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    Chapter 1

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    Maramma

    We were now voyaging straight for Maramma; where lived and reigned, in
    mystery, the High Pontiff of the adjoining isles: prince, priest, and
    god, in his own proper person: great lord paramount over many kings in
    Mardi; his hands full of scepters and crosiers.

    Soon, rounding a lofty and insulated shore, the great central peak of
    the island came in sight; domineering over the neighboring hills; the
    same aspiring pinnacle, descried in drawing near the archipelago in
    the Chamois.

    "Tall Peak of Ofo!" cried Babbalanja, "how comes it that thy shadow so
    broods over Mardi; flinging new shades upon spots already shaded by
    the hill-sides; shade upon shade!"

    "Yet, so it is," said Yoomy, sadly, "that where that shadow falls, gay
    flowers refuse to spring; and men long dwelling therein become shady
    of face and of soul. 'Hast thou come from out the shadows of Ofo?'
    inquires the stranger, of one with a clouded brow."

    "It was by this same peak," said Mohi, "that the nimble god Roo, a
    great sinner above, came down from the skies, a very long time ago.
    Three skips and a jump, and he landed on the plain. But alas, poor
    Roo! though easy the descent, there was no climbing back."

    "No wonder, then," said Babbalanja, "that the peak is inaccessible to
    man. Though, with a strange infatuation, many still make pilgrimages
    thereto; and wearily climb and climb, till slipping from the rocks,
    they fall headlong backward, and oftentimes perish at its base."

    "Ay," said Mohi, "in vain, on all sides of the Peak, various paths are
    tried; in vain new ones are cut through the cliffs and the brambles:--
    Ofo yet remains inaccessible."

    "Nevertheless," said Babbalanja, "by some it is believed, that those,
    who by dint of hard struggling climb so high as to become invisible
    from the plain; that these have attained the summit; though others
    much doubt, whether their be-coming invisible is not because of their
    having fallen, and perished by the way."

    "And wherefore," said Media, "do you mortals undertake the ascent at
    all? why not be content on the plain? and even if attainable, what

    would you do upon that lofty, clouded summit? Or how can you hope to
    breathe that rarefied air, unfitted for your human lungs?"

    "True, my lord," said Babbalanja; "and Bardianna asserts that the
    plain alone was intended for man; who should be content to dwell under
    the shade of its groves, though the roots thereof descend into the
    darkness of the earth. But, my lord, you well know, that there are
    those in Mardi, who secretly regard all stories connected with this
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