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    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 42
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      The crumblings note they of the verge.

      In rear one strange steed timid lags:

      On foot an Arab goes before

      And coaxes him to steepy shore

      Of scooped-out gulfs, would halt him there:

      Back shrinks the foal with snort and glare.

      Then downward from the giddy brim

      They peep; but hardly may they tell

      If the black gulf affrighted him

      Or lingering scent he caught in air

      From relics in mid lodgment placed,

      Now first perceived within the dell—

      Two human skeletons inlaced

      In grapple as alive they fell,

      Or so disposed in overthrow,

      As to suggest encounter so.

      A ticklish rim, an imminent pass

      For quarrel; and blood-feud, alas,

      The Arab keeps, and where or when,

      Cain meeting Abel, closes then.

      That desert’s age the gorge may prove,

      Piercing profound the mountain bare;

      Yet hardly churned out in the groove

      By a perennial wear and tear

      Of floods; nay, dry it shows within;

      But twice a year the waters flow,

      Nor then in tide, but dribbling thin:

      Avers Mar Saba’s abbot so.

      Nor less perchance before the day

      When Joshua met the tribes in fray,

      What wave here ran through leafy scene

      Like uplands in Vermont the green;

      What sylvan folk by mountain-base

      Descrying showers about the crown

      Of woods, foreknew the freshet’s race

      Quick to descend in torrent down;

      And watched for it, and hailed in glee,

      Then rode the comb of freshet wild,

      As peaked upon the roller free

      With gulls for mates, the Maldives’ merry child?

      Or, earlier yet, could be a day,

      In time’s first youth and pristine May

      When here the hunter stood alone—

      Moccasined Nimrod, belted Boone;

      And down the tube of fringed ravine

      Siddim descried, a lilied scene?

      But crime and earthquake, throes and war;

      And heaven remands the flower and star.

      Aside they turn, and leave that gorge,

      And slant upon the mountain long,

      And toward a ledge they toilsome urge

      High over Siddim, and overhung

      By loftier crags. In spirals curled

      And pearly nothings buoyant whirled,

      Eddies of exhalations light,

      As over lime-kilns, swim in sight.

      The fog dispersed, those vapors show

      Diurnal from the waters won

      By the athirst demanding sun—

      Recalling text of Scripture so;

      For on the morn which followed rain

      Of fire, when Abraham looked again,

      The smoke went up from all the plain.

      Their mount of vision, voiceless, bare,

      It is that ridge, the desert’s own,

      Which by its dead Medusa stare,

      Petrific o’er the valley thrown,

      Congeals Arabia into stone.

      With dull metallic glint, the sea

      Slumbers beneath the silent lee

      Of sulphurous hills. These stretch away

      Toward wilds of Kadesh Barnea,

      And Zin the waste.

      In pale regard

      Intent the Swede turned thitherward:

      “God came from Teman; in His hour

      The Holy One from Paran came;

      They knew Him not; He hid His power

      Within the forking of the flame,

      Within the thunder and the roll.

      Imperious in its swift control,

      The lion’s instantaneous lick

      Not more effaces to the quick

      Than His fierce indignation then.

      Look! for His wake is here. O men,

      Since Science can so much explode,

      Evaporated is this God?—

      Recall the red year Forty-eight:

      He storms in Paris; thence divides;

      The menace scarce outspeeds the fate:

      He’s over the Rhine—He’s at Berlin—

      At Munich—Dresden—fires Vien;

      He’s over the Alps—the whirlwind rides

      In Rome; London’s alert—the Czar:

      The portent and the fact of war,

      And terror that into hate subsides.

      There, through His instruments made known,

      Including Atheist and his tribes,

      Behold the prophet’s marching One,

      He at whose coming Midian shook—

      The God, the striding God of Habakkuk.”

      Distempered! Nor might passion tire,

      Nor pale reaction from it quell

      The craze of grief’s intolerant fire

      Unwearied and unweariable.

      2. THE CARPENTER

      From vehemence too mad to stem

      Fain would they turn and solace them.

      Turn where they may they find a dart.

      For while recumbent here they view,

      Beneath them spread, the seats malign,

      Nehemiah recurs—in last recline

      A hermit there. And some renew

      Their wonderment at such a heart,

      Single in life—in death, how far apart!

      That life they question, seek a clew:

      Those virtues which his meekness knew,

      Marked these indeed but wreckful wane

      Of strength, or the organic man?

      The hardy hemlock, if subdued,

      Decays to violets in the wood,

      Which put forth from the sodden stem:

      His virtues, might they breed like them?

