1. Well...
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2. if it isn't my good friend,
The Poet.
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3. I can't say I'm surprised
to find you here.
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4. Whose grave are
you visiting today?
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5. Who's there?
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6. Weeping at the same
grave over again?
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7. Why didn't you choose
any of the others?
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8. Ligeia, Annabel?
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9. Or perhaps Berenice?
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10. So sure Virginia
was going to be the pick
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11. for today's tortured journey.
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12. There's no denying
your affection for her.
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13. What was that poem of yours?
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14. "It was many and many a year ago
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15. “That a maiden there lived
whom you may know
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16. “And this maiden she lived
with no other thought...
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17. “Than to love and
be loved by me."
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18. What am I doing?
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19. I recite poetry with a statue!
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20. I must be drunk.
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21. Or mad.
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22. Or both.
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23. I am hallucinating.
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24. Should I answer this one
with another of your stanzas?
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25. "All that we see or seem
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26. “ls but a dream
within a dream..."
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27. Still you have no
clue to who I am.
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28. I am your shadow, your soul.
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29. The object of your obsession.
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30. Are you mad?
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31. My obsession?
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32. Recognize me now, Poe?
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33. Are you feeling lonely?
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34. Longing again for the departed?
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35. Silence!
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36. I came here for solitude.
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37. Not loneliness.
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38. A great subject
for your writings.
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39. It is not obsession
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40. but rather inspiration
which drives my writing.
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41. I wouldn't define it that way.
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42. Remember Roderick Usher?
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43. His compulsive obsession for
his departed sister Madeline
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44. caused such a nervous agitation
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45. that it lead him
to an early demise.
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46. It was brotherly love, not
obsession.
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47. Obsession, superstition,
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48. unrequited love.
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49. Who do you want to convince?
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50. It was a magical place
that filled my childhood
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51. with visions
to stir the imagination.
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52. And now, during the whole
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53. of a dull, dark,
and soundless clay
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54. in the autumn of another year,
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55. I was alone, passing through
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56. a singularly dreary
tract of country;
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57. and at length found myself
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58. within reach of the
melancholy House of Usher.
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59. I know not how it was;
but with my first glimpse
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60. of the house after so long,
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61. an unexpected sense
of insufferable gloom
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62. pervaded my spirit.
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63. What was it?
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64. What unnerved me so
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65. in the contemplation
of the House of Usher?
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66. Its proprietor, Roderick Usher,
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67. had been one of my boon
companions in boyhood;
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68. but many years had elapsed
since our last meeting.
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69. His letter, however,
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70. had lately reached me
in a distant part
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71. of the country.
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72. I scanned more narrowly
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73. the real aspect of the building.
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74. Its principal feature
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75. seemed to be that
of an excessive antiquity.
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76. The writer spoke of
acute bodily illness,
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77. of a mental disorder
which oppressed him,
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78. and brought an
earnest desire to see me,
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79. as his best,
and indeed his only
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80. personal friend, in an attempt
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81. to alleviate some of his malady;
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82. and I, accordingly,
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83. obeyed forthwith
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84. what I still considered
a very singular
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85. and haunting summons.
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86. I gazed upon him with a feeling
half of pity, half of awe.
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87. Frederick!
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88. My dear friend,
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89. I have after all this time
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90. been waiting for your arrival!
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91. I at first thought it to be
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92. an overdone cordiality.
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93. It was with difficulty
that I could bring myself
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94. to admit the identity of
the man being before me
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95. with the companion
of my early boyhood.
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96. He entered into what
he conceived to be
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97. the nature of his malady.
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98. The most insipid food
was alone endurable.
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99. The odors of all flowers
proved oppressive;
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100. his eyes were tortured
by even a faint light.
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101. And there were but
peculiar sounds
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102. which inspired him with horror.
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103. I began to question
my worthiness
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104. of being present for my friend,
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105. who now existed in a world
of which I held no key.
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106. I shall perish!
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107. I dread the events
of the future!
