CHAPTER LXXIII. SOMETHING MORE OF THE PRINCE.
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Previous to recording our stay in his dominions, it only
remains to be related of Donjalolo, that after assuming the
girdle, a change came over him.
During the lifetime of his father, he had been famed for
his temperance and discretion. But when Mardi was forever
shut out; and he remembered the law of his isle,
interdicting abdication to its kings; he gradually fell into
desperate courses, to drown the emotions at times distracting
him.
His generous spirit thirsting after some energetic career,
found itself narrowed down within the little glen of Willamilla,
where ardent impulses seemed idle. But these are
hard to die; and repulsed all round, recoil upon themselves.
So with Donjalolo; who, in many a riotous scene, wasted
the powers which might have compassed the noblest designs.
Not many years had elapsed since the death of the king,
his father. But the still youthful prince was no longer the
bright-eyed and elastic boy who at the dawn of day had
sallied out to behold the landscapes of the neighboring isles.
Not more effeminate Sardanapalus, than he. And, at
intervals, he was the victim of unaccountable vagaries;
haunted by specters, and beckoned to by the ghosts of his
sires.
At times, loathing his vicious pursuits, which brought him
no solid satisfaction, but ever filled him with final disgust,
he would resolve to amend his ways; solacing himself for
his bitter captivity, by the society of the wise and discreet.
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But brief the interval of repentance. Anew, he burst into
excesses, a hundred fold more insane than ever.
Thus vacillating between virtue and vice; to neither
constant, and upbraided by both; his mind, like his person
in the glen, was continually passing and repassing between
opposite extremes.
-- -- p275-270
Melville, Herman, 1819-1891 [1849], Mardi and a voyage thither, volume 1 (Harper & Brothers, New York) [word count] [eaf275v1].