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    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 28
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      What Lazarus in grief may get;

      Nor less sincere those priests were yet.

      Second in the dismounted list

      Was one, a laic votarist,

      The cross and chaplet by his side,

      Sharing the peace of eventide

      In frame devout. A Latin he,

      But not, as seemed, of high degree.

      Such public reverence profound

      In crossing Salem’s sacred bound

      Is not so common, in late day,

      But that the people by the way

      In silent-viewing eyes confessed

      The spectacle had interest.

      Nazarene Hebrews twain rode next,

      By one of the escort slyly vexed.

      In litter borne by steady mules

      A Russian lady parts the screen;

      A rider, as the gate is seen,

      Dismounts, and her alighting rules—

      Her husband. Checkered following there,

      Like envoys from all Adam’s race,

      Mixed men of various nations pace,

      Such as in crowded steamer come

      And disembark at Jaffa’s stair.

      Mute mid the buzz of chat and prayer,

      Plain-clad where others sport the plume,

      What countrymen are yonder three?

      The critic-coolness in their eyes

      Disclaims emotion’s shallow sea;

      Or misapply they precept wise,

      Nil admirari? Or, may be,

      Rationalists these riders are,

      Men self-sufficing, insular.

      Nor less they show in grave degree

      Tolerance for each poor votary.

      Now when the last rays slanting fall,

      The last new comer enters in:

      The gate shuts after with a din.

      Tarries the student on the wall.

      Dubieties of recent date—

      Scenes, words, events—he thinks of all.

      As, when the autumn sweeps the down,

      And gray skies tell of summer gone,

      The swallow hovers by the strait—

      Impending on the passage long;

      Upon a brink and poise he hung.

      The bird in end must needs migrate

      Over the sea: shall Clarel too

      Launch o’er his gulf, e’en Doubt, and woo

      Remote conclusions?

      Unresigned,

      He sought the inn, and tried to read

      The Fathers with a filial mind.

      In vain; heart wandered or repined.

      The Evangelists may serve his need:

      Deep as he felt the beauty sway,

      Estrangement there he could but heed,

      Both time and tone so far away

      From him the modern. Not to dwell,

      Rising he walked the floor, then stood

      Irresolute. His eye here fell

      Upon the blank wall of the cell,

      The wall before him, and he viewed

      A place where the last coat of lime—

      White flakes whereof lay dropped below—

      Thin scaling off, laid open so

      Upon the prior coat a rhyme

      Pale penciled. In one’s nervous trance

      Things near will distant things recall,

      And common ones suggest romance:

      He thought of her built up in wall,

      Cristina of Coll’alto; yes,

      The verse here breaking from recess—

      Tho’ immaterial, but a thought

      In some sojurning traveler wrought—

      Scribbled, overlaid, again revealed—

      Seemed like a tragic fact unsealed:

      So much can mood possess a man.

      He read: obscurely thus it ran:—

      “For me who never loved the stride,

      Triumph and taunt that shame the winning side—

      Toward Him over whom, in expectation’s glow,

      Elate the advance of rabble-banners gleam—

      Turned from a world that dare renounce Him so,

      My unweaned thoughts in steadfast trade-wind stream.

      If Atheists and Vitriolists of doom

      Faith’s gathering night with rockets red illume—

      So much the more in pathos I adore

      The low lamps flickering in Syria’s Tomb.”—

      “What strain is this?—But, here, in blur:—

      ‘After return from Sepulcher:

      B. L.’ ”—On the ensuing day

      He plied the host with question free:

      Who answered him, “A pilgrim—nay,

      How to remember! English, though—

      A fair young Englishman. But stay:”

      And after absence brief he slow

      With volumes came in hand: “These, look—

      He left behind by chance.”—One book,

      With portrait of a mitered man,

      Treated of high church Anglican,

      Confession, fast, saint-day—deplored

      That rubric old was not restored.

      But under Finis there was writ

      A comment that made grief of it.

      The second work had other cheer—

      Started from Strauss, disdained Renan—

      By striding paces up to Pan;

      Nor rested, but the goat-god here

      Capped with the red cap in the twist

      Of Proudhon and the Communist.

      But random jottings in the marge

      Disclosed some reader of the text

      Whose fervid comments did discharge

      More dole than e’en dissent. Annexed,

      In either book was penciled small:

      “B. L.: Oxford: St. Mary’s Hall.”

      Such proved these volumes—such, as scanned

      By Clarel, wishful to command

      Some hint that might supply a clew

      Better enabling to construe

      The lines their owner left on wall.