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108. I feel that the period
will sooner or later arrive
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109. when I must abandon
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110. life and reason together,
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111. in some struggle
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112. with the grim phantasm...
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113. fear.
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114. But what do you fear, Roderick?
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115. I must know what
is it that torments
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116. your every moment.
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117. I admit that
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118. much of the peculiar gloom which
afflicts me could be traced
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119. to a severe
and long continued illness.
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120. I speak of my tenderly
beloved sister, Madeline.
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121. My sole companion
for so many long years,
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122. my last
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123. and only relative on earth.
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124. Roderick spoke with
such bitterness,
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125. which made me shudder.
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126. And yet, I could tell
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127. of his complete devotion
towards his sister.
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128. Madeline...
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129. Her decease
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130. will leave me as the last
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131. of the ancient
race of the Ushers.
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132. His voice trembled
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133. as he recounted how even in
her youth, Madeline would fear
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134. the outside world.
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135. Roderick loved his sister
for her purity,
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136. but the foreboding doom
was forever present.
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137. The Usher's life of loneliness
will mean there will be no heir.
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138. But on the closing in
of the evening of my arrival
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139. at the house,
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140. she succumbed
to the prostrating power
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141. of the destroyer.
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142. She is dead!
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143. Madeline has died!
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144. She has left me!
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145. At the request of
Roderick Usher,
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146. I personally aided him
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147. in the arrangements
for the temporary entombment.
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148. And now,
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149. some days of bitter grief
having elapsed,
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150. an observable change
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151. came over the features of the
mental disorder of my friend.
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152. At times, again, I was
obliged to resolve all
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153. into the mere inexplicable
vagaries of madness.
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154. For I beheld him
gazing upon vacancy
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155. for long hours,
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156. in an attitude
of the profoundest attention,
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157. as if listening to some
imaginary sound.
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158. It was no wonder
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159. that his terrifying condition
was creeping upon me,
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160. the wild influence
of his fantastic
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161. yet impressive superstitions.
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162. And you have not seen it?
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163. Then you shall!
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164. You must!
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165. You must behold this!
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166. I hear it, and have heard it.
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167. We have put her
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168. living
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169. in the tomb!
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170. I now tell you
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171. that I heard
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172. her first feeble movements
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173. in the hollow coffin.
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174. I heard them many,
many days ago.
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175. Yet I dared not,
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176. I dared not speak!
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177. The rending of her coffin,
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178. and the grating of the
iron hinges of her prison,
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179. and her struggles
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180. within the coppered
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181. archway of the vault!
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182. Be calm.
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183. It is the storm
that draws breath,
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184. playing tricks on us both!
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185. Is she not hurrying
to upbraid me for my haste?
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186. Have I not heard
her footsteps on the stairs?
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187. Do I not distinguish that heavy
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188. and horrible
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189. beating
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190. of her heart?
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191. Madman!
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192. MADMAN!
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193. I tell you that she now
stands without the door!
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194. The vision before
me will stay burnt
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195. into my very soul and haunt me
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196. to the end of my days.
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197. Where I gazed,
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198. the House once stood.
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199. I saw the mighty walls rushing
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200. as under there was a long
tumultuous shouting sound,
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201. like the voice of
a thousand waters
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202. and the deep and
dank tarn at my feet
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203. closed sullenly and silently
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204. over the fragments
of the House of Usher.
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205. Bravo!
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206. In your own words he became
a victim of the very terrors
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207. he had anticipated.
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208. Much like you.
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209. Don't you wish you were dead?
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210. Why should I? I want to live.
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211. I have more stories to tell.
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212. Your time is up in your world.
You have nothing to lose,
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213. no one to love.
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214. Stop feeling guilty
for other people's death.
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215. Virginia died in spite
of your care or your love.
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216. Your mother succumbed
to my power
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217. leaving you helplessly alone.
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218. I was so young when she died...
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219. I was denied even the
memory of her face.
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220. Guilt never leads to any good.
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221. If anything you are haunted...
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222. Haunted by sorrow,
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223. guilty not of a crime, but of
the inability to stop me...
