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    Chapter 5 - Page 2

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    "Because you promised to explain matters to me. Listen. I am
    certain that, as soon as ever I 'begin to play for myself' (and I
    still have 120 gulden left), I shall win. You can then take of
    me what you require."

    She made a contemptuous grimace.

    "You must not be angry with me," I continued, "for making such
    a proposal. I am so conscious of being only a nonentity in your
    eyes that you need not mind accepting money from me. A gift from
    me could not possibly offend you. Moreover, it was I who lost
    your gulden."

    She glanced at me, but, seeing that I was in an irritable,
    sarcastic mood, changed the subject.

    "My affairs cannot possibly interest you," she said. Still,
    if you DO wish to know, I am in debt. I borrowed some
    money, and must pay it back again. I have a curious, senseless
    idea that I am bound to win at the gaming-tables. Why I think so
    I cannot tell, but I do think so, and with some assurance.
    Perhaps it is because of that assurance that I now find myself
    without any other resource."

    "Or perhaps it is because it is so NECESSARY for you to win. It
    is like a drowning man catching at a straw. You yourself will
    agree that, unless he were drowning he would not mistake a straw
    for the trunk of a tree."

    Polina looked surprised.

    "What?" she said. "Do not you also hope something from it?
    Did you not tell me again and again, two weeks ago, that you
    were certain of winning at roulette if you played here? And did
    you not ask me not to consider you a fool for doing so? Were you
    joking? You cannot have been, for I remember that you spoke with
    a gravity which forbade the idea of your jesting."

    "True," I replied gloomily. "I always felt certain that I
    should win. Indeed, what you say makes me ask myself--Why have my
    absurd, senseless losses of today raised a doubt in my mind?
    Yet I am still positive that, so soon as ever I begin to play
    for myself, I shall infallibly win."

    "And why are you so certain?"

    "To tell the truth, I do not know. I only know that I must
    win--that it is the one resource I have left. Yes, why do I feel
    so assured on the point?"

    "Perhaps because one cannot help winning if one is fanatically
    certain of doing so."


    "Yet I dare wager that you do not think me capable of serious
    feeling in the matter?"

    "I do not care whether you are so or not," answered Polina with
    calm indifference. "Well, since you ask me, I DO doubt your
    ability to take anything seriously. You are capable of worrying,
    but not deeply. You are too ill-regulated and unsettled a person
    for that. But why do you want money? Not a single one of the reasons
    which you have given can be looked upon as serious."

    "By
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