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Herman Melville- Complete Poems

Page 21

by Herman Melville


  As from the wall of wail they passed;

  “Father and daughter? Who may be

  That strange pervert?” No willing haste

  The mentor showed; awhile he fed

  On anxious thoughts; then grievingly

  The story gave—a tangled thread,

  Which, cleared from snarl and ordered so,

  Follows transferred, with interflow

  Of much Nehemiah scarce might add.

  17. NATHAN

  Nathan had sprung from worthy stock—

  Austere, ascetical, but free,

  Which hewed their way from sea-beat rock

  Wherever woods and winter be.

  The pilgrim-keel in storm and stress

  Had erred, and on a wilderness.

  But shall the children all be schooled

  By hap which their forefathers ruled?

  Those primal settlers put in train

  New emigrants which inland bore;

  From these too, emigrants again

  Westward pressed further; more bred more;

  At each remove a goodlier wain,

  A heart more large, an ampler shore,

  With legacies of farms behind;

  Until in years the wagons wind

  Through parks and pastures of the sun,

  Warm plains as of Esdraleon:

  ’Tis nature in her best benign.

  Wild, wild in symmetry of mould,

  With freckles on her tawny gold,

  The lily alone looks pantherine—

  The libbard-lily. Never broods

  The gloom here of grim hemlock woods

  Breeding the witchcraft-spell malign;

  But groves like isles in Grecian seas,

  Those dotting isles, the Sporades.

  But who the gracious charm may tell—

  Long rollings of the vast serene—

  The prairie in her swimming swell

  Of undulation.

  Such glad scene

  Was won by venturers from far

  Born under that severer star

  The landing patriarchs knew. In fine,

  To Illinois—a turf divine

  Of promise, how auspicious spread,

  Ere yet the cities rose thereon—

  From Saco’s mountain wilds were led

  The sire of Nathan, wife and son;

  Life’s lot to temper so, and shun

  Mountains whose camp withdrawn was set

  Above one vale he would forget.

  After some years their tale had told,

  He rested; lay forever stilled

  With sachems and mound-builders old.

  The son was grown; the farm he tilled;

  A stripling, but of manful ways,

  Hardy and frugal, oft he filled

  The widow’s eyes with tears of praise.

  An only child, with her he kept

  For her sake part, the Christian way,

  Though frequent in his bosom crept

  Precocious doubt unbid. The sway

  He felt of his grave life, and power

  Of vast space, from the log-house door

  Daily beheld. Three Indian mounds

  Against the horizon’s level bounds

  Dim showed across the prairie green

  Like dwarfed and blunted mimic shapes

  Of Pyramids at distance seen

  From the broad Delta’s planted capes

  Of vernal grain. In nearer view

  With trees he saw them crowned, which drew

  From the red sagamores of eld

  Entombed within, the vital gum

  Which green kept each mausoleum.

  Hard by, as chanced, he once beheld

  Bones like sea corals; one bleached skull

  A vase vined round and beautiful

  With flowers; felt, with bated breath

  The floral revelry over death.

  And other sights his heart had thrilled;

  Lambs had he known by thunder killed,

  Innocents—and the type of Christ

  Betrayed. Had not such things sufficed

  To touch the young pure heart with awe,

  Memory’s mint could move him more.

  In prairie twilight, summer’s own,

  The last cow milked, and he alone

  In barn-yard dreamy by the fence,

  Contrasted, came a scene immense:

  The great White Hills, mount flanked by mount,

  The Saco and Ammonoosuc’s fount;

  Where, in September’s equinox

  Nature hath put such terror on

  That from his mother man would run—

  Our mother, Earth: the founded rocks

  Unstable prove: the Slide! the Slide!

  Again he saw the mountain side

  Sliced open; yet again he stood

  Under its shadow, on the spot—

  Now waste, but once a cultured plot,

  Though far from village neighborhood—

  Where, nor by sexton hearsed at even,

  Somewhere his uncle slept; no mound,

  Since not a trace of him was found,

  So whelmed the havoc from the heaven.

  This reminiscence of dismay,

  These thoughts unhinged him. On a day

  Waiting for monthly grist at mill

  In settlement some miles away,

  It chanced, upon the window-sill

  A dusty book he spied, whose coat,

  Like the Scotch miller’s powdered twill,

  The mealy owner might denote.

  Called off from reading, unaware

  The miller e’en had left it there.

  A book all but forsaken now

  For more advanced ones not so frank,

  Nor less in vogue and taking rank;

  And yet it never shall outgrow

  That infamy it first incurred,

  Though—viewed in light which moderns know—

  Capricious infamy absurd.

