 Slave at Fort Liard 281 Slave at Fort Norman 84 Tenán Kutchin (1877) 700?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 259   ~   ~   ~

"You're a yellow-livered bastard," Zarwell told him.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 144   ~   ~   ~

It is due to the structural peculiarities that "honeycombing" occurs in rapid seasoning, that checks or cracks extend radially and follow pith rays, that tangent or "bastard" cut stock shrinks and warps more than that which is quarter-sawn.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 268   ~   ~   ~

On the faces of the boards nearest the slab (tangential or bastard boards) the several years' growth should also appear as parallel, but much broader stripes.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 545   ~   ~   ~

Cuban Pine= (_Pinus cubensis_) (Slash Pine, Swamp Pine, Bastard Pine, Meadow Pine).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 616   ~   ~   ~

BASTARD SPRUCE Spruce or fir in name, but resembling hard pine or larch in appearance, quality and uses of its wood.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 652   ~   ~   ~

5); on the tangential section or "bastard" face patterns similar to those mentioned for pine wood are observed.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 677   ~   ~   ~

They appear as long, sharp, grayish lines on the cross-sections; as short, thick lines, tapering at each end, on the tangential or "bastard" face, and as broad, shiny bands, "the mirrors," on the radial section.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,011   ~   ~   ~

Elm for years has been the principal wood used in slack cooperage for barrel staves, also in the construction of cars, wagons, etc., in boat building, agricultural implements and machinery, in saddlery and harness work, and particularly in the manufacture of all kinds of furniture, where the beautiful figures, especially those of the tangential or bastard section, are just beginning to be appreciated.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,288   ~   ~   ~

This, too, is the cause of most of the ordinary phenomena of shrinkage, such as the difference in behavior of the entire and quartered logs, "bastard" (tangent) and rift (radial) boards, etc., and explains many of the phenomena erroneously attributed to the influence of bark, or of the greater shrinkage of outer and inner parts of any log.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,703   ~   ~   ~

=Bastard cut.= Tangential cut.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,819   ~   ~   ~

