Full Body Chills - POE: The Pit And The Pendulum (1842)
Episode Date: December 3, 2024"The Pit And The Pendulum" by Edgar Allan Poe. First published, 1842.Intro read by Christopher Swindle.Poe is an audiochuck production.Instagram: @audiochuckTwitter: Â @audiochuckFacebook: /audiochuck...llc
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Time, the reaper of tomorrows, whose ticking hand counts the sand spilling through each day, each atom, an instant, gone.
And as the hourglass tilts to draining, so too the vanishing shores of hope.
Much like despair, hope is hard to kill, yet tenfold harder to find.
Because as each second swings by, as the distance between life and death shrinks,
between life and death shrinks. So does hope.
For what once was the size of man
devolves into a madman,
an animal,
a rat,
a fleeting thought barely sustainable,
barely a crumb.
In this story you will see one man pressed to the edge of despair as he struggles to
survive the pit and the Pendulum by Edgar Allan Poe, first published in 1842.
I was sick, sick unto death with that long agony, and when they at length unbound me
and I was permitted to sit, I felt that my senses were leaving me.
The sentence, the dread sentence of death, was the last of distinct accentuation which
reached my ears.
After that, the sound of the inquisitorial voices seemed merged into one dreamy, indeterminate
hum.
It conveyed to my soul the idea of revolution, perhaps from its association in fancy with
a burr of a mill-wheel.
This only for a brief period, for presently I heard no more.
Yet for a while I saw, but with how terrible an exaggeration, I saw the lips of the black
robed judges.
They appeared to me white. Whiter than the
sheet upon which I trace these words, and thin even to a grotesqueness, thin with the
intensity of their expression of firmness, of immovable resolution, of stern contempt
of human torture. I saw that the decrees of what to me was fate were still issuing from those lips. I saw them writhe with a
deadly locution. I saw them fashion the syllables of my name, and I shuddered because no sound
succeeded. I saw, too, for a few moments of delirious horror, the soft and nearly imperceptible
waving of the sable draperies which enwrapped the walls of the apartment.
And then my vision fell upon the seven tall candles upon the table.
At first they wore the aspect of charity and seemed white and slender angels who would
save me.
But then all at once there came a most deadly nausea over my spirit, and I felt every fiber in my frame thrill
as if I had touched the wire of a galvanic battery, while the angel forms became meaningless
specters with heads of flame, and I saw that from them there would be no help. And then
there stole into my fancy, like a rich musical note, the thought of what sweet
rest there must be in the grave.
The thought came gently and stealthily, and it seemed long before it attained full appreciation.
But just as my spirit came at length properly to feel and entertain it, the figures of the
judges vanished, as if magically from before me.
The tall candles sank into nothingness. Their flames went out utterly. The blackness of darkness
supervened. All sensations appeared swallowed up in a mad rushing descent, as of the soul into Hades.
and rushing descent as of the soul into Hades. Then silence, and stillness, and night were the universe.
I had swooned, but still will not say that all of consciousness was lost.
What of it there remained I will not attempt to define or even to describe. Yet all was not lost.
In the deepest slumber, no, in delirium, no, in a swoon, no, in death, no, even in the
grave all is not lost.
Else there is no immortality for man.
Arousing from the most profound of slumbers, we break the gossamer
web of some dream. Yet in the second afterward, so frail may that web have been, we remember
not that we have dreamed. In the return to life from the swoon, there are two stages.
First, that of the sense of mental or spiritual. Secondly, that of the sense of mental or spiritual.
Secondly, that of the sense of physical existence.
It seems probable that if upon reaching the second stage
we could recall the impressions of the first,
we should find these impressions
eloquent in memories of the gulf beyond.
And that gulf is what? How at least shall we
distinguish its shadows from those of the tomb? But if the impressions of what I have
termed the first stage are not at will recalled, yet after long interval do they not come unbidden, while we marvel whence they come?
He who has never swooned is not he who finds strange palaces and wildly familiar faces in colds that glow, is not he who beholds floating in midair the sad visions that the many may not
view, is not he who ponders over the perfume of some novel flower? Is not he
whose brain grows bewildered with a meaning of some musical cadence which has never before
arrested his attention? Amid frequent and thoughtful endeavors to remember, amid earnest
struggles to regather some token of the state of seeming nothingness into which
my soul had lapsed.
