[Nobody’s Man by E. Phillips Oppenheim]@TWC D-Link book
Nobody’s Man

CHAPTER IX
14/30

That is all, I suppose, that any single generation could accomplish.

The views which I have advocated in the _Universal Review_ are the views which will be accepted as a matter of course in fifty years' time.

To-day they seem crude and unmoral, chiefly because the casual reader, especially the British reader, dwells so much upon external effects and thinks so little of the soul that lies below.

Even you, Mr.Tallente, with your passion for order and your distrust of all change in established things, can scarcely consider our marriage laws an entire success ?" Tallente winced a little and Dartrey hastily intervened.
"We want you to remember this," he said.

"The principles which we advocate are condemned before they are considered by men of inherited principles and academic education such as yourself, because you have associated them always with the disciples of anarchy, bolshevism, and other diseased rituals.


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