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    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 53
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    But faltered there. The saint but glanced.

      “Father, if Good, ’tis unenhanced:

      No life domestic do ye own

      Within these walls: woman I miss.

      Like cranes, what years from time’s abyss

      Their flight have taken, one by one,

      Since Saba founded this retreat:

      In cells here many a stifled moan

      Of lonely generations gone;

      And more shall pine as more shall fleet.”

      With dove on wrist, he, robed, stood hushed,

      Mused on the bird, and softly brushed.

      Scarce reassured by air so mute,

      Anxiously Clarel urged his suit.

      The celibate let go the dove;

      Cooing, it won the shoulder—lit

      Even at his ear, as whispering it.

      But he one pace made in remove,

      And from a little alcove took

      A silver-clasped and vellum book;

      And turned a leaf, and gave that page

      For answer.—

      Rhyme, old hermit-rhyme

      Composed in Decius’ cruel age

      By Christian of Thebæan clime:

      ’Twas David’s son, and he of Dan,

      With him misloved that fled the bride,

      And Job whose wife but mocked his ban;

      Then rose, or in redemption ran—

      The rib restored to Adam’s side,

      And man made whole, as man began.

      And lustral hymns and prayers were here:

      Renouncings, yearnings, charges dread

      Against our human nature dear:

      Worship and wail, which, if misled,

      Not less might fervor high instill

      In hearts which, striving in their fear

      Of clay, to bridle, curb or kill;

      In the pure desert of the will

      Chastised, live the vowed life austere.

      The given page the student scanned:

      Started—reviewed, nor might withstand.

      He turned; the celibate was gone;

      Over the gulf he hung alone:

      Alone, but for the comment caught

      Or dreamed, in face seen far below,

      Upturned toward the Palm in thought,

      Or else on him—he scarce might know.

      Fixed seemed it in assent indeed

      Which indexed all? It was the Swede.

      Over the Swede, upon the stair—

      Long Bethel-stair of ledges brown

      Sloping as from the heaven let down—

      Apart lay Vine; lowermost there,

      Rolfe he discerned; nor less the three,

      While of each other unaware,

      In one consent of frame might be.

      How vaguely, while yet influenced so

      By late encounter, and his glance

      Rested on Vine, his reveries flow

      Recalling that repulsed advance

      He knew by Jordan in the wood,

      And the enigma unsubdued—

      Possessing Ruth, nor less his heart

      Aye hungering still, in deeper part

      Unsatisfied. Can be a bond

      (Thought he) as David sings in strain

      That dirges beauteous Jonathan,

      Passing the love of woman fond?

      And may experience but dull

      The longing for it? Can time teach?

      Shall all these billows win the lull

      And shallow on life’s hardened beach?—

      He lingered. The last dove had fled,

      And nothing breathed—breathed, waved, or fed,

      Along the uppermost sublime

      Blank ridge. He wandered as in sleep;

      A saffron sun’s last rays were shed;

      More still, more solemn waxed the time,

      Till Apathy upon the steep

      Sat one with Silence and the Dead.

      31. THE RECOIL

      “But who was SHE (if Luke attest)

      Whom generations hail for blest—

      Immaculate though human one;

      What diademed and starry Nun—

      Bearing in English old the name

      And hallowed style of HOLIDAME;

      She, She, the Mater of the Rood—

      Sprang she from Ruth’s young sisterhood?”

      On cliff in moonlight roaming out,

      So Clarel, thrilled by deep dissent,

      Revulsion from injected doubt

      And many a strange presentiment.

      But came ere long profound relapse:

      The Rhyme recurred, made voids or gaps

      In dear relations; while anew,

      From chambers of his mind’s review,

      Emerged the saint, who with the Palm

      Shared heaven on earth in gracious calm,

      Even as his robe partook the hue.

      And needs from that high mentor part?

      Is strength too strong to teach the weak?

      Though tame the life seem, turn the cheek,

      Does the call elect the hero-heart?—

      The thunder smites our tropic bloom:

      If live the abodes unvexed and balmy—

      No equinox with annual doom;

      If Eden’s wafted from the plume

      Of shining Raphael, Michael palmy;

      If these in more than fable be,

      With natures variously divine—

      Through all their ranks they are masculine;

      Else how the power with purity?

      Or in yon worlds of light is known

      The clear intelligence alone?

      Express the Founder’s words declare,

      Marrying none is in the heaven;

      Yet love in heaven itself to spare—

      Love feminine! Can Eve be riven

      From sex, and disengaged retain

      Its charm? Think this—then may ye feign

      The perfumed rose shall keep its bloom,

      Cut off from sustenance of loam.

