* * * * *

Marlow got up to get another cigar. The night was getting on to what I

may call its deepest hour, the hour most favourable to evil purposes of

men's hate, despair or greed--to whatever can whisper into their ears the

unlawful counsels of protest against things that are; the hour of ill-

omened silence and chill and stagnation, the hour when the criminal plies

his trade and the victim of sleeplessness reaches the lowest depth of

dreadful discouragement; the hour before the first sight of dawn. I know

it, because while Marlow was crossing the room I looked at the clock on

the mantelpiece. He however never looked that way though it is possible

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that he, too, was aware of the passage of time. He sat down heavily.

"Our friend Powell," he began again, "was very anxious that I should

understand the topography of that cabin. I was interested more by its

moral atmosphere, that tension of falsehood, of desperate acting, which

tainted the pure sea-atmosphere into which the magnanimous Anthony had

carried off his conquest and--well--his self-conquest too, trying to act

at the same time like a beast of prey, a pure spirit and the "most

generous of men." Too big an order clearly because he was nothing of a

monster but just a common mortal, a little more self-willed and

self-confident than most, may be, both in his roughness and in his

delicacy.

As to the delicacy of Mr. Powell's proceedings I'll say nothing. He

found a sort of depraved excitement in watching an unconscious man--and

such an attractive and mysterious man as Captain Anthony at that. He

wanted another peep at him. He surmised that the captain must come back

soon because of the glass two-thirds full and also of the book put down

so brusquely. God knows what sudden pang had made Anthony jump up so. I

am convinced he used reading as an opiate against the pain of his

magnanimity which like all abnormal growths was gnawing at his healthy

substance with cruel persistence. Perhaps he had rushed into his cabin

simply to groan freely in absolute and delicate secrecy. At any rate he

tarried there. And young Powell would have grown weary and compunctious

at last if it had not become manifest to him that he had not been alone

in the highly incorrect occupation of watching the movements of Captain

Anthony.

Powell explained to me that no sound did or perhaps could reach him from

the saloon. The first sign--and we must remember that he was using his

eyes for all they were worth--was an unaccountable movement of the

curtain. It was wavy and very slight; just perceptible in fact to the

sharpened faculties of a secret watcher; for it can't be denied that our

wits are much more alert when engaged in wrong-doing (in which one

mustn't be found out) than in a righteous occupation.




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