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 44
    Prev Next


      His broad and blessed comity.

      I do avow He still doth seem

      Pontiff of optimists supreme!”

      The Swede sat stone-like. Suddenly:

      “Leave thy carmine! From thorns the streak

      Ruddies enough that tortured cheek.

      ’Twas Shaftesbury first assumed your tone,

      Trying to cheerfulize Christ’s moan.”

      “Nay now,” plead Derwent, earnest here,

      And in his eyes the forming tear;

      “But hear me, hear!”

      “No more of it!”

      And rose. It was his passion-fit.

      The other changed; his pleasant cheer,

      Confronted by that aspect wild,

      Dropped like the flower from Ceres’ child

      In Enna, seeing the pale brow

      Of Pluto dank from scud below.

      Though by Gethsemane, where first

      Derwent encountered Mortmain’s mien,

      Christian forbearance well he nursed,

      Allowing for distempered spleen;

      Now all was altered, quite reversed—

      ’Twas now as at the burial scene

      By Siddim’s marge. And yet—and yet

      Was here a proof that priest had met

      His confutation? Hardly so

      (Mused Clarel) but he longed to know

      How it could be, that while the rest

      Contented scarce the splenetic Swede,

      They hardly so provoked the man

      To biting outburst unrepressed

      As did the cleric’s gentle fan.

      But had the student paid more heed

      To Derwent’s look, he might have caught

      Hints of reserves within the thought.

      Nor failed the priest ere all too late

      His patience here to vindicate.

      7. BELL AND CAIRN

      “ELOI LAMA SABACHTHANI!”

      And, swooning, strove no more.

      Nor gone

      For every heart, whate’er they say,

      The eclipse that cry of cries brought down,

      And clamors through the darkness blown.

      More wide for some it spreads in sway,

      Involves the lily of the Easter Day.

      A chance word of the Swede in place—

      Allusion to the anguished face,

      Recalled to Clarel now the cry,

      The ghost’s reproachful litany.

      Disturbed then, he apart would go;

      And passed among the crags; and there,

      Like David in Adullam’s lair—

      Could it be Vine, and quivering so?

      ’Twas Vine. He wore that nameless look

      About the mouth—so hard to brook—

      Which in the Cenci portrait shows,

      Lost in each copy, oil or print;

      Lost, or else slurred, as ’twere a hint

      Which if received, few might sustain:

      A trembling over of small throes

      In weak swoll’n lips, which to restrain

      Desire is none, nor any rein.

      Clarel recalled the garden’s shade,

      And Vine therein, with all that made

      The estrangement in Gethsemane.

      Reserves laid bare? and can it be?

      The dock-yard forge’s silent mound,

      Played over by small nimble flame—

      Raked open, lo, the anchor’s found

      In white-heat’s alb.

      With shrinking frame,

      Grateful that he was unespied,

      Clarel quite noiseless slipped aside:

      Ill hour (thought he), an evil sign:

      No more need dream of winning Vine

      Or coming at his mystery.

      O, lives which languish in the shade,

      Puzzle and tease us, or upbraid;

      What noteless confidant, may be,

      Withholds the talisman, the key!

      Or if indeed it run not so,

      And he’s above me where I cling;

      Then how these higher natures know

      Except in shadow from the wing?—

      Hark! as in benison to all,

      Borne on waste air in wasteful clime,

      What swell on swell of mellowing chime,

      Which every drooping pilgrim rallies;

      How much unlike that ominous call

      Pealed in the blast from Roncesvalles!

      Was more than silver in this shell

      By distance toned. What festival?

      What feast? of Adam’s kind, or fay?

      Hark—no, not yet it dies away.

      Where the sexton of the vaulted seas

      Buries the drowned in weedy grave,

      While tolls the buoy-bell down the breeze;

      There, off the shoals of rainy wave

      Outside the channel which they crave,

      The sailors lost in shrouding mist,

      Unto that muffled knelling list,

      The more because for fogged remove

      The floating belfry none may prove;

      So, yet with difference, do these

      Attend.

      “Chimes, chimes? but whence? thou breeze;”

      Here Derwent; “convent none is near.”

      “Ay,” said the Druze, “but quick’s the ear

      In deep hush of the desert wide.”

      “’Tis Saba calling; yea,” Rolfe cried,

      “Saba, Mar Saba summons us:

      O, hither, pilgrims, turn to me,

      Escape the desert perilous;

      Here’s refuge, hither unto me!”

      A lateral lodgment won, they wheeled,

      And toward the abandoned ledge they glanced:

      Near, in the high void waste advanced,

      They saw, in turn abrupt revealed,

      An object reared aloof by Vine

      In whim of silence, when debate

      Was held upon the cliff but late

      And ended where all words decline:

      A heap of stones in arid state.

