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Updated: April 30, 2025
Fludd, thus assailed, took up the pen in defence of his unguent, in a reply called "The Squeezing of Parson Foster's Spunge; wherein the Spunge-Bearer's immodest Carriage and Behaviour towards his Brethren is detected; the bitter Flames of his slanderous Reports are, by the sharp Vinegar of Truth, corrected and quite extinguished; and, lastly, the virtuous Validity of his Spunge in wiping away the Weapon-Salve, is crushed out and clean abolished."
Modest or immodest, husband-hunting obviously tends to remedy this misdirection and waste of force.
She gave out that he was not to be for one moment accused of having encouraged her by secret addresses. It was her unsolicited avowal thought by my aunt Dorothy immodest, not by me that she preferred him to all living men. Her name was Anna Penrhys.
Flowers and fruit in Manitoba are treasured as sunshine in London, for you must remember that Manitoba is a very new country, that it is only a paltry few thousands of years since its thousands of miles were scraped flat as a floor. Everything even yet looks so immodest on those vast stretches. The clumps of trees stand out in such a bold brazen fashion.
It is safe to say only that people will then be very much at heart what they are to-day and were in the days when the Assyrian women and men felt as we do about most things. Kedzie will be scolding her children or her grandchildren and telling them that in her day little girls did not speak disrespectfully to their parents or run away from them or do immodest, forward things.
In contrast to the modern student journals, the earliest files of the Chronicle are distinguished by their exceedingly rare references to athletic events, and then only in a very occasional modest item giving the immodest score of some class contest, such as the baseball game between '71 and '72 on May 29, 1869, when the score ran 50 to 36.
She wore a white gown, as on the night of the ball; but her whole costume was much less rich and shockingly immodest. The dress was barely caught together at the shoulders; her hair floated in a blond mist low over her eyes, and around her neck was a necklace of pearls too large to be real, alternated with bits of tinsel. Delobelle was right: the Bohemian life was better suited to her.
Thus: "When we see a man with large eyes, we argue that he is indolent." "If his eyes are deeply situated in his head, we say that he is crafty and a deceiver." "If his eyes are prominent, we say that he is immodest, loquacious and stupid." "He whose eyes are mobile and sharp is a deceiver, crafty and a thief." and so forth for an entire page of the Compendium.
The villainous stares of foreign interlopers, the ribald jests of guards, the furtive glances of the envious, the scowls of the emancipated underling, the profanity of the domineering agitator who denounced respectability and clamored for possession of the girls, no moment of their lives was free from ugly threats; no retreat, save the wild jungle or the mountains, offered any liberation from the immodest glare of cruel, licentious eyes.
And there was nothing forward, nothing immodest, in this joyous enthusiasm. It was, in fact, as if he were a mere confidant, and she were singing a hymn in praise of her beloved. And thus she spared him any feeling of shame. But what was to happen now? It went without saying that this visit must have consequences of some sort.
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