| Edgar:
|
| And then I had a vision
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| Roderick Usher:
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| Ah Edgar
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| Ah Edgar, my dear friend Edgar
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| Edgar:
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| It’s been a long time, Roderick
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| I’ve ridden many miles
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| It’s been a dull and soundless day for autumn
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| The leaves have lost their autumn glow
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| And the clouds seem oppressive with their drifting finery
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| Roderick Usher:
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| I know, my friend
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| Though I own so much of this land I find
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| The country insufferable
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| I deal only in half pleasures
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| Edgar:
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| Speaking of half pleasures
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| Would you care for a tincture of opium?
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| Roderick Usher:
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| Nothing would please me more than to smoke
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| With an old friend
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| I’ve experienced the hideous dropping of the veil
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| The bitter lapse into common life
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| Unredeemed dreariness of thought
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| I have an iciness, a sickening of the heart
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| Edgar:
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| It’s true you don’t look well, Roderick
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| But I am your friend
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| No matter the occasion or position of the stars
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| I’m glad you wrote me
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| But I must admit to concern
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| Roderick Usher:
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| I cannot contain my heart
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| Edgar, I look to you for solace
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| For relief from myself
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| What I have is constitutional
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| A family evil, a nervous affection that must surely pass
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| But I do have this morbid acuteness of senses
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| I can eat only the most insipid food
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| Clothes only of the lightest texture
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| The odor of flowers I find oppressive
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| My eyes cannot bear even the faintest light
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| Madeline Usher:
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| Roderick Usher:
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| Did you hear that?
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| Edgar:
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| I hear
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| I am listening, go on
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| Roderick Usher:
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| I shall perish
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| I will perish in this deplorable folly
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| I dread the future
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| Not the events, the results
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| The most trivial event
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| Causes the greatest agitation of the soul
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| I do not fear danger except in its absolute effect terror
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| I find I must inevitably abandon life and reason together
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| In my struggles with the demon fear
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| Perhaps you’ll think me superstitious
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| But the physique of this place
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| It hovers about me like a great body
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| Some diseased outer shell
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| Some decaying finite skin encasing my morale
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| Edgar:
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| You mentioned your sister was ill
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| Roderick Usher:
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| My beloved sister, my sole companion
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| Has had a long continuing illness
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| Whose inevitable conclusion seems forsworn
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| This will leave me the last of the ancient race of Ushers
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| Madeline Usher:
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| Edgar:
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| She looks so much like you
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| Roderick Usher:
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| I love her in a nameless way
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| More than I love myself
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| Her demise will leave me hopelessly
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| Confined to memories and realities of a future
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| So barren as to be stultifying
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| Madeline Usher:
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| Edgar:
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| Oh, what of physicians?
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| Roderick Usher:
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| Ah, they are baffled
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| Until today she refused bed rest
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| Wanting to be present in your honor
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| But finally she succumbed to the prostrating power of the destroyer
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| You will probably see her no more
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| Edgar:
|
| Sound and music take us to the twin curves of experience
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| Like brother and sister intertwined
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| They relieve themselves of bodily contact
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| And dance in a pagan revelry
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| Roderick Usher:
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| I have soiled myself with my designs
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| I am ashamed of my brain
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| The enemy is me
|
| And the executioner terror
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| Music is a reflection of our inner self
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| Unfiltered agony touches the wayward string
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| The wayward brain confuses itself
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| With the self-perceived future
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| And turns inward with loathing and terror
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| Either by design or thought
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| We are doomed to know our own end
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| I’ve written a lyric
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| Edgar:
|
| May I hear it?
|
| Roderick Usher:
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| It is called «The Haunted Palace»
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| In the greenest of our valleys
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| By good angels tenanted
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| Once a fair and stately palace --
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| Snow-white palace -- reared its head
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| Banners yellow, glorious, golden
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| On its roof did float and flow;
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| (This -- all this -- was in the olden time long ago)
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| And every gentle air that dallied
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| Along the rampart plumed and pallid
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| A winged odor went away
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| All wanderers in that happy valley
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| Through two luminous windows saw
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| Spirits moving musically
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| The sovereign of the realm serene
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| A troop of echoes whose sweet duty
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| Was but to sing
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| In voices of surpassing beauty
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| The wit and wisdom of their king
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| But evil things in robes of sorrow
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| Assailed the monarch’s high estate!
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| And round about his home the glory
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| Is but a dim-remembered story
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| Vast forms that move fantastically
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| To a discordant melody; |
| While, like a ghastly river
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| A hideous throng rush out forever
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| And laugh -- but smile no more
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| Nevermore
|
| Edgar:
|
| It’s cold in here
|
| Roderick Usher:
|
| I tell you minerals are sentient things
|
| The gradual yet certain condensation of an atmosphere
|
| Of their own about the waters and the walls proves this
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| Thus the silent yet importunate and terrible influence
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| Which for centuries has molded my family
|
| And now me
|
| Madeline Usher:
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| Roderick Usher:
|
| Excuse me
|
| Madeline Usher:
|
| Roderick Usher:
|
| She is gone
|
| Out, sad light
|
| Roderick has no life
|
| I shall preserve her corpse for a fortnight
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| Edgar:
|
| But Roderick.
|
| Roderick Usher:
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| I shall place it in a vault facing the lake
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| I do not wish to answer to the medical men
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| Nor place her in the exposed burial plot of my family
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| We shall inter her at the proper date
|
| When I am more fully of a right mind
|
| Her malady was unusual
|
| Please do not question me on this
|
| Edgar:
|
| I cannot question you
|
| Roderick Usher:
|
| Then help me now
|
| Madeline Usher:
|
| Edgar:
|
| One would think you twins
|
| Roderick Usher:
|
| We are
|
| We have always been sympathetic to each other
|
| Have you seen this?
|
| It is her
|
| Edgar:
|
| It is a whirlwind
|
| You should not
|
| You must not behold this
|
| Roderick, these appearances which bewilder you are mere electrical phenomena
|
| not uncommon
|
| Or perhaps they have their rank origins in the marshy gases of the lake
|
| Please, let’s close this casement and I will read and you will listen
|
| Aand together we will pass this terrible night together
|
| What’s that?
|
| What is that?
|
| Don’t you hear that?
|
| Roderick Usher:
|
| Not hear it?
|
| Yes, I hear it and have heard it many minutes have I heard it?
|
| Oh, pity me miserable wretch
|
| I dared not
|
| Oh no
|
| I dared not speak
|
| We have put her living in the tomb
|
| I have heard feeble movements in the coffin
|
| I thought I heard
|
| I dared not speak
|
| Oh God
|
| I have heard footsteps
|
| Do you not hear them?
|
| Attention
|
| Do I not distinguish that heavy and horrible beating of her heart?
|
| Madman
|
| Madman
|
| I tell you she now stands without the door
|
| Madeline Usher: |