Herman Melville
1819 - 1891
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Clarel
Part I. Jerusalem
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Canto xxxviiA Sketch.
Not knowing them in very heart,Nor why to join him they were loth,He, disappointed, moved apart,With sad pace creeping, dull, as doth | |
5 | Along the bough the nerveless sloth.
For ease upon the ground they sit;And Rolfe, with eye still followingWhere Nehemiah slow footed it,Asked Clarel: "Know you anythingOf this man's prior life at all?""Nothing," said Clarel. —"I recall,"Said Rolfe, "a mariner like him.""A mariner?"—"Yes; one whom grimDisaster made as meek as heThere plodding." Vine here showed the zestOf a deep human interest:"We crave of you his history:"And Rolfe began: "Scarce would I tellOf what this mariner befell—So much is it with cloud o'ercast—Were he not now gone home at lastInto the green land of the dead,Where he encamps and peace is shed.Hardy he was, sanguine and bold,The master of a ship. His mindIn night-watch frequent he unrolled—As seamen sometimes are inclined—On serious topics, to his mate,A man to creed austere resigned.The master ever spumed at fate,Calvin's or Zeno's. Always stillMan-like he stood by man's free willAnd power to effect each thing he would,Did reason but pronounce it good.The subaltern held in humble wayThat still heaven's over-rulings swayWill and event."On waters far,Where map-man never made survey,Gliding along in easy plight,The strong one brake the lull of nightEmphatic in his willful war—But staggered, for there came a jarWith fell arrest to keel and speech:A hidden rock. The pound—the grind—Collapsing sails o'er deck declined—Sleek billows curling in the breach,And nature with her neutral mind.A wreck. 'Twas in the former days,Those waters then obscure; a maze;The isles were dreaded—every chain;Better to brave the immense of sea,And venture for the Spanish Main,Beating and rowing against the trades,Than float to valleys 'neath the lee,Nor far removed, and palmy shades.So deemed he, strongly erring there.To boats they take; the weather fair—Never the sky a cloudlet knew;A temperate wind unvarying blewWeek after week; yet came despair;The bread though doled, and water stored,Ran low and lower—ceased. They burn—They agonize till crime abhorredLawful might be. O trade-wind, turn!"Well may some items sleep unrolled—Never by the one survivor told.Him they picked up, where, cuddled down,They saw the jacketed skeleton,Lone in the only boat that lived—His signal frittered to a shred." 'Strong need'st thou be,' the rescuers said,'Who hast such trial sole survived.''I willed it,' gasped he. And the man,Renewed ashore, pushed off again.How bravely sailed the pennoned shipBound outward on her sealing tripAntarctic. Yes; but who returnsToo soon, regaining port by landWho left it by the bay? What spurnsWere his that so could countermand?Nor mutineer, nor rock, nor galeNor leak had foiled him. No; a whaleOf purpose aiming, stove the bow:They foundered. To the master nowOwners and neighbors all imputeAn inauspiciousness. His wife—Gentle, but unheroic—she,Poor thing, at heart knew bitter strifeBetween her love and her simplicity:A Jonah is he?—And men bruitThe story. None will give him placeIn a third venture. Came the dayDire need constrained the man to paceA night patrolman on the quayWatching the bales till morning hourThrough fair and foul. Never he smiled;Call him, and he would come; not sourIn spirit, but meek and reconciled;Patient he was, he none withstood;Oft on some secret thing would brood.He ate what came, though but a crust;In Calvin's creed he put his trust;Praised heaven, and said that God was good,And his calamity but just.So Sylvio Pellico from cell-doorForth tottering, after dungeoned years,Crippled and bleached, and dead his peers:'Grateful, I thank the Emperor,'"
There ceasing, after pause Rolfe drewRegard to Nehemiah in view:"Look, the changed master, roams he there?I mean, is such the guise, the air?"The speaker sat between mute VineAnd Clarel. From the mystic seaLaocoon's serpent, sleek and fine,In loop on loop seemed here to twineHis clammy coils about the three.Then unto them the wannish manDraws nigh; but absently they scan;A phantom seems he, and from zoneWhere naught is real though the winds aye moan. |