There have been moments when I have dreamed of success.
There have been brief, very brief periods when I have conjured up remembrances which
the lucid reason of a later epoch assures me could have had reference only to that condition of seeming
unconsciousness. These shadows of memory tell indistinctly of tall figures that lifted and
bore me in silence down, down, still down, till a hideous dizziness oppressed me at the mere idea of the interminableness of the descent. They
tell also of a vague horror at my heart, on account of that heart's unnatural stillness.
Then comes a sense of sudden motionlessness throughout all things, As if those who bore me, a ghastly train, had outrun in their descent
the limits of the limitless, and paused from the weariness of their toil. After this I
call to mind flatness and dampness. And then all is madness, the madness of a memory which busies itself among forbidden things.
Very suddenly there came back to my soul motion and sound, the tumultuous motion of the heart,
and in my ears the sound of its beating, then a pause in which all is blank. Then again sound and motion and touch, a tingling sensation pervading my frame.
Then the mere consciousness of existence without thought, a condition which lasted long.
Then very suddenly thought and shuddering terror, and earnest endeavor to comprehend my true state. Then
a strong desire to lapse into insensibility, then a rushing revival of soul and a successful
effort to move, and now a full memory of the trial, of the judges, of the sable draperies,
of the sentence, of the sickness, of the swoon. Then, entire forgetfulness
of all that followed, of all that a later day, and much earnestness of endeavor, have
enabled me vaguely to recall.
So far I had not opened my eyes. I felt that I lay upon my back, unbound. I reached out my hand, and it fell heavily upon
something damp and hard. There I suffered it to remain for many minutes, while I strove to
imagine where and what I could be. I longed, yet dared not to employ my vision. I dreaded the first glance at objects around
me. It was not that I feared to look upon things horrible, but that I grew aghast, lest
there should be nothing to see. At length, with a wild desperation at heart, I quickly
unclosed my eyes. My worst thoughts then were confirmed. The blackness of eternal night
encompassed me. I struggled for breath. The intensity of the darkness seemed to oppress
and stifle me. The atmosphere was intolerably close.
I still lay quietly and made effort to exercise my reason. I brought to mind the inquisitorial proceedings
and attempted from that point to deduce my real condition.
The sentence had passed, and it appeared to me
that a very long interval of time had since elapsed.
Yet not for a moment did I suppose myself actually dead.
Such a supposition, notwithstanding what we read in fiction, is altogether inconsistent
with real existence.
But where and in what state was I?
The condemned to death, I knew, perished usually at the Otto's daffay.
And one of these had been held on the very night of the day of my trial. Had I been remanded to my dungeon to await the next sacrifice, which would not take place
for many months, this I at once saw could not be.
Victims had been in immediate demand.
Moreover, my dungeon, as well as all the condemned cells at Toledo, had stone floors, and light
was not altogether excluded.
A fearful idea now suddenly drove the blood in torrents upon my heart, and for a brief
period I once more relapsed into insensibility.
Upon recovering, I at once started to my feet, trembling convulsively in every fiber.
I thrust my arms wildly above and around me in all directions.
I felt nothing, yet dreaded to move a step, lest I should be impeded by the walls of a
tomb.
Perspiration burst from every pore, and stood in cold big beads upon my forehead.
The agony of suspense grew at length intolerable, and I cautiously moved forward, with my arms
extended and my eyes straining from their sockets in the hope of catching some faint
ray of light.
I proceeded for many paces, but still all was blackness and vacancy.
I breathed more freely. It seemed evident that mine was not at least the most hideous of fates.
And now as I still continue to step cautiously onward, there came thronging upon my recollection
a thousand vague rumors of the horrors of Toledo. Of
the dungeons there had been strange things narrated, fables I had always deemed them,
but yet strange and too ghastly to repeat save in a whisper. Was I left to perish of
starvation in this subterranean world of darkness? Or what fate, perhaps even
more fearful, awaited me? That the result would be death, and a death of more than customary
bitterness I knew too well the character of my judges to doubt. The mode and the hour
were all that occupied or distracted me. My outstretched hands at length encountered some
solid obstruction. It was a wall, seemingly of stone masonry, very smooth, slimy, and cold.
