"What, you didn't notice how distressed he became when you mentioned her," went on M. de Charlus, who liked to show that he had experience of women, and spoke of the sentiment they inspire as naturally as if it was what he himself habitually felt. But a certain equivocally paternal tone in addressing all young men - in spite of his exclusive affection for Morel - gave the lie to the womanizing views which he expressed. "Oh! these children," he said in a shrill, mincing, sing-song voice, "one has to teach them everything, they're as innocent as newborn babes, they can't even tell when a man is in love with a woman. I was more fly than that at your age," he added, for he liked to use the expressions of the underworld, perhaps because they appeared to him, perhaps so as not to appear, by avoiding them, to admit that he consorted with people whose current vocabulary they were.
Marcel Proust, Cities of the Plain, p. 1127
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