- The Old
Debauchees,
originally titled The
Despairing Debauchee, was a play
written by
Henry Fielding. It
originally appeared with The Covent-Garden Tragedy...
-
Battle of the
Poets (author unknown). The Old
Debauchees (1732),
originally titled The
Despairing Debauchee.
Later revived as The Becauchees; or, The Jesuit...
-
Frankfort Berries Yield such an Alcohol!
Inebriate of air - am I - And
Debauchee of Dew -
Reeling - thro'
endless summer days - From inns of
molten Blue...
-
Montijo and one from the ****ure King
Edward VII, who had been his
fellow debauchee.
After his death, his
brother Alexander became heir-apparent and Prince...
-
France from 1715 to 1723, gave the term the
sense of
impious and
callous debauchee,
which it has
borne since his time, by
habitually applying it to the very...
- enthusiasms, however, led the New York
Times to call him "the
greatest debauchee of the age".
Another cause of
marital tension (and
later political tension)...
-
Mistress (603) The Sandal-Wood
Merchant and the
Sharpers (604–605) The
Debauchee and the Three-Year-Old
Child The
Stolen Purse (606) The Fox and the Folk...
- personage... The
character which Ctesias depicted or invented, an
effeminate debauchee, sunk in
luxury and sloth, who at the last was
driven to take up arms...
-
Louis d'Orléans
unveils a
mistress c.1825–26 (Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, Madrid) by Eugène Delacroix,
illustrating Louis' re****tion as a
debauchee....
-
abnormal pastimes and
weird orgies of
overly aesthetic artists and
jaded debauchees. In the cast of the
motley show were
Bowery toughs,
Harlem gangsters,...