[An Outcast of the Islands by Joseph Conrad]@TWC D-Link bookAn Outcast of the Islands CHAPTER FIVE 3/30
Lakamba stirred slightly without changing his position or taking his eyes off the glowing coals, on which they had been fixed in dreamy immobility. "Yes," went on Babalatchi, in a low monotone, as if pursuing aloud a train of thought that had its beginning in the silent contemplation of the unstable nature of earthly greatness--"yes.
He has been rich and strong, and now he lives on alms: old, feeble, blind, and without companions, but for his daughter.
The Rajah Patalolo gives him rice, and the pale woman--his daughter--cooks it for him, for he has no slave." "I saw her from afar," muttered Lakamba, disparagingly.
"A she-dog with white teeth, like a woman of the Orang-Putih." "Right, right," assented Babalatchi; "but you have not seen her near. Her mother was a woman from the west; a Baghdadi woman with veiled face. Now she goes uncovered, like our women do, for she is poor and he is blind, and nobody ever comes near them unless to ask for a charm or a blessing and depart quickly for fear of his anger and of the Rajah's hand.
You have not been on that side of the river ?" "Not for a long time.
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