  The blunt straightforward Saxon tone,

  Work-a-day language, even his own,

  The sturdy thought, not deep but clear,

  The hearty unbelief sincere,

  Arrested him much like a hand

  Clapped on the shoulder. Here he found

  Body to doubt, rough standing-ground.

  After some pages brief were scanned,

  “Wilt loan me this?” he anxious said.

  The shrewd Scot turned his square, strong head—

  The book he saw, in troubled trim,

  Fearing for Nathan, even him

  So young, and for the mill, may be,

  Should his unspoken heresy

  Get bruited so. The lad but part

  Might penetrate that senior heart.

  Vainly the miller would dissuade;

  Pledge gave he, and the loan was made.

  Reclined that night by candle dim

  He read, then slept, and woke afraid:

  The White Hill’s slide! the Indian skull!

  But this wore off; and unto him

  Came acquiescence, which tho’ dull

  Was hardly peace. An altered earth

  Sullen he tilled, in Adam’s frame

  When thrust from Eden out to dearth

  And blest no more, and wise in shame.

  The fall! nor aught availed at need

  To Nathan, not each filial deed

  Done for his mother, to allay

  This ill. But tho’ the Deist’s sway,

  Broad as the prairie fire, consumed
/>
  Some pansies which before had bloomed

  Within his heart; it did but feed

  To clear the soil for upstart weed.

  Yes, ere long came replacing mood.

  The god, expelled from given form,

  Went out into the calm and storm.

  Now, ploughing near the isles of wood

  In dream he felt the loneness come,

  In dream regarded there the loam

  Turned first by him. Such mental food

  Need quicken, and in natural way,

  Each germ of Pantheistic sway,

  Whose influence, nor always drear,

  Tenants our maiden hemisphere;

  As if, dislodged long since from cells

  Of Thracian woodlands, hither stole—

  Hither, to renew their old control—

  Pan and the pagan oracles.

  How frequent when Favonius low

  Breathed from the copse which mild did wave

  Over his father’s sylvan grave,

  And stirred the corn, he stayed the hoe,

  And leaning, listening, felt a thrill

  Which heathenized against the will.

  Years sped. But years attain not truth,

  Nor length of life avails at all;

  But time instead contributes ruth:

  His mother—her the garners call:

  When sicklemen with sickles go,

  The churl of nature reaps her low.

  Let now the breasts of Ceres swell—

  In shooks, with golden tassels gay,

  The Indian corn its trophies ray

  About the log-house; is it well

  With death’s ripe harvest?—To believe,

  Belief to win nor more to grieve!

  But how? a sect about him stood

  In thin and scattered neighborhood;

  Uncanny, and in rupture new;

  Nor were all lives of members true

  And good. For them who hate and heave

  Contempt on rite and creed sublime,

  Yet to their own rank fable cleave—

  Abject, the latest shame of time;

  These quite repelled, for still his mind

  Erring, was of no vulgar kind.

  Alone, and at Doubt’s freezing pole

  He wrestled with the pristine forms

  Like the first man. By inner storms

  Held in solution, so his soul

  Ripened for hour of such control

  As shapes, concretes. The influence came,

  And from a source that well might claim

  Surprise.

  ’Twas in a lake-port new,

  A mart for grain, by chance he met

  A Jewess who about him threw

  Else than Nerea’s amorous net

  And dubious wile. ’Twas Miriam’s race:

  A sibyl breathed in Agar’s grace—

  A sibyl, but a woman too;

  He felt her grateful as the rains

  To Rephaim and the Rama plains

  In drought. Ere won, herself did woo:

  “Wilt join my people?” Love is power;

  Came the strange plea in yielding hour.

  Nay, and turn Hebrew? But why not?

  If backward still the inquirer goes

  To get behind man’s present lot

  Of crumbling faith; for rear-ward shows

  Far behind Rome and Luther—what?

  The crag of Sinai. Here then plant

  Thyself secure: ’tis adamant.

  Still as she dwelt on Zion’s story

  He felt the glamour, caught the gleam;

  All things but these seemed transitory—

  Love, and his love’s Jerusalem.

  And interest in a mitred race,

  With awe which to the fame belongs,

  These in receptive heart found place

  When Agar chanted David’s songs.

  ’Twas passion. But the Puritan—

  Mixed latent in his blood—a strain

  How evident, of Hebrew source;

  ’Twas that, diverted here in force,

  Which biased—hardly might do less.