I followed it up, stepping with all the careful distrust with which certain
antique narratives had inspired me. This process, however, afforded me no means of ascertaining the dimensions of my dungeon,
as I might make it circuit and return to the point whence I set out, without being aware
of the fact, so perfectly uniform seemed the wall.
I therefore sought the knife which had been in my pocket when led into the inquisitorial
chamber, but it was gone.
My clothes had been exchanged for a wrapper of coarse surge.
I had thought of forcing the blade in some minute crevice of the masonry so as to identify
my point of departure.
The difficulty nevertheless was but trivial,
although in the disorder of my fancy it seemed at first insuperable.
I tore apart of the hem from the robe and placed the fragment at full length and at right angles to the wall.
In groping my way around the prison, I could not fail to encounter this rag upon completing the
circuit. So at least I thought, but I had not counted upon the extent of the dungeon
or upon my own weakness. The ground was moist and slippery. I staggered onward for some
time when I stumbled and fell. My excessive fatigue induced me to remain prostrate,
and sleep soon overtook me as I lay. Upon awakening and stretching forth an arm,
I found beside me a loaf and a pitcher with water. I was too much exhausted to reflect
upon this circumstance, but ate and drank with avidity. Shortly afterward,
I resumed my tour around the prison, and with much toil came at last upon the fragment of
the surge. Up to the period when I fell, I had counted 52 paces, and upon resuming my walk, I had counted forty-eight more, when I arrived
at the rag. There were in all, then, a hundred paces, and, admitting two paces to the yard,
I presumed the dungeon to be fifty yards in circuit. I had met, however, with many angles
in the wall, and thus I could form no guess at the shape of the vault, for vault I could
not help supposing it to be.
I had little object, certainly no hope these researchers, but a vague curiosity prompted
me to continue them.
Quitting the wall, I resolved to cross the area of the enclosure. At first I proceeded with extreme caution, for the
floor, though seemingly of solid material, was treacherous with slime. At length,
however, I took courage and did not hesitate to step firmly, endeavoring to
cross in as direct a line as possible. I had advanced some ten or twelve paces in
this manner. When the remnant of the torn hem of my robe became entangled between my
legs, I stepped on it and fell violently on my face.
In the confusion attending my fall, I did not immediately apprehend a somewhat startling circumstance, which yet,
in a few seconds afterwards, and while I still lay prostrate, arrested my attention. It was
this. My chin rested upon the floor of the prison, but my lips and the upper portion
of my head, although seemingly at a less elevation than the chin,
touched nothing. At the same time my forehead seemed bathed in a clammy vapor, and the peculiar
smell of decayed fungus arose to my nostrils. I put forward my arm and shuddered to find that I had fallen at the very brink of a circular pit,
whose extent, of course, I had no means of ascertaining at the moment.
Groping about the masonry just below the margin, I succeeded in dislodging a small
fragment and let it fall into the abyss. For many seconds I hearkened to its reverberations as it dashed against the sides of the chasm
in its descent.
At length there was a sudden plunge into water, succeeded by loud echoes.
At the same moment there came a sound resembling the quick opening and as rapid closing of a door overhead, while
a faint gleam of light flashed suddenly through the gloom and as suddenly faded away.
I saw clearly the doom which had been prepared for me and congratulated myself upon the timely accident by which I had escaped, another
step before my fall, and the world would have seen me no more.
And the death just avoided was of that very character which I had regarded as fabulous
and frivolous in the tales respecting the Inquisition. To the victims of its tyranny there was the
choice of death with its direst physical agonies or death with its most hideous moral horrors.
I had been reserved for the latter. By long suffering my nerves had been unstrung,
suffering, my nerves had been unstrung, until I trembled at the sound of my own voice, and had become, in every respect, a fitting subject for the species of torture which awaited me.
Shaking in every limb, I groped my way back to the Wall, resolving there to perish, rather than risk the terrors of the wells, of which my imagination now pictured many in various positions about the dungeon.
In other conditions of mind, I might have had courage to end my misery at once by a plunge into one of these abysses.