INDEX OF LATIN NAMES Abies amabalis, 21 Abies balsamea, 20 Abies concolor, 20 Abies grandis, 20 Abies magnifica, 21 Abies nobilis, 21 Acer macrophyllum, 69 Acer negundo, 69 Acer Pennsylvanicum, 70 Acer rubrum, 69 Acer saccharinum, 69 Acer saccharum, 68 Acer spicatum, 69 Æsculus flava, 45 Æsculus glabra, 45 Æsculus octandra, 45 Ailanthus glandulosa, 37 Asimina triloba, 76 Betula lenta, 41 Betula lutea, 42 Betula nigra, 43 Betula papyrifera, 43 Betula populifolia, 42 Betula rubra, 43 Buxus sempervirens, 77 Carpinus Caroliana, 44 Castanea Americana, 48 Castanea chrysophylla, 49 Castanea dentata, 48 Castanea pumila, 48 Castanea vesca, 48 Castanea vulgaris, 48 Catalpa bignonioides, 46 Catalpa speciosa, 46 Celtis occidentalis, 62 Chamæcyparis Lawsonia, 18 Chamæcyparis thyoides, 17 Cladrastis lutea, 85 Cornus florida, 49 Cupressus nootkatensis, 18 Diospyros Virginia, 77 Evonymus atropurpureus, 82 Fagus ferruginea, 40 Fraxinus Americana, 37 Fraxinus Caroliniana, 39 Fraxinus nigra, 38 Fraxinus Oregana, 38 Fraxinus Pennsylvanica, 38 Fraxinus pubescens, 38 Fraxinus quadrangulata, 38 Fraxinus sambucifolia, 38 Fraxinus viridis, 38 Gleditschia triacanthos, 66 Gymnocladus dioicus, 49 Hicoria alba, 64 Hicoria glabra, 64 Hicoria minima, 64 Hicoria ovata, 64 Hicoria pecan, 64 Ilex monticolo, 65 Ilex opaca, 64 Juglans cinerea, 45 Juglans nigra, 82 Juniperus communis, 19 Juniperus Virginiana, 18 Larix Americana, 22 Larix laricina, 22 Larix occidentalis, 22 Libocedrus decurrens, 18 Liquidamber styraciflua, 54 Liriodendron tulipfera, 81 Maclura aurantiaca, 76 Magnolia acuminata, 67 Magnolia glauca, 67 Magnolia tripetala, 67 Morus rubra, 70 Nyssa aquatica, 60 Nyssa sylvatica, 62 Ostrya Virginiana, 65 Oxydendrum arboreum, 80 Picea alba, 28 Picea canadensis, 28 Picea engelmanni, 28 Picea mariana, 27 Picea nigra, 27 Picea rubens, 28 Picea sitchensis, 28 Pinus banksiana, 27 Pinus cubensis, 26 Pinus divaricata, 27 Pinus enchinata, 26 Pinus flexilis, 24 Pinus inops, 27 Pinus Jeffreyi, 25 Pinus Lambertiana, 24 Pinus monticolo, 24 Pinus Murryana, 27 Pinus palustris, 24 Pinus ponderosa, 25 Pinus resinosa, 25 Pinus rigida, 26 Pinus strobus, 23 Pinus tæda, 25 Pinus Virginiana, 27 Platanus occidentalis, 80 Platanus racemosa, 81 Populus alba, 79 Populus angulata, 77 Populus balsamifera, 79 Populus fremontii, 78 Populus grandidentata, 79 Populus heteropylla, 78 Populus monilifera, 77 Populus nigra italica, 79 Populus tremuloides, 79 Populus trichocarpa, 78 Populus Wislizeni, 78 Prunus Pennsylvanica, 47 Prunus serotina, 47 Pseudotsuga douglasii, 29 Pseudotsuga taxifolia, 29 Pyrus coronaria, 49 Quercus acuminata, 73 Quercus alba, 71 Quercus aquatica, 73 Quercus bicolor, 72 Quercus chrysolepis, 76 Quercus coccinea, 75 Quercus digitata, 75 Quercus durandii, 71 Quercus falcata, 75 Quercus garryana, 71 Quercus ilicijolia, 74 Quercus imbricaria, 75 Quercus lobata, 72 Quercus lyrata, 73 Quercus macrocarpa, 72 Quercus marilandica, 75 Quercus Michauxii, 74 Quercus minor, 74 Quercus nigra, 75 Quercus obtusiloda, 74 Quercus palustris, 73 Quercus phellos, 72 Quercus platanoides, 72 Quercus prinoides, 74 Quercus prinus, 73 Quercus pumila, 74 Quercus rubra, 74 Quercus tinctoria, 74 Quercus velutina, 74 Quercus virens, 75 Rhamnus Caroliniana, 45 Robinia pseudacacia, 66 Robinia viscosa, 66 Salix alba, 83 Salix amygdaloides, 84 Salix babylonica, 84 Salix bebbiana, 84 Salix discolor, 84 Salix fluviatilis, 84 Salix fragilis, 84 Salix lucida, 84 Salix nigra, 83 Salix rostrata, 84 Salix vitellina, 83 Sassafras sassafras, 80 Sequoia sempervirens, 19 Taxodium distinchum, 19 Taxus brevifolia, 30 Thuya gigantea, 17 Thuya occidentalis, 17 Tilia Americana, 39 Tilia heterophylla, 39 Tilia pubescens, 39 Tsuga canadensis, 21 Tsuga mertensiana, 21 Ulmus alata, 51 Ulmus Americana, 50 Ulmus crassifolia, 51 Ulmus fulva, 51 Ulmus pubescens, 51 Ulmus racemosa, 50 Umbellularia Californica, 65 INDEX Abele, Tree, 79 Absorption of water by dry wood, 124 Acacia, 66 Acacia, false, 66 Acacia, three-thorned, 66 According to species, different kiln drying, 170 Advantages in seasoning, 128 Advantages of kiln-drying over air-drying, 156 Affect drying, properties of wood that, 156 Ailanthus, 37 Air circulation, 173 Air-drying, advantages of kiln-drying over, 156 Alaska cedar, 18 Alaska cypress, 18 Alcoholic liquids, stave and heads of barrels containing, 112 Almond-leaf willow, 84 Ambrosia or timber beetles, 99 American box, 49 American elm, 50 American larch, 22 American linden, 39 American oak, 71 American red pine, 25 Anatomical structure, 14 Annual ring, the yearly or, 10 Apartment dry kiln, 198 Apple, crab, 49 Apple, custard, 76 Apple, wild, 49 Appliances in kiln-drying, helpful, 237 Arborvitæ, 17 Ash, 37 Ash, black, 38 Ash, blue, 38 Ash, Carolina, 39 Ash, green, 38 Ash, ground, 38 Ash, hoop, 38 Ash-leaved maple, 69 Ash, Oregon, 38 Ash, red, 38 Ash, white, 37 Aspen, 39, 79 Aspen, large-toothed, 78 Aspen-leaved birch, 42 Aspen, quaking, 79 Atmospheric pressure, drying at, 146 Bald Cypress, 19 Ball tree, button, 80 Balm of gilead, 79 Balm of gilead fir, 20 Balsam, 20, 79 Balsam fir, 20 Bark and pith, 8 Bark on, round timber with, 106 Barrels containing alcoholic liquids, staves and heads of, 112 Barren oak, 75 Bar willow, sand, 84 Basket oak, 74 Basswood, 39 Basswood, small-leaved, 39 Basswood, white, 39 Bastard pine, 26 Bastard spruce, 29 Bay poplar, 60 Bay, sweet, 67 Bear oak, 74 Beaver wood, 67 Bebb willow, 84 Bee tree, 39 Beech, 40 Beech, blue, 44 Beech, red, 40 Beech, water, 44, 80 Beech, white, 40 Berry, sugar, 62 Beetles, ambrosia or timber, 99 Big bud hickory, 64 Bilsted, 54 Birch, 41 Birch, aspen-leaved, 42 Birch, black, 41 Birch, canoe, 43 Birch, cherry, 41 Birch, gray, 42 Birch, mahogany, 41 Birch, old field, 42 Birch, paper, 43 Birch, red, 42 Birch, river, 43 Birch, silver, 42 Birch, sweet, 41 Birch, white, 42, 43 Birch, wintergreen, 41 Birch, yellow, 42 Bird cherry, 47 Bitternut hickory, 64 Black ash, 38 Black birch, 41 Black cherry, 47 Black cottonwood, 78 Black cypress, 19 Black gum, 62 Black hickory, 64 Black jack, 75 Black larch, 22 Black locust, 66 Black nut hickory, 64 Black oak, 74 Black pine, 25, 27 Black spruce, 27 Black walnut, 44, 82 Black willow, 83 Blower dry kiln, operation of, 186 Blower or hot blast dry kiln, 185 Blue ash, 38 Blue beech, 44 Blue poplar, 81 Blue willow, 83 Bois d'Arc, 45, 76 Bolts, stave, heading and shingle, 109 Borers, flat-headed, 103 Borers, powder post, 105 Borers, round-headed, 101 Box, American, 49 Box elder, 69 Box dry kiln, 204 Broad-leaved maple, 69 Broad-leaved trees, 31 Broad-leaved trees, list of most important, 37 Broad-leaved trees, wood of, 31 Brown hickory, 64 Brown locust, 66 Buckeye, 45 Buckeye, fetid, 45 Buckeye, Ohio, 45 Buckeye, sweet, 45 Buckthorne, 45 Bud hickory, big, 64 Bull nut hickory, 64 Bull pine, 25 Bur oak, 72 Burning bush, 82 Bush, burning, 82 Bush, juniper, 18 Butternut, 45 Button ball tree, 80 Button wood, 80 California Redwood, 19 California white pine, 25 Canadian pine, 25 Canary wood, 81 Canoe birch, 43 Canoe cedar, 17 Carolina ash, 39 Carolina pine, 26 Carolina poplar, 77 Cars, method of loading kiln, 206 Catalpa, 46 Cedar, 17 Cedar, Alaska, 18 Cedar, canoe, 17 Cedar, elm, 51 Cedar, ground, 19 Cedar, incense, 18 Cedar of the West, red, 17 Cedar, Oregon, 18 Cedar, pencil, 18 Cedar, Port Orford, 18 Cedar, red, 18, 19 Cedar, white, 17, 18 Cedar, yellow, 18 Changes rendering drying difficult, 140 Characteristics and properties of wood, 1 Checking and splitting, prevention of, 129 Cherry, 47 Cherry birch, 41 Cherry, bird, 47 Cherry, black, 47 Cherry, Indian, 45 Cherry, red, 47 Cherry, rum, 47 Cherry, wild, 47 Cherry, wild red, 47 Chestnut, 48 Chestnut, horse, 45, 65 Chestnut oak, 73 Chestnut oak, rock, 73 Chestnut oak, scrub, 74 Chinquapin, 48, 49 Chinquapin oak, 73, 74 Chinquapin oak, dwarf, 74 Choice of drying method, 195 Circassian walnut, 60 Circulation, air, 173 Clammy locust, 66 Classes of trees, 5 Cliff elm, 50 Coast redwood, 19 Coffee nut, 49 Coffee tree, 49 Color and odor of wood, 89 Color, odor, weight, and figure in wood, grain, 86 Composition of sap, 116 Conditions and species, temperature depends on, 171 Conditions favorable for insect injury, 106 Conditions governing the drying of wood, 156 Conditions of success in kiln-drying, 169 Coniferous trees, 8 Coniferous trees, wood of, 8 Coniferous woods, list of important, 17 Containing alcoholic liquids, staves and heads of barrels, 112 Cooperage stock and wooden truss hoops, dry, 112 Cork elm, 50 Cotton gum, 60 Cottonwood, 49, 77, 78 Cottonwood, black, 78 Cottonwood, swamp, 78 Cow oak, 74 Crab apple, 49 Crab, fragrant, 49 Crack willow, 84 Crude products, 106 Cuban pine, 26 Cucumber tree, 49, 67 Cup oak, mossy, 72 Cup oak, over-, 72, 73 Custard apple, 76 Cypress, 19 Cypress, Alaska, 18 Cypress, bald, 19 Cypress, black, 19 Cypress, Lawson's, 18 Cypress, pecky, 19 Cypress, red, 19 Cypress, white, 19 D'Arc, Bois, 45, 76 Deal, yellow, 23 Demands upon soil and moisture of red gum, 56 Depends on conditions and species, temperature, 171 Description of the forest service kiln, theory and, 161 Diagram, the uses of the humidity, 237 Difference between seasoned and unseasoned wood, 121 Different grains of wood, 86 Different kiln-drying according to species, 170 Different species, weight of kiln-dried wood of, 95 Different types, kilns of, 196 Different types of dry kilns, 185 Different types of kiln doors, 231 Difficult, changes rendering drying, 140 Difficulties of drying wood, 138 Distribution of water in wood, 114 Distribution of water in wood, local, 114 Distribution of water in wood seasonal, 115 Dogwood, 49 Doors, different types of kiln, 231 Douglas spruce, 29 Downy linden, 39 Downy poplar, 78 Dry cooperage stock and wooden truss hoops, 112 Drying according to species, different kiln, 170 Drying, advantages of kiln-drying over air, 156 Drying at atmospheric pressure, 146 Drying by superheated steam, 150 Drying, conditions of success in kiln, 169 Drying difficult, changes rendering, 140 Drying gum, kiln, 180 Drying, helpful appliances in kiln, 237 Drying, kiln, 164, 177 Drying, losses due to improper kiln, 141 Drying method, choice of, 185 Drying, methods of kiln, 145 Drying, objects of kiln, 168 Drying of green red gum, kiln, 183 Drying of wood, kiln, 156 Drying of wood, physical conditions governing the, 156 Drying, physical properties that influence, 125 Drying, properties of wood that effect, 141 Drying, theory of kiln, 157 Drying, underlying principles of kiln, 166 Drying under pressure and vacuum, 146 Drying, unsolved problems in kiln, 143 Drying wood, difficulties of, 138 Drying 100 lb.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,821   ~   ~   ~

