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    Herman Melville- Complete Poems

    Page 64
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      Through Clarel a revulsion ran,

      Such as may seize debarking man

      First hearing on Coquimbo’s ground

      That subterranean sullen sound

      Which dull foreruns the shock. His heart,

      In augury fair arrested here,

      Upbraided him: Fool! and didst part

      From Ruth? Strangely a novel fear

      Obtruded—petty, and yet worse

      And more from reason too averse,

      Than that recurrent haunting bier

      Molesting him erewhile. And yet

      It was but irritation, fret—

      Misgiving that the lines he writ

      Upon the eve before the start

      For Siddim, failed, or were unfit—

      Came short of the occasion’s tone:

      To leave her, leave her in grief’s smart:

      To leave her—her, the stricken one:

      Now first to feel full force of it!

      Away! to be but there, but there!

      Vain goadings: yet of love true part.

      But then the pledge with letter sent,

      Though but a trifle, still might bear

      A token in dumb argument

      Expressive more than words.

      With knee

      Straining against the saddle-brace,

      He urges on; till, near the place

      Of Hebrew graves, a light they see

      Moving, and figures dimly trace:

      Some furtive strange society.

      Yet nearer as they ride, the light

      Shuts down. “Abide!” enjoined the Druze;

      “Waylayers these are none, but Jews,

      Or I mistake, who here by night

      Have stolen to do grave-digger’s work.

      During late outbreak in the town

      The bigot in the baser Turk

      Was so inflamed, some Hebrews dread

      Assault, even here among their dead.

      Abide a space; let me ride on.”

      Up pushed he, spake, allayed the fright

      Of them who had shut down the light

      At sound of comers.

      Close they draw—

      Advancing, lit by fan-shaped rays

      Shot from a small dark-lantern’s jaw

      Presented pistol-like. They saw

      Mattocks and men, in outline dim

      On either ominous side of him

      From whom went forth that point of blaze.

      Resting from labor, each one stays

      His implement on grave-stones old.

      New-dug, between these, they behold

      Two narrow pits: and (nor remote)

      Twin figures on the ground they note

      Folded in cloaks.

      “And who rest there?”

      Rolfe sidelong asked.

      “Our friends; have care!”

      Replied the one that held in view

      The lantern, slanting it a’shift,

      Plainer disclosing them, and, too,

      A broidered scarf, love’s first chance gift,

      The student’s (which how well he knew!)

      Binding one mantle’s slender span.

      With piercing cry, as one distraught,

      Down from his horse leaped Clarel—ran,

      And hold of that cloak instant caught,

      And bared the face. Then (like a man

      Shot through the heart, but who retains

      His posture) rigid he remains—

      The mantle’s border in his hand,

      His glazed eyes unremoved. The band

      Of Jews—the pilgrims—all look on

      Shocked or amazed.

      But speech he won:

      “No—yes: enchanted here!—her name?”

      “Ruth, Nathan’s daughter,” said a Jew

      Who kenned him now—the youth that came

      Oft to the close; “but, thou—forbear;

      The dawn’s at hand and haste is due:

      See, by her side, ’tis Agar there.”

      “Ruth? Agar?—art thou, God?—But ye—

      All swims, and I but blackness see.—

      How happed it? speak!”

      “The fever—grief:

      ’Twere hard to tell; was no relief.”

      “And ye—your tribe—’twas ye denied

      Me access to this virgin’s side

      In bitter trial: take my curse!—

      O blind, blind, barren universe!

      Now am I like a bough torn down,

      And I must wither, cloud or sun!—

      Had I been near, this had not been.

      Do spirits look down upon this scene?—

      The message? some last word was left?”

      “For thee? no, none; the life was reft

      Sudden from Ruth; and Agar died

      Babbling of gulls and ocean wide—

      Out of her mind.”

      “And here’s the furl

      Of Nathan’s faith: then perish faith—

      ’Tis perjured!—Take me, take me, Death!

      Where Ruth is gone, me thither whirl,

      Where’er it be!”

      “Ye do outgo

      Mad Korah. Boy, this is the Dale

      Of Doom, God’s last assizes; so,

      Curb thee; even if sharp grief assail,

      Respect these precincts lest thou know

      An ill.”

      “Give way, quit thou our dead!”

      Menaced another, striding out;

      “Art thou of us? turn thee about!”

      “Spurn—I’ll endure; all spirit’s fled

      When one fears nothing.—Bear with me,

      Yet bear!—Conviction is not gone

      Though faith’s gone: that which shall not be

      It ought to be!”