But now I was the various of cowards, neither could I forget what I had read of these pits,
that the sudden extinction of life formed no part of their most horrible plan.
Agitation of spirit kept me awake for many long hours, but at length I again slumbered. Upon arousing, I found by my side, as before, a loaf and a pitcher of water.
A burning thirst consumed me, and I emptied the vessel at a draught.
It must have been drugged.
For scarcely had I drunk before I became irresistibly drowsy.
A deep sleep fell upon me, asleep like that of death. How
long it lasted, of course, I know not. But when, once again, I unclosed my eyes, the
objects around me were visible. By a wild, sulfurous luster, the origin of which I could not at first determine, I was unable
to see the extent and aspect of the prison. In its size, I had been greatly mistaken.
The whole circuit of its walls did not exceed twenty-five yards. For some minutes this fact occasioned me a world of vain trouble, vain indeed, for what could be
of less importance under the terrible circumstances which environed me than the mere dimensions of my
dungeon. But my soul took a wild interest in trifles, and I busied myself in endeavors to account for the error I had committed in my measurement.
The truth at length flashed upon me. In my first attempt at exploration,
I had counted fifty-two paces up to the period when I fell. I must then have been within a
pace or two of the fragment of surge. In fact, I had nearly performed the circuit of the vault.
I then slept, and upon awakening, I must have returned upon my steps,
thus supposing the circuit nearly double what it actually was.
My confusion of mind prevented me from observing
that I began my tour with the wall to the left and ended it with
the wall to the right. I had been deceived too in respect to the shape of the enclosure. In feeling
my way I had found many angles and thus deduced an idea of great irregularity. So potent is the effect of total darkness upon one arousing from
lethargy or sleep. The angles were simply those of a few slight depressions or
niches at odd intervals. The general shape of the prison was square. What I
had taken for masonry now seemed to be iron or some other metal in huge plates
whose sutures or joints occasioned the depression.
The entire surface of this metallic enclosure was rudely daubed in all the hideous and repulsive
devices to which the charnel superstition of the monks had given rise. The figures of
fiends in aspects of menace, with skeleton forms, and other, more really fearful images,
overspread and disfigured the walls. I observed that the outline of these monstrosities were
sufficiently distinct, but that the colors seemed faded and blurred,
as if from the effects of a damp atmosphere. I now noticed the floor, too, which was of
stone. In the center yawned the circular pit from whose jaws I had escaped, but it was
the only one in the dungeon. All this I saw indistinctly and by much effort, for my personal condition had been greatly
changed during slumber.
I now lay upon my back, and at full length on a species of low framework of wood.
To this I was securely bound by a long strap, resembling a sur-single.
It passed in many convolutions about my limbs and body, leaving at liberty only my head
and my left arm to such extent that I could, by dint of much exertion, supply myself with
food from an earthen dish which lay by my side on the floor. I saw, to my
horror, that the pitcher had been removed. I say to my horror, for I was consumed with
intolerable thirst. This thirst it appeared to be the design of my persecutors to stimulate,
for the food in the dish was meat pungently seasoned.
Looking upward, I surveyed the ceiling of my prison.
It was some thirty or forty feet overhead, and constructed much as the side walls.
In one of its panels, a very singular figure riveted my whole attention. It was the painted figure of time, as he is commonly represented,
save that, in lieu of a scythe, he held what, at casual glance, I suppose to be the pictured
image of a huge pendulum such as we see on antique clocks. There was something, however, in the appearance of this machine, which caused me to regard
it more attentively.
While I gazed directly upward at it, for its position was immediately over my own, I fancied
that I saw it in motion.
In an instant afterward, the fancy was confirmed. Its sweep was brief and, of course, slow. I
watched it for some minutes, somewhat in fear but more in wonder. Wearyed at length with
observing its dull movement, I turned my eyes upon the other objects in the cell. A slight noise attracted my notice,
and looking to the floor, I saw several enormous rats traversing it. They had issued from
the well which lay just within view to my right. Even then, while I gazed, they came up in troupes, hurriedly with ravenous eyes, allured
by the scent of the meat.
From this it required much effort and attention to scare them away.
