| 0. Dedication and Author's Note (continued)But mainly Nostromo is what he is because I received the
inspiration for him in my early days from a Mediterranean sailor.
 Those who have read certain pages of mine will see at once what I
 mean when I say that Dominic, the padrone of the Tremolino, might
 under given circumstances have been a Nostromo. At any rate
 Dominic would have understood the younger man perfectly--if
 scornfully. He and I were engaged together in a rather absurd
 adventure, but the absurdity does not matter. It is a real
 satisfaction to think that in my very young days there must,
 after all, have been something in me worthy to command that man's
 half-bitter fidelity, his half-ironic devotion. Many of
 Nostromo's speeches I have heard first in Dominic's voice.  His
 hand on the tiller and his fearless eyes roaming the horizon from
 within the monkish hood shadowing his face, he would utter the
 usual exordium of his remorseless wisdom: "Vous autres
 gentilhommes!" in a caustic tone that hangs on my ear yet. Like
 Nostromo!  "You hombres finos!" Very much like Nostromo.  But
 Dominic the Corsican nursed a certain pride of ancestry from
 which my Nostromo is free; for Nostromo's lineage had to be more
 ancient still. He is a man with the weight of countless
 generations behind him and no parentage to boast of. . . . Like
 the People.
 
 In his firm grip on the earth he inherits, in his improvidence
and generosity, in his lavishness with his gifts, in his manly
 vanity, in the obscure sense of his greatness and in his faithful
 devotion with something despairing as well as desperate in its
 impulses, he is a Man of the People, their very own unenvious
 force, disdaining to lead but ruling from within. Years
 afterwards, grown older as the famous Captain Fidanza, with a
 stake in the country, going about his many affairs followed by
 respectful glances in the modernized streets of Sulaco, calling
 on the widow of the cargador, attending the Lodge, listening in
 unmoved silence to anarchist speeches at the meeting, the
 enigmatical patron of the new revolutionary agitation, the
 trusted, the wealthy comrade Fidanza with the knowledge of his
 moral ruin locked up in his breast, he remains essentially a Man
 of the People. In his mingled love and scorn of life and in the
 bewildered conviction of having been betrayed, of dying betrayed
 he hardly knows by what or by whom, he is still of the People,
 their undoubted Great Man--with a private history of his own.
 
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