I expect the church will be full of jaded ladiesofpleasure, all waiting to forbid the banns.'
2
This play was greatly condemned by the critics; some incidents in it are borrowed from Shirley's LadyofPleasure.
3
The tables win enormously, and so do the ladiesofpleasure; but the winnings of these go back again to the tables.
4
As Evelyn, the diarist, puts it, this great man's fall was the work of "the buffoones and ladysofpleasure."
5
This sham petition occasioned a pretended answer, entitled, The Gracious Answer of the Most Illustrious LadyofPleasure, the Countess of Castlem .
6
He walked deliberately, firmly, and with head erect, through the hostile throng of courtiers-"especiallythe buffoones and ladysofpleasure," as Evelyn says.