green wood in the kiln, pounds of water, 179 Magnolia, 67 Magnolia, small, 67 Magnolia, swamp, 67 Mahogany, birch, 41 Mahogany, white, 45 Manner of evaporation of water, 123 Maple, 67 Maple, ash-leaved, 69 Maple, broad-leaved, 69 Maple, hard, 68 Maple, mountain, 69 Maple, Oregon, 69 Maple, red, 69 Maple, rock, 68 Maple, silver, 69 Maple, silver-leaved, 69 Maple, soft, 69 Maple, striped, 70 Maple, sugar, 68 Maple, swamp, 69 Maple, water, 69 Maple, white, 69 Maul oak, 75, 76 Meadow pine, 26 Method, choice of drying, 195 Method of loading kiln cars, 206 Method of piling gum, 180 Methods, impregnation, 151 Methods of drying, 154 Mildew, elimination of stain and, 136 Minute structure, 34 Mockernut hickory, 64 Moist-air dry kiln, operation of, 192 Moist-air or pipe kiln, the, 188 Moisture content, keep records of the, 249 Moisture, demands upon soil and, 56 Moisture on wood, effects of, 117 Moose elm, 51 Moose-wood, 70 Mossy-cup oak, 72 Most important broad-leaved trees list of, 37 Mountain holly, 65 Mountain maple, 69 Mulberry, 70 Mulberry, red, 70 Myrtle, 65, 70 Nettle Tree, 62 Noble fir, 21 Norway pine, 25 Nut, coffee, 49 Nut hickory, black, 64 Nut hickory, bull, 64 Nut, Illinois, 64 Nyssa, 60 Oak, 70 Oak, American, 71 Oak, barren, 75 Oak, basket, 74 Oak, bear, 74 Oak, black, 74 Oak, bur, 72 Oak, chestnut, 73 Oak, chinquapin, 73, 74 Oak, cow, 74 Oak, duck, 73 Oak, dwarf chinquapin, 74 Oak, iron, 74 Oak, jack, 75 Oak, laurel, 75 Oak, live, 75, 76 Oak, maul, 75, 76 Oak, mossy-cup, 72 Oak, over-cup, 72, 73 Oak, peach, 72 Oak, pin, 73 Oak, possum, 73 Oak, post, 74 Oak, punk, 73 Oak, red, 74, 75 Oak, rock, 73 Oak, rock chestnut, 73 Oak, scarlet, 75 Oak, scrub, 74 Oak, scrub chestnut, 74 Oak, shingle, 75 Oak, Spanish, 75 Oak, swamp post, 73 Oak, swamp Spanish, 73 Oak, swamp white, 72, 73 Oak, water, 73 Oak, western white, 71 Oak, white, 71, 72 Oak, willow, 72 Oak, yellow, 73, 74 Oak, Valparaiso, 76 Objects of kiln-drying, 168 Odor and color of wood, 89 Odor, weight, and figure in wood, grain, color, 86 Ohio buckeye, 45 Old field birch, 42 Old field pine, 25, 26 Operation of the blower kiln, 186 Operation of the moist-air kiln, 192 Orange, osage, 76 Oregon ash, 38 Oregon cedar, 18 Oregon maple, 69 Oregon pine, 29 Orford cedar, Port, 18 Osage orange, 76 Out-of-door seasoning, 154 Over-cup oak, 72, 73 Papaw, 76 Paper birch, 43 Peach oak, 72 Pecan, 64 Pecky cypress, 19 Pencil cedar, 18 Pepperidge, 60 Perch willow, 84 Persimmon, 77 Peruche, 21 Physical conditions governing the drying of wood, 156 Physical properties that influence drying, 125 Pignut hickory, 64 Piling gum, methods of, 180 Pine, American red, 25 Pine, bastard, 26 Pine, black, 25, 27 Pine, bull, 25 Pine, California white, 25 Pine, Canadian, 25 Pine, Carolina, 26 Pine, Cuban, 26 Pine, Georgia, 24 Pine, ginger, 18 Pine, gray, 27 Pine, hard, 26 Pine, hazel, 54, 60 Pine, jack, 27 Pine, Jersey, 27 Pine, loblolly, 25 Pine, lodge-pole, 27 Pine, long-leaf, 24 Pine, long-straw, 24 Pine, meadow, 26 Pine, Norway, 25 Pine, old field, 25, 26 Pine, Oregon, 29 Pine, pitch, 26 Pine, Puget Sound, 29 Pine, pumpkin, 23, 24 Pine, red, 29 Pine, rosemary, 25 Pine, sap, 25 Pine, scrub, 27 Pines, hard, 24 Pine, short-leaf, 26 Pine, short-straw, 25 Pine, slash, 25, 26 Pine, soft, 23, 24 Pine, southern, 24 Pine, southern hard, 24 Pine, spruce, 26 Pine, sugar, 24 Pine, swamp, 26 Pine, torch, 26 Pine, Weymouth, 23 Pine, western, 25 Pine, western white, 25 Pine, western yellow, 25 Pine, white, 23, 24 Pine, yellow, 24, 25, 26 Pin oak, 73 Pipe or moist-air kiln, 188 Pitch pine, 26 Pith and bark, 8 Plane tree, 80 Pocket dry kiln, the, 200 Point in wood, the fibre saturation, 118 Pole pine, lodge, 27 Poplar, 67, 77, 79, 81 Poplar, bay, 60 Poplar, blue, 81 Poplar, Carolina, 77 Poplar, downy, 78 Poplar, hickory, 81 Poplar, Lombardy, 79 Poplar, swamp, 60 Poplar, white, 79, 81 Poplar, yellow, 81 Port Orford cedar, 18 Possum oak, 73 Post borers, powder, 105 Post oak, 74 Post oak, swamp, 73 Pounds of water lost in drying 100 lb.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,822   ~   ~   ~

