Ninian leant forward and tapped the table with his knuckles. "I say that lust is the motor force of the world," he said, "and I think you might let me finish my sentences, Gilbert. You are so eager to vent your own views that you won't let any one else vent his...."
"What's the good of venting your views if they're wrong, damn it!" said Gilbert.
"Well, let me finish venting 'em anyhow. Assuming that I'm right, I say you should treat lust exactly as you treat the circulation of your blood: don't fuss about it. It's a natural function, neither beautiful nor ugly. It's just there, and that's all about it. The fellow who dithers about it as if he'd invented a new philosophy on the day he first slept with a woman, is a dirty, neurotic ass. So is the fellow who pretends that there's no such thing as sex in the world. Male and female created He them, and I can tell you, He jolly well knew what He was up to!"
Roger flicked the ash from his cigarette and coughed slightly.
"I think," he said, "we talk too much about these things. They pass the time, of course, but not very profitably. Whatever the Universal Motive may be ... I'm talking, of course, without prejudice ... it'll express itself in complete disregard of our feelings and views. I have had no experience of women otherwise than in the capacity of a mother, several aunts, a nurse, a number of cousins, and also some waitresses in restaurants...."
"Roger's never kissed a woman in a sexual sense in his life," Gilbert interrupted.
"I have never seen the necessity of it," Roger said.
"But aren't you curious to know what it's like? After all, it's a form of experience," Henry asked, looking at Roger with curiosity.
"Having scarlet fever is a form of experience, but I don't wish to know what it's like," Roger answered.
"My God, you are a prig, Roger!" said Gilbert simply.