Vulgar words in The Man and the Moment (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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James NEW YORK D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 1914 Copyright, 1914, by D. APPLETON AND COMPANY * * * * * Copyright, 1914, by The Red Book Corporation LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FACING PAGE "It all looked very intimate and lover-like" _Frontispiece_ "He bounded forward to meet her" 48 "His solitary table was near theirs in the restaurant" 64 "'He is often in some scrape--something must have culminated to-night'" 224 THE MAN AND THE MOMENT CHAPTER I Michael Arranstoun folded a letter which he had been reading for the seventh time, with a vicious intentness, and then jumping up from the big leather chair in which he had been buried, he said aloud, "Damn!"
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These instincts of seizing what they wanted had gone on in them throughout eleven hundred years and more, and were there until this day, when Michael, the sole representative of this branch of the family, said "Damn!" and kicked a footstool across the room into the grate.
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It was to Père Anselme that she almost made love, with shy sallies at Henry, and merry replies to Madame Imogen.
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He married a girl about five years ago just to make himself safe from another woman whom he had been making love to.
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"I was so stunned with surprise to see you, and overcome with the knowledge that I had just given Henry my word of honor that I would not interfere with him, or make love to the lady we were going to see--a Mrs. Howard, who was married to a ruffian of an American husband shut up in a madhouse or home for inebriates!