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    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 45
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      To fossils turn in mountain near;

      Nor less while now lone scribe may write,

      Even now, in living dead of night,

      In Saba’s lamps the flames aspire—

      The votaries tend the far-transmitted fire.

      10. BEFORE THE GATE

      ’Tis Kedron, that profound ravine

      Whence Saba soars. And all between

      Zion and Saba one may stray,

      Sunk from the sun, through Kedron’s way.

      By road more menacingly dead

      Than that which wins the convent’s base

      No ghost to Tartarus is led.

      Through scuttle small, that keepeth place

      In floor of cellars which impend—

      Cellars or cloisters—men ascend

      By ladder which the monks let down

      And quick withdraw; and thence yet on

      Higher and higher, flight by flight,

      They mount from Erebus to light,

      And off look, world-wide, much in tone

      Of Uriel, warder in the sun,

      Who serious views this earthly scene

      Since Satan passed his guard and entered in.

      But not by Kedron these now come

      Who ride from Siddim; no, they roam

      The roof of mountains—win the tall

      Towers of Saba, and huge wall

      Builded along the steep, and there

      A postern with a door, full spare

      Yet strong, a clamped and bucklered mass

      Bolted. In waste whose king is Fear,

      Sole port of refuge, it is here.

      Strange (and it might repel, alas)

      Fair haven’s won by such a pass.

      In London Tower the Traitors’ Gate

      Through which the guilty waters flow,

      Looks not more grim. Yet shalt thou know,

      If once thou enter, good estate.

      Beneath these walls what frays have been,

      What clash and outcry, sabers crossed

      Pilgrim and Perizzite between;

      And some have here given up the ghost

      Before the gate in last despair.

      Nor, for the most part, lacking fair

      Sign-manual from a mitered lord,

      Admission shall that arch afford

      To any.

      Weary now the train

      At eve halt by the gate and knock.

      No answer. Belex shouts amain:

      As well invoke the Pico Rock.

      “Bide,” breathes the Druze, and dropping rein,

      He points. A wallet’s lowered down

      From under where a hood projects

      High up the tower, a cowl of stone,

      Wherefrom alert an eye inspects

      All applicants, and unbeknown.

      Djalea promptly from his vest

      A missive draws, which duly placed

      In budget, rises from the ground

      And vanishes. So, without sound

      Monks fish up to their donjon dark

      The voucher from their Patriarch,

      Even him who dwells in damask state

      On Zion throned. Not long they wait:

      The postern swings. Dismounting nigh,

      The horses through the needle’s eye,

      That small and narrow gate, they lead.

      But while low ducks each lofty steed,

      Behold how through the crucial pass

      Slips unabased the humble ass.

      And so they all with clattering din

      The stony fortress court-yard win.

      There see them served, and bidden rest;

      Horse, ass too, treated as a guest.

      Friars tend as grooms. Yet others call

      And lead them to the frater-hall

      Cliff-hung. By monks the board is spread;

      They break the monastery bread,

      Moist’ning the same with Saba’s wine,

      Product of painful toil mid stones

      In terraces, whose Bacchic zones

      That desert gird. Olive and vine

      To flinty places well incline,

      Once crush the flint. Even so they fared,

      So well for them the brethren cared.

      Refection done, for grateful bed

      Cool mats of dye sedate, were spread:

      The lamps were looked to, freshly trimmed;

      And last (at hint from mellow man

      Who seemed to know how all things ran,

      And who in place shall soon be hymned)

      A young monk-servant, slender-limbed,

      And of a comely countenance,

      Set out one flask of stature tall,

      Against men’s needs medicinal,

      Travelers, subject to mischance;

      Devout then, and with aspect bright

      Invoked Mar Saba’s blessing—bade good night.

      He goes. But now in change of tune,

      Shall friar be followed by buffoon?

      Saba supply a Pantaloon?

      Wise largess of true license yield.

      Howe’er the river, winding round,

      May win an unexpected bound;

      The aim and destiny, unsealed

      In the first fount, hold unrepealed.

      11. THE BEAKER

      “Life is not by square and line:

      Wisdom’s stupid without folly:

      Sherbet to-day, to-morrow wine—

      Feather in cap and the world is jolly!”

      So he, the aforesaid mellow man,

      Thrumming upon the table’s span.

      Scarce audible except in air

      Mirth’s modest overture seemed there.

      Nor less the pilgrims, folding wing,

      Weary, would now in slumber fall—

      Sleep, held for a superfluous thing

      By that free heart at home in hall.

      And who was he so jovial?

      Purveyor, he some needful stores

      Supplied from Syrian towns and shores;

      And on his trips, dismissing care,—

      His stores delivered all and told,

      Would rest awhile in Saba’s fold.

