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Pat
Martin the sheltered cove Book 5: Lines 483-487 He lunged for a reef, he seized it with both hands and clung for dear life, groaning until the giant wave surged past and so he escaped its force, but the breaker's backwash charged into him full fury and hurled him out to sea. Like pebbles stuck in the suckers of some octopus dragged from its lair--so strips of skin torn from his clawing hands stuck to the rock face. A heavy sea covered him over, then and there unlucky Odysseus would have met his death-- against the will of Fate-- but the bright-eyed one inspired him yet again. Fighting out from the breakers pounding toward the coast,free of rocks, with a windbreak from the gales. As the current flowed he felt the river's god and prayed to him in spirit: "Hear me, lord, whoever you are, |
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