      42. TIDINGS

      Some of the strangers late arrived

      Tarried with Abdon at the inn;

      And, ere long, having viewed the town

      Would travel further, and pass on

      To Siddim, and the Dead Sea win

      And Saba. And would Clarel go?

      ’Twas but for days. They would return

      By Bethlehem, and there sojourn

      Awhile, regaining Zion so.

      But Clarel undetermined stood,

      And kept his vacillating mood,

      Though learning, as it happed, that Vine

      And Rolfe would join the journeying band.

      Loath was he here to disentwine

      Himself from Ruth. Nor less Lot’s land,

      And sea, and Judah’s utmost drought

      Fain would he view, and mark their tone:

      And prove if, unredeemed by John,

      John’s wilderness augmented doubt.

      As chanced, while wavering in mind,

      And threading a hushed lane or wynd

      Quick warning shout he heard behind

      And clattering hoofs. He hugged the wall,

      Then turned; in that brief interval

      The dust came on him, powdery light,

      From one who like a javelin flew

      Spectral with dust, and all his plight

      Charged with the desert and its hue;

      A courier, and he bent his flight—

      (As Clarel afterward recalled)

      Whither lay Agar’s close inwalled.

      The clank of arms, the clink of shoe,

      The cry admonitor
    y too,

      Smote him, and yet he scarce knew why;

      But when, some hours having flitted by,

      Nearing the precincts of the Jew

      His host, he did Nehemiah see

      Waiting in arch, and with a look

      Which some announcement’s shadow took,

      His heart stood still—Fate’s herald, he?

      “What is it? what?”—The saint delayed.—

      “Ruth?”—“Nathan;” and the news conveyed.

      The threat, oft hurled, as oft reviled

      By one too proud to give it heed,

      The menace of stern foemen wild,

      No menace now was, but a deed:

      Burned was the roof on Sharon’s plain;

      And timbers charred showed clotted stain:

      But, spirited away, each corse

      Unsepulchered remained, or worse.

      Ah, Ruth—woe, Agar! Ill breeds ill;

      The widow with no future free,

      Without resource perhaps, or skill

      To steer upon grief’s misty sea.

      To grieve with them and lend his aid,

      Straight to the house see Clarel fare,

      The house of mourning—sadder made

      For that the mourned one lay not there—

      But found it barred. He, waiting so,

      Doubtful to knock or call them—lo,

      The rabbi issues, while behind

      The door shuts to. The meeting eyes

      Reciprocate a quick surprise,

      Then alter; and the secret mind

      The rabbi bears to Clarel shows

      In dark superior look he throws:

      Censorious consciousness of power:

      Death—and it is the Levite’s hour.

      No word he speaks, but turns and goes.

      The student lingered. He was told

      By one without, a neighbor old,

      That never Jewish modes relent:

      Sealed long would be the tenement

      To all but Hebrews—of which race

      Kneeled comforters by sorrow’s side.

      So both were cared for. Clogged in pace

      He turned away. How pass the tide

      Of Ruth’s seclusion? Might he gain

      Relief from dull inaction’s pain?

      Yes, join he would those pilgrims now

      Which on the morrow would depart

      For Siddim, by way of Jericho.

      But first of all, he letters sent,

      Brief, yet dictated by the heart—

      Announced his plan’s constrained intent

      Reluctant; and consigned a ring

      For pledge of love and Ruth’s remembering.

      43. A PROCESSION

      But what!—nay, nay: without adieu

      Of vital word, dear presence true,

      Part shall I?—break away from love?

      But think: the circumstances move,

      And warrant it. Shouldst thou abide,

      Cut off yet wert thou from her side

      For time: tho’ she be sore distressed,

      Herself would whisper: “Go—’tis best.”

      Unstable! It was in a street,

      Half vault, where few or none do greet,

      He paced. Anon, encaved in wall

      A fount arrests him, sculpture wrought

      After a Saracen design—

      Ruinous now and arid all

      Save dusty weeds which trail or twine.

      While lingering in way that brought

      The memory of the Golden Bowl

      And Pitcher broken, music rose—

      Young voices; a procession shows:

      A litter rich, with flowery wreath,

      Singers and censers, and a veil.

      She comes, the bride; but, ah, how pale:

      Her groom that Blue-Beard, cruel Death,

      Wedding his millionth maid to-day;

      She, stretched on that Armenian bier,

      Leaves home and each familiar way—

      Quits all for him. Nearer, more near—

      Till now the ineffectual flame

      Of burning tapers borne he saw:

      The westering sun puts these to shame.