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224. If anything, I am guilty of
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225. giving my readers
what they want.
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226. A glimpse of redemption,
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227. stories with a moral
where justice always triumphs.
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228. Is this what you mean?
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229. It is impossible to say how
first the idea entered my brain;
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230. but once conceived,
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231. it haunted me day and night.
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232. Object,
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233. there was none,
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234. I loved the old man.
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235. He had never wronged me.
He had never given me insult,
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236. and for his money,
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237. I had no desire.
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238. I think
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239. it was his eye!
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240. Yes, that was it!
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241. One of his eyes resembled
that of a vulture.
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242. I made up my mind
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243. to take the life of the old man,
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244. and thus rid myself
of the eye forever.
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245. You should have seen
how wisely I proceeded,
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246. with what caution and foresight
I went to work.
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247. And every night, about midnight,
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248. I turned the latch of
his door and opened it.
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249. And then, when my
head was well in the room,
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250. I undid the lantern cautiously,
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251. oh, so cautiously.
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252. I undid it just so much
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253. that a single thin ray
fell upon the vulture eye.
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254. But I found the
eye always closed;
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255. and so
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256. it was impossible
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257. to do the work;
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258. for it was not the old man
who vexed me,
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259. but his Evil Eye.
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260. I was never kinder
to the old man than during
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261. the whole week
before I killed him.
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262. And this I did for
seven long nights.
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263. Every night, just at midnight.
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264. But I found the
eye always closed.
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265. Upon the eighth night
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266. I was more than usually cautious
in opening the door.
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267. A watch's minute hand moves
more quickly than did mine.
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268. When I was about to
open the lantern,
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269. my thumb slipped
upon the tin fastening.
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270. And the old man sprang up in bed
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271. crying out: Who's there?
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272. He had been trying
to fancy them causeless.
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273. He had been saying to himself:
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274. "it is nothing
but the wind in the chimney.
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275. It is only a mouse
crossing the floor."
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276. Then, there came to my ears
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277. a low, dull, quick sound
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278. such as the watch makes
when enveloped in cotton.
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279. I knew that sound well.
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280. It was the beating
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281. of the old man's heart.
Copy !req
282. Meantime the hellish tattoo
of the heart increased.
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283. It grew quicker and quicker,
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284. louder and louder,
every instant.
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285. The old man's hour had come!
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286. He shrieked once, only once.
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287. The old man was dead.
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288. His eye would
trouble me no more.
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289. If still you think me mad,
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290. you will think so no longer
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291. when I describe
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292. the wise precautions I took
for the concealment of the body.
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293. First of all I
dismembered the corpse,
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294. I then took up three planks
from the flooring
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295. and deposited all
between the scantlings.
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296. I then replaced the boards
so cleverly, so cunningly,
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297. that no human eye could have
detected anything wrong.
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298. There entered three men,
who introduced themselves
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299. as officers of the police.
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300. A shriek had been heard by
a neighbor during the night
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301. and they had been deputed
to search the premises.
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302. I bid the gentleman welcome.
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303. The shriek, I said,
was my own in a dream.
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304. The old man, I mentioned,
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305. was absent in the country.
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306. The officers were satisfied,
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307. my manner had convinced them.
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308. But, ere long,
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309. I felt myself getting pale
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310. and wished them gone.
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311. My head ached
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312. and I fancied a
ringing in my ears.
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313. I found that the noise
was not within my ears.
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314. I gasped for breath,
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315. and yet the officers
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316. heard it not.
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317. Why would they not be gone?
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318. Oh God!
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319. What could I do?
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320. Was it possible they heard not?
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321. No! No!
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322. They heard;
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323. they suspected!
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324. THEY KNEW!
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325. They were making mockery
Copy !req
326. of my horror.
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327. "Villains!"
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328. I shrieked, "I admit the deed!
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329. "Tear up the planks!
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330. "Here,
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331. "here!
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332. "It is the beating
Copy !req
333. "of his hideous heart!"
