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    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 57
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      ‘Which is the humble publican?

      Or do they but prostrate them there

      To flout you Franks with Islam’s prayer?’ ”

      “Doubtless: some shallow thing he’d say,

      Poor fellow,” Derwent then; “but, nay,

      Earnest they are; nor yet they’d part

      (If pealed the hour) in street or mart,

      From like observance.”

      “If ’tis so”

      The refugee, “let all avow

      As openly faith’s loyal heart.

      By Christians too was God confessed

      How frankly! in those days that come

      No more to misnamed Christendom!

      Religion then was the good guest,

      First served, and last, in every gate:

      What mottoes upon wall and plate!

      She every human venture shared:

      The ship in manifest declared

      That not disclaiming heaven she thrust

      Her bowsprit into fog and storm:

      Some current silver bore the palm

      Of Christ, token of saint, or bust;

      In line devout the pikemen kneeled—

      To battle by the rite were sealed.

      Men were not lettered, but had sense

      Beyond the mean intelligence

      That knows to read, and but to read—

      Not think. ’Twas harder to mislead

      The people then, whose smattering now

      Does but the more their ignorance show—

      Nay, them to peril more expose—

      Is as the ring in the bull’s nose

      Whereby a pert boy turns and winds

      This monster of a million minds.

      Men owned true masters; kings owned God—

      Their master; Louis plied the rod

      Upon himself. In high estate,

      Not puffed up like a democrat

      In office, how with Charlemagne?

      Look up he did, look up in reign—

      Humbly look up, who might look down:

      His meekest thing was still his crown:

      How meek on him; since, graven there,

      Among the Apostles twelve—behold,

      Stern Scriptural precepts were enrolled,

      High admonitions, meet for kings.

      The coronation was a prayer,

      Which yet in ceremonial clings.

      The church was like a bonfire warm:

      All ranks were gathered round the charm.”

      Derwent, who vainly had essayed

      To impede the speaker, or blockade,

      Snatched at the bridle here: “Ho, wait;

      A word, impetuous laureate!

      This bric-a-brac-ish style (outgrown

      Almost, where first it gave the tone)

      Of lauding the quaint ages old—

      But nay, that’s satire; I withhold.

      Grant your side of the shield part true:

      What then? why, turn the other: view

      The buckler in reverse. Don’t sages

      Denominate those times Dark Ages?

      Dark Middle Ages, time’s midnight!”

      “If night, it was no starless one;

      Art still admires what then was done:

      A strength they showed which is of light.

      Not more the Phidian marbles prove

      The graces of the Grecian prime

      And indicate what men they were,

      Than the grand minsters in remove

      Do intimate, if not declare

      A magnanimity which our time

      Would envy, were it great enough

      To comprehend. Your counterbuff,

      However, holds. Yes, frankly, yes,

      Another side there is, admit.

      Nor less the very worst of it

      Reveals not such a shamelessness

      Of evildoer and hypocrite,

      And sordid mercenary sin

      As these days vaunt and revel in.”

      “No use, no use,” the priest aside;

      “Patience! it is the maddest tide;”

      And seated him.

      And Ungar then:

      “What’s overtaken ye pale men?

      Shrewd are ye, the main chance ye heed:

      Has God quite lost his throne indeed

      That lukewarm now ye grow? Wilt own,

      Council ye take with fossil-stone?

      Your sects do nowadays create

      Churches as worldly as the state.

      And, for your more established forms—

      Ah, once in York I viewed through storms

      The Minster’s majesty of mien—

      Towers, peaks, and pinnacles sublime—

      Faith’s iceberg, stranded on a scene

      How alien, and an alien time;

      But now”—he checked himself, and stood.

      Whence this strange bias of his mood

      (Thought they) leaning to things corroded,

      By many deemed for aye exploded?

      But, truly, knowing not the man,

      At fault they in conjecture ran.

      But Ungar (as in fitter place

      Set down) being sprung from Romish race,

      Albeit himself had spared to feed

      On any one elected creed

      Or rite, though much he might recall

      In annals bearing upon all;

      And, in this land named of Behest,

      A wandering Ishmael from the West;

      Inherited the Latin mind,

      Which late—blown by the adverse wind

      Of harder fortunes that molest—

      Kindled from ember into coal.

      The priest, as one who keeps him whole,

      Anew turns toward the kneeling twain:

      “Your error’s slight, or, if a stain,

      ’Twill fade. Our Lord enjoins good deeds

      Nor catechiseth in the creeds.”