green wood in the kiln, 179 Powder post borers, 105 Preliminary steaming of gum, 182 Preliminary treatments, 151 Pressure and vacuum, drying under, 146 Pressure, drying at atmospheric, 146 Prevent injury from insects, how to, 107 Prevention of checking and splitting, 129 Principles of kiln-drying, underlying, 166 Problems in kiln-drying, unsolved, 143 Products, crude, 106 Products in the rough, seasoned, 112 Products in the rough, unseasoned, 109 Progressive dry kiln, the, 196 Properties, characteristics and, 1 Properties of wood, 4 Properties of wood that affect drying, 141 Properties that influence drying, physical, 125 Puget Sound pine, 29 Pumpkin pine, 23, 24 Punk oak, 73 Pussy willow, 84 Quaking Aspen, 79 Range of Red Gum, 55 Range of tupelo gum, 61 Rapidity of evaporation, 124 Recording hygrometer, the, 242 Recording steam gauge, the, 246 Recording thermometer, the, 245 Records of the moisture content, keep, 249 Red ash, 38 Red beech, 40 Red birch, 43 Red cedar, 18, 19 Red cedar of the West, 17 Red cherry, 47 Red cherry, wild, 47 Red cypress, 19 Red elm, 51 Red fir, 21, 29 Red gum, 54, 79 Red gum, demands upon soil and moisture of, 56 Red gum, form of the, 55 Red gum, kiln-drying of green, 183 Red gum, range of, 55 Red gum, reproduction of, 57 Red gum, second-growth, 59 Red gum, tolerance of, 56 Red juniper, 18 Red maple, 69 Red mulberry, 70 Red oak, 74, 75 Red pine, 29 Red pine, American, 25 Red spruce, 28 Redwood, 19, 27 Redwood, California, 19 Redwood, Coast, 19 Registering hygrometer, the, 244 Registering thermometer, the, 246 Rendering drying difficult, changes, 140 Reproduction of red gum, 57 Requirements in a satisfactory dry kiln, 160 Ring, the annual or yearly, 10 River birch, 43 Rock chestnut oak, 73 Rock elm, 50 Rock maple, 68 Rock oak, 73 Rosemary pine, 25 Rough, seasoned products in the, 112 Rough, unseasoned products in the, 109 Round-headed borers, 101 Round timber with bark on, 106 Rum cherry, 47 Samples for Scalometer Test, 248 Sand bar willow, 84 Sap and heartwood, 8 Sap, composition of, 116 Saplings, 108 Sap pine, 25 Sassafras, 80 Satin walnut, 54 Satisfactory dry kiln, requirements in a, 160 Saturation point in wood, fibre, 118 Sawmills, scalometer in, 249 Savin juniper, 18 Scalometer in factories, 249 Scalometer in sawmills, 249 Scalometer, test samples for, 248 Scalometer, the troemroid, 247 Scalometer, weighing with, 248 Scalybark hickory, 64 Scarlet oak, 75 Scrub chestnut oak, 74 Scrub oak, 74 Scrub pine, 27 Seasonal distribution of water in wood, 115 Seasoned and unseasoned wood, difference between, 121 Seasoned, how wood is, 145 Seasoned products in the rough, 112 Seasoning, advantages in, 128 Seasoning is, what, 119 Seasoning, out-of-door, 154 Second-growth red gum, 59 Sequoia, 19 Service kiln, theory and description of forest, 161 Shagbark hickory, 64 Shellbark hickory, 64 Shingle, heading and stave bolts, 109 Shingle oak, 75 Shining willow, 84 Short-leaf pine, 26 Short-straw pine, 25 Shrinkage of wood, 130 Shucks, honey, 66 Sitka spruce, 28 Silver birch, 42 Silver-leaved maple, 69 Silver maple, 69 Slash pine, 25, 26 Slippery elm, 51 Small-leaved basswood, 39 Small magnolia, 67 Soft maple, 69 Soft pine, 23, 24 Soil and moisture, demands upon, 56 Sorrel-tree, 80 Sound pine, Puget, 29 Sour gum, 62, 80 Sourwood, 80 Southern hard pine, 24 Southern pine, 24 Spanish oak, 75 Spanish oak, swamp, 73 Specialties, dry-kiln, 206 Species, different kiln-drying according to, 170 Species, temperature depends upon condition and, 171 Species, weight of kiln-dried wood of different, 95 Spindle tree, 82 Splitting, prevention of checking and, 129 Spring and summer-wood, 12 Spruce, 27 Spruce, bastard, 29 Spruce, black, 27 Spruce, Douglas, 29 Spruce, hemlock, 21 Spruce pine, 26 Spruce, red, 28 Spruce, Sitka, 28 Spruce, tide-land, 28 Spruce, white, 28 Stain and mildew, elimination of, 136 Stave, heading and shingle bolts, 109 Staves and heads of barrels containing alcoholic liquids, 112 Steam, drying by superheated, 150 Steam gauge, the recording, 246 Steaming of gum, preliminary, 182 Steaming of gum, final, 182 Stock and wooden truss hoops, dry cooperage, 112 Straw pine, long, 24 Straw pine, short, 25 Striped maple, 70 Structure, anatomical, 14 Structure, minute, 34 Structure of wood, 4 Stump tree, 49 Success in kiln-drying, conditions of, 169 Sugar berry, 62 Sugar maple, 68 Sugar pine, 24 Summerwood, spring and, 12 Superheated steam, drying by, 150 Swamp cottonwood, 78 Swamp hickory, 64 Swamp magnolia, 67 Swamp maple, 69 Swamp pine, 26 Swamp poplar, 60 Swamp post oak, 73 Swamp Spanish oak, 73 Swamp white oak, 72, 73 Sweet bay, 67 Sweet buckeye, 45 Sweet birch, 41 Sweet gum, 54, 80 Sweet locust, 66 Switchbud hickory, 64 Sycamore, 80, 81 Tacmahac, 79 Tamarack, 22, 27, 29 Temperature depends upon conditions and species, 171 Test samples for scalometer, 248 Theory and description of the forest service kiln, 161 Theory of kiln-drying, 157 Thermometer, the recording, 245 Thermometer, the registering, 246 Thorned acacia, three, 66 Three-thorned acacia, 66 Tide-land spruce, 28 Timber, 1 Timber beetles, ambrosia or, 99 Timber with bark on, round, 106 Timber worms, 103 Tolerance of red gum, 56 Toothed aspen, large-, 79 Torch pine, 26 Tower dry kiln, the, 202 Treatments, preliminary, 151 Tree, abele, 79 Tree, bee, 39 Tree, button ball, 80 Tree, coffee, 49 Tree, cucumber, 49, 67 Tree, fir, 20 Tree, lime, 39 Tree, nettle, 62 Tree of life, 17 Tree, plane, 80 Trees, broad-leaved, 31 Trees, classes of, 5 Trees, coniferous, 8 Trees, list of important coniferous, 17 Trees, list of most important broad-leaved, 37 Tree, sorrel, 80 Tree, spindle, 82 Tree, stump, 49 Trees, wood of broad-leaved, 31 Trees, wood of the coniferous, 8 Tree, tulip, 81 Tree, umbrella, 67 Troemroid Scalometer, the, 247 Truss hoops, dry cooperage stock and, 112 Tulip tree, 81 Tulip wood, 67, 81 Tupelo, 82 Tupelo gum, 60 Tupelo gum, range of, 61 Tupelo gum, uses of, 61 Types of dry kilns, different, 185 Types of kiln doors, different, 231 Types, kilns of different, 196 Umbrella Tree, 67 Underlying principles of kiln-drying, 166 Unseasoned products in the rough, 109 Unseasoned wood, difference between seasoned and, 121 Unsolved problems in kiln-drying, 143 Uses of the humidity diagram, 237 Uses of tupelo gum, 61 Vacuum, Drying under Pressure and, 146 Valparaiso oak, 76 Virgilia, 85 Wahoo, 51, 82 Walnut, 45, 82 Walnut, black, 44, 82 Walnut, circassian, 60 Walnut, satin, 54 Walnut, white, 45, 83 Water beech, 44, 80 Water by dry wood, absorption of, 124 Water elm, 50 Water in wood, 114 Water in wood, distribution of, 114 Water in wood, local distribution of, 114 Water in wood, seasonal distribution of, 115 Water lost in drying 100 lb.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 64   ~   ~   ~

