The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 2


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"No one ever will know what my feelings were at that moment. I shook  
from head to foot as if I had had the most violent fit of the ague. I  
knew what he meant by that one word well enough--I knew what he wished  
to make me understand. With the wind that now drove us on, we were bound  
for the whirl of the Ström, and nothing could save us!  
"You perceive that in crossing the Ström channel, we always went a  
long way up above the whirl, even in the calmest weather, and then had  
to wait and watch carefully for the slack--but now we were driving right  
upon the pool itself, and in such a hurricane as this! 'To be sure,' I  
thought, 'we shall get there just about the slack--there is some little  
hope in that'--but in the next moment I cursed myself for being so great  
a fool as to dream of hope at all. I knew very well that we were doomed,  
had we been ten times a ninety-gun ship.  
"By this time the first fury of the tempest had spent itself, or perhaps  
we did not feel it so much, as we scudded before it, but at all events  
the seas, which at first had been kept down by the wind, and lay flat  
and frothing, now got up into absolute mountains. A singular change,  
too, had come over the heavens. Around in every direction it was still  
as black as pitch, but nearly overhead there burst out, all at once, a  
circular rift of clear sky--as clear as I ever saw--and of a deep bright  
blue--and through it there blazed forth the full moon with a lustre that  
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