the night. He is not met with faces, but with carnal masks of his own superstitious design. Indeed, the people Marlow sees are not people, they are "atrocious phantom[s]" (HoD 135), "dark human shapes" (HoD 136), "swift shadows" (HoD 137), or, often, "figures" (HoD 93), which "mostly black and naked, move about like ants" (HoD 79). They sound like animals, monsters, ghosts and demons. This passage…
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