Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 33
    Prev Next


      Sheltered he looks as by the grace

      Of shady palm-tuft. Vernal he

      In sacerdotal chivalry:

      That turban by its hue declares

      That the great Prophet’s blood he shares:

      Kept as the desert stallions be,

      ’Tis an attested pedigree.

      But ah, the bigot, he could lower

      In mosque on the intrusive Giaour.

      To make him truculent for creed

      Family-pride joined personal greed.

      Tho’ foremost here his word he vents—

      Officious in the conference,

      In rank and sway he ranged, in sooth,

      Behind that fine sultanic youth

      Which held his place apart, and, cool,

      In lapse or latency of rule

      Seemed mindless of the halting train

      And pilgrims there of Franquestan

      Or land of Franks. Remiss he wore

      An indolent look superior.

      His grade might justify the air:

      The viceroy of Damascus’ heir.

      His father’s jurisdiction sweeps

      From Lebanon to Amman’s steeps.

      Return he makes from mission far

      To independent tribes of war

      Beyond the Hauran. In advance

      Of the main escort, gun and lance,

      He aims for Salem back.

      This learned,

      In anxiousness the banker yearned

      To join; nor Glaucon seemed averse.

      ’Twas quick resolved, and soon arranged

      Through fair diplomacy of purse

      And Eastern compliments exchanged.

      Their wine, in pannier of the mule,

      Upon the pilgrims they bestow:

      “And pledge us, friends, in valley cool,

      If such this doleful road may know:

      Farewell!” And so the Moslem train

      Received these Christians, happy twain.

      They fled. And thou? The way is dun;

      Why further follow the Emir’s son?

      Scarce yet the thought may well engage

      To lure thee thro’ these leafless bowers,

      That little avails a pilgrimage

      Whose road but winds among the flowers.

      Part here, then, would ye win release

      From ampler dearth; part, and in peace.

      Nay, part like Glaucon, part with song:

      The note receding dies along:

      “Tarry never there

      Where the air

      Lends a lone Hadean spell—

      Where the ruin and the wreck

      Vine and ivy never deck,

      And wizard wan and sibyl dwell:

      There, oh, beware!

      “Rather seek the grove—

      Thither rove,

      Where the leaf that falls to ground

      In a violet upsprings,

      And the oracle that sings

      Is the bird above the mound:

      There, tarry there!”

      14. BY ACHOR

      Jerusalem, the mountain town

      Is based how far above the sea;

      But down, a lead-line’s long reach down,

      A deep-sea lead, beneath the zone

      Of ocean’s level, heaven’s decree

      Has sunk the pool whose deeps submerged

      The doomed Pentapolis fire-scourged.

      Long then the slope, though varied oft,

      From Zion to the seats abject;

      For rods and roods ye wind aloft

      By verges where the pulse is checked;

      And chief both hight and steepness show

      Ere Achor’s gorge the barrier rends

      And like a thunder-cloud impends

      Ominous over Jericho.

      Hard by the brink the Druze leads on,

      But halts at a projecting crown

      Of cliff, and beckons them. Nor goat

      Nor fowler ranging far and high

      Scales such a steep; nor vulture’s eye

      Scans one more lone. Deep down in throat

      It shows a sooty black.

      “A forge

      Abandoned,” Rolfe said, “thus may look.”

      “Yea,” quoth the saint, “and read the Book:

      Flames, flames have forked in Achor’s gorge.”

      His wizard vehemence surprised:

      Some new illusion they surmised;

      Not less authentic text he took:

      “Yea, after slaughter made at Ai

      When Joshua’s three thousand fled,

      Achan the thief they made to die—

      They stoned him in this hollow here—

      They burned him with his children dear;

      Among them flung his ingot red

      And scarlet robe of Babylon:

      Meet end for Carmi’s wicked son

      Because of whom they failed at Ai:

      ’Twas meet the trespasser should die;

      Yea, verily.”—His visage took

      The tone of that uncanny nook.

      To Rolfe here Derwent: “Study him;

      Then weigh that most ungenial rule

      Of Moses and the austere school

      Which e’en our saint can make so grim—

      At least while Achor feeds his eyes.”

      “But here speaks Nature otherwise?”

      Asked Rolfe; “in region roundabout

      She’s Calvinistic if devout

      In all her aspect.”—

      Vine, o’ercast,

      Estranged rode in thought’s hid repast.

      Clarel, receptive, saw and heard,

      Learning, unlearning, word by word.

      Erelong the wilds condense the ill—

      They hump it into that black Hill

      Named from the Forty Days and Nights,

      The Quarantania’s sum of blights.

      Up from the gorge it grows, it grows:

      Hight sheer, sheer depth, and death’s repose.

