[Almayer's Folly by Joseph Conrad]@TWC D-Link book
Almayer's Folly

CHAPTER XII
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Almayer was the last to leave the boat, and together with Ali ran it higher up on the beach.

Then Ali, tired out by the long paddling, laid down in the shade of the canoe, and incontinently fell asleep.

Almayer sat sideways on the gunwale, and with his arms crossed on his breast, looked to the southward upon the sea.
After carefully laying Nina down in the shade of the bushes growing in the middle of the islet, Dain threw himself beside her and watched in silent concern the tears that ran down from under her closed eyelids, and lost themselves in that fine sand upon which they both were lying face to face.

These tears and this sorrow were for him a profound and disquieting mystery.

Now, when the danger was past, why should she grieve?
He doubted her love no more than he would have doubted the fact of his own existence, but as he lay looking ardently in her face, watching her tears, her parted lips, her very breath, he was uneasily conscious of something in her he could not understand.


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