I simply endeavoured to make Captain Dangerous express himself as a man of ordinary intelligence and capacity would do who was born in the reign of Queen Anne,--who received a scrambling education in that of George the First,--who had passed the prime of his life abroad and had picked up a good many bastard foreign words and locutions,--whose reading had been confined to the ordinary newspapers and chap-books of his time (with perhaps an occasional dip into the pages of "Ned Ward" and "Tom Brown"),--and who in his old age had preserved the pseudo-didactic of his youth.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,565   ~   ~   ~

Here dwelt a vagabond tribe of Bastard Verderers and Charcoal-burners, savage, ignorant, brutish Wretches, as superstitious as the Manilla Creoles.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,391   ~   ~   ~

Fortunately for me the Interpreter, to whom I had given a hint of ultimate Reward, deposed that I could not speak twenty words of Maltese (which is a kind of Bastard Italian); and he told me that if it had been discovered that I was in any way Connected with the Order, I should surely have been Impaled; the Dey being then in a towering rage with the Knights, one of whose commanders had just captured one of his finest Brigantines, and Dressed Ship, as he humorously put it, by hanging every Man-Jack of the Crew at the Yard-arm, and the Algerine Captain at the Mizen.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 282   ~   ~   ~

Earl Patrick had seen more than threescore years, and his hair was white, and his limbs stiff; but his head was still as clear, and his heart was still as courageous, as in the days when he had dyed his lance in Celtic blood, vanquished the great Somerled, and carried the Bastard of Galloway in chains to Edinburgh; and, with an earnest desire to couch against the enemies of Christianity the lance which he had often couched against the enemies of civilisation, he took the Cross, sold his stud on the Leader Haughs to pay his expenses, bade a last farewell to Euphemia Stewart, his aged countess, received the pilgrim's staff and scrip from the Abbot of Melrose, and left his castle to embark with his knights and kinsmen.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 790   ~   ~   ~

Duns, Bastards, Claps, And Am'rous Scraps, Of _Cælia_ and _Amadis_; Toss up a Beau, That Grand Ragou, That Hodge-Podge for the Ladies.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 954   ~   ~   ~

Are you for having the Lady Mary called bastard--God pardon me the word!--or would you defend her with your life?--I do not know.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,044   ~   ~   ~

'Cleves has gone to the bastard called Charles to sue for mercy.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,289   ~   ~   ~

And he will bring a bastard child or twain----' She paused, and he paused too.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 533   ~   ~   ~

True; I ought to have seen at the first glance that you were a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 535   ~   ~   ~

I am not a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 444   ~   ~   ~

We had indeed an opportunity of speaking with some of the natives, in a kind of bastard Portuguese, but it would by no means answer the purpose of preaching the gospel to them in general.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 62   ~   ~   ~

Then answered Godey Sir Loumand, he Was surely wroth thereat: "Ride hence, and boast not of thy birth, Thou art a bastard brat."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 63   ~   ~   ~

"And though a bastard brat I be, My fortune's not the worse; Enough I hold of silver and gold, And ride on a gallant horse.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 64   ~   ~   ~

"And if a bastard brat I be, Thou mad'st me that I trow; But still I've towers, and pleasant bowers, And of green woods enow.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,401   ~   ~   ~

Let her, dressed as a man, and a bastard uncle of hers (who is evidently the "Will Wimble" of the house) go quietly on little horses, and it will save time, trouble, money, and danger.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,384   ~   ~   ~

Saravia,(385) perceiving how much the popish sacrament of confirmation is countenanced and confirmed by our bishoping, thinks it best to put the fairest face he can upon the Papists' judgment of that bastard sacrament.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,846   ~   ~   ~

And, first, we say, whatsoever be the condition of the ceremonies in their own nature, they cannot be indifferently embraced and used by the church of Scotland, which hath not only once cast them forth, but also given her great oath solemnly to the God of heaven, both witnessing her detestation of the Roman Antichrist's "five bastard sacraments, with all his rites, ceremonies, and false doctrine, added to the ministration of the true sacraments, without the word of God; all his vain allegories, rites, signs, and traditions, brought in the kirk, without or against the word of God;" and likewise "promising, and swearing to continue," as well "in the discipline and use of the holy sacraments," as "in the doctrine," of this reformed church of Scotland, which then first she embraced and used after she was truly reformed from Popery and popish abuses.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,823   ~   ~   ~

"You poor low-life bastard."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5   ~   ~   ~

| +------------------------------------------------------------+ ON THE UNCERTAINTY OF THE SIGNS OF MURDER IN THE CASE OF BASTARD CHILDREN.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 13   ~   ~   ~

GENTLEMEN, In the course of the present year, one of our friends, distinguished by rank, fortune, and science, came to me upon the following occasion: In the country, he said, a young woman was taken up, and committed to jail to take her trial, for the supposed murder of her bastard child.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 23   ~   ~   ~

* * * * * In those unhappy cases of the death of bastard children, as in every action indeed that is either criminal or suspicious, reason and justice demand an enquiry into all the circumstances; and particularly to find out from what views and motives the act proceeded.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 44   ~   ~   ~