      Sunk in the gulf the wave disowns,

      Stranded lay ancient torrent-stones.

      These Mortmain marks: “Ah, from your deep

      Turn ye, appeal ye to the steep?

      But that looks off, and everywhere

      Descries but worlds more waste, more bare.”

      Flanked by the crag and glen they go.

      Ahead, erelong in greeting show

      The mounts of Moab, o’er the vale

      Of Jordan opening into view,

      With cloud-born shadows sweeping thro’.

      The Swede, intent: “Lo, how they trail,

      The mortcloths in the funeral

      Of gods!”

      Although he naught confessed,

      In Derwent, marking there the scene,

      What interference was expressed

      As of harsh grit in oiled machine—

      Disrelish grating interest:

      Howbeit, this he tried to screen.

      “Pisgah!” cried Rolfe, and pointed him.

      “Peor, too—ay, long Abarim

      The ridge. Well, well: for thee I sigh,

      Poor Moses. Saving Jericho

      And her famed palms in Memphian row,

      No cheerful landscape met thine eye;

      Unless indeed (yon Pisgah’s high)

      Was caught, beyond each mount and plain,

      The blue, blue Mediterranean.”

      “And might he then for Egypt sigh?”

      Here prompted Rolfe; but no reply;

      And Rolfe went on: “Balboa’s ken

      Roved in fine sweep from Darien:


      The woods and waves in tropic meeting,

      Bright capes advancing, bays retreating—

      Green land, blue sea in charm competing!”

      Meantime, with slant reverted eyes

      Vine marked the Crag of Agonies.

      Exceeding high (as Matthew saith)

      It shows from skirt of that wild path

      Bare as an iceberg seamed by rain

      Toppling awash in foggy main

      Off Labrador. Grottoes Vine viewed

      Upon the flank—or cells or tombs—

      Void as the iceberg’s catacombs

      Of frost. He starts. A form endued

      With living guise, from ledges dim

      Leans as if looking down toward him.

      Not pointing out the thing he saw

      Vine watched it, but it showed no claw

      Of hostile purpose; tho’ indeed

      Robbers and outlaws armed have dwelt

      Vigilant by those caves where knelt

      Of old the hermits of the creed.

      Beyond, they win a storied fount

      Which underneath the higher mount

      Gurgles, clay-white, and downward sets

      Toward Jericho in rivulets,

      Which—much like children whose small mirth

      Not funerals can stay—through dearth

      Run babbling. One old humpbacked tree,

      Sad grandam whom no season charms,

      Droops o’er the spring her withered arms;

      And stones as in a ruin laid,

      Like penitential benches be

      Where silent thickets fling a shade

      And gather dust. Here halting, here

      Awhile they rest and try the cheer.

      15. THE FOUNTAIN

      It brake, it brake how long ago,

      That morn which saw thy marvel done,

      Elisha—healing of the spring!

      A good deed lives, the doer low:

      See how the waters eager run

      With bounty which they chiming bring:

      So out of Eden’s bounds afar

      Hymned Pison through green Havilah!

      But ill those words in tone impart

      The simple feelings in the heart

      Of Nehemiah—full of the theme,

      Standing beside the marge, with cup,

      And pearls of water-beads adroop

      Down thinnish beard of silvery gleam.

      “Truly,” said Derwent, glad to note

      That Achor found her antidote,

      “Truly, the fount wells grateful here.”

      Then to the student: “For the rest,

      The site is pleasant; nor unblest

      These thickets by their shade endear.”

      Assent half vacant Clarel gave,

      Watching that miracle the wave.

      Said Rolfe, reclining by the rill,

      “Needs life must end or soon or late:

      Perchance set down it is in fate

      That fail I must ere we fulfill

      Our travel. Should it happen true—

      Attention, pray—I mend my will,

      And name executors in you:

      Bury me by the road, somewhere

      Near spring or brook. Palms plant me there,

      And seats with backs to them, all stone:

      In peace then go. The years shall run,

      And green my grave shall be, and play

      The part of host to all that stray

      In desert: water, shade, and rest

      Their entertainment. So I’ll win

      Balm to my soul by each poor guest

      That solaced leaves the Dead Man’s Inn.

      But charges, mind, yourselves defray—

      Seeing I’ve naught.”

      Where thrown he lay,

      Vine, sensitive, suffused did show,

      Yet looked not up, but seemed to weigh

      The nature of the heart whose trim

      Of quaint goodfellowship could so

      Strike on a chord long slack in him.

      But how may spirit quick and deep

      A constancy unfreakish keep?

      A reed there shaken fitfully

      He marks: “Was’t this we came to see

      In wilderness?” and rueful smiled.

      The meek one, otherwise beguiled,

      Here chancing now the ass to note

      Languidly munching straw and bran,

      Drew nigh, and smoothed the roughened coat,

      And gave her bread, the wheaten grain.

