Page:Thea von Harbou Metropolis eng 1927.pdf/74

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METROPOLIS who likes little children. He laid the hand of the Borgia, with the suspiciously blue shimmering nails on Slim's arm.

«The intoxication of the others-Sir, do you know what that means? Not of one other-no, of the multitude which rolls itseU into a lump. the rolled up intoxication of the multitude gives Maohee its friends .. ,.. "Has Maohee many friends, September?" The proprietor of Yoshiwara grinned, apocalyptically. "Sir. in this house there is a round room. You shall see it.

It has not its like. It is huilt like a winding seashell, like a mammoth shell, in the windings of which thunders the surf of seven oceans; in these windings people crouch. so densely crowded that their faces appear as one face. No one knows the other, yet they are all friends. They all fever. They are all pale with expectation. They have all clasped hands. The trembling of those who sit right down at the bottom of the shell runs rigbt through the windings of the mammoth shell, right up to those, who, from the gleaming top of the spiral, send out their own trembling towards it .. :'

September gulped for breath. Sweat stood like a fine chain of beads on his brow. An international smile of insanity parted his prating mouth. "Go on, Septemberl" said Slim. "On?-On?-Suddenly the rim of the shell begins to tum ... gently ... ah how gently, to music such as would bring a tenfold murderer-bandit to sobs and his judges to pardon him on the scaffold-to music on hearing which deadly enemies kiss, beggars believe themselves to be kings. the hungry forget their hunger-to such music the shell revolves around its stationary heart. until it seems to free itself from the ground and, hovering, to revolve about itself. The people scream-not loudly, no, nol-they scream like the birds that bathe in the sea. The twisted hands are clenched to fists. The hodies rock in one rhythm. Then comes the first stammer of: Maohee. . . . The stammer swells, becomes waves of spray, becomes a spring tide. The revolving shell roars: Maohee . . . Maohee . . . I It is as though a little Bame must rest on everyone's hair parting like St. Ehn's fire ... Maohee ... Maoheel They call on the;;

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