1838 ‘The Laundress & Her Ass’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 4: Why yer honer, ’tis true what I’m telling you, / His cock has been bang-in(g) my ass.at ass, n.
1838 ‘Cupid’s Battering Ram’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 22: But tell me the use of the travelling bag, / That every minute continued to wag, / As thought ’twould crack / The door at my back.at back-door, n.
1838 ‘Cupid’s Battering Ram’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 22: When the bag which hangs under the battery ram Rub a dub. / Is injured, the engine is not worth a damn.at bag, n.1
1838 ‘My Love Has Got A Weather Eye!’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 28: She does not care for all his blows, / That from his bags he can muster.at bags, n.1
1838 ‘Laundress And Her Ass’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 4: Why yer honer, ’tis true what I’m telling you, / His cock has been bang-in(g) my ass.at bang, v.1
1838 ‘Hurrah For The Girls’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 16: Then we sally forth to a bawdyken.at bawdy-ken (n.) under bawdy, adj.
1838 ‘My Love Has Got A Weather Eye!’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 28: She does not care for all his blows, / That from his bags he can muster.at blow, n.1
1838 ‘The Brass Founder’s Cock’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 40: A victim to boring, the ladies’ he fell, / And he died with his cock in his hand it is said, sir.at bore, v.1
1838 ‘A Stiff Upright Parody’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 11: Rory O’More Had A Hell Of A Bore.at bore, n.2
1838 ‘Cupid Turned Housebreaker’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 39: To talk about his bow and arrow, tho’ some may delight.at bow, n.1
1838 ‘Rory O’More Had A Hell Of A Bore’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 12: My darlings, said Rory, come one at a time. / And I’m the boy your touch holes to prime.at boy, the, n.1
1838 ‘The Laundress & Her Ass’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 3: About five miles from town, lived one Sarah Brown, / By washing she did earn her bread.at bread, n.1
1838 ‘The Female Tobacconist’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 14: You ne’er can decline, such a good shagg as mine, / And with it I do it up brown.at do up brown (v.) under brown, adj.2
1838 ‘Put It Up’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 31: The result from pleasure turns the scale, for their peculiar strut, / Tells plainly how they burnt their tails, when last they put it up.at burn, v.
1838 ‘Toasts And Sentiments’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 48: The three C’s – the rough C – the hairy C – and the open C.at C, n.1
1838 ‘The Laundress And Her Ass’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 6: Said his worship, away, I dismiss the affray [...] So get the way back, I’ll hear no more clack.at clack, n.
1838 ‘The Laundress And Her Ass’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 4: Why yer honer, ’tis true what I’m telling you, / His cock has been bang-in(g) my ass.at cock, n.3
1838 ‘Toasts & Sentiments’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 48: May the ladies always find plenty of fresh cod in the market.at cod, n.3
1838 ‘Long Tail Jock’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 42: Some niggas tink themselves so big, / And show dare little cork.at cork, n.1
1838 ‘I Dreamt Last Night As I Lay On My Bed’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 37: He jumped into bed, and in less than a crack, / The job it was done and all over.at crack, n.1
1838 ‘Cupid Turned Housebreaker’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 39: There’s none like cupid, ever yet, that could evade the laws. / With his picklock, and happy cock, could enter in a crack, / It matter’d not to him, whether in the front or back.at crack, n.3
1838 ‘Oh! What A Flare-Up’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 32: The jarveys had most of them met they say, / And were counting the dibs vot they’d took that ere day.at dibbs, n.
1838 ‘The Devil To Pay’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 44: This is my sugar stick, / So do not cut your luckey, / I’ve come to do the trick, / For you, my dearest ducky.at ducky, n.
1838 ‘Mounting A Maid’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 29: The radiant moon shone clear and bright, / On her latter-end so lilly white.at end, n.
1838 ‘My Love Has Got A Weather Eye!’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 27: My love has got a weather eye, / She can tell when e’er she pleases, / When it’s wet, or when it dry, / When it itches, when it teases.at eye, n.
1838 ‘When We Went Out A Shooting’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 37: Our flash girls in their best, / Were togg’d from top to toe.at flash, adj.
1838 ‘Rory O’More Had A Hell Of A Bore’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 12: My darlings, said Rory, come one at a time, / And I’m the boy your touch holes to prime.at touch-hole, n.
1838 ‘Master Humphrey’s Clock’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 8: But gents anon, be sure your weights are well hung.at well-hung, adj.1
1838 ‘Put It Up’ Rambler’s Flash Songster 30: They on some pretty damsels call, resolved to put it up. / That funny little well fledg’d place, / That causes so much bother, / And if you do not like it there, / Your nose put up the other.at put it up (v.) under it, n.1
1838 ‘The Brave Old Jock’ in Rambler’s Flash Songster 13: A song to the jock, the brave old jock, / Who has stood so stiff and strong.at jock, n.1