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    Chapter 57 - Page 2

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    the times.

    Rambling on, we espied a clamorous crowd gathered about a conspicuous
    palm, against which, a scroll was fixed.

    The people were violently agitated; storming out maledictions against
    the insolent knave, who, over night must have fixed there, that
    scandalous document. But whoever he may have been, certain it was, he
    had contrived to hood himself effectually.

    After much vehement discussion, during which sundry inflammatory
    harangues were made from the stump's of trees near by, it was
    proposed, that the scroll should be read aloud, so that all might give
    ear.

    Seizing it, a fiery youth mounted upon the bowed shoulders of
    an old man, his sire; and with a shrill voice, ever and anon
    interrupted by outcries, read as follows:--

    "Sovereign-kings of Vivenza! it is fit you should hearken to wisdom.
    But well aware, that you give ear to little wisdom except of your own;
    and that as freemen, you are free to hunt down him who dissents from
    your majesties; I deem it proper to address you anonymously.

    "And if it please you, you may ascribe this voice to the gods: for
    never will you trace it to man.

    "It is not unknown, sovereign-kings! that in these boisterous days,
    the lessons of history are almost discarded, as super seded by present
    experiences. And that while all Mardi's Present has grown out of its
    Past, it is becoming obsolete to refer to what has been. Yet,
    peradventure, the Past is an apostle.

    "The grand error of this age, sovereign-kings! is the general
    supposition, that the very special Diabolus is abroad; whereas, the
    very special Diabolus has been abroad ever since Mardi began.

    "And the grand error of your nation, sovereign-kings! seems this:--The
    conceit that Mardi is now in the last scene of the last act of her
    drama; and that all preceding events were ordained, to bring about the
    catastrophe you believe to be at hand,--a universal and permanent
    Republic.

    "May it please you, those who hold to these things are fools, and not
    wise.

    "Time is made up of various ages; and each thinks its own a novelty.
    But imbedded in the walls of the pyramids, which outrun all

    chronologies, sculptured stones are found, belonging to yet older
    fabrics. And as in the mound-building period of yore, so every age
    thinks its erections will forever endure. But as your forests grow
    apace, sovereign-kings! overrunning the tumuli in your western vales;
    so, while deriving their substance from the past, succeeding
    generations overgrow it; but in time, themselves decay.

    "Oro decrees these vicissitudes.

    "In chronicles of old, you read, sovereign kings! that an eagle from
    the clouds presaged royalty to
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