[Conscience by Hector Malot]@TWC D-Link bookConscience CHAPTER IV 4/13
As he turned them over Saniel saw that they were all portraits of women.
Presently he selected two and handed them to Saniel. One represented a woman from thirty-eight to forty years, corpulent, robust, covered with horrible cheap jewelry that she had evidently put on for the purpose of being photographed.
The other was a young girl of about twenty years, pretty, simply and elegantly dressed, whose distinguished and reserved physiognomy was a strong contrast to the first portrait. While Saniel looked at these pictures Caffie studied him, trying to discover the effect they produced. "Now that you have seen them," he said, "let us talk of them a little. If you knew me better, my dear sir, you would know that I am frankness itself, and in business my principle is to tell everything, the good and the bad, so that my clients are responsible for the decisions they make. In reality, there is nothing bad about these two persons, because, if there were, I would not propose them to you.
But there are certain things that my delicacy compels me to point out to you, which I do frankly, feeling certain that a man like you is not the slave of narrow prejudices." An expression of pain passed over his face, and he clasped his jaw with both hands. "You suffer ?" Saniel asked. "Yes, from my teeth, cruelly.
Pardon me that I show it; I know by myself that nothing is more annoying than the sight of the sufferings of others." "At least not to doctors." "Never mind; we will return to my clients.
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