Herman Melville- Complete Poems

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Herman Melville- Complete Poems Page 72

by Herman Melville


  Wake up!” And, shooting by, we ran;

  The while I mused, This, surely, now,

  Confutes the Naturalists, allow!

  Sirens, true sirens verily be,

  Sirens, waylayers in the sea.

  Well, wooed by these same deadly misses,

  Is it shame to run?

  No! flee them did divine Ulysses,

  Brave, wise, and Venus’ son.

  Pisa’s Leaning Tower

  THE Tower in tiers of architraves,

  Fair circle over cirque,

  A trunk of rounded colonades,

  The maker’s master-work,

  Impends with all its pillared tribes,

  And, poising them, debates:

  It thinks to plunge—but hesitates;

  Shrinks back—yet fain would slide;

  Withholds itself—itself would urge;

  Hovering, shivering on the verge,

  A would-be suicide!

  In a Church of Padua

  IN vaulted place where shadows flit,

  An upright sombre box you see:

  A door, but fast, and lattice none.

  But punctured holes minutely small

  In lateral silver panel square

  Above a kneeling-board without,

  Suggest an aim if not declare.

  Who bendeth here the tremulous knee

  No glimpse may get of him within,

  And he immured may hardly see

  The soul confessing there the sin;

  Nor yields the low-sieved voice a tone

  Whereby the murmurer may be known.

  Dread diving-bell! In thee inurned

  What hollows the priest must sound,

  Descending into consciences

  Where more is hid than found.

  Milan Cathedral

  THROUGH light green haze, a rolling sea

  Over gardens where redundance flows,

  The fat old plain of Lombardy,

  The White Cathedral shows.

  Of Art the miracles

  Its tribes of pinnacles

  Gleam like to ice-peaks snowed; and higher,

  Erect upon each airy spire

  In concourse without end,

  Statues of saints over saints ascend

  Like multitudinous forks of fire.

  What motive was the master-builder’s here?

  Why these synodic hierarchies given,

  Sublimely ranked in marble sessions clear,

  Except to signify the host of heaven.

  Pausilippo

  (In the time of Bomba)

  A HILL there is that laves its feet

  In Naples’ bay and lifts its head

  In jovial season, curled with vines.

  Its name, in pristine years conferred

  By settling Greeks, imports that none

  Who take the prospect thence can pine,

  For such the charm of beauty shown

  Even sorrow’s self they cheerful weened

  Surcease might find and thank good Pan.

  Toward that Hill my landau drew;

  And there, hard by the verge, was seen

  Two faces with such meaning fraught

  One scarce could mark and straight pass on:

  I bade my charioteer rein up.

  A man it was less hoar with time

  Than bleached through strange immurement long,

  Retaining still, by doom depressed,

  Dim trace of some aspiring prime.

  Seated, he tuned a homely harp

  Watched by a girl, whose filial mien

  Toward one almost a child again,

  Took on a staid maternal tone.

  Nor might one question that the locks

  Which in smoothed natural silvery curls

  Fell on the bowed one’s thread-bare coat

  Betrayed her ministering hand.

  Anon, among some ramblers drawn

  A murmur rose, “’Tis Silvio, Silvio!”

  With inklings more in tone suppressed

  Touching his story, part recalled:

  Clandestine arrest abrupt by night;

  The sole conjecturable cause

  The yearning in a patriot ode

  Construed as treason; trial none;

  Prolonged captivity profound;

  Vain liberation late. All this,

  With pity for impoverishment

  And blight forestalling age’s wane.

  Hillward the quelled enthusiast turned,

  Unmanned, made meek through strenuous wrong,

  Preluding, faltering; then began,

  But only thrilled the wire—no more,

  The constant maid supplying voice,

  Hinting by no ineloquent sign

  That she was but his mouth-piece mere,

  Himself too spiritless and spent.

  Pausilippo, Pausilippo,

  Pledging easement unto pain,

  Shall your beauty even solace

  If one’s sense of beauty wane?

  Could light airs that round ye play

  Waft heart-heaviness away

  Or memory lull to sleep,

  Then, then indeed your balm

  Might Silvio becharm,

  And life in fount would leap,

  Pausilippo!

