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    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 4
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      Still vying with the Victory

      Throughout that earnest race—

      The Victory, whose Admiral,

      With orders nobly won,

      Shone in the globe of the battle glow—

      The angel in that sun.

      Parallel in story,

      Lo, the stately pair,

      As late in grapple ranging,

      The foe between them there—

      When four great hulls lay tiered,

      And the fiery tempest cleared,

      And your prizes twain appeared,

      Temeraire!

      But Trafalgar´ is over now,

      The quarter-deck undone;

      The carved and castled navies fire

      Their evening-gun.

      O, Titan Temeraire,

      Your stern-lights fade away;

      Your bulwarks to the years must yield,

      And heart-of-oak decay.

      A pigmy steam-tug tows you,

      Gigantic, to the shore—

      Dismantled of your guns and spars,

      And sweeping wings of war.

      The rivets clinch the iron-clads,

      Men learn a deadlier lore;

      But Fame has nailed your battle-flags—

      Your ghost it sails before:

      O, the navies old and oaken,

      O, the Temeraire no more!

      A Utilitarian View of the Monitor’s Fight

      PLAIN be the phrase, yet apt the verse,

      More ponderous than nimble;

      For since grimed War here laid aside

      His Orient pomp, ’twould ill befit

      Overmuch to ply

      The rhyme’s barbaric cymbal.

      Hail to victory without the gaud

      Of glory; zeal that needs no fans

      Of banners; plain mechanic power

      Plied cogently in War now placed—

      Where War belongs—

      Among the trades and artisans.

      Yet this was battle, and intense—

      Beyond the strife of fleets heroic;

      Deadlier, closer, calm ’mid storm;

      No passion; all went on by crank,

      Pivot, and screw,

      And calculations of caloric.

      Needless to dwell; the story’s known.

      The ringing of those plates on plates

      Still ringeth round the world—

      The clangor of that blacksmiths’ fray.

      The anvil-din

      Resounds this message from the Fates:

      War yet shall be, and to the end;

      But war-paint shows the streaks of weather;

      War yet shall be, but warriors

      Are now but operatives; War’s made

      Less grand than Peace,

      And a singe runs through lace and feather.

      Shiloh

      A Requiem

      (April, 1862)

      SKIMMING lightly, wheeling still,

      The swallows fly low

      Over the field in clouded days,

      The forest-field of Shiloh—

      Over the field where April rain

      Solaced the parched ones stretched in pain

      Through the pause of night

      That followed the Sunday fight

      Around the church of Shiloh—

      The church so lone, the log-built one,

      That echoed to many a parting groan

      And natural prayer

      Of dying foemen mingled there—

      Foemen at morn, but friends at eve—

      Fame or country least their care:

      (What like a bullet can undeceive!)

      But now they lie low,

      While over them the swallows skim,

      And all is hushed at Shiloh.

      The Battle for the Mississippi

      (April, 1862)

      WHEN Israel camped by Migdol hoar,

      Down at her feet her shawm she threw,

      But Moses sung and timbrels rung

      For Pharaoh’s stranded crew.

      So God appears in apt events—

      The Lord is a man of war!

      So the strong wing to the muse is given

      In victory’s roar.

      Deep be the ode that hymns the fleet—

      The fight by night—the fray

      Which bore our Flag against the powerful stream,

      And led it up to day.

      Dully through din of larger strife

      Shall bay that warring gun;

      But none the less to us who live

      It peals—an echoing one.

      The shock of ships, the jar of walls,

      The rush through thick and thin—

      The flaring fire-rafts, glare and gloom—

      Eddies, and shells that spin—

      The boom-chain burst, the hulks dislodged,

      The jam of gun-boats driven,

      Or fired, or sunk—made up a war

      Like Michael’s waged with leven.

      The manned Varuna stemmed and quelled

      The odds which hard beset;

      The oaken flag-ship, half ablaze,

      Passed on and thundered yet;

      While foundering, gloomed in grimy flame,

      The Ram Manassas—hark the yell!—

      Plunged, and was gone; in joy or fright,

      The River gave a startled swell.

      They fought through lurid dark till dawn;

      The war-smoke rolled away

      With clouds of night, and showed the fleet

      In scarred yet firm array,

      Above the forts, above the drift

      Of wrecks which strife had made;

      And Farragut sailed up to the town

      And anchored—sheathed the blade.

