Vulgar words in Another Study of Woman (Page 1)

This book at a glance

bastard x 2
            

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~   ~   ~   Sentence 311   ~   ~   ~

"In these days every rogue who can hold his head straight in his collar, cover his manly bosom with half an ell of satin by way of a cuirass, display a brow where apocryphal genius gleams under curling locks, and strut in a pair of patent-leather pumps graced by silk socks which cost six francs, screws his eye-glass into one of his eye-sockets by puckering up his cheek, and whether he be an attorney's clerk, a contractor's son, or a banker's bastard, he stares impertinently at the prettiest duchess, appraises her as she walks downstairs, and says to his friend--dressed by Buisson, as we all are, and mounted in patent-leather like any duke himself--'There, my boy, that is a perfect lady.'"

~   ~   ~   Sentence 483   ~   ~   ~

"And so," said Blondet, "our 'perfect lady' lives between English hypocrisy and the delightful frankness of the eighteenth century--a bastard system, symptomatic of an age in which nothing that grows up is at all like the thing that has vanished, in which transition leads nowhere, everything is a matter of degree; all the great figures shrink into the background, and distinction is purely personal.

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