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    Chapter 10

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    CHAPTER X.

    Denis did not dance, but when ragtime came squirting out of the
    pianola in gushes of treacle and hot perfume, in jets of Bengal
    light, then things began to dance inside him. Little black
    nigger corpuscles jigged and drummed in his arteries. He became
    a cage of movement, a walking palais de danse. It was very
    uncomfortable, like the preliminary symptoms of a disease. He
    sat in one of the window-seats, glumly pretending to read.

    At the pianola, Henry Wimbush, smoking a long cigar through a
    tunnelled pillar of amber, trod out the shattering dance music
    with serene patience. Locked together, Gombauld and Anne moved
    with a harmoniousness that made them seem a single creature, two-
    headed and four-legged. Mr. Scogan, solemnly buffoonish,
    shuffled round the room with Mary. Jenny sat in the shadow
    behind the piano, scribbling, so it seemed, in a big red
    notebook. In arm-chairs by the fireplace, Priscilla and Mr.
    Barbecue-Smith discussed higher things, without, apparently,
    being disturbed by the noise on the Lower Plane.

    "Optimism," said Mr. Barbecue-Smith with a tone of finality,
    speaking through strains of the "Wild, Wild Women"--"optimism is
    the opening out of the soul towards the light; it is an expansion
    towards and into God, it is a h-piritual self-unification with
    the Infinite."

    "How true!" sighed Priscilla, nodding the baleful splendours of
    her coiffure.

    "Pessimism, on the other hand, is the contraction of the soul
    towards darkness; it is a focusing of the self upon a point in
    the Lower Plane; it is a h-piritual slavery to mere facts; to
    gross physical phenomena."

    "They're making a wild man of me." The refrain sang itself over
    in Denis's mind. Yes, they were; damn them! A wild man, but not
    wild enough; that was the trouble. Wild inside; raging,
    writhing--yes, "writhing" was the word, writhing with desire.
    But outwardly he was hopelessly tame; outwardly--baa, baa, baa.

    There they were, Anne and Gombauld, moving together as though
    they were a single supple creature. The beast with two backs.
    And he sat in a corner, pretending to read, pretending he didn't
    want to dance, pretending he rather despised dancing. Why? It
    was the baa-baa business again.

    Why was he born with a different face? Why WAS he? Gombauld had

    a face of brass--one of those old, brazen rams that thumped
    against the walls of cities till they fell. He was born with a
    different face--a woolly face.

    The music stopped. The single harmonious creature broke in two.
    Flushed, a little breathless, Anne swayed across the room to the
    pianola, laid her hand on Mr. Wimbush's shoulder.

    "A waltz this time, please, Uncle Henry," she said.

    "A waltz," he
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