      The moody broadsides, brooding deep,

      Hold the lewd mob at bay,

      While o’er the armed decks’ solemn aisles

      The meek church-pennons play;

      By shotted guns the sailors stand,

      With foreheads bound or bare;

      The captains and the conquering crews

      Humble their pride in prayer.

      They pray; and after victory, prayer

      Is meet for men who mourn their slain;

      The living shall unmoor and sail,

      But Death’s dark anchor secret deeps detain.

      Yet Glory slants her shaft of rays

      Far through the undisturbed abyss;

      There must be other, nobler worlds for them

      Who nobly yield their lives in this.

      Malvern Hill

      (July, 1862)

      YE elms that wave on Malvern Hill

      In prime of morn and May,

      Recall ye how McClellan’s men

      Here stood at bay?

      While deep within yon forest dim

      Our rigid comrades lay—

      Some with the cartridge in their mouth,

      Others with fixed arms lifted South—

      Invoking so

      The cypress glades? Ah wilds of woe!

      The spires of Richmond, late beheld

      Through rifts in musket-haze,

      Were closed from view in clouds of dust

      On leaf-walled ways,

      Where streamed our wagons in caravan;

      And the Seven Nights and Days

      Of march and fast, retreat and fight,

      Pinched our grimed faces to ghastly plight—

      Does the elm wood

      Recall the haggard beards of blood?

     
    The battle-smoked flag, with stars eclipsed,

      We followed (it never fell!)—

      In silence husbanded our strength—

      Received their yell;

      Till on this slope we patient turned

      With cannon ordered well;

      Reverse we proved was not defeat;

      But ah, the sod what thousands meet!—

      Does Malvern Wood

      Bethink itself, and muse and brood?

      We elms of Malvern Hill

      Remember every thing;

      But sap the twig will fill:

      Wag the world how it will,

      Leaves must be green in Spring.

      The Victor of Antietam e

      (1862)

      WHEN tempest winnowed grain from bran,

      And men were looking for a man,

      Authority called you to the van,

      McClellan:

      Along the line the plaudit ran,

      As later when Antietam’s cheers began.

      Through storm-cloud and eclipse must move

      Each Cause and Man, dear to the stars and Jove;

      Nor always can the wisest tell

      Deferred fulfillment from the hopeless knell—

      The struggler from the floundering ne’er-do-well.

      A pall-cloth on the Seven Days fell,

      McClellan—

      Unprosperously heroical!

      Who could Antietam’s wreath foretell?

      Authority called you; then, in mist

      And loom of jeopardy—dismissed.

      But staring peril soon appalled;

      You, the Discarded, she recalled—

      Recalled you, nor endured delay;

      And forth you rode upon a blasted way,

      Arrayed Pope’s rout, and routed Lee’s array,

      McClellan:

      Your tent was choked with captured flags that day,

      McClellan.

      Antietam was a telling fray.

      Recalled you; and she heard your drum

      Advancing through the ghastly gloom.

      You manned the wall, you propped the Dome,

      You stormed the powerful stormer home,

      McClellan:

      Antietam’s cannon long shall boom.

      At Alexandria, left alone,

      McClellan—

      Your veterans sent from you, and thrown

      To fields and fortunes all unknown—

      What thoughts were yours, revealed to none,

      While faithful still you labored on—

      Hearing the far Manassas gun!

      McClellan,

      Only Antietam could atone.

      You fought in the front (an evil day,

      McClellan)—

      The fore-front of the first assay;

      The Cause went sounding, groped its way;

      The leadsmen quarrelled in the bay;

      Quills thwarted swords; divided sway;

      The rebel flushed in his lusty May:

      You did your best, as in you lay,

      McClellan.

      Antietam’s sun-burst sheds a ray.

      Your medalled soldiers love you well,

      McClellan:

      Name your name, their true hearts swell;

      With you they shook dread Stonewall’s spell,f

      With you they braved the blended yell

      Of rebel and maligner fell;

      With you in shame or fame they dwell,

      McClellan:

      Antietam-braves a brave can tell.

      And when your comrades (now so few,

      McClellan—

      Such ravage in deep files they rue)

      Meet round the board, and sadly view

      The empty places; tribute due

      They render to the dead—and you!

      Absent and silent o’er the blue;

      The one-armed lift the wine to you,

      McClellan,

      And great Antietam’s cheers renew.

