Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. II (of 2) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 383 pages of information about Mardi.
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Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. II (of 2) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 383 pages of information about Mardi.

Within, was a bower; going behind it, like standing inside the sheet of the falls of the Genesee.

In this arbor we anchored.  And with their shaded prows thrust in among the flowers, our three canoes seemed baiting by the way, like wearied steeds in a hawthorn lane.

High midsummer noon is more silent than night.  Most sweet a siesta then.  And noon dreams are day-dreams indeed; born under the meridian sun.  Pale Cynthia begets pale specter shapes; and her frigid rays best illuminate white nuns, marble monuments, icy glaciers, and cold tombs.

The sun rolled on.  And starting to his feet, arms clasped, and wildly staring, Yoomy exclaimed—­“Nay, nay, thou shalt not depart, thou maid!—­here, here I fold thee for aye!—­Flown?—­A dream!  Then siestas henceforth while I live.  And at noon, every day will I meet thee, sweet maid!  And, oh Sun! set not; and poppies bend over us, when next we embrace!”

“What ails that somnambulist?” cried Media, rising.  “Yoomy, I say! what ails thee?”

“He must have indulged over freely in those citrons,” said Mohi, sympathetically rubbing his fruitery.  “Ho, Yoomy! a swallow of brine will help thee.”

“Alas,” cried Babbalanja, “do the fairies then wait on repletion?  Do our dreams come from below, and not from the skies?  Are we angels, or dogs?  Oh, Man, Man, Man! thou art harder to solve, than the Integral Calculus—­yet plain as a primer; harder to find than the philosopher’s-stone—­yet ever at hand; a more cunning compound, than an alchemist’s—­yet a hundred weight of flesh, to a penny weight of spirit; soul and body glued together, firm as atom to atom, seamless as the vestment without joint, warp or woof—­yet divided as by a river, spirit from flesh; growing both ways, like a tree, and dropping thy topmost branches to earth, like thy beard or a banian!—­I give thee up, oh Man! thou art twain—­yet indivisible; all things—­yet a poor unit at best.”

“Philosopher you seem puzzled to account for the riddles of your race,” cried Media, sideways reclining at his ease.  “Now, do thou, old Mohi, stand up before a demi-god, and answer for all.—­Draw nigh, so I can eye thee.  What art thou, mortal?”

“My worshipful lord, a man.”

“And what are men?”

“My lord, before thee is a specimen.”

“I fear me, my lord will get nothing out of that witness,” said Babbalanja.  “Pray you, King Media, let another inquisitor cross-question.”

“Proceed; take the divan.”

“A pace or two farther off, there, Mohi; so I can garner thee all in at a glance.—­Attention!  Rememberest thou, fellow-being, when thou wast born?”

“Not I. Old Braid-Beard had no memory then.”

“When, then, wast thou first conscious of being?”

“What time I was teething:  my first sensation was an ache.”

“What dost thou, fellow-being, here in Mardi?”

“What doth Mardi here, fellow-being, under me?”

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Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. II (of 2) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.