Copy !req
334. So you presume
everyone is guilty
Copy !req
335. of some unfathomable crime?
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336. A crime that should
remain unpunished?
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337. I feel flattered.
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338. Your obsession with death is to
my ears like a sweet love song.
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339. What do you mean, obsession?
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340. Come with me,
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341. don't delay for another second.
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342. Being alive in this world
brings you more unbearable pain
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343. and suffering than those
who wish to sleep forever
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344. even as you try to extend life
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345. beyond my sweet embrace.
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346. I remember vaguely,
once I wrote about a doctor.
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347. Someone who challenged you.
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348. My attention, for
the last three years,
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349. had been repeatedly drawn
to the subject of Mesmerism.
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350. In Boston, a 13-year-old
child under hypnosis
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351. could diagnose his own illness,
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352. one which his own doctors
could not determine.
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353. And in India, a paraplegic,
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354. placed in a similar
hypnotic state,
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355. managed to take some steps!
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356. Imagine, Mr. Valdemar,
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357. the progress that Mesmerism
offers to science!
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358. My friend,
I respect your enthusiasm,
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359. but for my part, I can't disavow
Copy !req
360. my skepticism
about the future of hypnosis.
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361. Our table is waiting for
us at the Black Swan.
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362. In addition, it
seems that no person
Copy !req
363. has as yet been mesmerized
in articulo mortis.
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364. What a great testimony
will that be,
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365. witnessing the transition
between life and death.
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366. My friend, if you promise
to change the subject,
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367. I am ready to volunteer myself
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368. to this experiment
at the time of my death.
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369. Really?
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370. Yes, but rest assured,
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371. I have no intention
of dying anytime soon!
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372. It is now rather more
than seven months
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373. since last time I talked
with M. Valdemar.
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374. Phthisis has attacked my lungs.
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375. They give me a few
months at most.
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376. M. Valdemar,
do you remember your promise?
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377. I beg your pardon?
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378. Yes, the idea may seem absurd,
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379. but think of all you
have to gain now.
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380. No...
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381. I don't know.
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382. Allow me to consider it.
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383. Valdemar, you are condemned.
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384. You have no family or home.
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385. What have you to lose?
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386. Promise me you will
think about it.
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387. Very well,
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388. lam in your hands.
Copy !req
389. It was finally arranged between
us that he would send for me
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390. about twenty-four
hours before the period
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391. announced by his physicians
Copy !req
392. as that of his decease.
Copy !req
393. I received this note
within half an hour
Copy !req
394. after it was written,
and in fifteen minutes more,
Copy !req
395. I was in the dying
man's chamber.
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396. It was about five
minutes to eight when,
Copy !req
397. taking the patient's hand,
Copy !req
398. I begged him to state
as distinctly as he could
Copy !req
399. to Dr. I whether he
was entirely willing
Copy !req
400. that I should make the
experiment of mesmerizing him
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401. in his then condition.
Copy !req
402. Yes, I wish to be mesmerized.
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403. I fear you have
deferred it too long.
Copy !req
404. At five minutes before eleven,
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405. I perceived unequivocal signs
of the mesmeric influence.
Copy !req
406. When I had accomplished this,
it was fully midnight,
Copy !req
407. and I requested the
gentlemen present
Copy !req
408. to examine
M. Valdemar's condition.
Copy !req
409. The patient's extremities
Copy !req
410. were of an icy coldness.
Copy !req
411. Still, the general appearance
was not that of death.
Copy !req
412. Monsieur Valdemar,
Copy !req
413. are you asleep?
Copy !req
414. Yes,
Copy !req
415. I am asleep now.
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416. Do not wake me!
Copy !req
417. Let me die so!
Copy !req
418. It was now the opinion,
or rather the wish,
Copy !req
419. of the physicians,
Copy !req
420. that M. Valdemar should be
suffered to remain undisturbed
Copy !req
421. in his present apparently
tranquil condition,
Copy !req
422. until death should supervene,
Copy !req
423. and this,
it was now generally agreed,
Copy !req
424. must take place
within a few minutes.
