I canna be bathered wi' the chatterin', fykie, kyowowin' little wratch.
1903, William Barnes, Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect:
Noo soul to sheaere The trials the poor wratch must bear.
1896, Ian Maclaren, Kate Carnegie and Those Ministers:
He said he wes up for a walk an' juist dropped in, the wratch.'
1868, Alexander Hislop, The Proverbs of Scotland:
"Little Andrew, the wratch, has been makin' a totum wi' his faither's ae razor; an' the pair man's trying to shave himsel yonder, an' girnan like a sheep's head on the tangs."
1855, Charles Kingsley, Westward Ho!:
Why, he's a praste, a Popish praste, that can't marry if he would, poor wratch."