      A something in the voice or man,

      Or in assumption of the turn

      Which prior theme did so adjourn,

      Pricked Ungar, and a look he ran

      Toward Derwent—an electric light

      Chastising in its fierce revolt;

      Then settled into that still night

      Of cloud which has discharged the bolt.

      11. DISQUIET

      At breakfast in refectory there

      The priest—if Clarel not mistook—

      The good priest wore the troubled air

      Of honest heart striving to brook

      Injury, which from words abstained,

      And, hence, not readily arraigned;

      Which to requite in its own sort

      Is not allowed in heaven’s high court,

      Or self-respect’s. Such would forget,

      But for the teasing doubt or fret

      Lest unto worldly witness mere

      The injury none the less appear

      To challenge notice at the least.

      Ungar withdrew, leaving the priest

      Less ill at ease; who now a thought

      Threw out, as ’twere in sad concern

      For one whose nature, sour or stern,

      Still dealt in all unhandsome flings

      At happy times and happy things:

      “‘The bramble sayeth it is naught:’

      Poor man!” But that; and quite forbore

      To vent his grievance. Nor less sore

      He felt it—Clarel so inferred,

      Recalling here too Mortmain’s word

      Of cutting censorship. How then?

      While most who met him frank averred


      That Derwent ranked with best of men,

      The Swede and refugee unite

      In one repugnance, yea, and slight.

      How take, construe their ill-content?

      A thing of vein and temperament?

      Rolfe liked him; and if Vine said naught,

      Yet even Vine seemed not uncheered

      By fair address. Then stole the thought

      Of how the priest had late appeared

      In that one confidential hour,

      Ambiguous on Saba’s tower.

      There he dismissed it, let it fall:

      To probe overmuch seems finical.

      Nor less (for still the point did tease,

      Nor would away and leave at ease),

      Nor less, I wonder, if ere long

      He’ll turn this off, not worth a song,

      As lightly as of late he turned

      Poor Mortmain’s sally when he burned?

      12. OF POPE AND TURK

      Marking the priest not all sedate,

      Rolfe, that a friend might fret discard,

      Turned his attention to debate

      Between two strangers at the board.

      In furtherance of his point or plea

      One said:

      “Late it was told to me,

      And by the man himself concerned,

      A merchant Frank on Syria’s coast,

      That in a fire which traveled post,

      His books and records being burned,

      His Christian debtors held their peace;

      The Islam ones disclaimed release,

      And came with purses and accounts.”

      “And duly rendered their amounts?

      ’Twas very kind. But oh, the greed,

      Rapacity, and crime at need

      In satraps which oppress the throng.”

      “True. But with these ’tis, after all,

      Wrong-doing purely personal—

      Not legislated—not a wrong

      Law-sanctioned. No: the Turk, admit,

      In scheme of state, the scheme of it,

      Upon the civil arm confers

      A sway above the scimeter’s—

      The civil power itself subjects

      Unto that Koran which respects

      Nor place nor person. Nay, adjourn

      The jeer; for now aside we’ll turn.

      Dismembered Poland and her throe

      In Ninety-Five, all unredressed:

      Did France, did England then protest?”

      “England? I’m sure I do not know.

      Come, I distrust your shifting so.

      Pray, to what end now is this pressed?”

      “Why, here armed Christendom looking on,

      In protest the Sultan stood alone.”

      “Indeed? But all this, seems to me,

      Savors of Urquhart’s vanity.”

      “The commentator on the East?”

      “The same: that very inexact

      Eccentric ideologist

      Now obsolete.”

      “And that’s your view?

      He stands for God.”

      “I stand by fact.”

      “Well then, another fact or two;

      When Poland’s place in Thirty-One

      Was blotted out, the Turk again

      Protested, with one other man,

      The Pope; these, and but these alone;

      And in the protest both avowed

      ’Twas made for justice’s sake and God.—

      You smile.”

      “Oh no: but very clear

      The protest prompted was by fear

      In Turk and Pope, that time might come

      When spoliation should drive home

      Upon themselves. Besides, you know

      The Polish church was Catholic:

      The Czar would wrest it to the Greek:

      ’Twas that touched Rome. But let it go.—

      In pith, what is it you would show?

      Are Turks our betters? Very strange

      Heaven’s favor does not choicely range

      Upon these Islam people good:

      Bed-rid they are, behindhand all,

      While Europe flowers in plenitude

      Of wealth and commerce.”

      “I recall

      Nothing in Testament which saith

      That worldliness shall not succeed

      In that wherein it laboreth.