      Not broken he with fast and prayer:

      The leg did well plump out the sock;

      Nor young, nor old, but did enlock

      In reconcilement a bright cheek

      And fleecy beard; that cheek, in show,

      Arbutus flaked about with snow,

      Running-arbutus in Spring’s freak

      Overtaken so. In Mytilene,

      Sappho and Phaon’s Lesbos green,

      His home was, his lax Paradise,

      An island yet luxurious seen,

      Fruitful in all that can entice.

      For chum he had a mountaineer,

      A giant man, beneath whose lee

      Lightly he bloomed, like pinks that cheer

      The base of tower where cannon be.

      That mountaineer the battle tans,

      An Arnaut of no mean degree,

      A lion of war, and drew descent

      Through dames heroic, from the tent

      Of Pyrrhus and those Epirot clans

      Which routed Rome. And, furthermore,

      In after-line enlinked he stood

      To Scanderbeg’s Albanian brood,

      And Arslan, famous heretofore,

      The horse-tail pennon dyed in gore.

      An Islamite he was by creed—

      In act, what fortune’s chances breed:

      Attest the medal, vouch the scar—

      Had bled for Sultan, won for
    Czar;

      His psalter bugle was and drum,

      Any scorched rag his Labarum.

      For time adherent of the Turk,

      In Saba’s hold he sheathed his dirk,

      Waiting arrival of a troop

      Destined for some dragooning swoop

      On the wild tribes beyond the wave

      Of Jordan. Unconstrained though grave,

      Stalwart but agile, nobly tall,

      Complexion a burnt red, and all

      His carriage charged with courage high

      And devil-dare. A hawk’s his eye.

      While, for the garb: a snow-white kilt

      Was background to his great sword-hilt:

      The waistcoat blue, with plates and chains

      Tarnished a bit with grapy stains;

      Oaches in silver rows: stout greaves

      Of leather: buskins thonged; light cloak

      Of broidered stuff Damascus weaves;

      And, scorched one side with powder smoke,

      A crimson Fez, bald as a skull

      Save for long tassel prodigal.

      Last, add hereto a blood-red sash,

      With dagger and pistol’s silvery charms,

      And there you have this Arnaut rash,

      In zone of war—a trophy of arms.

      While yet the monks stood by serene,

      He as to kill time, his moustache

      Adjusted in his scimeter’s sheen;

      But when they made their mild adieu,

      Response he nodded, seemly too.

      And now, the last gowned friar gone,

      His heart of onslaught he toned down

      Into a solemn sort of grace,

      Each pilgrim looking full in face,

      As he should say: Why now, let’s be

      Good comrades here to-night.

      Grave plea

      For brotherly love and jollity

      From such an arsenal of man,

      A little strange seemed and remote.

      To bring it nearer—spice—promote—

      Nor mindless of some aspects wan,

      Lesbos, with fair engaging tone,

      Threw in some moral cinnamon:

      “Sir pilgrims, look; ’tis early yet;

      In evening arbor here forget

      The heat, the burden of the day.

      Life has its trials, sorrows—yes,

      I know—I feel; but blessedness

      Makes up. Ye’ve grieved the tender clay:

      Solace should now all that requite;

      ’Tis duty, sirs. And—by the way—

      Not vainly Anselm bade good night,

      For see!” and cheery on the board

      The flask he set.

      “I and the sword”

      The Arnaut said (and in a tone

      Of natural bass which startled one—

      Profound as the profound trombone)

      “I and the sword stand by the red.

      But this will pass, this molten ore

      Of yellow gold. Is there no more?”

      “Trust wit for that,” the other said:

      “Purveyor, shall he not purvey?”

      And slid a panel, showing store

      Of cups and bottles in array.

      “Then arms at ease, and ho, the bench!”

      It made the slender student blench

      To hark the jangling of the steel,

      Vibration of the floor to feel,

      Tremor through beams and bones which ran

      As that ripe masterpiece of man

      Plumped solid down upon the deal.

      Derwent a little hung behind—

      Censorious not, nor disinclined,

      But with self-querying countenance,

      As if one of the cloth, perchance

      Due bound should set, observe degree

      In liberal play of social glee.

      Through instinct of good fellow bright

      His poise, as seemed, the Lesbian wight

      Divined: and justly deeming here

      The stage required a riper cheer

      Than that before—solicitous,

      With bubbling cup in either hand,

      Toward Derwent drew he, archly bland;

      Then posed; and tunefully e’en thus:

      “A shady rock, and trickling too,

      Is good to meet in desert drear:

      Prithee now, the beading here—

      Beads of Saba, saintly dew:

      Quaff it, sweetheart, I and you:

      Quaff it, for thereby ye bless

      Beadsmen here in wilderness.