Copy !req
425. I concluded, however,
to speak to him
Copy !req
426. ONCE more.
Copy !req
427. Monsieur Valdemar,
do you still sleep?
Copy !req
428. HO.
Copy !req
429. I have been sleeping
Copy !req
430. and now...
Copy !req
431. Now...
Copy !req
432. I am dead.
Copy !req
433. It was evident that,
so far, death,
Copy !req
434. or what is usually termed death,
Copy !req
435. had been arrested
by the mesmeric process.
Copy !req
436. The experiment is completed.
Copy !req
437. But... are we sure he's dead?
Copy !req
438. You've heard it like me, right?
Copy !req
439. Is your scientific mind
restricted
Copy !req
440. by that which you can only see
or hear yourself?
Copy !req
441. From this period
until the close of last week,
Copy !req
442. an interval of
nearly seven months,
Copy !req
443. we continued to make daily calls
at M. Valdemar's house.
Copy !req
444. I managed to convince my
colleagues to leave M. Valdemar
Copy !req
445. in this state and
to monitor him.
Copy !req
446. First, we confined ourselves
to simple daily observations.
Copy !req
447. But soon, we were obliged
to face the facts.
Copy !req
448. Gentlemen,
we are not advancing our work.
Copy !req
449. These observations
are too superficial.
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450. You still wish to
dissect the subject
Copy !req
451. like a laboratory animal.
Copy !req
452. Without going that far,
Copy !req
453. we can engage in
some light tests.
Copy !req
454. You are mistaken! I...
Copy !req
455. What are you suggesting, Dr. L?
Copy !req
456. Well, we could always...
Copy !req
457. let it be.
Copy !req
458. There is nothing further
to be done.
Copy !req
459. All of the subject's vital
functions are inert.
Copy !req
460. He has stopped breathing, his
heart no longer beats, yet...
Copy !req
461. in seven months, decomposition
has not attacked his body
Copy !req
462. and no treatment has
cured his illness.
Copy !req
463. Medically, M. Valdemar is dead.
Copy !req
464. Let's wake him up.
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465. You're talking nonsense!
Copy !req
466. These thoughts are sacrilege!
Insanity!
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467. You would not agree
to put him in this state
Copy !req
468. and now you refuse
to release him from it?
Copy !req
469. I...
Copy !req
470. Let it go my friend,
Dr. P is right.
Copy !req
471. M. Valdemar is legally dead.
Copy !req
472. All we can do now
is to offer him a decent burial.
Copy !req
473. It was on Friday last
that we finally resolved
Copy !req
474. to make the experiment
of awakening,
Copy !req
475. or attempting to awaken him.
Copy !req
476. For the purpose of
relieving M. Valdemar
Copy !req
477. from the mesmeric trance,
Copy !req
478. I made use of the
customary passes.
Copy !req
479. These, for a time,
were unsuccessful.
Copy !req
480. M. Valdemar,
Copy !req
481. can you explain to us what your
feelings or wishes are now?
Copy !req
482. For God's sake!
Copy !req
483. Quick! Quick!
Copy !req
484. Put me to sleep!
Copy !req
485. Or Waken me! Quick!
Copy !req
486. I say to you that I am dead!
Copy !req
487. Dead!
Copy !req
488. Dead!
Copy !req
489. For what really
occurred, however,
Copy !req
490. it is quite impossible
that any living human
Copy !req
491. could have been prepared.
Copy !req
492. And as I can see, he lost...
Copy !req
493. lost to me.
Copy !req
494. He was so close...
Copy !req
495. so close to sparing M. Valdemar
from your fatal embrace.
Copy !req
496. Was that a crime?
Copy !req
497. A crime against fate.
Copy !req
498. And your sentence
was a life of endless sorrow.
Copy !req
499. Stop with your
tortured mind games.
Copy !req
500. There is nothing worse than
imagining your own death.
Copy !req
501. Isn't it?
Copy !req
502. Nothing worse than
to fear eternity.