It might have been half an hour, perhaps even an hour, for I could take but imperfect note
of time, before I again cast my eyes upward.
What I then saw confounded and amazed me. The sweep of the pendulum had increased in extent
by nearly a yard. As a natural consequence, its velocity was also much greater.
But what mainly disturbed me was the idea that had perceptibly descended.
I now observed, with what horror it is needless to say, that its nether extremity was formed
of a crescent of glittering steel, about a foot in length from horn to horn, the horns upward and the under-edge
evidently as keen as that of a razor.
Like a razor also, it seemed massy and heavy, tapering from the edge into a solid and broad
structure above. It was appended to a weighty rod of brass and the whole hissed as it swung
through the air. I could no longer doubt the doom prepared for me by monkish ingenuity
and torture. My cognizance of the pit had become known to the inquisitorial agents, the pit whose horrors had been destined for so bold a recusant as myself,
the pit typical of hell, and regarded by rumor as the ultima thule of all their punishments.
The plunge into this pit I had avoided by the merest of accidents, I knew that surprise, or entrapment into torment,
formed an important portion of all the grotesquery of these dungeon deaths.
Having failed to fall, it was no part of the demon plan to hurl me into the abyss, and thus, there being no alternative, a different and milder destruction
awaited me. Milder. I half smiled in my agony as I thought of such application of such a term.
What boots it to tell of the long, long hours of horror, more than mortal, during which
I counted, the rushing vibrations of the steel, inch by inch, line by line, with a descent
only appreciable at intervals that seemed ages, down and still down it came. Days past. It might have been many days past,
ere it swept so closely over me as to fan me with its acrid breath. The odor of the
sharp steel forced itself into my nostrils. I prayed, I wearied heaven with my prayer,
for its more speedy descent.
I grew frantically mad,
and struggled to force myself upward
against the sweep of the fearful scimitar.
And then I fell suddenly calm,
and lay smiling at the glittering death, as a child at some
rare bauble.
There was another interval of utter insensibility.
It was brief, for upon again lapsing into life, there had been no perceptible descent
in the pendulum. But it might have been long, for I knew there were demons who took note of my swoon, and
who could have arrested the vibration at pleasure.
Upon my recovery, too, I felt very, oh, inexpressibly sick and weak, as if through long ininitian. Even amid the agonies of that period, the
human nature craved food. With painful effort, I outstretched my left arm as far
as my bonds permitted, and took possession of the small remnant which had
been spared me by the rats.
As I put a portion of it within my lips, there rushed to my mind a half-formed thought of
joy, of hope.
Yet what business had I with hope?
It was, as I say, a half-formed thought.
Man has many such which are never completed. I felt that it was of joy,
of hope, but felt also that it had perished in its formation. In vain I struggled perfect to
regain it. Long suffering had nearly annihilated all my ordinary powers of mind. I was an imbecile, an idiot.
The vibration of the pendulum was at right angles to my length.
I saw that the crescent was designed to cross the region of the heart.
It would fray the surge of my robe.
It would return and repeat its operations again and again,
notwithstanding its terrifically wide sweep, some thirty feet or more,
and the hissing vigor of its descent,
sufficient to sunder these very walls of iron.
Still, the fraying of my robe would be all that, for several
minutes, it would accomplish. And at this thought I paused. I dared not go any
farther than this reflection. I dwelt upon it with a pertinacity of attention,
as if in so dwelling I could arrest here the descent of the steel.
I forced myself to ponder upon the sound of the crescent as it should pass across the
garment, upon the peculiar, thrilling sensation which the friction of cloth produces on the
nerves.
I pondered upon all this frivolity until my teeth were on edge.
Down, steadily down it crept.
I took a frenzy pleasure in contrasting its downward with its lateral velocity.
To the right, to the left, far and wide, with a shriek of a damned spirit, to my heart with a stealthy pace of
a tiger.
My alternately laughed and howled as the one or the other idea grew predominant.
Down, certainly relentlessly down, it vibrated within three inches of my bosom. I struggled violently,
furiously, to free my left arm. This was free only from the elbow to the hand. I could reach
the latter, from the platter beside me, to my mouth with great effort, but no farther.
