[Astoria by Washington Irving]@TWC D-Link book
Astoria

CHAPTER XXXIII
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Their report served but to increase the general despondency.

They had followed Mr.Reed for some distance below the point to which Mr.Hunt had explored, but had met with no Indians from whom to obtain information and relief.

The river still presented the same furious aspect, brawling and boiling along a narrow and rugged channel, between rocks that rose like walls.
A lingering hope, which had been indulged by some of the party, of proceeding by water, was now finally given up: the long and terrific strait of the river set all further progress at defiance, and in their disgust at the place, and their vexation at the disasters sustained there, they gave it the indignant, though not very decorous, appellation of the Devil's Scuttle Hole..


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