[Almayer's Folly by Joseph Conrad]@TWC D-Link bookAlmayer's Folly CHAPTER VII 3/35
"The fellow had plenty of time to cross the river," he mused, "and there was so much to be done to-day.
The settling of details for the early start on the morrow; the launching of the boats; the thousand and one finishing touches.
For the expedition must start complete, nothing should be forgotten, nothing should--" The sense of the unwonted solitude grew upon him suddenly, and in the unusual silence he caught himself longing even for the usually unwelcome sound of his wife's voice to break the oppressive stillness which seemed, to his frightened fancy, to portend the advent of some new misfortune. "What has happened ?" he muttered half aloud, as he shuffled in his imperfectly adjusted slippers towards the balustrade of the verandah.
"Is everybody asleep or dead ?" The settlement was alive and very much awake.
It was awake ever since the early break of day, when Mahmat Banjer, in a fit of unheard-of energy, arose and, taking up his hatchet, stepped over the sleeping forms of his two wives and walked shivering to the water's edge to make sure that the new house he was building had not floated away during the night. The house was being built by the enterprising Mahmat on a large raft, and he had securely moored it just inside the muddy point of land at the junction of the two branches of the Pantai so as to be out of the way of drifting logs that would no doubt strand on the point during the freshet. Mahmat walked through the wet grass saying bourrouh, and cursing softly to himself the hard necessities of active life that drove him from his warm couch into the cold of the morning.
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