  Did not your spell invite,

  In moods that slip between,

  A dream of years serene,

  And wake, to dash, delight—

  Evoking here in vision

  Fulfillment and fruition—

  Nor mine, nor meant for man!

  Did hope not frequent share

  The mirage when despair

  Overtakes the caravan,

  Me then your scene might move

  To break from sorrow’s snare,

  And apt your name would prove,

  Pausilippo!

  But I’ve looked upon your revel—

  It unravels not the pain:

  Pausilippo, Pausilippo,

  Named benignly if in vain!

  It ceased. In low and languid tone

  The tideless ripple lapped the passive shore.

  As listlessly the bland untroubled heaven

  Looked down, as silver doled was silent given

  In pity—futile as the ore!

  The Attic Landscape

  TOURIST, spare the avid glance

  That greedy roves the sights to see:

  Little here of “Old Romance,”

  Or Picturesque of Tivoli.

  No flushful tint the sense to warm—

  Pure outline pale, a linear charm.

  The clear-cut hills carved temples face,

  Respond, and share their sculptural grace.

  ’Tis Art and Nature lodged together,

  Sister by sister, cheek to cheek;

  Such Art, such Nature, and such weather

  The All-in-All seems here a Greek.

  The Same

  A CIRCUMAMBIENT spell it is,

  Pellucid on these scenes that waits,

  Repose that does of Plato tell—

  Charm that his style authenticates.

  The Parthenon

  I

  Seen aloft from afar

  ESTRANGED in site,

  Aerial gleaming, warmly white,

  You look a sun-cloud motionless

  In noon of day divine;

  Your beaut
y charmed enhancement takes

  In Art’s long after-shine.

  II

  Nearer viewed

  Like Lais, fairest of her kind,

  In subtlety your form’s defined—

  The cornice curved, each shaft inclined,

  While yet, to eyes that do but revel

  And take the sweeping view,

  Erect this seems, and that a level,

  To line and plummet true.

  Spinoza gazes; and in mind

  Dreams that one architect designed

  Lais—and you!

  III

  The Frieze

  What happy musings genial went

  With airiest touch the chisel lent

  To frisk and curvet light

  Of horses gay—their riders grave—

  Contrasting so in action brave

  With virgins meekly bright,

  Clear filing on in even tone

  With pitcher each, one after one

  Like water-fowl in flight.

  IV

  The Last Tile

  When the last marble tile was laid

  The winds died down on all the seas;

  Hushed were the birds, and swooned the glade;

  Ictinus sat; Aspasia said

  “Hist!—Art’s meridian, Pericles!”

  Greek Masonry

  JOINTS were none that mortar sealed:

  Together, scarce with line revealed,

  The blocks in symmetry congealed.

  Greek Architecture

  NOT magnitude, not lavishness,

  But Form—the Site;

  Not innovating wilfulness,

  But reverence for the Archetype.

  Off Cape Colonna

  ALOOF they crown the foreland lone,

  From aloft they loftier rise—

  Fair columns, in the aureola rolled

  From sunned Greek seas and skies.

  They wax, sublimed to fancy’s view,

  A god-like group against the blue.

  Overmuch like gods! Serene they saw

  The wolf-waves board the deck,

  And headlong hull of Falconer,

  And many a deadlier wreck.

  The Archipelago

  SAIL before the morning breeze

  The Sporads through and Cyclades,

  They look like isles of absentees—

  Gone whither?

  You bless Apollo’s cheering ray,

  But Delos, his own isle, to-day

  Not e’en a Selkirk there to pray

  God friend me!

  Scarce lone these groups, scarce lone and bare,

  When Theseus roved a Raleigh there,

  Each isle a small Virginia fair—

  Unravished.

  Nor less, though havoc fell they rue,

  They still retain, in outline true,

  Their grace of form when earth was new

  And primal.

  But beauty clear, the frame’s as yet,

  Never shall make one quite forget

  Thy picture, Pan, therein once set—

  Life’s revel!

  ’Tis Polynesia reft of palms,

  Seaward no valley breathes her balms—

  Not such as musk thy rings of calms,

  Marquesas!