      Howbeit, the Sultan’s coming on:

      Fine lesson from ye has he won

      Of late; apt pupil he indeed:

      Ormus, that riches did confer,

      Ormus is made a borrower:

      Selim, who grandly turbaned sat,

      Verges on bankruptcy and—hat.

      But this don’t touch the rank and file;

      At least, as yet. But preach and work:

      You’ll civilize the barbarous Turk—

      Nay, all the East may reconcile:

      That done, let Mammon take the wings of even,

      And mount and civilize the saints in heaven.”

      “I laugh—I like a brave caprice!

      And, sir——”

      But here did Rolfe release

      His ear, and Derwent too. A stir

      In court was heard of man and steed—

      Neighings and mountings, din indeed;

      And Rolfe: “Come, come; our traveler.”

      13. THE CHURCH OF THE STAR

      They rise, and for a little space

      In farewell Agath they detain,

      Transferred here to a timelier train

      Than theirs. A work-day, passive face

      He turns to Derwent’s Luck to thee!

      No slight he means—’tis far from that;

      But, schooled by the inhuman sea,

      He feels ’tis vain to wave the hat

      In God-speed on this mortal strand;

      Recalling all the sailing crews

      Destined to sleep in ocean sand,

      Cheered from the wharf with blithe adieus.

      Nor less the heart’s farewell they say,

      And bless the old man on his way.

      Led by a slender monk and young,

      With curls that ringed the shaven crown,

      Courts now and shrines they trace. That thong

      Ascetic which can life chastise

      Down to her bleak necessities,

      They mark in coarse serge of his gown,

      And girdling rope, with cross of wood

      For tag at end; and hut-like hood

      Superfluous now behind him thrown;

      And sandals which expose the skin

      Transparent, and the blue vein thin

      Meandering there: the feet, the face

      Alike in lucid marble grace.

      His simple manners self-possessed

      Both saint and noble-born suggest;

      Yet under quietude they mark

      The slumbering of a vivid spark—

      Excitable, if brought to test.

      A Tuscan, he exchanged the charm

      Val d’Arno yields, for this dull calm

      Of desert. Was his youth self-given

      In frank oblation unto heaven?

      Or what inducement might disarm

      This Isaac when too young to know?

      Hereon they, pacing, muse—till, lo,

      The temple opens in dusk glades

      Of long-drawn double colonnades:

      Monoliths two-score and eight.

      Rolfe looked about him, pleased in state:

      “But this is goodly! Here we rove

      As down the deep Dodona
    grove:

      Years, years and years these boles have stood!—

      Late by the spring in idle mood

      My will I made (if ye recall),

      Providing for the Inn of Trees:

      But ah, to set out trunks like these

      In harbor open unto all

      For generations!” So in vein

      Rolfe free descanted as through fane

      They passed. But noting now the guide

      In acquiescence by their side,

      He checked himself: “Why prate I here?

      This brother—I usurp his sphere.”

      They came unto a silver star

      In pavement set which none do mar

      By treading. Here at pause remained

      The monk; till, seeing Rolfe refrained,

      And all, from words, he said: “The place,

      Signori, where that shining grace

      Which led the Magi, stood; below,

      The Manger is.” They comment none;

      Not voicing everything they know,

      In cirque about that silver star

      They quietly gaze thereupon.

      But, turning now, one glanced afar

      Along the columned aisles, and thought

      Of Baldwin whom the mailed knights brought,

      While Godfrey’s requiem did ring,

      Hither to Bethlehem, and crowned

      His temples helmet-worn, with round

      Of gold and velvet—crowned him king—

      King of Jerusalem, on floor

      Of this same nave august, above

      The Manger in its low remove

      Where lay, a thousand years before,

      The Child of awful worshiping,

      Destined to prove all slights and scorns,

      And a God’s coronation—thorns.

      Not Derwent’s was that revery;

      Another thing his heart possessed,

      The clashing of the East and West,

      Odd sense of incongruity;

      He felt a secret impulse move

      To start a humorous comment slant

      Upon the monk, and sly reprove.

      But no: I’ll curb the Protestant

      And modern in me—at least here

      For time I’ll curb it. Perish truth

      If it but act the boor, in sooth,

      Requiting courtesy with jeer;

      For courteous is our guide, with grace

      Of a pure heart.

      Some little trace,

      May be, of Derwent’s passing thought

      The Tuscan from his aspect caught;

      And turned him: “Pardon! but the crypt:

      This way, signori—follow me.”

      Down by a rock-hewn stair they slipped,

     


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