Could I have broken the fastenings above the elbow,
I would have seized and attempted to arrest the pendulum. I might as well have attempted
to arrest an avalanche. Down, still unceasingly, still inevitably down. I gasped and struggled
at each vibration. I shrunk convulsively at its every sweep. My
eyes followed its outward or upward whirls with the eagerness of the most unmeaning despair.
They closed themselves spasmodically at the descent, though death would have been a relief.
Oh, how unspeakable! Still I quivered in the very nerve to think how slight a sinking of the
machinery would precipitate that keen, glistening axe upon my bosom.
It was hope that prompted the nerve to quiver, the frame to shrink.
It was hope, the hope that triumphs on the rack, that whispers to the death condemned,
even in the dungeons of the Inquisition.
I saw that some ten or twelve vibrations would bring the steel in actual contact with my robe,
and with this observation there suddenly came over my spirit all the keen collected calmness
of despair. For the first time during many hours, or perhaps days, I thought.
It now occurred to me that the bandage or the sursingle which had enveloped me was unique.
I was tied by no separate cord. The first stroke of the razor-like crescent, athwart any portion
of the band, would so detach it that it might be unwound from my person by means of my left
hand. But how fearful, in that case, the proximity of the steel. The result of the slightest struggle, how deadly. Was it likely, moreover,
that the minions of the torturer had not foreseen and provided for this possibility? Was it probable
that the bandage crossed my bosom in the track of the pendulum? Dreading to find my faint, and, as it seemed in last hope frustrated, I so far elevated
my head as to obtain a distinct view of my breast.
The seer-single enveloped my limbs and body close in all directions save in the path of
the destroying crescent.
Scarcely had I dropped my head back into its original position, when there flashed upon
my mind what I cannot better describe then as the unformed half of that idea of deliverance
to which I have previously alluded, and of which a moiety only floated indeterminately
through my brain when I raised food to my burning lips. The whole thought was now present,
feeble, scarcely sane,
scarcely definite, but still entire.
I proceeded at once with a nervous energy of despair to attempt its execution.
For many hours the immediate vicinity of the low framework upon which I lay had been
literally swarming with rats.
They were wild, bold, ravenous, their red eyes glaring upon me as if they waited but
promotionless on my part to make me their prey.
To what food, I thought, have they been accustomed in the well?
They had devoured, in spite of all my efforts to prevent them, all but a small remnant of the contents of the dish.
I had fallen into an habitual seesaw or wave of the hand about the platter, and, at length,
the unconscious uniformity of the movement deprived it of
effect.
At first, the ravenous animals were startled and terrified at the change, at the cessation
of movement.
They shrank, alarmantly back.
Many sought the well, but this was only for a moment.
I had not counted in vain upon their veracity. Observing that I remained without
motion, one or two of the boldest leaped upon the framework and smelt at the surcingle.
This seemed the signal for a general rush.
Forth from the well, they hurried in fresh troops. They clung to the wood, they overran
it and leaped in hundreds upon my person.
The measured movement of the pendulum disturbed them not at all. Avoiding its strokes, they
busied themselves with the anointed bandage. They pressed. They swarmed upon me in ever-accumulating
heaps. They writhed upon my throat. Their cold lips salt my own. I was half stifled
by their thronging pressure disgust, for which the world has no name, swelled my bosom and
chilled with a heavy clamminess my heart. Yet one minute and I felt the struggle would
be over. Plainly I perceived the loosening of the bandage.
I knew that in more than one place it must be already severed. With a more than human
resolution I lay still. Nor had I erred in my calculations, nor had I endured in vain.
I at length felt that I was free. The sursingle hung in ribbons from my body,
but the stroke of the pendulum already pressed upon my bosom. It had divided the surge of
the robe. It had cut through the linen beneath. Twice again it swung, and a sharp sense of
pain shot through every nerve. But the moment of escape had arrived.
At a wave of my hand, my deliverers hurried tumultuously away.
With a steady movement, cautious, sidelong, shrinking, and slow, I slid from the embrace
of the bandage and beyond the reach of the scimitar. For the moment at least, I was free.
Free, and in the grasp of the Inquisition.
