Chap.

 1        1|       said, “I think it is light conduct on your part, my son, to
 2        4|       manner announced that such conduct was scarcely in good taste.
 3        4|        were guilty of disgusting conduct when they made their first
 4        5|         at any rate, knew how to conduct himself! Not so the others,
 5        7|        she decided that Madame’s conduct was rather too much of a
 6        8|     would return to her flat and conduct herself like a sensible
 7        8|       she was so charmed by this conduct that she at length got to
 8        8|         she left him. Her heroic conduct made her tenderly pitiful
 9       10|      listen at the door, as such conduct would scarcely look proper
10       11| scandalized at the chamberlain’s conduct. Whereupon, in order ro
11       12|        he reasoned with her. Her conduct was perfect—she had only
12       12|          perfect—she had only to conduct herself well in order one
13       12|    Scandalized by Count Muffat’s conduct, he had publicly broken
14       13|      soon regretted her discreet conduct, for the moment Labordette
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