      But if Eve’s charm be not supernal,

      Enduring not divine transplanting—

      Love kindled thence, is that eternal?

      Here, here’s the hollow—here the haunting!

      Ah, love, ah wherefore thus unsure?

      Linked art thou—locked, with Self impure?

      Yearnings benign the angels know,

      Saint Francis and Saint John have felt:

      Good-will—desires that overflow,

      And reaching far as life is dealt.

      That other love!—Oh heavy load—

      Is naught then trustworthy but God?

      On more hereof, derived in frame

      From the eremite’s Thebæan flame,

      Mused Clarel, taking self to task,

      Nor might determined thought reclaim:

      But, the waste invoking, this did ask:

      “Truth, truth cherubic! claim’st thou worth

      Foreign to time and hearts which dwell

      Helots of habit old as earth

      Suspended ’twixt the heaven and hell?”

      But turn thee, rest the burden there;

      To-morrow new deserts must thou share.

      32. EMPTY STIRRUPS

      The gray of dawn. A tremor slight:

      The trouble of imperfect light

      Anew begins. In floating cloud

      Midway suspended down the gorge,

      A long mist trails white shreds of shroud

      How languorous toward the Dead Sea’s verge.

      Riders in seat halt by the gate:

      Why not set forth? For one t
    hey wait

      Whose stirrups empty be—the Swede.

      Still absent from the frater-hall

      Since afternoon and vesper-call,

      He, they imagined, had but sought

      Some cave in keeping with his thought,

      And reappear would with the light

      Suddenly as the Gileadite

      In Obadiah’s way. But—no,

      He cometh not when they would go.

      Dismounting, they make search in vain;

      Till Clarel—minding him again

      Of something settled in his air—

      A quietude beyond mere calm—

      When seen from ledge beside the Palm

      Reclined in nook of Bethel stair,

      Thitherward led them in a thrill

      Of nervous apprehension, till

      Startled he stops, with eyes avert

      And indicating hand.—

      ’Tis he—

      So undisturbed, supine, inert—

      The filmed orbs fixed upon the Tree—

      Night’s dews upon his eyelids be.

      To test if breath remain, none tries:

      On those thin lips a feather lies—

      An eagle’s, wafted from the skies.

      The vow: and had the genius heard,

      Benignant? nor had made delay,

      But, more than taking him at word,

      Quick wafted where the palm-boughs sway

      In Saint John’s heaven? Some divined

      That long had he been undermined

      In frame; the brain a tocsin-bell

      Overburdensome for citadel

      Whose base was shattered. They refrain

      From aught but that dumb look that fell

      Identifying; feeling pain

      That such a heart could beat, and will—

      Aspire, yearn, suffer, baffled still,

      And end. With monks which round them stood

      Concerned, not discomposed in mood,

      Interment they provided for—

      Heaved a last sigh, nor tarried more.

      Nay; one a little lingered there;

      ’Twas Rolfe. And as the rising sun,

      Though viewless yet from Bethel stair,

      More lit the mountains, he was won

      To invocation, scarce to prayer:

      “Holy Morning,

      What blessed lore reservest thou,

      Withheld from man, that evermore

      Without surprise,

      But, rather, with a hurtless scorning

      In thy placid eyes,

      Thou viewest all events alike?

      Oh, tell me, do thy bright beams strike

      The healing hills of Gilead now?”

      And glanced toward the pale one near

      In shadow of the crag’s dark brow.—

      Did Charity follow that poor bier?

      It did; but Bigotry did steer:

      Friars buried him without the walls

      (Nor in a consecrated bed)

      Where vulture unto vulture calls,

      And only ill things find a friend:

      There let the beak and claw contend,

      There the hyena’s cub be fed:

      Heaven that disclaims, and him beweeps

      In annual showers; and the tried spirit sleeps.

      END OF PART 3

      PART 4

      Bethlehem

      1. IN SADDLE

      OF OLD, if legend truth aver,

      With hearts that did in aim concur,

      Three mitered kings—Amerrian,

      Apelius, and Damazon—

      By miracle in Cassak met

      (An Indian city, bards infer);

      Thence, prompted by the vision yet

      To find the new-born Lord nor err,

      Westward their pious feet they set—

      With gold and frankincense and myrrh.

      Nor failed they, though by deserts vast

      And voids and menaces they passed:

      They failed not, for a light was given—

      The light and pilotage of heaven:

      A light, a lead, no longer won

      By any, now, who seekers are:

      Or fable is it? but if none,

      Let man lament the foundered Star.

      And Kedron’s pilgrims: In review

      The wilds receive those guests anew.