What is commonly understood to be the murder of a bastard child by the mother, if the real circumstances were fully known, would be allowed to be a very different crime in different circumstances.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 47   ~   ~   ~

But, as well as I can judge, the greatest number of what are called murders of bastard children, are of a very different kind.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 580   ~   ~   ~

But this created a suspicion among the people, that the Queen's favourite, Leicester, intended after her death to set up some bastard of his own, pretending it was born of her, and bred up privately."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 314   ~   ~   ~

Cardinal Beaton had lots of bastards, but I never remember to have seen in any account of Wolsey mention made of natural children.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 448   ~   ~   ~

This is a translation from an epigram by Thomas Bastard, first printed in 1598, and beginning: "I mett a courtier riding on the plaine."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 7,529   ~   ~   ~

During that night, Louis Napoleon, in complicity with the bastard princes, De Morny, Valevsky, Saint-Arnaud, Persigny, Maupas and others, having made sure of the commanding officers of the troops on duty, caused the arrest before daylight of all the leading Republicans.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 4,256   ~   ~   ~

The Elector of Mainz declared all such marriages void and their children bastards.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,513   ~   ~   ~

An anarchist at heart--as so many great artists are--Keats hated, with a furious hatred, any bastard claims and privileges that insolently intruded themselves between the godlike senses of Man and the divine madness of their quest.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 390   ~   ~   ~

He likewise excelled in many parts of genteel comedy; such as lord Townly, Young Belville, &c. &c. The Bastard in King John, was another fine character of his, which Garrick attempted in vain--having neither sufficiency of figure, or heroic jocularity.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,441   ~   ~   ~

"For spearing a salmon or a Southron, dissolving that old foolish tenure between a proprietor and his cattle, or cutting the tie of forced duty between a rich old Mayor and his daughter, where shall the bastard of Hume be equalled on the Borders?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,474   ~   ~   ~

The whole bells of Berwick now began to swing and ring as if the town had been invaded; and messengers, breathless and panting, arrived at the camp, and communicated the intelligence that the Bastard of Hume had, with a body of men, got entrance to the Mayor's house, by shewing the guard the Governor's sword, and carried off Isabel, the Mayor's daughter, who was more willing to go than to stay.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,478   ~   ~   ~

He burned to reclaim his bride; but he feared the Bastard of Hume, whose prowess was acknowledged far and wide from the Borders.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,481   ~   ~   ~

As fate would have it, the Berwickers came up with the Bastard's party, who, with the gay and laughing Isabel in the midst of them, were seated, as they thought securely, in the old Berwick wood, enjoying some wine, which she, with wise providence, had handed to one of the men as a refreshment when they should be beyond danger.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,485   ~   ~   ~

Give me my daughter, traitor!" addressing himself to the Bastard, who stood now in the front of the party, all prepared for a tough defence.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,497   ~   ~   ~

"Come forward, Captain!" cried the Bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 438   ~   ~   ~

"I'm ready any time you're ready, you yellow mutinous bastard!"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 234   ~   ~   ~

"It lies," observes the Bastard, "It lies as sightly on the back of him (_Austria_) As great Alcides' (_robe_) shows upon an ass:-- But, ass, I'll take that burden from your back," &c. Were it not that _doth_ is the usual word in this play, I might be tempted to read _does_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 59   ~   ~   ~

Mrs. Kirke and her daughter Diana are unfavourably alluded to by Mrs. Grace Worthley, a lady of the same class, who will not "be any longer a laughing-stock for any of Mr. Kirk's bastards" (vide letter to her cousin Lord Brandon, September 7, 1682, _Diary of Henry Sidney, Earl of Romney_, i. pp.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 62   ~   ~   ~

And again, the same lady, in another letter, speaks of "the common Countess of Oxford and her adulterous bastards" (_Ibid._).

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,201   ~   ~   ~

Those brought to Singapore by the Celebes traders, are a bastard species.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,697   ~   ~   ~

Also in this yere was the bataille of Nazers in Spayne, where prince Edward with his companye scomfyted the bastard of Spayne, and restored kyng Petir ayeyn to his reaume that was put out be the forseid bastard; and there was taken the erle of Dene, S^{r}.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,287   ~   ~   ~

Also another companye of Englysshmen lay in the town of Barbesey; and there was don a jorney betwen Englysshmen and Frensshmen be syde Mount Andre, in the monthe of August: and thorugh the grace of God iij c Englysshmen xvij lesse, toke and sclewe viij m of Frensshmen: and there were take the lord Hayle, the lord Morlet, the bastard of Clynton, the lord en le Sale de Mary, the maire of Rochell, the capytayn of Tholomonde, the capitayn of Ryons, the capitayne of seynt John the Evangelist, the capitayn of Racheford, the capitayn of Urlound, and manye othere capitaynes and gentiles whiche were to longe to telle.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,415   ~   ~   ~

John Trussell and hise sone, and othere men of his, sore wounded; and that fray began betwen the lord Strange wyf and Sire John Trussell wyf: and the same yere, upon seynt Petyr day and Poule, the erle of Huntyngdon, with othere certeyn lordes and there retenue, foughten with ix carykes of Jene, the grettest that evere were seyn in this coostes, and scomfited them; of whiche, thanked be God, he toke iiij grete with there patrons, and the admirall of them alle was called the bastard of Burbon, with alle the tresoure that they alle schulde aben waged with for a quarter of a yere; and the othere carykes fledden awey.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,587   ~   ~   ~

Thomas Rempston, and othere capitayns of oure syde, the whiche hadde nought passyng v^{c} fytynge men with them at all withoughte chartres; but Charles of Burbon and the bastard of Orlions, with alle the Frensshmen sittynge on horsbak seynge the governaunce, trussed them and wente away.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,801   ~   ~   ~

And in this yere was lost a good town in Normandye of the lord Scales, that is called there Graundevyle, in the coost of Baas Normandye, toward the coost of Bretaigne, wyth his bastard sone therinne; and the substaunce of alle the good that the lord Scales hadde in that land was thereinne, the whiche was falsly sold be a man that he trusted most too whiles he was at Roon.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,894   ~   ~   ~

Pieres de Brasil, and the bastard of Orliaunce, and Manypeny taken.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,048   ~   ~   ~

Anthony Widvile, faught with the bastard of Burgoyne in Smethfeld.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,080   ~   ~   ~

This yere kyng Edward landid in the North with fewe people, and came to London on Sher Thursday, and toke his journey furth ageyne on Eastre even; and upon Eastre day met with therle of Warwik and marquys Mountague his brother at Barnet, and there slewe them with moch other people: and than was quene Margret and prynce Edward hir sone with theare compeigny, landid in the West; and kyng Edward met them at Tewkesbury; and there was the prynce slayne with many others: and while the kyng was there, came the bastard Faconbrige with shipmen and moche other people to London, and firid at London brige biside seint Katerynes and without Algate: and afterward the kyng rode into Kent with moch people, and assid the contrey at moch money for theire risyng.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 374   ~   ~   ~

