[The Works of Edgar Allan Poe by Edgar Allan Poe]@TWC D-Link book
The Works of Edgar Allan Poe

CHAPTER 23
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DURING the six or seven days immediately following we remained in our hiding-place upon the hill, going out only occasionally, and then with the greatest precaution, for water and filberts.

We had made a kind of penthouse on the platform, furnishing it with a bed of dry leaves, and placing in it three large flat stones, which served us for both fireplace and table.

We kindled a fire without difficulty by rubbing two pieces of dry wood together, the one soft, the other hard.

The bird we had taken in such good season proved excellent eating, although somewhat tough.

It was not an oceanic fowl, but a species of bittern, with jet black and grizzly plumage, and diminutive wings in proportion to its bulk.


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