  Hereto append, how earnestness,

  Which disbelief for first-fruits bore,

  Now, in recoil, by natural stress

  Constrained to faith—to faith in more

  Than prior disbelief had spurned;

  As if, when he toward credence turned,

  Distance therefrom but gave career

  For impetus that shot him sheer

  Beyond. Agar rejoiced; nor knew

  How such a nature, charged with zeal,

  Might yet overpass that limit due

  Observed by her. For woe or weal

  They wedded, one in heart and creed.

  Transferring fields with title-deed,

  From rustic life he quite withdrew—

  Traded, and throve. Two children came:

  Sedate his heart, nor sad the dame.

  But years subvert; or he outgrew

  (While yet confirmed in all the myth)

  The mind infertile of the Jew.

  His northern nature, full of pith,

  Vigor and enterprise and will,

  Having taken thus the Hebrew bent,

  Might not abide inactive so

  And but the empty forms fulfill:

  Needs utilize the mystic glow—

  For nervous energies find vent.

  The Hebrew seers announce in time

  The return of Judah to her prime;

  Some Christians deemed it then at hand.

  Here was an object: Up and do!

  With seed and tillage help renew—

  Help reinstate the Holy Land.

  Some zealous Jews on alien soil

  Who still from Gentile ways recoil,

  And loyally maintain the dream,

  Salute upon the Paschal day

  With Next year in Jerusalem!

  Now Nathan turning unto her,

  Greeting his wife at morning ray,

  Those words breathed on the Passover;

  But she, who mutely startled lay,

  In the old phrase found import new,

  In the blithe tone a bitter cheer

  That did the very speech subdue.

  She kenned her husband’s mind austere,

  Had watched his reveries grave; he meant

  No flourish mere of sentiment.

  Then what to do? or how to stay?

  Decry it? that would faith unsay.

  Withstand him? but she gently loved.

  And so with Agar here it proved,

  As oft it may, the hardy will

  Overpowered the deep monition still.

  Enough; fair fields and household charms

  They quit, sell all, and cross the main

  With Ruth and a young child in arms.

  A tract secured on Sharon’s plain,

  Some sheds he built, and ground walled in

  Defensive; toil severe but vain.

  The wandering Arabs, wonted long

  (Nor crime they deemed it, crime nor sin)

  To scale the desert convents strong—

  In sly foray leaped Nathan’s fence

  And robbed him; and no recompense

  Attainable where law was none

  Or perjured. Resolute hereon,

  Agar, with Ruth and the young child,

  He lodged within the stronghold town

  Of Zion, and his heart exiled

  To abide the worst on Sharon’s lea.

  Himself and honest servan
ts three

  Armed husbandmen became, as erst

  His sires in Pequod wilds immersed.

  Hittites—foes pestilent to God

  His fathers old those Indians deemed:

  Nathan the Arabs here esteemed

  The same—slaves meriting the rod;

  And out he spake it; which bred hate

  The more imperiling his state.

  With muskets now his servants slept;

  Alternate watch and ward they kept

  In grounds beleaguered. Not the less

  Visits at stated times he made

  To them in Zion’s walled recess.

  Agar with sobs of suppliance prayed

  That he would fix there: “Ah, for good

  Tarry! abide with us, thine own;

  Put not these blanks between us; should

  Such space be for a shadow thrown?

  Quit Sharon, husband; leave to brood;

  Serve God by cleaving to thy wife,

  Thy children. If come fatal strife—

  Which I forebode—nay!” and she flung

  Her arms about him there, and clung.

  She plead. But tho’ his heart could feel,

  ’Twas mastered by inveterate zeal.

  Even the nursling’s death ere long

  Balked not his purpose tho’ it wrung.

  But Time the cruel, whose smooth way

  Is feline, patient for the prey

  That to this twig of being clings;

  And Fate, which from her ambush springs

  And drags the loiterer soon or late

  Unto a sequel unforeseen;

  These doomed him and cut short his date;

  But first was modified the lien

  The husband had on Agar’s heart;

  And next a prudence slid athwart—

  After distrust. But be unsaid

  That steep toward which the current led.

  Events shall speak.

  And now the guide,

  Who did in sketch this tale begin,

  Parted with Clarel at the inn;

  And ere long came the eventide.

  18. NIGHT

  Like sails convened when calms delay

  Off the twin forelands on fair day,

  So, on Damascus’ plain behold

  Mid groves and gardens, girdling ones,

  White fleets of sprinkled villas, rolled

  In the green ocean of her environs.

  There when no minaret receives

  The sun that gilds yet St. Sophia,

  Which loath and later it bereaves,

  The peace fulfills the heart’s desire.

  In orchards mellowed by eve’s ray

  The prophet’s son in turban green,

 

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