      Spite of sorrow, maugre sin,

      Bless their larder and laud their bin:

      Nor deem that here they vainly pine

      Who toil for heaven and till the vine!”

      He sings; and in the act of singing,

      Near and more near one cup he’s bringing,

      Till by his genial sleight of hand

      ’Tis lodged in Derwent’s, and—retained.

      As lit by vintage sunset’s hue

      Which mellow warms the grapes that bleed,

      In amber light the good man view;

      Nor text of sanction lacked at need;

      “At Cana, who renewed the wine?

      Sourly did I this cup decline

      (Which lo, I quaff, and not for food),

      ’Twould by an implication rude

      Asperse that festival benign.—

      We’re brethren, ay!”

      The lamps disclose

      The Spahi, Arnaut, and the priest,

      With Rolfe and the not-of-Sharon Rose,

      Ranged at the board for family feast.

      “But where’s Djalea?” the cleric cried;

      “’Tis royalty should here preside:”

      And looked about him. Truth to own,

      The Druze, his office having done

      And brought them into haven there,

      Discharged himself of further care

      Till the next start: the interim

      Accounting rightfully his own;

      And may be, heedful not to dim

      The escutcheon of an Emir’s son

      By any needless letting down.

      The Lesbian who had Derwent served,

      Officiated for them all;

      And, as from man to man he swerved,

      Grotesque a bit of song let fall:

      “The Mufti in park suburban

      Lies under a stone

      Surmounted serene by a turban

      Magnific—a marble one!”

      So, man by man, with twinkling air,

      And cup and text of stanza fair:

      “A Rabbi in Prague they muster

      In mound evermore

      Looking up at his monument’s cluster—

      A cluster of grapes of Noah!”

      When all were served with wine and rhyme

      “Ho, comrade,” cried armed Og sublime,

      “Your singing makes the filling scant;

      The flask to me, let me decant.”

      With that, the host he played—brimmed up

      And off-hand pushed the frequent cup;

      Flung out his thigh, and quaffed apace,

      Barbaric in his hardy grace;

      The while his haughty port did say,

      Who’s here uncivilized, I pray?

      I know good customs: stint I ye?

      Indeed (thought Rolfe), a man of mark,

      And makes a rare symposiarch;

      I like him; I’ll e’en feel his grip.

      With that, in vinous fellowship

      Frank he put out his hand. In mood

      Of questionable brotherhood


      The slayer stared—anon construed

      The overture aright, and yet

      Not unreservedly he met

      The palm. Came it in sort too close?

      Was it embraces were for foes?

      Rolfe, noting a fine color stir

      Flushing each happy reveler,

      Now leaned back, with this ditty wee:

      “The Mountain-Ash

      And Sumach fine,

      Tipplers of summer,

      Betray the wine

      In autumn leaf

      Of vermil flame:

      Bramble and Thorn

      Cry—Fie, for shame!”

      Mortmain aloof and single sat—

      In range with Rolfe, as viewed from mat

      Where Vine reposed, observing there

      That these in contour of the head

      And goodly profile made a pair,

      Though one looked like a statue dead.

      Methinks (mused Vine), ’tis Ahab’s court

      And yon the Tishbite; he’ll consort

      Not long, but Kedron seek. It proved

      Even so: the desert-heart removed.

      But he of bins, whose wakeful eye

      On him had fixed, and followed sly

      Until the shadow left the door,

      Turned short, and tristful visage wore

      In quaint appeal. A shrug; and then

      “Beseech ye now, ye friendly men,

      Who’s he—a cup, pray;—O, my faith!

      That funeral cap of his means death

      To all good fellowship in feast.

      Mad, say he’s mad!”

      Awhile the priest

      And Rolfe, reminded here in heart

      Of more than well they might impart,

      Uneasy sat. But this went by:

      Ill sort some truths with revelry.—

      The giant plied the flask. For Vine,

      Relaxed he viewed nor spurned the wine,

      But humorously moralized

      On those five souls imparadised

      For term how brief; well pleased to scan

      The Mytilene, the juicy man.

      Earth—of the earth (thought Vine) well, well,

      So’s a fresh turf, but good the smell,

      Yes, deemed by some medicinal—

      Most too if damped with wine of Xeres

      And snuffed at when the spirit wearies.

      I have it under strong advising

      ’Tis good at whiles this sensualizing;

      Would I could joy in it myself;

      But no!—

      For Derwent, he, light elf

      Not vainly stifling recent fret,

      Under the table his two knees

     


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