      But here came on,

      With heavy footing, hollow heard,

      Hebrews, which bare rude slabs, to place

      Athwart the bodies when interred,

      That earth should weigh not on the face;

      For coffin was there none; and all

      Was make-shift in this funeral.

      Uncouthly here a Jew began

      To re-adjust Ruth’s cloak. Amain

      Did Clarel push him; and, in hiss:

      “Not thou—for me!—Alone, alone

      In such bride-chamber to lie down!

      Nay, leave one hand out—like to this—

      That so the bridegroom may not miss

      To kiss it first, when soon he comes.—

      But ’tis not she!” and hid his face.

      They laid them in the under-glooms—

      Each pale one in her portioned place.

      The gravel, from the bank raked down,

      Dull sounded on those slabs of stone,

      Grave answering grave—dull and more dull,

      Each mass growing more, till either pit was full.

      As up from Kedron dumb they drew,

      Then first the shivering Clarel knew

      Night’s damp. The Martyr’s port is won—

      Stephen’s; harsh grates the bolt withdrawn;

      And, over Olivet, comes on

      Ash Wednesday in the gray of dawn.

      31. DIRGE

      Stay, Death. Not mine the Christus-wand

      Wherewith to charge thee and command:

      I plead. Most gently hold the hand

      Of her thou leadest far away;

      Fear thou to let her naked feet

      Tread ashes—but let mosses sweet

      Her footing tempt, where’er ye stray.

      Shun Orcus; win the moonlit land


      Belulled—the silent meadows lone,

      Where never any leaf is blown

      From lily-stem in Azrael’s hand.

      There, till her love rejoin her lowly

      (Pensive, a shade, but all her own)

      On honey feed her, wild and holy;

      Or trance her with thy choicest charm.

      And if, ere yet the lover’s free,

      Some added dusk thy rule decree—

      That shadow only let it be

      Thrown in the moon-glade by the palm.

      32. PASSION WEEK

      Day passed; and passed a second one,

      A third—fourth—fifth; and bound he sate

      In film of sorrow without moan—

      Abandoned, in the stony strait

      Of mutineer thrust on wild shore,

      Hearing, beyond the roller’s froth,

      The last dip of the parting oar.

      Alone, for all had left him so;

      Though Rolfe, Vine, Derwent—each was loth,

      How loth to leave him, or to go

      Be first. From Vine he caught new sense

      Developed through fate’s pertinence.

      Friendly they tarried—blameless went:

      Life, avaricious, still demands

      Her own, and more; the world is rent

      With partings.

      But, since all are gone,

      Why lingers he, the stricken one?

      Why linger where no hope can be?

      Ask grief, love ask—fidelity

      In dog that by the corse abides

      Of shepherd fallen—abides, abides

      Though autumn into winter glides,

      Till on the mountain all is chill

      And snow-bound, and the twain lie still.

      How oft through Lent the feet were led

      Of this chastised and fasting one

      To neutral silence of the dead

      In Kedron’s gulf. One morn he sate

      Down poring toward it from the gate

      Sealed and named Golden. There a tomb,

      Erected in time’s recent day,

      In block along the threshold lay

      Impassable. From Omar’s bloom

      Came birds which lit, nor dreamed of harm,

      On neighboring stones. His visage calm

      Seemed not the one which late showed play

      Of passion’s throe; but here divine

      No peace; ignition in the mine

      Announced is by the rush, the roar:

      These end; yet may the coal burn on—

      Still slumberous burn beneath the floor

      Of pastures where the sheep lie down.

      Ere long a cheerful choral strain

      He hears; ’tis an Armenian train

      Embowered in palms they bear, which (green,

      And shifting oft) reveal the mien

      Of flamens tall and singers young

      In festal robes: a rainbow throng,

      Like dolphins off Madeira seen

      Which quick the ship and shout dismay.

      With the blest anthem, censers sway,

      Whose opal vapor, spiral borne,

      Blends with the heavens’ own azure Morn

      Of Palms; for ’twas Palm Sunday bright,

      Though thereof he, oblivious quite,

      Knew nothing, nor that here they came

      In memory of the green acclaim

      Triumphal, and hosanna-roll

      Which hailed Him on the ass’s foal.

      But unto Clarel that bright view

      Into a dusk reminder grew:

      He saw the tapers—saw again

      The censers, singers, and the wreath

      And litter of the bride of death

      Pass through the Broken Fountain’s lane;

      In treble shrill and bass how deep

      The men and boys he heard again

      The undetermined contest keep

      About the bier—the bier Armenian.

      Yet dull, in torpor dim, he knew

      The futile omen in review.