      Vine watches; and his aspect knows

      A flush of diffident humor: “Nay,

      Me too, me too let wait, I pray,

      On our snubbed kin here;” and he rose.

      Erelong, alert the escort show:

      ’Tis stirrups. But the Swede moved not,

      Aloof abiding in dark plot

      Made by the deeper shadow: “Go—

      My horse lead; but for me, I stay;

      Some bread—there, that small loaf will do:

      It is my whim—my whim, I say;

      Mount, heed not me.”—“And how long, pray?”

      Asked Derwent, startled: “eve draws on:

      Ye would not tarry here alone?”

      “Thou man of God, nor desert here,

      Nor Zin, nor Obi, yieldeth fear

      If God but be—but be! This waste—

      Soon shall night fold the hemisphere;

      But safer then to lay me down,

      Here, by yon evil Summit faced—

      Safer than in the cut-throat town

      Though on the church-steps. Go from me—

      Begone! To-morrow or next day

      Jordan ye greet, then round ye sway

      And win Lot’s marge. In sight ye’ll be:

      I’ll intercept. Ride on, go—nay,

      Bewitched, why gape ye so at me?

      Shall man not take the natural way

      With nature? Tut, fling me the cloak!”

      Away, precipitate he broke,

      The skull-cap glooming thro’ the glade:

      They paused, nor ventured to invade.

      While so, not unconcerned, they stood,

      The Druze said, “Well, let be. Why chafe?

      Nights here are mild; one’s pretty safe

      When fearless.—Belex! come, the road!”

      16. NIGHT IN JERICHO

      Look how a pine in luckless land

      By fires autumnal overrun,

      Abides a black extinguished brand

      Gigantic—killed, not overthrown;

      And high upon the horny bough

      Perches the bandit captain-crow

      And caws unto his troop afar

      Of foragers: much so, in scar

      Of blastment, looms the Crusaders’ Tower

      On the waste verge of Jericho:

      So the dun sheik in lawless power

      Kings it aloft in sombre robe,

      Lord of the tawny Arab mob

      To which, upon the plains in view,

      He shouts down his wild hullabaloo.

      There on the tower, through eve’s delay

      The pilgrims tarry, till for boon,

      Launched up from Nebo far away,

      Balloon-like rose the nibbled moon—

      Nibbled, being after full one day.

      Intent they watched the planet’s rise—

      Familiar, tho’ in strangest skies.

      The ascending orb of furrowed gold,

      Contracting, changed, and silvery rolled

      In violet heaven. The desert brown,

     
    Dipped in the dream of argent light,

      Like iron plated, took a tone

      Transmuting it; and Ammon shone

      In peaks of Paradise—so bright.

      They gazed. Rolfe brake upon the calm:

      “O haunted place, O powerful charm!

      Were now Elijah’s chariot seen

      (And yonder, read we writ aright,

      He went up—over against this site)

      Soaring in that deep heaven serene,

      To me ’twould but in beauty rise;

      Nor hair-clad John would now surprise—

      But Volney!”

      “Volney?” Derwent cried;

      “Ah, yes; he came to Jordan’s side

      A pilgrim deist from the Seine.”

      “Ay, and Chateaubriand, he too,

      The Catholic pilgrim, hither drew—

      Here formed his purpose to assert

      Religion in her just desert

      Against the Red Caps of his time.

      The book he wrote; it dies away;

      But those Septemberists of crime

      Enlarge in Vitriolists to-day.

      Nor while we dwell upon this scene

      Can one forget poor Lamartine—

      A latter palmer. Oh, believe

      When, his fine social dream to grieve,

      Strode Fate, that realist how grim,

      Displacing, deriding, hushing him,

      Apt comment then might memory weave

      In lesson from this waste.—That cry!

      And would the jackal testify

      From Moab?”

      Derwent could but sway:

      “Omit ye in citation, pray,

      The healthy pilgrims of times old?

      Robust they were; and cheery saw

      Shrines, chapels, castles without flaw

      Now gone. That river convent’s fold,

      By willows nigh the Pilgrims’ Strand

      Of Jordan, was a famous hold.

      Prince Sigurd from the Norseman land,

      Quitting his keel at Joppa, crossed

      Hither, with Baldwin for his host,

      And Templars for a guard. Perchance

      Under these walls the train might prance

      By Norman warder eyed.”

      “Maybe,”

      Responded Vine; “but why disown

      The Knight of the Leopard—even he,

      Since hereabout that fount made moan,

      Named Diamond of the Desert?”—“Yes,”

      Beamed Rolfe, divining him in clue;

      “Such shadows we, one need confess

      That Scott’s dreamed knight seems all but true

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026