Excerpt from The Corsars: Or, Love and Lucre Carl had lived mostly in those small French towns peopled by a shameless, shabby society Of British defalcators; and such families and boarding-houses and ream'ons surrounded him as are usually described by the term shady. And in these abodes Of vitiated talent, battered reputation, and all uncleanness, Carl had giown. Up, when he ought to have been playing cricket and football in England. And so he came to England at eighteen, with the cynicism and blasphemy Of a French comic journalist on his lips, a handsome thin face, with the expression of eight-and twenty, a keen brain, a great appetite, and a light pocket. He reverenced neither man nor woman - nor anything else, certainly not children.
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