[Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2) by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link book
Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2)

CHAPTER XLIV
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Away Though clothed in language of my own, the maiden's story is in substance the same as she related.

Yet were not these things narrated as past events; she merely recounted them as impressions of her childhood, and of her destiny yet unaccomplished.

And mystical as the tale most assuredly was, my knowledge of the strange arts of the island priesthood, and the rapt fancies indulged in by many of their victims, deprived it in good part of the effect it otherwise would have produced.
For ulterior purposes connected with their sacerdotal supremacy, the priests of these climes oftentimes secrete mere infants in their temples; and jealously secluding them from all intercourse with the world, craftily delude them, as they grow up, into the wildest conceits.
Thus wrought upon, their pupils almost lose their humanity in the constant indulgence of seraphic imaginings.

In many cases becoming inspired as oracles; and as such, they are sometimes resorted to by devotees; always screened from view, however, in the recesses of the temples.

But in every instance, their end is certain.


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