      Nor less that tale by Rolfe narrated

      (Thrown out some theory to achieve),

      Erewhile upon Mount Olivet,

      That sea-tale of the master fated;

      Not wholly might it here receive

      An application such as met

      The case. It needed something more

      Or else, to penetrate the core.

      But Clarel—made remindful so

      Of by-gone things which death can show

      In kindled meaning—here revealed

      That once Nehemiah his lips unsealed

      (How prompted he could not recall)

      In story which seemed rambling all,

      And yet, in him, not quite amiss.

      In pointed version it was this:

      A gentle wight of Jesu’s trade,

      A carpenter, for years had made

      His living in a quiet dell,

      And toiled and ate and slept alone,

      Esteemed a harmless witless one.

      Had I a friend thought he, ’twere well.

      A friend he made, and through device

      Of jobbing for him without price.

      But on a day there came a word—

      A word unblest, a blow abhorred.

      Thereafter, in the mid of night,

      When from the rafter and the joist

      The insect ticked; and he, lone sprite,

      How wakeful lay, what word was voiced?

      Me love; fear only man. And he—

      He willed what seemed too strange to be:

      The hamlet marveled and the glade:

      Interring him within his house,

      He there his monaste
    ry made,

      And grew familiar with the mouse.

      Down to the beggar who might sing,

      Alms, silent alms, unseen he’d fling,

      And cakes to children. But no more

      Abroad he went, till spent and gray,

      Feet foremost he was borne away.

      As when upon a misty shore

      The watchful seaman marks a light

      Blurred by the fog, uncertain quite;

      And thereto instant turns the glass

      And studies it, and thinks it o’er

      By compass: Is’t the cape we pass?

      So Rolfe from Clarel’s mention caught

      Food for an eagerness of thought:

      “It bears, it bears; such things may be:

      Shut from the busy world’s pell-mell

      And man’s aggressive energy—

      In cloistral Palestine to dwell

      And pace the stone!”

      And Mortmain heard,

      Attesting; more his look did tell

      Than comment of a bitter word.

      Meantime the ass, high o’er the bed

      Late scooped by Siddim’s borders there—

      As stupefied by brute despair,

      Motionless hung the earthward head.

      3. OF THE MANY MANSIONS

      “The Elysium of the Greek was given

      By haughty bards, a hero-heaven;

      No victim looked for solace there:

      The marble gate disowned the plea—

      Ye heavy laden, come to me.

      Nor Fortune’s Isles, nor Tempe’s dale

      Nor Araby the Blest did bear

      A saving balm—might not avail

      To lull one pang, one lot repair.

      Dreams, narrow dreams; nor of a kind

      Showing inventiveness of mind

      Beyond our earth. But oh! ’twas rare,

      In world like this, the world we know

      (Sole know, and reason from) to dare

      To pledge indemnifying good

      In worlds not known; boldly avow,

      Against experience, the brood

      Of Christian hopes.”

      So Rolfe, and sat

      Clouded. But, changing, up he gat:

      “Whence sprang the vision? They who freeze,

      On earth here, under want or wrong;

      The Sermon on the Mount shall these

      Find verified? is love so strong?

      Or bounds are hers, that Python mars

      Your gentler influence, ye stars?

      If so, how seem they given o’er

      To worse than Circe’s fooling spell;

      Enslaved, degraded, tractable

      To each mean atheist’s crafty power.

      So winning in enthusiast plea,

      Here may the Gospel but the more

      Operate like a perfidy?”

      “So worldlings deem,” the Swede in glow;

      “Much so they deem; or, if not so,

      Hereon they act. But what said he,

      The Jew whose feet the blisters know,

      To Christ as sore He trailed the Tree

      Toward Golgotha: ‘Ha, is it Thou,

      The king, the god? Well then, be strong:

      No royal steed with galls is wrung:

      That’s for the hack.’ There he but hurled

      The scoff of Nature and the World,

      Those monstrous twins.” It jarred the nerve

      Of Derwent, but he masked the thrill.

      For Vine, he kindled, sitting still;

      Respected he the Swede’s wild will

      As did the Swede Vine’s ruled reserve.

      Mortmain went on: “We’ve touched a theme

      From which the club and lyceum swerve,

      Nor Herr von Goethe would esteem;

      And yet of such compulsive worth,

      It dragged a god here down to earth,

      As some account. And, truth to say,

      Religion ofttimes, one may deem,

      Is man’s appeal from fellow-clay:

      Thibetan faith implies the extreme—

      That death emancipates the good,

      Absorbs them into deity,

      Dropping the wicked into bestialhood.”