      But, hark: responsive marching choirs,

      Robed men and boys, in rhythmic law

      A contest undetermined keep:

      Ay, as the bass in dolings deep

      The serious, solemn thought inspires—

      In unconcern of rallying sort

      The urchin-treble shrills retort;

      But, true to part imposed, again

      The beards dirge out. And so they wind

      Till thro’ the city gate the train

      Files forth to sepulcher.

      Behind

      Left in his hermitage of mind,

      What troubles Clarel? See him there

      As if admonishment in air

      He heard. Can love be fearful so?

      Jealous of fate? the future? all

      Reverse—mischance? nay, even the pall

      And pit?—No, I’ll not leave her: no,

      ’Tis fixed; I waver now no more.—

      But yet again he thought it o’er,

      And self-rebukeful, and with mock:

      Thou superstitious doubter—own,

      Biers need be borne; why such a shock

      When passes this Armenian one?

      The word’s dispatched, and wouldst recall?

      ’Tis but for fleeting interval.

      44. THE START

      The twilight and the starlight pass,

      And breaks the morn of Candlemas.

      The pilgrims muster; and they win

      A common terrace of the inn,

      Which, lifted on Mount Acra’s cope,

      Looks off upon the town aslope

      In gray of dawn. They hear the din

      Of mongrel Arabs—the loud coil

      And uproar of high words they wage

      Harnessing for the pilgrimage.

      ’Tis special—marks the Orient life,

      Which, roused from indolence to toil,

      Indignant starts, enkindling strife.

      Tho’ spite the fray no harm they share,

      How fired they seem by burning wrong;

      And small the need for strenuous care,

      And languor yet shall laze it long.

      Wonted to man and used to fate

      A pearl-gray ass there stands sedate

      While being saddled by a clown

      And buffeted. Of her anon.

      Clarel regards; then turns his eye

      Away from all, beyond the town,

      Where pale against the tremulous sky

      Olivet shows in morning shy;

      Then on the court again looks down.

      The mountain mild, the wrangling crew—

      In contrast, why should these indue

      With vague unrest, and swell the sigh?

      Add to the burden? tease the sense

      With unconfirmed significance?

      To horse. And, passing one by one

      Their host the Black Jew by the gate,

      His grave salute they take, nor shun

      His formal God-speed. One, elate

      In air Auroral, June of life,

      With quick and gay response is rife.

      But he, the Israelite alone,

      ’Tis he reflects Jehovah’s town;

      Experienced he, the vain elation gone;

      While flit athwart his furrowed face

      Glimpses of that ambiguous thought

      Which in some aged men ye trace


      When Venture, Youth and Bloom go by;

      Scarce cynicism, though ’tis wrought

      Not all of pity, since it scants the sigh.

      They part. Farewell to Zion’s seat.

      Ere yet anew her place they greet,

      In heart what hap may Clarel prove?

      Brief term of days, but a profound remove.

      END OF PART FIRST

      PART 2

      The Wilderness

      1. THE CAVALCADE

      ADOWN THE Dolorosa Lane

      The mounted pilgrims file in train

      Whose clatter jars each open space;

      Then, muffled in, shares change apace

      As, striking sparks in vaulted street,

      Clink, as in cave, the horses’ feet.

      Not from brave Chaucer’s Tabard Inn

      They pictured wend; scarce shall they win

      Fair Kent, and Canterbury ken;

      Nor franklin, squire, nor morris-dance

      Of wit and story good as then:

      Another age, and other men,

      And life an unfulfilled romance.

      First went the turban—guide and guard

      In escort armed and desert trim;

      The pilgrims next: whom now to limn.

      One there the light rein slackly drew,

      And skimming glanced, dejected never—

      While yet the pilgrimage was new—

      On sights ungladsome howsoever.

      Cordial he turned his aspect clear

      On all that passed; man, yea, and brute

      Enheartening by a blithe salute,

      Chirrup, or pat, in random cheer.

      This pleasantness, which might endear,

      Suffused was with a prosperous look

      That bordered vanity, but took

      Fair color as from ruddy heart.

      A priest he was—though but in part;

      For as the Templar old combined

      The cavalier and monk in one;

      In Derwent likewise might you find

      The secular and cleric tone.

      Imported or domestic mode,

      Thought’s last adopted style he showed;

      Abreast kept with the age, the year,

      And each bright optimistic mind,

      Nor lagged with Solomon in rear,

      And Job, the furthermost behind—

      Brisk marching in time’s drum-corps van

      Abreast with whistling Jonathan.

      Tho’ English, with an English home,

     


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