< Page:A chambermaid's diary.djvu
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mes and her



salon, and Monsieur's complacency in letting this vile conduct go on, though perfectly aware of it. With admirable cynicism he said: " At any rate .. it is less expensive than paying by the line at the newspaper of&ces." Monsieur, on his side, fell to the lowest depths of baseness and unscrupulousness. He called that the politics of the salon, and society diplomacy.

I am going to write to Paris to have them send me my old master's new book. But how rotten it must b

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