[Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. II (of 2) by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link bookMardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. II (of 2) CHAPTER XLVIII 6/9
Verdanna is a lunatic--" "A trope! my lord," cried Babbalanja. "My tropes are not tropes," said Media, "but yours are .-- Verdanna is a lunatic, that after vainly striving to cut another's throat, grimaces before a standing pool and threatens to cut his own.
And is such a madman to be intrusted with himself? No; let another govern him, who is ungovernable to himself Ay, and tight hold the rein; and curb, and rasp the bit.
Do I exaggerate ?--Mohi, tell me, if, save one lucid interval, Verdanna, while independent of Dominora, ever discreetly conducted her affairs? Was she not always full of fights and factions? And what first brought her under the sway of Bello's scepter? Did not her own Chief Dermoddi fly to Bello's ancestor for protection against his own seditious subjects? And thereby did not her own king unking himself? What wonder, then, and where the wrong, if Henro, Bello's conquering sire, seized the diadem ?" "What my lord cites is true," said Mohi, "but cite no more, I pray; lest, you harm your cause." "Yet for all this, Babbalanja," said Media, "Bello but holds lunatic Verdanna's lands in trust." "And may the guardian of an estate also hold custody of the ward, my lord ?" "Ay, if he can.
What _can_ be done, may be: that's the Greed of demi- gods." "Alas, alas!" cried Yoomy, "why war with words over this poor, suffering land.
See! for all her bloom, her people starve; perish her yams, ere taken from the soil; the blight of heaven seems upon them." "Not so," said Media.
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