| PART THIRD: THE LIGHTHOUSE
12. CHAPTER TWELVE
 (continued)Fiercely whiskered and grave, a shade less supple in his walk,
the vigour and symmetry of his powerful limbs lost in the
 vulgarity of a brown tweed suit, made by Jews in the slums of
 London, and sold by the clothing department of the Compania
 Anzani, Captain Fidanza was seen in the streets of Sulaco
 attending to his business, as usual, that trip. And, as usual, he
 allowed it to get about that he had made a great profit on his
 cargo. It was a cargo of salt fish, and Lent was approaching. He
 was seen in tramcars going to and fro between the town and the
 harbour; he talked with people in a cafe or two in his measured,
 steady voice.  Captain Fidanza was seen. The generation that
 would know nothing of the famous ride to Cayta was not born yet.
 
 Nostromo, the miscalled Capataz de Cargadores, had made for
himself, under his rightful name, another public existence, but
 modified by the new conditions, less picturesque, more difficult
 to keep up in the increased size and varied population of Sulaco,
 the progressive capital of the Occidental Republic.
 
 Captain Fidanza, unpicturesque, but always a little mysterious,
was recognized quite sufficiently under the lofty glass and iron
 roof of the Sulaco railway station.  He took a local train, and
 got out in Rincon, where he visited the widow of the Cargador who
 had died of his wounds (at the dawn of the New Era, like Don Jose
 Avellanos) in the patio of the Casa Gould. He consented to sit
 down and drink a glass of cool lemonade in the hut, while the
 woman, standing up, poured a perfect torrent of words to which he
 did not listen.  He left some money with her, as usual. The
 orphaned children, growing up and well schooled, calling him
 uncle, clamoured for his blessing. He gave that, too; and in the
 doorway paused for a moment to look at the flat face of the San
 Tome mountain with a faint frown.  This slight contraction of his
 bronzed brow casting a marked tinge of severity upon his usual
 unbending expression, was observed at the Lodge which he attended
 --but went away before the banquet. He wore it at the meeting of
 some good comrades, Italians and Occidentals, assembled in his
 honour under the presidency of an indigent, sickly, somewhat
 hunchbacked little photographer, with a white face and a
 magnanimous soul dyed crimson by a bloodthirsty hate of all
 capitalists, oppressors of the two hemispheres. The heroic
 Giorgio Viola, old revolutionist, would have understood nothing
 of his opening speech; and Captain Fidanza, lavishly generous as
 usual to some poor comrades, made no speech at all. He had
 listened, frowning, with his mind far away, and walked off
 unapproachable, silent, like a man full of cares.
 
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