I had scarcely stepped from my wooden bed of horror
upon the stone floor of the prison,
when the motion of the hellish machine ceased,
and I beheld it, drawn up by some invisible force, through the
ceiling. This was a lesson which I took desperately to heart. My every motion was undoubtedly watched.
Free. I had but escaped death in one form of agony, to be delivered unto worse than death in some
other. With that thought, I rolled my eyes nervously around on the barriers of iron that
hemmed me in.
Something unusual, some change which at first I could not appreciate distinctly. It was obvious had taken place in the apartment.
For many minutes of a dreamy and trembling abstraction,
I busied myself in vain, unconnected conjecture.
During this period, I became aware for the first time
of the origin of the sulfurous light which illuminated the
cell. It proceeded from a fissure about half an inch in width, extending entirely around
the prison at the base of the walls, which thus appeared and were completely separated
from the floor. I endeavored, but of course in vain, to look through the aperture.
As I arose from the attempt, the mystery of the alteration in the chamber broke at once
upon my understanding.
I have observed that, although the outlines of the figures upon the walls were sufficiently distinct,
yet the colors seemed blurred and indefinite. These colors had now assumed, and were momentarily
assuming, a startling and most intense brilliancy that gave to their spectral and fiendish portraitures
an aspect that might have thrilled even firmer nerves
than my own. Demon eyes of a wild and ghastly vivacity glared upon me in a thousand directions
where none had been visible before and gleamed, with the lurid luster of a fire that I could
not force my imagination to regard as unreal. Unreal. Even while I
breathed there came to my nostrils the breath of the vapor of heated iron.
A suffocating odor pervaded the prison. A deeper glow settled each moment in the eyes
that glared at my agonies. A richer tint of crimson diffused itself
over the pictured horrors of blood. I panted,
I gasped for breath. There could be no doubt of the design of my tormentors.
Oh, most unrelenting, oh most
demoniac of men, I shrank from the glowing metal
to the center of the cell. Amid the
thought of the fiery destruction that impended, the idea of the coolness of the well came
over my soul like balm. I rushed to its deadly brink. I threw my straining vision below.
The glare from the enkindled roof illuminated its innermost recesses.
Yet for a wild moment did my spirit refuse to comprehend the meaning of what I saw.
At length it forced.
It wrestled its way into my soul.
It burned itself upon my shuddering reason, oh, for a voice to speak, oh, horror, oh, any horror but this.
With a shriek, I rushed from the margin and buried my face in my hands, weeping bitterly.
The heat rapidly increased, and once again I looked up, shuddering, as with
the fit of the Aegu. There had been a second change in the cell, and now the change was
obviously in the form. As before, it was in vain that I, at first, endeavored to appreciate
or understand what was taking place, but not long was I left
in doubt.
The inquisitorial vengeance had been hurried by my twofold escape, and there was to be
no more dallying with the King of Terrors.
The room had been square.
I saw that two of its iron angles were now acute, two consequently obtuse.
The fearful difference quickly increased with a low rumbling or moaning sound.
In an instant, the apartment had shifted its form into that of a lozenge.
But the alteration stopped not here.
I neither hoped nor desired it to stop. I could have clasped
the red walls to my bosom as a garment of eternal peace. Death, I said. Any death,
but that of the pit. Fool, might I have not known that into the pit it was the object of the burning iron to urge
me?
Could I resist its glow?
Or if even that, could I withstand its pressure?
And now flatter and flatter grew the lozenge, with a rapidity that left me no time for contemplation. Its center, and of course its greatest width,
came just over the yawning gulf. I shrank back, but the closing walls pressed me
resistlessly onward. At length, from my seared and writhing body, there was no
longer an inch of foothold on the firm floor of the prison. I struggled
no more. But the agony of my soul found vent in one loud, long, and final scream of despair.
I felt that I tottered upon the brink, I averted my eyes.
There was a discordant hum of human voices.
There was a loud blast, as of many trumpets.
There was a harsh grating, as of a thousand thunders.
The fiery walls rushed back.
An outstretched arm caught my own as I fell, fainting into the abyss. It was that
of General La Salle. The French army had entered Toledo. The Inquisition was in the hands of
its enemies. Poe is an audio chuck original.
This episode was read to you by Jake Webber.
So what do you think Chuck?
Do you approve?