[The Titan by Theodore Dreiser]@TWC D-Link book
The Titan

CHAPTER XLII
14/19

"I am getting old." The freshness of the hills in the pale night was sad.
Saddler's, when they reached there after ten, was crowded with the youth and beauty of the vicinity.

Mrs.Carter, who was prepossessing in a ball costume of silver and old rose, expected that Cowperwood would dance with her.

And he did, but all the time his eyes were on Berenice, who was caught up by one youth and another of dapper mien during the progress of the evening and carried rhythmically by in the mazes of the waltz or schottische.

There was a new dance in vogue that involved a gay, running step--kicking first one foot and then the other forward, turning and running backward and kicking again, and then swinging with a smart air, back to back, with one's partner.

Berenice, in her lithe, rhythmic way, seemed to him the soul of spirited and gracious ease--unconscious of everybody and everything save the spirit of the dance itself as a medium of sweet emotion, of some far-off, dreamlike spirit of gaiety.


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