Pardon, Senorita Isabel, Sunday comes not into a pasquinade.
2
The pasquinade was a very great one.
3
But though Frederic was diverted by this charming pasquinade, he was unwilling that it should get abroad.
4
Here is another pasquinade.
5
Leti, in his entertaining and gossipping life of this most merciless of Popes, tells a story of another pasquinade, which exhibits the temper of Sixtus.
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If, as the old pasquinade had it the Barbarini did what the Barbarians did not, how much worse than barbarians have these modern civilizers done!
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The air is full of real and false sweetmeats, pamphlets, pasquinades, and puns.
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This does not prevent him from playing his pasquinades every night at the Vaudeville.
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But, leaving the pasquinades of other people, let us come back to the sayings of Pasquin himself.
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The only person who, apparently, remained quite indifferent to the storm of caricatures and pasquinades was Montanelli himself.
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At the entrance booksellers stationed themselves, offering for sale Protestant catechisms, religious tracts, and pasquinades on the bishops.
12
Of whimsical and satirical epitaphs-someactually inscribed on tombstones, and others intended for pasquinades- alargecollection might be made.
13
The replies to the Doctor, the vindications of the Doctor, the pasquinades on the Doctor, would fill a library.
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The most biting satires against the church, and the most lively political pasquinades, were thus expressed, and written almost always by churchmen.
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"He is sick, sick to death of a galloping consumption-hewill not write any more pasquinades."
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But the character of most of those pasquinades which belong to the pontificate of Leo is so coarse as to render them unfit for reproduction.