      The cairn (thought Clarel), meant he—yes,

      A monument to barrenness?

      8. TENTS OF KEDAR

      They climb. In Indian file they gain

      A sheeted blank white lifted plain—

      A moor of chalk, or slimy clay,

      With gluey track and streaky trail

      Of some small slug or torpid snail.

      With hooded brows against the sun,

      Man after man they labor on.

      Corrupt and mortally intense,

      What fumes ere long pollute the sense?

      But, hark the flap and lumbering rise

      Of launching wing; see the gaunt size

      Of the ground-shadow thereby thrown.

      Behind a great and sheltering stone

      A camel, worn out, down had laid—

      Never to rise. ’Tis thence the kite

      Ascends, sails off in Tyreward flight.

      As ’twere Apollyon, angel bad,

      They watch him as he speeds away.

      But Vine, in mere caprice of clay,

      Or else because a pride had birth

      Slighting high claims which vaunted be

      And favoring things of low degree—

      From heaven he turned him down to earth,

      Eagle to ass. She now, ahead

      Went riderless, with even tread

      And in official manner, sooth,

      For bell and cord she’d known in youth;

      Through mart and wild, bazaar and waste

      Precedi
    ng camels strung in train,

      Full often had the dwarf thing paced,

      Conductress of the caravan

      Of creatures tall. What meant Vine’s glance

      Ironic here which impish ran

      In thievish way? O, world’s advance:

      We wise limp after!

      The cavalcade

      Anon file by a pit-like glade

      Clean scooped of last lean dregs of soil;

      Attesting in rude terraced stones

      The ancient husbandmen’s hard toil,—

      All now a valley of dry bones—

      In shape a hopper. ’Twas a sight

      So marked with dead, dead undelight,

      That Derwent half unconscious here

      Stole a quick glance at Mortmain’s face

      To note how it received the cheer.

      Whereat the moody man, with sting

      Returned the imprudent glance apace—

      Wayward retort all withering

      Though wordless. Clarel looking on,

      Saw there repeated the wild tone

      Of that discountenancing late

      In sequel to prolonged debate

      Upon the mountain. And again

      Puzzled, and earnest, less to know

      What rasped the Swede in such a man

      Than how indeed the priest could show

      Such strange forbearance; ventured now

      To put a question to him fair.

      “Oh, oh,” he answered, all his air

      Recovered from the disarray;

      “The shadow flung by Ebal’s hill

      On Gerizim, it cannot stay,

      But passes. Ay, and ever still—

      But don’t you see the man is mad?

      His fits he has; sad, sad, how sad!

      Besides; but let me tell you now;

      Do you read Greek? Well, long ago,

      In stage when goslings try the wing,

      And peacock-chicks would softly sing,

      And roosters small essay to crow;

      Reading Theocritus divine,

      Envious I grew of all that charm

      Where sweet and simple so entwine;

      But I plucked up and won a balm:

      Thought I, I’ll beat him in his place:

      If, in my verses, and what not,

      If I can’t have this pagan grace,

      Still—nor alone in page I blot,

      But all encounters that may be—

      I’ll make it up with Christian charity.”

      Another brink they win, and view

      Adown in faintly greenish hollow

      An oval camp of sable hue

      Pitched full across the track they follow—

      Twelve tents of shaggy goat’s wool dun.

      “Ah, tents of Kedar may these be,”

      Cried Derwent; “named by Solomon

      In song? Black, but scarce comely, see.

      Whom have we here? The brood of Lot?”

      “The oval seems his burial-plot,”

      Said Rolfe; “and, for his brood, these men—

      They rove perchance from Moab’s den

      Or Ammon’s. Belex here seems well

      To know them, and no doubt will tell.”

      The Spahi, not at all remiss

      In airing his Turk prejudice,

      Exclaimed: “Ay, sirs; and ill betide

      These Moabites and Ammonites

      Ferrying Jordan either side—

      Robbers and starvelings, mangy wights.

      Sirs, I will vouch one thing they do:

      Each year they harry Jericho

      In harvest; yet thereby they gain

      But meager, rusty spears of grain.

      What right have such black thieves to live?

      Much more to think here to receive

      Our toll? Just Allah! say the word,

      And——” here he signified with sword

      The rest, impatient of delay

      While yet on hight at brink they stay,

      So bidden by Djalea, who slow

      Descends into the hopper low,

      Riding. “To parley with the knaves!”