      Yet ere, the MANGER now to win,

      Their desert march they re-begin,

      Belated leaving Saba’s tower;

      Reverted glance they grateful throw,

      Nor slight the abbot’s parting dower

      Whose benedictions with them go.

      Nor did the sinner of the isle

      From friendly cheer refrain, though lax:

      “Our Lady of the Vines beguile

      Your travel and bedew your tracks!”

      Blithe wishes, which slim mirth bestow;

      For, ah, with chill at heart they mind

      Two now forever left behind.

      But as men drop, replacements rule:

      Though fleeting be each part assigned,

      The eternal ranks of life keep full:

      So here—if but in small degree—

      Recruits for fallen ones atone;

      The Arnaut and pilgrim from the sea

      The muster joining; also one

      In military undress dun—

      A stranger quite.

      The Arnaut rode

      For escort mere. His martial stud

      A brother seemed—as strong as he,

      As brave in trappings, and with blood

      As proud, and equal gravity,

      Reserving latent mettle. Good

      To mark the rider in his seat—

      Tall, shapely, powerful and complete;

      A’lean, too, in an easy way,

      Like Pisa’s Tower confirmed in place,

      Nor lacking in subordinate grace

      Of lighter beauty. Truth to say,

      This horseman seemed to waive command:

      Abeyance of the bridle-hand.

      But winning space more wide and clear,

      He showed in ostentation here

      How but a pulse conveyed through rein

      Could thrill and fire, or prompt detain.

      On dappled steed, in kilt snow-white,

      With burnished arms refracting light,

      He orbits round the plodding train.

      Djalea in quiet seat observes;

      ’Tis little from his poise he swerves;

      Sedate he nods, as he should say:

      “Rough road may tame this holiday

      Of thine; but pleasant to look on:

      Come, that’s polite!” for on the wing,

      Or in suspense of curveting

      Chiron salutes the Emir’s son.

      Meantime, remiss, with dangling sword,

      Upon a cloistral beast but sad,

      A Saba friar’s befitting pad

      (His own steed, having sprained a cord,

      Left now behind in convent ward)

      The plain-clad soldier, heeding none

      Though marked himself, in neutral tone

      Maintained his place. His shoulders lithe

      Were long-sloped and yet ample, too,

      In keeping with each limb and thew:

      Waist flexile as a willow withe;

      Withal, a slouched reserve of strength,

      As in the pard’s luxurious length;

      The cheek, high-boned, of copperish show

      Enhanced by sun on land and seas;

      Long hair, much like a Cherokee’s,

      Curving behind
    the ear in flow

      And veiling part a saber-scar

      Slant on the neck, a livid bar;

      Nor might the felt hat hide from view

      One temple pitted with strange blue

      Of powder-burn. Of him you’d say—

      A veteran, no more. But nay:

      Brown eyes, what reveries they keep—

      Sad woods they be, where wild things sleep.

      Hereby, and by yet other sign,

      To Rolfe, and Clarel part, and Vine,

      The stranger stood revealed, confessed

      A native of the fair South-West—

      Their countryman, though of a zone

      Varied in nature from their own:

      A countryman—but how estranged!

      Nor any word as yet exchanged

      With them. But yester-evening’s hour

      Then first he came to Saba’s tower,

      And saw the Epirot aside

      In conference, and word supplied

      Touching detention of the troop

      Destined to join him for the swoop

      Over Jordan. But the pilgrims few

      Knew not hereof, not yet they knew,

      But deemed him one who took his way

      Eccentric in an armed survey

      Of Judah.

      On the pearl-gray ass

      (From Siddim riderless, alas!)

      Rode now the timoneer sedate,

      Jogging beneath the Druze’s lee,

      As well he might, instructed late

      What perils in lack of convoy be.

      A frater-feeling of the sea

      Influenced Rolfe, and made him take

      Solace with him of salt romance,

      Albeit Agath scarce did wake

      To full requital—chill, perchance

      Derived from years or diffidence;

      Howe’er, in friendly way Rolfe plied

      One-sided chat.

      As on they ride

      And o’er the ridge begin to go,

      A parting glance they turn; and lo!

      The convent’s twin towers disappear—

      Engulfed like a brig’s masts below

      Submerging waters. Thence they steer

      Upward anew, in lane of steeps—

      Ravine hewn-out, as ’twere by sledges;

      Inwalled, from ledges unto ledges,

      And stepwise still, each rider creeps,

      Until, at top, their eyes behold

      Judæa in highlands far unrolled.

      A horseman so, in easier play

      Wheeling aloft (so travelers say)

      Up the Moor’s Tower, may outlook gain

     


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