  Syra

  (A Transmitted Reminiscence)

  FLEEING from Scio’s smouldering vines

  (Where when the sword its work had done

  The Turk applied the torch) the Greek

  Came here, a fugitive stript of goods,

  Here to an all but tenantless isle,

  Nor here in footing gained at first,

  Felt safe. Still from the turbaned foe

  Dreading the doom of shipwrecked men

  Whom feline seas permit to land

  Then pounce upon and drag them back,

  For height they made, and prudent won

  A cone-shaped fastness on whose flanks

  With pains they pitched their eyrie camp,

  Stone huts, whereto they wary clung;

  But, reassured in end, come down—

  Multiplied through compatriots now,

  Refugees like themselves forlorn—

  And building along the water’s verge

  Begin to thrive; and thriving more

  When Greece at last flung off the Turk,

  Make of the haven mere a mart.

  I saw it in its earlier day—

  Primitive, such an isled resort

  As hearthless Homer might have known

  Wandering about the Ægean here.

  Sheds ribbed with wreck-stuff faced the sea

  Where goods in transit shelter found.

  And here and there a shanty-shop

  Where Fez-caps, swords, tobacco, shawls,

  Pistols, and orient finery, Eve’s—

  (The spangles dimmed by hands profane)

  Like plunder on a pirate’s deck

  Lay orderless in such loose way

  As to suggest things ravished or gone astray.

  Above a tented inn with fluttering flag

  A sunburnt board announced Greek wine

  In selfsame text Anacreon knew,

  Dispensed by one named “Pericles.”

  Got up as for the opera’s scene,

  Armed strangers, various, lounged or lazed,

  Lithe fellows tall, with gold-shot eyes,

  Sunning themselves as leopards may.

  Off-shore lay xebecs trim and light,

  And some but dubious in repute.

  But on the strand, for docks were none,

  What busy bees! no testy fry;

  Frolickers, picturesquely odd,

  With bales and oil-jars lading boats,

  Lighters that served an anchored craft,

  Each in his tasseled Phrygian cap,

  Blue Eastern drawers and braided vest;

  And some with features cleanly cut

  As Proserpine’s upon the coin.

  Such chatterers all! like children gay

  Who make believe to work, but play.

  I saw, and how help musing too.

  Here traffic’s immature as yet:

  Forever this juvenile fun hold out

  And these light hearts? Their garb, their glee,

  Alike profuse in flowing measure,

  Alike inapt for serious work,

  Blab of grandfather Saturn’s prime

  When trade was not, nor toil nor stress,

  But life was leisure, merriment, peace,

  And lucre none, and love was righteousness.

  Disinterment of the Hermes

  WHAT forms divine in adamant fair—

  Carven demigod and god,

  And hero-marbles rivalling these,

  Bide under Latium’s sod,

  Or lost in sediment and drift

  Alluvial which the Grecian rivers sift.

  To dig for these, O better far

  Than raking arid sands

  For gold more barren, meetly theirs

  Sterile, with brimming hands.

  The Apparition

  (The Parthenon uplifted on its rock first challenging

  the view on the approach to Athens)

  ABRUPT the supernatural Cross,

  Vivid in startled air,

  Smote the Emperor Constantine

  And turned his soul’s allegiance there.

  With other pow
er appealing down,

  Trophy of Adam’s best!

  If cynic minds you scarce convert,

  You try them, shake them, or molest.

  Diogenes, that honest heart,

  Lived ere your date began;

  Thee had he seen, he might have swerved

  In mood nor barked so much at Man.

  In the Desert

  NEVER Pharoah’s Night,

  Whereof the Hebrew wizards croon,

  Did so the Theban flamens try

  As me this veritable Noon.

  Like blank ocean in blue calm

  Undulates the ethereal frame;

  In one flowing oriflamme

  God flings his fiery standard out.

  Battling with the Emirs fierce,

  Napoleon a great victory won,

  Through and through his sword did pierce;

  But, bayonetted by this sun,

  His gunners drop beneath the gun.

  Holy, holy, holy Light!

  Immaterial incandescence,

  Of God the effluence of the essence,

  Shekinah, intolerably bright!

  The Great Pyramid

  YOUR masonry—and is it man’s?

  More like some Cosmic artizan’s.

  Your courses as in strata rise,

  Beget you do a blind surmise

  Like Grampians.

  Far slanting up your sweeping flank

 

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