Nostromo: A Tale of the Seaboard
to leave his ship, in the hope of securing a friend and
defender for the girls. The wife of old Giorgio was aware of her precarious lu-alth. and was haunted by the fear of her aged husband's loneliness and the un- protected state of the children. She had wanted to annex that apparently quiet and steady young man, tionate and pliable, an orphan from his tenderest age, as he had told her, with no ties in Italy except an uncle, owner and master of a felucca, from whose ill-usage he had run away before he was fourteen. He hal seemed to her courageous, a hard worker, deter- mined to make his way in the world. From gratitude ami the ties of habit he would become like a son to herself and Giorgio; and then, who knows, when Linda haM grown up. . . . Ten years difference between hus- band and wife was not so much. Her own great man was nearly twenty years older than herself. Gian' Battista was an attractive young fellow, besides; at- ive to men, women, and children, just by that profound quietness of personality hich, like a serene twilight, rendered more seductive the promise of his vigorous form and the resolution of his conduct. Old Giorgio, in profound ignorance of his wife's views and hopes, had a great regard for his young countryman. "A man ought not to be tame," he uso.l to tell her, quoting the Spanish proverb in de- fence of the splendid capataz. She was growing jeal- ous of his success. He was escaping from her, she feared. She was practical, and he seemed to her to be an absurd spendthrift of these qualities which made him so valuable. He got too little for them. He
scattered them with both hands among too many
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