Farewell, false Love, the oracle of lies, A mortal foe and enemy to rest, An envious boy from whom all cares arise, A bastard vile, a beast with rage possest; A way of error, a temple full of treason, In all effects contrary unto reason.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 3,612   ~   ~   ~

Davie swung himself out at the door on his kent, much crestfallen, and in great wrath, shutting the door with a bang behind him, but opening it again, he shook his clenched fist in the parson's face, and said, 'Weel, weel, ye'll no let decent, honest folk marry; but, 'od, lad, I'se plenish your parish wi' bastards, to see what ye'll mak o' that,' and away he went.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,548   ~   ~   ~

That bastard romance, full of vulgar acclamation over mechanical achievements, which makes so much of the mere size and speed of a trans-Atlantic liner, is waved aside contemptuously by Conrad.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,293   ~   ~   ~

He is only a bastard orator who fancies that loudness and shrillness of tone can enforce conviction.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 256   ~   ~   ~

Foremost among those who sought her hand was that hair-brained, handsome, coarse-mannered Duke de Beaufort, younger son of Cæsar de Vendôme, himself the bastard of the jovial Bearnois by the _Fair Gabrielle_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 268   ~   ~   ~

[2] The Duke was descended from the "brave Dunois," bastard of Orleans.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 6,556   ~   ~   ~

To Nisida will I leave all my estates--all my wealth, save a miserable pittance as an inheritance for the bastard Francisco.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,289   ~   ~   ~

"Bon Dieu, I thought you was him come back," he gasped in his bastard French Indian, "that man that half killed me on the Caraquet road!

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,560   ~   ~   ~

_Bye-blow_, a bastard.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 654   ~   ~   ~

It is all for the best, because in any case he wrote only a gnarled and involved bastard stuff of partly Teutonic origin.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 1,566   ~   ~   ~

But where among that bastard race was the splendid desire for freedom of their fathers, the love of the fresh air of heaven and the untrammeled life of the fields?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 824   ~   ~   ~

By his side, with an irony that is seldom praised, Shakespeare places the figure of the Bastard, the man who ought to have been king, the man fitted by nature to rule the English, the man without intellect but with a rough capacity, the man whom we meet again, as a successful king, in the play of _Henry V_.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 836   ~   ~   ~

Another of the results of human treachery appears in the person of the Bastard, whose mother confesses that she was seduced by the "long and vehement suit" of Coeur de Lion.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 837   ~   ~   ~

The Bastard's half-brother, another domestic traitor, does not scruple to accuse his mother of adultery in the hope that, by doing so, he may obtain the Bastard's heritage.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 854   ~   ~   ~

The play ends with the Bastard's well-known brag about England-- "Naught shall make us rue If England to itself do rest but true."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 864   ~   ~   ~

A reader feels that in the figure of the Bastard he set down what he found most significant in the common English character.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 865   ~   ~   ~

With the exceptions of Sir Toby Belch and Justice Shallow, the Bastard is the most English figure in the plays.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 868   ~   ~   ~

An entirely honest, robust, hearty person, contemptuous of the weak, glad to be a king's bastard, making friends with women (his own mother one of them) with a trusty, good-humoured frankness, fond of fighting, extremely able when told what to do, fond of plain measures--the plainer the better, an honest servant, easily impressed by intellect when found in high place on his own side, but utterly incapable of perceiving intellect in a foreigner, fond of those sorts of humour which generally lead to blows, extremely just, very kind when not fighting, fond of the words "fair play," and nobly and exquisitely moved to deep, true poetical feeling by a cruel act done to something helpless and little.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 870   ~   ~   ~

The Bastard is trying to find out whether Hubert killed Arthur, whose little body lies close beside them.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 873   ~   ~   ~

The Bastard tests the protest with one sentence: "Go bear him in thine arms."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 876   ~   ~   ~

Instantly the Bastard is touched to a tenderness that lifts Hubert to a spiritual comradeship with him-- "How easy dost thou take all England up."

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,068   ~   ~   ~

Gloucester, deceived by his bastard Edmund, casts off Edgar his son.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,070   ~   ~   ~

Gloucester, trying to comfort him against the wishes of Goneril and Regan, is betrayed by his bastard Edmund, and blinded.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,099   ~   ~   ~

It is unnatural that Gloucester should make much of a bastard son whom he has hardly seen for nine years.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,785   ~   ~   ~

