"The Masque of the Red Death"

Gap-fill exercise

Fill in all the gaps, then press "Check" to check your answers.
   black      blue      clock      corpse      dagger      disease      disgust      entertainment      flames      gate      green      insult      life      mask      party      Prince      Prospero      purple      scarlet      seven      six      symptoms      thief      thousand      windows   
A terrifying called the Red Death ravages the dominion of Prospero. So lethal is it that it kills within a half-hour after the onset of its : sharp pain, dizziness, and bleeding from the pores.
.......However, the prince is safe and happy in an abbey to which he has withdrawn with a knights and ladies selected from his court. The abbey, which resembles a great castle, is surrounded by a sturdy wall. Its iron has been welded shut, making it impossible for anyone to enter or leave.
.......Inside, the prince has stocked food and drink aplenty and maintains companies of musicians, dancers, and clowns for .
After about months, while the disease was taking its toll outside, the prince held a masked ball in a maze-like suite of rooms specially decorated according to a theme color. One room was blue; the second, purple; the third, ; the fourth, orange; the fifth, white; and the sixth, violet. A stained-glass window in the wall between each of these rooms and the outside corridor matched the color of the room. The seventh room was hung with tapestries of velvet. However, here the stained-glass between the room and the corridor was scarlet instead of black.

.......There were no candles to light any of the rooms. Rather, illumination was provided by a brazier of fire set on a tripod in the corridor outside each of the stained-glass . Thus, shimmering blue light, mimicking the movement of the leaping flames, illuminated the first room, shimmering light illuminated the second room, and so on. Into the seventh room, the black one with the window, the fire projected blood-red light that was ghastly to behold. The masqueraders were reluctant to enter this room. Adding to the spooky atmosphere of the room was an ebony pendulum clock that marked the hour with a deep chime that echoed through the winding hallways and made all the guests nervous.
.......Nevertheless, the is a smashing success overall, with the guests–outfitted in every manner of odd, alluring, and grotesque costumes–enjoying themselves immensely. But no one enters the seventh room. Instead, everyone congregates in the other rooms.
.......After the ebony strikes twelve, the revelers in the room, where the prince is mingling with his friends, notice a new masquerader among them. They express surprise, utter whispers, and finally recoil in terror and . And no wonder. This masquerader, tall in and thin, is outfitted as a in a grave. His mask is as stiff and fearsome as a dead man’s face. Daubs of red on his costume make it clear that he has come in the guise of the Red Death. Prince Prospero reacts with a shudder signifying fear or disgust. Then he becomes angry. He asks, “Who dares us with this blasphemous mockery?”
Prospero orders the unmasking of the intruder and declares that he will be hanged in the morning from the fortress’s battlements.
But no one undertakes the task. The intruder then moves from room to room. Prospero withdraws a and chases him. In the black room, the intruder turns and faces Prospero. There is a cry. The dagger falls to the sable carpet. Then falls. Finding courage, Prospero’s friends then attack the intruder. To their horror, they discover that there is nothing inside the costume or behind the .
Poe ends the story by revealing the identity of the intruder:
"And now was acknowledged the presence of the Red Death. He had come like a in the night. And one by one dropped the revellers in the blood-bedewed halls of their revel, and died each in the despairing posture of his fall. And the of the ebony clock went out with that of the last of the gay. And the of the tripods expired. And Darkness and Decay and the Red Death held illimitable dominion over all."