      Cried Belex; “spur them down; that saves

      All trouble, sirs; ’twas Ibrahim’s way;

      When, in the Lebanon one day

      We came upon a——”

      “Pardon me,”

      The priest; “but look how leisurely

      He enters; yes, and straight he goes

      To meet our friend with scowling brows,

      The warder in yon outlet, see,

      Holding his desert spear transverse,

      Bar-like, from sable hearse to hearse

      Of toll-gate tents. Foreboding ill,

      The woman calls there to her brood.

      But what’s to fear! Ah, with good-will

      They bustle in the war-like mood;

      Save us from those long fish-pole lances!

      Look, menacingly one advances;

      But he, our Druze, he mindeth none,

      But paces. So! they soften down.

      ’Tis Zar, it is that dainty steed,

      High-bred fine equine lady brave,

      Of stock derived from long ago;

      ’Tis she they now admiring heed,

      Picking her mincing way so grave,

      None jostling, grazing scarce a toe

      Of all the press. The sulky clan,

      Yes, make way for the mare—and man!

      There’s homage!”

      “Ay, ay,” Belex said,

      “They’d like to steal her and retire:

      Her beauty is their heart’s desire—

      Base jackals with their jades!”

      Well sped

      The Druze. The champion he nears

      Posted in outlet, keeping ward,

      Who, altering at that aspect, peers,

      And him needs own for natural lord.

      Though claiming kingship of the land

      He hesitates to make demand:

      Salute he yields. The Druze returns

      The salutation; nor he spurns

      To smoke with Ammon, but in way

      Not derogating—brief delay.

      They part. The unmolested train

      Are beckoned, and come down. Amain

      The camp they enter and pass through;

      No conflict here, no weak ado

      Of words or blows.

      This policy

      (Djalea’s) bred now a pleasing thought

      In Derwent: “Wars might ended be,

      Yes, Japhet, Shem, and Ham be brought

      To confluence of amity,

      Were leaders but discreet and wise

      Like this our chief.”

      The armed man’s eyes

      Turned toward him tolerantly there

      As ’twere a prattling child.

      They fare

      Further, and win a nook of stone,

      And there a fountain making moan.

      The shade invites, though not of trees:

      They tarry in this chapel-of-ease;

      Then up, and journey on and on,

      Nor tent they see—not even a lonely one.

      9. OF MONASTERIES

      The lake ink-black mid slopes of snow—

      The dead-house for the frozen, barred—

      And the stone hospice; chill they show

      Monastic in thy pass, Bernard.

      Apostle of the Alps storm-riven,

      How lone didst build so near the heaven!

      Anchored in seas of Nitria’s sand,

      The desert convent of the Copt—

    &n
    bsp; No aerolite can more command

      The sense of dead detachment, dropped

      All solitary from the sky.

      The herdsmen of Olympus lie

      In summer when the eve is won

      Viewing white Spermos lower down,

      The mountain-convent; and winds bear

      The chimes that bid the monks to prayer;

      Nor man-of-war-hawk sole in sky

      O’er lonely ship sends lonelier cry.

      The Grand Chartreuse with crystal peaks

      Mid pines—the wintry Paradise

      Of soul which but a Saviour seeks—

      The mountains round all slabbed with ice;

      May well recall the founder true,

      St. Bruno, who to heaven has gone

      And proved his motto—that whereto

      Each locked Carthusian yet adheres:

      Troubled I was, but spake I none;

      I kept in mind the eternal years.

      And Vallambrosa—in, shut in;

      And Montserrat—enisled aloft;

      With many more the verse might win,

      Solitudes all, austere or soft.

      But Saba! Of retreats where heart

      Longing for more than downy rest,

      Fit place would find from world apart,

      Saba abides the loneliest:

      Saba, that with an eagle’s theft

      Seizeth and dwelleth in the cleft.

      Aloof the monks their aerie keep,

      Down from their hanging cells they peep

      Like samphire-gatherers o’er the bay

      Faint hearing there the hammering deep

      Of surf that smites the ledges gray.

      But up and down, from grot to shrine,

      Along the gorge, hard by the brink

      File the gowned monks in even line,

      And never shrink!

      With litany or dirge they wend

      Where nature as in travail dwells;

      And the worn grots and pensive dells

      In wail for wail responses send—

      Echoes in plaintive syllables.

      With mystic silvery brede divine,

      Saint Basil’s banner of Our Lord

      (In lieu of crucifix adored

      By Greeks which images decline)

      Stained with the five small wounds and red,

      Down through the darkling gulf is led—

      By night ofttimes, while tapers glow

      Small in the depths, as stars may show

      Reflected far in well profound.

      Full fifteen hundred years have wound

      Since cenobite first harbored here;

      The bones of men, deemed martyrs crowned,

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026