Herman Melville
1819 - 1891
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Clarel
Part II. The Wilderness
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Canto xxxivMortmain Reappears.
While now at poise the wings of shadeOutstretched overhang each ridge and glade,Mortmain descends from Judah's hightThrough sally-port of minor glens: | |
5 | Against the background of black densBlacker the figure glooms enhanced.Relieved from anxious fears, the groupIn friendliness would have advancedTo greet, but shrank or fell adroop. |
10 | Like Hecla ice inveined with marlAnd frozen cinders showed his faceRigid and darkened. Shunning parleHe seated him aloof in place,Hands clasped about the knees drawn up |
15 | As round the cask the binding hoop—Condensed in self, or like a seerUnconscious of each object near,While yet, informed, the nerve may reachLike wire under wave to furthest beach. |
20 | By what brook Cherith had he been,Watching it shrivel from the scene—Or voice aerial had heard,That now he murmured the wild word;"But, hectored by the impious years, |
25 | What god invoke, for leave to unveilThat gulf whither tend these modern fears,And deeps over which men crowd the sail?["]Up, as possessed, he rose anon,And crying to the beach went down: |
30 | "Repent! repent in every landOr hell's hot kingdom is at hand!Yea, yea,In pause of the artillery's boom,While now the armed world holds its own, |
35 | The comet peers, the star dips down;Flicker the lamps in Syria's tomb,While Anti-Christ and Atheist setOn Anarch the red coronet!"
"Mad John," sighed Rolfe, "dost there betray |
40 | The dire Vox Clamans of our day?""Why heed him?" Derwent breathed: "alas!Let him alone, and it will pass.—What would he now?" Before the bayLow bowed he there, with hand addressed |
45 | To scoop. "Unhappy, hadst thou best?"Djalea it was; then calling lowUnto a Bethlehemite whose browWas wrinkled like the bat's shrunk hide—"Your salt-song, Beltha: warn and chide."
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50 | "Would ye know what bitter drinkThey gave to Christ upon the Tree?Sip the wave that laps the brinkOf Siddim: taste, and God keep ye!It drains the hills where alum's hid— |
55 | Drains the rock-salt's ancient bed;Hither unto basin fallThe torrents from the steeps of gall—Here is Hades' water-shed.Sinner, would ye that your soul |
60 | Bitter were and like the pool?Sip the Sodom waters dead;But never from thy heart shall hasteThe Marah—yea, the after-taste."
He closed.—Arrested as he stooped, |
65 | Did Mortmain his pale hand recall?No; undeterred the wave he scooped,And tried it—madly tried the gall. |