Copy !req
503. I wrote a story once.
Copy !req
504. A tale about someone
who relived the hell
Copy !req
505. of dying a thousand deaths.
Copy !req
506. Perhaps a mirror where you
saw yourself reflected,
Copy !req
507. every image
Copy !req
508. a different death.
Copy !req
509. I was sick...
Copy !req
510. sick to death with
that long agony.
Copy !req
511. And when they unbound me, I felt
that my senses were leaving me.
Copy !req
512. The sentence...
Copy !req
513. the dread sentence of death...
Copy !req
514. was the last of
distinct accentuation
Copy !req
515. which reached my ears.
Copy !req
516. After that,
Copy !req
517. the sound of the inquisitorial
voices seemed merged
Copy !req
518. into one dreamy
indeterminate hum.
Copy !req
519. I heard no more.
Copy !req
520. Yet, for a while,
Copy !req
521. I saw the lips of the judges.
Copy !req
522. I saw them pronouncing
the syllables of my name,
Copy !req
523. and I shuddered
because I heard no sound.
Copy !req
524. The tall candles sank
into nothingness;
Copy !req
525. their flames went out.
Copy !req
526. The blackness of darkness
supervened.
Copy !req
527. All sensations appeared
Copy !req
528. swallowed up in a mad
rushing descent as of the soul
Copy !req
529. into Hades.
Copy !req
530. Then silence, and stillness,
Copy !req
531. night were the universe.
Copy !req
532. After this I call to mind
flatness and dampness;
Copy !req
533. and then all the
madness of a memory
Copy !req
534. which busies itself
among forbidden things.
Copy !req
535. So far, I had not
opened my eyes.
Copy !req
536. I dreaded the first glance
at objects around me.
Copy !req
537. My worst thoughts, then,
were confirmed.
Copy !req
538. The blackness of eternal night
encompassed me.
Copy !req
539. I struggled for breath.
Copy !req
540. The atmosphere was
intolerably close.
Copy !req
541. But where
Copy !req
542. and in what state was I?
Copy !req
543. The condemned to death, I knew,
Copy !req
544. perished usually
at the autos-da-fe,
Copy !req
545. and one of
these had been held
Copy !req
546. on the very night
of the day of my trial.
Copy !req
547. Had I been remanded
to my dungeon,
Copy !req
548. to await the next
sacrifice, which
Copy !req
549. would not take
place for many months?
Copy !req
550. And now,
Copy !req
551. there came thronging
upon my recollection
Copy !req
552. a thousand vague rumors
of the horrors of Toledo.
Copy !req
553. Of the dungeons
Copy !req
554. there had been
strange things narrated,
Copy !req
555. strange, and too
ghastly to repeat.
Copy !req
556. Was I left to
perish of starvation
Copy !req
557. in this subterranean
world of darkness;
Copy !req
558. or what fate,
perhaps even more fearful,
Copy !req
559. awaited me?
Copy !req
560. My outstretched hands at length
Copy !req
561. encountered some solid
obstruction.
Copy !req
562. It was a wall,
Copy !req
563. I followed it up.
Copy !req
564. This process, however,
afforded me no means
Copy !req
565. of ascertaining
the dimensions of my dungeon.
Copy !req
566. Another step before my fall,
Copy !req
567. and the world had
seen me no more.
Copy !req
568. And the death just avoided,
Copy !req
569. was of that very character
which I had regarded
Copy !req
570. as fabulous and frivolous
Copy !req
571. in the tales regarding
the Inquisition.
Copy !req
572. To the victims of its tyranny,
Copy !req
573. there was the choice of death
Copy !req
574. with its direst physical
agonies,
Copy !req
575. or death with its most hideous
moral horrors.
Copy !req
576. I had been reserved
for the latter.
Copy !req
577. I was consumed with
intolerable thirst.
Copy !req
578. This thirst it appeared to be
the design of my persecutors
Copy !req
579. to stimulate:
Copy !req
580. for the food in
the dish was meat
Copy !req
581. pungently seasoned.
