[Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link bookEight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon CHAPTER XVIII 2/10
For the rest, we must still watch!" It seemed that from this day Torres desired to keep himself more reserved.
He did not seek to intrude on the family, and was even less assiduous toward Minha.
There seemed a relief in the situation of which all, save perhaps Joam Garral, felt the gravity. On the evening of the same day they left on the right the island of Baroso, formed by a furo of that name, and Lake Manaori, which is fed by a confused series of petty tributaries. The night passed without incident, though Joam Garral had advised them to watch with great care. On the morrow, the 20th of August, the pilot, who kept near the right bank on account of the uncertain eddies on the left, entered between the bank and the islands. Beyond this bank the country was dotted with large and small lakes, much as those of Calderon, Huarandeina, and other black-watered lagoons.
This water system marks the approach of the Rio Negro, the most remarkable of all the tributaries of the Amazon.
In reality the main river still bore the name of the Solimoens, and it is only after the junction of the Rio Negro that it takes the name which has made it celebrated among the rivers of the globe. During this day the raft had to be worked under curious conditions. The arm followed by the pilot, between Calderon Island and the shore, was very narrow, although it appeared sufficiently large.
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