However, proud scorner, thy whorish Impudency may happen hereafter to insist in the derision of these fearful denunciations, and sport thy jester's pen at the speech of my soul, yet take heed least despair be predominant in the day of thy death, and thou instead of calling for mercy to thy Jesus, repeat more oftener to thyself, Sic morior damnatus ut Judas!
"A History of English Literature Elizabethan Literature"
George Saintsbury
The conscience of mankind was seduced or browbeaten by the Impudency of self-love.
"Three French Moralists and The Gallantry of France"
Edmund Gosse
Puritan women also were not above reproach in regard to the fashion of extravagant hair-dressing; they also "showed the vile note of Impudency."
"Customs and Fashions in Old New England"
Alice Morse Earle