      With that for text to revery due,

      In lifted waste, on ashy ground

      Like Job’s pale group, without a sound

      They sat. But hark! what strains ensue

      Voiced from the crags above their view?

      4. THE CYPRIOTE

      “Noble gods at the board

      Where lord unto lord

      Light pushes the care-killing wine:

      Urbane in their pleasure,

      Superb in their leisure—

      Lax ease—

      Lax ease after labor divine!

      “Golden ages eternal,

      Autumnal, supernal,

      Deep mellow their temper serene:

      The rose by their gate

      Shall it yield unto fate?

      They are gods—

      They are gods and their garlands keep green.

      “Ever blandly adore them;

      But spare to implore them:

      They rest, they discharge them from time;

      Yet believe, light believe

      They would succor, reprieve—

      Nay, retrieve—

      Might but revelers pause in the prime!”

      “Who sings?” cried Rolfe; “dare say no Quaker:

      Fine song o’er funeral Siddim here:

      So, mindless of the undertaker,

      In cage above her mistress’ bier

      The gold canary chirps. What cheer?

      Who comes?”

      “Ay, welcome as the drums

      Of marching allies unto men

      Beleaguered—comes, who hymning comes—

      What rescuer, what Delian?”

      So Derwent, and with quick remove

      Scaling the rock which hemmed their cove

      He thence descried where higher yet

      A traveler came, by cliffs beset,

      Descending, and where terrors met.

      Nor Orpheus of heavenly seed

      Adown thrilled Hades’ gorges singing,

      About him personally flinging

      The bloom transmitted from the mead;

      In listening ghost such thoughts could breed

      As did the vocal stranger here

      In Mortmain, where relaxed he lay

      Under that voice from other sphere

      And carol laughing at the clay.

      Nearer the minstrel drew. How fair

      And light he leaned with easeful air

      Backward in saddle, so to frame

      A counterpoise as down he came.

      Against the dolorous mountain side

      His Phrygian cap in scarlet pride

      Burned like a cardinal-flower in glen.

      And after him, in trappings paced

      His escort armed, three goodly men.

      Observing now the other train,

      He halted. Young he was, and graced

      With fortunate aspect, such as draws

      Hearts to good-will by natural laws.

      No furtive scrutiny he made,

      But frankly flung salute, and said:

      “Well met in desert! Hear my song?”

      “Indeed we did,” cried Derwent boon.

      “And wondered where you got that tune,”

      Rolfe added there. “Oh, brought along

      From Cyprus; I’m a Cypriote,

      You see; one catches many a note


      Wafted from only heaven knows where.”

      “And, pray, how name you it?” “The air?

      Why, hymn of Aristippus.” “Ah:

      And whither wends your train?” “Not far;”

      And sidelong in the saddle free

      A thigh he lolled: “’Tis thus, you see:

      My dame beneath Our Lady’s star

      Vowed in her need, to Saba’s shrine

      Three flagons good for holy wine:

      Vowed, and through me performed. Even now

      I come from Saba, having done

      Her will, accomplishing the vow.

      But late I made a private one—

      Meant to surprise her with a present

      She’ll value more than juicy pheasant,

      Good mother mine. Yes, here I go

      To Jordan, in desert there below,

      To dip this shroud for her.” “Shroud, shroud?”

      Cried Derwent, following the hand

      In startled wonderment unfeigned,

      Which here a little tap bestowed

      In designation on a roll

      Strapped to the pommel; “Azrael’s scroll!

      You do not mean you carry there

      A—a—” “The same; ’tis woven fair:

      “My shroud is saintly linen,

      In lavender ’tis laid;

      I have chosen a bed by the marigold

      And supplied me a silver spade!”

      The priest gazed at the singer; then

      Turned his perplexed entreating ken

      Upon Djalea. But Rolfe explained:

      “I chance to know. Last year I gained

      The Jordan at the Easter tide,

      And saw the Greeks in numbers there,

      Men, women, blithe on every side,

      Dipping their winding-sheets. With care

      They bleach and fold and put away

      And take home to await the day:

      A custom of old precedent,

      And curious too in mode ’tis kept,

      Showing how under Christian sway

      Greeks still retain their primal bent,

      Nor let grave doctrine intercept

      That gay Hellene lightheartedness

      Which in the pagan years did twine

      The funeral urn with fair caress

      Of vintage holiday divine.”

      He turned him toward the Cypriote:

      “Your courier, the forerunning note

      Which ere we sighted you, we heard—

      You’re bold to trill it so, my bird.”

      “And why? It is a fluent song.

      Though who they be I cannot say,

      I trust their lordships think no wrong;

     


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