      Yet three more days, and leadenly

      From over Mary’s port and arch,

      On Holy Thursday, he the march

      Of friars beheld, with litany

      Filing beneath his feet, and bent

      With crosses craped to sacrament

      Down in the glenned Gethsemane.

      Yes, Passion Week; the altars cower—

      Each shrine a dead dismantled bower.

      But when Good Friday dirged her gloom

      Ere brake the morning, and each light

      Round Calvary faded and the TOMB,

      What exhalations met his sight:—

      Illusion of grief’s wakeful doom:

      The dead walked. There, amid the train,

      Wan Nehemiah he saw again—

      With charnel beard; and Celio passed

      As in a dampened mirror glassed;

      Gleamed Mortmain, pallid as wolf-bone

      Which bleaches where no man hath gone;

      And Nathan in his murdered guise—

      Sullen, and Hades in his eyes;

      Poor Agar, with such wandering mien

      As in her last blank hour was seen.

      And each and all kept lonely state,

      Yea, man and wife passed separate.

      But Ruth—ah, how estranged in face!

      He knew her by no earthly grace:

      Nor might he reach to her in place.

      And languid vapors from them go

      Like thaw-fogs curled from dankish snow.

      Where, where now He who helpeth us,

      The Comforter?—Tell, Erebus!

      33. EASTER

      BUT ON THE THIRD DAY CHRIST AROSE;

      And, in the town He knew, the rite

      Commemorative eager goes

      Before the hour. Upon the night

      Between the week’s last day and first,

      No more the Stabat is dispersed

      Or Tenebræ. And when the day,

      The Easter, falls in calendar

      The same to Latin and the array

      Of all schismatics from afar—

      Armenians, Greeks from many a shore—

      Syrians, Copts—profusely pour

      The hymns: ’tis like the choric gush

      Of torrents Alpine when they rush

      To swell the anthem of the spring.

      That year was now. Throughout the fane,

      Floor, and arcades in double ring

      About the gala of THE TOMB,

      Blazing with lights, behung with bloom—

      What child-like thousands roll the strain,

      The hallelujah after pain,

      Which in all tongues of Christendom

      Still through the ages has rehearsed

      That Best, the outcome of the Worst.

      Nor blame them who by lavish rite

      Thus greet the pale victorious Son,

      Since Nature times the same delight,

      And rises with the Emerging One;

      Her passion-week, her winter mood

      She slips, with crape from off the Rood.

      In soft rich shadow under dome,

      With gems and robes repletely fine,

      The priests like birds Brazilian shine:

      And moving tapers charm the sight,

      Enkindling the curled incense-fume:

      A dancing ray, Auroral light.

      Burn on the hours, and meet the day.

      The morn invites; the suburbs call

      The concourse to come forth—this way!

     
    Out from the gate by Stephen’s wall,

      They issue, dot the hills, and stray

      In bands, like sheep among the rocks;

      And the Good Shepherd in the heaven,

      To whom the charge of these is given,

      The Christ, ah! counts He there His flocks?

      But they, at each suburban shrine,

      Grateful adore that Friend benign;

      Though chapel now and cross divine

      Too frequent show neglected; nay,

      For charities of early rains

      Rim them about with vernal stains,

      Forerunners of maturer May,

      When those red flowers, which so can please,

      (Christ’s-Blood-Drops named—anemones),

      Spot Ephraim and the mountain-way.

      But heart bereft is unrepaid

      Though Thammuz’ spring in Thammuz’ glade

      Invite; then how in Joel’s glen?

      What if dyed shawl and bodice gay

      Make bright the black dell? what if they

      In distance clear diminished be

      To seeming cherries dropped on pall

      Borne graveward under laden tree?

      The cheer, so human, might not call

      The maiden up; Christ is arisen:

      But Ruth, may Ruth so burst the prison?

      The rite supreme being ended now,

      Their confluence here the nations part:

      Homeward the tides of pilgrims flow,

      By contrast making the walled town

      Like a depopulated mart;

      More like some kirk on week-day lone,

      On whose void benches broodeth still

      The brown light from November hill.

      But though the freshet quite be gone—

      Sluggish, life’s wonted stream flows on.

      34. VIA CRUCIS

      Some leading thoroughfares of man

      In wood-path, track, or trail began;

      Though threading heart of proudest town,

      They follow in controlling grade

      A hint or dictate, nature’s own,

      By man, as by the brute, obeyed.

      Within Jerusalem a lane,

      Narrow, nor less an artery main

      (Though little knoweth it of din),

      In part suggests such origin.

      The restoration or repair,

      Successive through long ages there,

      Of city upon city tumbled,

      Might scarce divert that thoroughfare,

      Whose hill abideth yet unhumbled

      Above the valley-side it meets.

     


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