      Battle of Stone River, Tennessee

      A View from Oxford Cloisters

      (January, 1863)

      WITH Tewksbury and Barnet heath

      In days to come the field shall blend,

      The story dim and date obscure;

      In legend all shall end.

      Even now, involved in forest shade

      A Druid-dream the strife appears,

      The fray of yesterday assumes

      The haziness of years.

      In North and South still beats the vein

      Of Yorkist and Lancastrian.

      Our rival Roses warred for Sway—

      For Sway, but named the name of Right;

      And Passion, scorning pain and death,

      Lent sacred fervor to the fight.

      Each lifted up a broidered cross,

      While crossing blades profaned the sign;

      Monks blessed the fratricidal lance,

      And sisters scarfs could twine.

      Do North and South the sin retain

      Of Yorkist and Lancastrian?

      But Rosecrans in the cedarn glade,

      And, deep in denser cypress gloom,

      Dark Breckinridge, shall fade away

      Or thinly loom.

      The pale throngs who in forest cowed

      Before the spell of battle’s pause,

      Forefelt the stillness that shall dwell

      On them and on their wars.

      North and South shall join the train

      Of Yorkist and Lancastrian.

      But where the sword has plunged so deep,

      And then been turned within the wound

      By deadly Hate; where Climes contend

      On vasty ground—

      No warning Alps or seas between,

      And small the curb of creed or law,

      And blood is quick, and quick the brain;

      Shall North and South their rage deplore,

      And reunited thrive amain

      Like Yorkist and Lancastrian?

      Running the Batteries

      As observed from the Anchorage above Vicksburgh

      (April, 1863)

      A MOONLESS night—a friendly one;

      A haze dimmed the shadowy shore

      As the first lampless boat slid silent on;

      Hist! and we spake no more;

      We but pointed, and stilly, to what we saw.

      We felt the dew, and seemed to feel

      The secret like a burden laid.

      The first boat melts; and a second keel

      Is blent with the foliaged shade—

      Their midnight rounds have the rebel officers made?

      Unspied as yet. A third—a fourth—

      Gun-boat and transport in Indian file

      Upon the war-path, smooth from the North;

      But the watch may they hope to beguile?

      The manned river-batteries stretch for mile on mile.

      A flame leaps out; they are seen;

      Another and another gun roars;

      We tell the course of the boats through the screen

      By each further fort that pours,

      And we guess how they jump from their beds on those

      shrouded shores.

      Converging fires. We speak, though low:

      “That blastful furnace can they thread?”

      “Why, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego

      Came out all right, we read;

      The Lord, be sure, he helps his people, Ned.”

      How we strain our gaze. On bluffs they shun

      A golden growing flame appears—

     
    Confirms to a silvery steadfast one:

      “The town is afire!” crows Hugh: “three cheers!”

      Lot stops his mouth: “Nay, lad, better three tears.”

      A purposed light; it shows our fleet;

      Yet a little late in its searching ray,

      So far and strong, that in phantom cheat

      Lank on the deck our shadows lay;

      The shining flag-ship stings their guns to furious play.

      How dread to mark her near the glare

      And glade of death the beacon throws

      Athwart the racing waters there;

      One by one each plainer grows,

      Then speeds a blazoned target to our gladdened foes.

      The impartial cresset lights as well

      The fixed forts to the boats that run;

      And, plunged from the ports, their answers swell

      Back to each fortress dun:

      Ponderous words speaks every monster gun.

      Fearless they flash through gates of flame,

      The salamanders hard to hit,

      Though vivid shows each bulky frame;

      And never the batteries intermit,

      Nor the boats’ huge guns; they fire and flit.

      Anon a lull. The beacon dies:

      “Are they out of that strait accurst?”

      But other flames now dawning rise,

      Not mellowly brilliant like the first,

      But rolled in smoke, whose whitish volumes burst.

      A baleful brand, a hurrying torch

      Whereby anew the boats are seen—

      A burning transport all alurch!

      Breathless we gaze; yet still we glean

      Glimpses of beauty as we eager lean.

      The effulgence takes an amber glow

      Which bathes the hill-side villas far;

      Affrighted ladies mark the show

      Painting the pale magnolia—

      The fair, false, Circe light of cruel War.

      The barge drifts doomed, a plague-struck one.

      Shoreward in yawls the sailors fly.

     


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