Copy !req
582. It must have been drugged;
Copy !req
583. for scarcely had I drunk,
Copy !req
584. before I became
irresistibly drowsy.
Copy !req
585. I could no longer doubt
Copy !req
586. the doom prepared for me
by monkish ingenuity in torture.
Copy !req
587. My cognizance of the pit
had become known
Copy !req
588. to the inquisitorial.
Copy !req
589. Having failed to fall,
Copy !req
590. it was no part of the demon plan
Copy !req
591. to hurl me into the abyss,
Copy !req
592. and thus a different and a
milder destruction awaited me.
Copy !req
593. I counted the rushing
vibrations of the steel!
Copy !req
594. Inch by inch...
Copy !req
595. line by line...
Copy !req
596. with a descent only appreciable
at intervals that seemed ages.
Copy !req
597. Down... steadily down it crept.
Copy !req
598. Down... certainly,
relentlessly down!
Copy !req
599. It vibrated within three inches
of my bosom!
Copy !req
600. I prayed for its
more speedy descent.
Copy !req
601. To force myself upward
Copy !req
602. against the sweep
of the fearful scimitar.
Copy !req
603. For the moment, at least,
Copy !req
604. I was free.
Copy !req
605. Free! And in the grasp
of the Inquisition!
Copy !req
606. Free!
Copy !req
607. I had but escaped death
Copy !req
608. in one form of agony,
Copy !req
609. to be delivered unto worse
than death in some other.
Copy !req
610. For a wild moment,
Copy !req
611. did my spirit refuse
Copy !req
612. to comprehend the meaning
of what I saw.
Copy !req
613. Any horror but this!
Copy !req
614. Any death but that of the pit!
Copy !req
615. Might I have not known
that into the pit
Copy !req
616. it was the object
of the burning iron to urge me?
Copy !req
617. Could I resist its glow?
Copy !req
618. There was a discordant hum
of human voices!
Copy !req
619. There was a loud blast.
Copy !req
620. The French army
had entered Toledo.
Copy !req
621. The Inquisition was in
the hands of its enemies.
Copy !req
622. You have devoted
so many pages to my name,
Copy !req
623. caressing my face
with your poems,
Copy !req
624. kissing my lips with your prose.
Copy !req
625. All veiled love letters
addressed to me.
Copy !req
626. You fear me
Copy !req
627. and yet you are
insatiably attracted.
Copy !req
628. Come with me. It's time.
Copy !req
629. No, it cannot be.
I don't want to be forgotten.
Copy !req
630. I was buried in a common grave.
Copy !req
631. My writings were
forgotten for years.
Copy !req
632. You are already dead.
Copy !req
633. How could you remember
your own death...
Copy !req
634. unless you have succumbed
to my embrace?
Copy !req
635. Your life is not
worth living anymore.
Copy !req
636. It is time
Copy !req
637. to meet your own ghosts,
Copy !req
638. the people you loved
and lost forever.
Copy !req
639. Come now, Poe.
Copy !req
640. You love me!
Copy !req
641. You've been a corpse
walking amongst the living
Copy !req
642. for a long time, Edgar.
Copy !req
643. It must have been
quite a strain.
Copy !req
644. Maybe you're right.
Copy !req
645. Sometimes I think the only thing
that kept me from you
Copy !req
646. was my beating heart.
Copy !req
647. They all succumb to my prowess.
Copy !req
648. The poor, the weak;
Copy !req
649. the rich, the powerful.
Copy !req
650. Everybody bows before me.
Copy !req
651. I offer you one last chance.
Copy !req
652. Who dares insult us with
this blasphemous mockery?
Copy !req
653. I don't want my work
to be lost forever.
Copy !req
654. My work is eternal.
Copy !req
655. I want that eternity.
Copy !req
656. I want to be sure
my words will survive me,
Copy !req
657. that they will be
never lost in time.
Copy !req
658. That, my friend,
Copy !req
659. nevermore..
Copy !req