[The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad]@TWC D-Link bookThe Secret Agent CHAPTER XI 40/112
He was not a lodger.
The lodger was Mr Verloc, indolent, and keeping late hours, sleepily jocular of a morning from under his bed-clothes, but with gleams of infatuation in his heavy lidded eyes, and always with some money in his pockets.
There was no sparkle of any kind on the lazy stream of his life.
It flowed through secret places.
But his barque seemed a roomy craft, and his taciturn magnanimity accepted as a matter of course the presence of passengers. Mrs Verloc pursued the visions of seven years' security for Stevie, loyally paid for on her part; of security growing into confidence, into a domestic feeling, stagnant and deep like a placid pool, whose guarded surface hardly shuddered on the occasional passage of Comrade Ossipon, the robust anarchist with shamelessly inviting eyes, whose glance had a corrupt clearness sufficient to enlighten any woman not absolutely imbecile. A few seconds only had elapsed since the last word had been uttered aloud in the kitchen, and Mrs Verloc was staring already at the vision of an episode not more than a fortnight old.
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