INDEX OF CHARACTERS Achilles, 169, 170 Adonis, 241, 242 Adriana, 46, 47 Ægeon, 44, 46, 49 Aguecheek, Sir Andrew, 139 Ajax, 169, 172 Albany, Duke of, 187, 190 Alcibiades, 214, 215, 217, 218 Angelo, 174, 175, 177, 196 Anne Bullen, 236, 237 Anne, Lady, 93, 100 Antipholus of Ephesus, 44, 46 Antipholus of Syracuse, 44 Antonio (_Merchant of Venice_), 103 Antonio (_Tempest_), 232, 235 Antonio (_Two Gentlemen of Verona_), 34 Apemantus, 215 Armado, 30, 31 Arthur, Prince, 75, 80, 83, 84 Audrey, 129 Austria, Lymoges, Duke of, 81 Autolycus, 228 Banquo, 195, 200 Bardolph, 122, 124, 125 Bassanio, 103 Beatrice, 133, 134, 136, 137 Beaufort, Cardinal, 51, 55, 57, 58, 59 Belarius, 223 Belch, Sir Toby, 82, 138, 139, 217 Benedick, 133, 134, 136 Bertram, 144, 145, 146 Bianca, 105, 108 Biondello, 107 Biron, 24, 25, 32, 36 Blanch of Spain, 75, 79 Borachio, 134, 135 Bottom, 63 Boyet, 30 Brutus, 149, 150, 154, 156 Buckingham, Duke of (_Richard III_), 94, 98, 99 Buckingham, Duke of (_Henry VIII_), 235, 237 Cade, Jack, 55, 57 Caius, Dr., 124, 125 Calchas, 169 Carlisle, Bishop of, 89, 92 Cassio, 180, 181, 183 Cassius, 149 Cawdor, 198 Celia, 128, 129 Cerimon, 222 Clarence, George, Duke of, 93, 94, 98, 100 Claudio (_Measure for Measure_), 174, 177, 178 Claudio (_Much Ado_), 133, 134, 135 Claudius (_Hamlet_), 157, 158, 160, 161, 163, 164, 165, 166 Cleopatra, 202, 203, 207, 217 Cloten, 223 Cordelia, 187, 188, 190, 192 Coriolanus, 196, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212 Cornwall, Duke of, 190 Costard, 30, 31 Cranmer, 236 Cressida, 169 Cymbeline, 223, 225 Demetrius, 63 Desdemona, 180, 181, 183, 184, 185 Diana (_All's Well_), 144 Diana (_Pericles_), 219, 220 Don John, 133, 134, 135 Don Pedro, 133, 134, 136 Dorset, Marquess of, 98 Dromio of Ephesus, 44 Dromio of Syracuse, 44, 46 Dumaine, 24, 32 Duncan, King, 154, 195, 198, 201 Edgar, 187, 190 Edmund, 187, 188, 189, 190, 192, 204 Edward III, 239 Edward IV, 93, 94 Edward, Prince of Wales (_Henry VI_), 62 Edward, Prince of Wales (_Richard III_), 99 Eglamour, 41 Elinor, Queen, 78 Elizabeth, wife of Edward IV, 94 Elizabeth, Princess, 236 Emilia, 183, 184 Evans, Sir Hugh, 124, 125 Falstaff, Sir John, 112, 113, 116, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126 Flavius, 216 Florizel, 227 Fluellen, 123 Fool (_Lear_), 192 Ford, Mistress, 124, 125 Fortinbras, 161 Frederick, Duke, 128, 129, 132 Friar Laurence, 68, 71, 74 Gertrude, Queen, 157, 158, 161, 165 Ghost (_Hamlet_), 158 Gloucester, Earl of, 187, 188, 189, 190 Gloucester, Humphrey, Duke of, 51, 55, 57, 58, 59 Gloucester, Richard, Duke of, (_Henry VI_), 61 Gloucester, Richard, Duke of, (_Richard III_), 93, 115 Goneril, 187, 189, 193 Grey, Lord, 98, 99 Hamlet, 158, 160, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 191, 196, 243 Hastings, Lord, 99 Hector, 169, 170 Helen, 171 Helena (_Midsummer Night's Dream_), 63 Helena (_All's Well_), 144, 145, 147 Henry IV, 109, 110, 111, 113, 114, 116 Henry V, 120, 121 Henry VI, 51, 52, 60, 61, 62 Henry VIII, 235, 236, 237, 238 Henry, Prince of Wales, 109, 111, 112, 114, 118 Henry Bolingbroke, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 92 Hermia, 63 Hermione, 226, 227, 229 Hero, 133, 134, 135 Hippolyta, 63 Hotspur, Henry Percy, surnamed, 109, 110, 111, 113, 114, 116, 119 Hubert de Burgh, 80, 83 Iachimo, 223, 225 Iago, 181, 182, 181, 185, 204, 211 Imogen, 223 Isabella, 174, 175 Jaques, 129, 131, 132 Joan of Arc, 51, 54 John, King of England, 75, 76, 77, 78, 80 John of Gaunt, 86, 89, 91 John of Lancaster, 114, 118 Julia, 34, 35, 39, 40, 42 Juliet, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71 Julius Cæsar, 149, 153, 154, 156, 196 Katharina, 106, 108 Katharine, 32 Katharine of France, 120 Katharine, Queen, 235, 236, 237, 238 Kent, 187, 190 Laertes, 158, 161 Launce, 42 Lear, King, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 193, 194 Lennox, 202 Leonato, 135, 136 Leontes, King of Sicilia, 226, 227, 228, 229 Lewis the Dauphin, 75, 79 Longaville, 24, 32 Lucio, 177,178 Lucrece, 243 Lysander, 63 Macbeth, 191, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 202, 217 Macbeth, Lady, 195, 199, 200 Macduff, 195, 202 Malcolm, 195 Malvolio, 138, 139, 140, 141 Mamillius, 227, 229 Marcius, 208 Margaret of Anjou, 52, 55, 62, 94 Maria, 139 Mariana, 174, 175 Marina, 219, 220, 222 Mark Antony, 149, 191, 196, 202, 204, 206 Mercutio, 68, 70 Milan, Duke of, 34, 35, 38, 39 Miranda, 232 Mortimer, 53 Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray, Duke of, 86, 119 Northumberland, Henry Percy, Earl of, 114 Nurse to Juliet, 74 Nym, 123, 124 Oberon, 63 Octavia, 202 Octavius Cæsar, 149, 202, 203, 205 Olivia, 138, 140, 141 Oliver, 128, 129 Ophelia, 157, 158, 166 Orlando, 128, 129, 131 Orsino, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142 Othello, 180, 181, 182, 183, 186, 191, 196 Page, Anne, 124 Page, Mistress, 124 Pandarus, 169 Pandulph, Cardinal, 75 Paris, 68 Pericles, Prince of Tyre, 213, 219, 220 Petruchio, 105, 107 Phebe, 129, 132, 133 Philip the Bastard, 77, 78, 80, 82, 83 Philip of France, 75, 80 Pistol, 117, 122, 123, 124 Polixenes, King of Bohemia, 226, 227, 228 Polonius, 158, 161 Portia, 102, 103, 104, 132 Posthumus, 223, 225 Prospero, Duke of Milan, 232, 235 Proteus, 34, 35, 39, 40, 41 Puck, 63 Pyramus, 63 Queen (_Cymbeline_), 223, 225 Quickly, Mrs., 124 Regan, 187, 189 Richard II, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 92, 115, 119 Richard III, 93, 94, 96, 98, 99, 102, 211 Richard, Duke of York, 99 Rivers, Earl, 98, 99 Roderigo, 183 Romeo, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71 Rosalind, 128, 129, 132 Rosaline, 25, 31, 32, 69, 133 Salisbury, Countess of, 239 Scroop, Lord, 122 Sebastian (_Tempest_), 235 Sebastian (_Twelfth Night_), 138 Shallow, Justice, 82, 124 Shylock, 103, 104 Silvia, 34, 35, 38, 39, 41 Simpcox, 65, 59 Slender, Master, 124 Sly, Christopher, 105, 107 Somerset, Earl of, 51 Stephano, 234 Suffolk, Earl of, 52, 55, 57 Talbot, 51, 54 Tamora, 49, 50 Tarquin, 196, 243 Thaisa, 219, 220, 222 Thersites, 172 Theseus, 63, 66 Thisbe, 63 Thurio, 34, 35, 37, 38 Timon of Athens, 196, 209, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218 Titania, 63 Titus Andronicus, 49, 50 Touchstone, 129 Trinculo, 234 Troilus, 169 Tybalt, 68, 70 Ulysses, 170 Ursula, 133 Valentine, 34, 35, 38, 39, 41 Venus, 241, 242 Vienna, Duke of, 174, 178 Viola, 138, 139, 141, 142 Warwick, Earl of, 59, 61 Wolsey, Cardinal, 196, 235, 236, 237, 238 York, Edmund of Langley, Duke of, 89, 92 York, Edward, Duke of, 61 York, Richard, Duke of, 51, 55, 57, 62 _Printed by Hazell, Watson & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury._ * * * * * Home University Library of Modern Knowledge _A Comprehensive Series of New and Specially Written Books_ EDITORS: PROF. GILBERT MURRAY, D.Litt., LL.D., F.B.A.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 5,169   ~   ~   ~

_Grub._ Why, an't like your Worships, she has had two Bastards, I'll prove it.

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,135   ~   ~   ~

Was he, he said in fierce disappointment, to be compelled to adopt his bastard children?

~   ~   ~   Sentence 2,329   ~   ~   ~

if you were merely a private gentleman, a minister, or a prince of the blood, and you were assassinated, a man's heart would cease to beat, and that would be all; but wrongly or rightly, you coveted a place among the powerful ones of the world; for that end you broke the will of Louis the Fourteenth, you drove the bastards from the throne whereon they had already placed their feet, you made yourself regent of France-that is to say, the keystone of the arch of the world.

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