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Updated: June 28, 2025


'If there be a flask of Johannisberg in the "Londres," I'll drink your health this day, and so shall Mary; so saying, I entered the hotel with a lighter heart, and a firmer step than ever it had been my fortune to do hitherto. "'We shall miss the old lady, I'm sure, Mary, she is so kind. "'Oh! indeed she is; but then, John, she is such a prude.

She was a woman with high principles, but neither a fool nor a prude, and she saw no sign of dissolute living there. The man's gaze was curiously steady, his skin clear and brown, and his sinewy form suggested a capacity for, and she almost fancied an acquaintance with, physical toil. Yet he had already denied the truth to her.

'Say what you were going to say. Caroline chuckled again. 'I can't help it. My tongue won't be tied. I'm like all the Malletts 'But not before the child. 'You're a prude, Sophia, and if Henrietta imagines that a man like Francis Sales, any man worth his salt besides, Henrietta has knocked about the world. She is no more innocent than she looks.

'See to the necessary comforts of the house instantly, said Beauchamp, and telling Renee, without listening to her, that he had to issue orders, he led Rosamund, who was out of breath at the effrontery of the pair, toward the door. 'Are you blind, ma'am? Have you gone foolish? What should I have sent for you for, but to protect her? I see your mind; and off with the prude, pray!

I would by no means have you go to the masquerade; I do not indeed like the diversion itself, as I have heard it described to me; not that I am such a prude to suspect every woman who goes there of any evil intentions; but it is a pleasure of too loose and disorderly a kind for the recreation of a sober mind. Indeed, you have still a stronger and more particular objection.

"Lady S. Yes, a tale of scandal is as fatal to the credit of a prude as a fever to those of the strongest constitutions; but there is a sort of sickly reputation that outlives hundreds of the robuster character of a prude. "Spat. "Lady S. But, Spatter, I have something of greater confidence now to entrust you with. I think I have some claim to your gratitude. "Spat.

She feared that the King would be displeased with me; but he only said to me, jestingly, "One must not play tricks with you about your family, for it seems to be a matter of life or death with you." I replied, "I hate lies." There was a troop of Italian players who had got up a comedy called "The Pretended Prude."

None but prude fools Mind manners and rules, We Hoydens do decency slight. Come, Trollops and Slatterns, Cocked hats and white aprons, This best our modesty suits; For why should not we In dress be as free As Hogs-Norton squires in boots? Why, indeed? But the Hogs-Norton squires, as is their wont, were not so easily pierced to the heart as the noble slatterns.

To this motive I attribute the frequent exhibition, over the doors of respectable looking houses, in the fashionable walks, and in different parts of Paris, of the following characters, "Commodités pour Hommes, et Femmes." An english prude would start to read these words.

"However new or old it is, I find it is true," cries Amelia "But, pray, tell me all, though I tremble to hear it." "Indeed, my dear friend," said Mrs. Atkinson, "you are terrified at nothing indeed, indeed, you are too great a prude." "I do not know what you mean by prudery," answered Amelia.

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