Herman Melville
1819 - 1891
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Clarel
Part IV. Bethlehem
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Canto xxiUngar and Rolfe.
["]Such earnestness! such wear and tear,And man but a thin gossamer!"So here the priest aside; then turned,And, starting: "List! the vesper-bell? | |
5 | Nay, nay—the hour is passed. But, oh,He must have supped, Don Hannibal,Ere now. Come, friends, and shall we go?This hot discussion, let it standAnd cool; to-morrow we'll remand." |
10 | "Not yet, I pray," said Rolfe; "a word;"And turned toward Ungar; "be adjured,And tell us if for earth may beIn ripening arts, no guaranteeOf happy sequel." |
15 | "Arts are tools;But tools, they say are to the strong:Is Satan weak? weak is the Wrong?No blessed augury overrules:Your arts advance in faith's decay: |
20 | You are but drilling the new HunWhose growl even now can some dismay;Vindictive in his heart of hearts,He schools him in your mines and marts—A skilled destroyer." |
25 | "But, need ownThat portent does in no degreeWestward impend, across the sea.""Over there? And do ye not forebode?Against pretenses void or weak |
30 | The impieties of 'Progress' speak.What say these, in effect, to God?'How profits it? And who art ThouThat we should serve Thee? Of Thy waysNo knowledge we desire; new ways |
35 | We have found out, and better. Go—Depart from us; we do eraseThy sinecure: behold, the sunStands still no more in Ajalon:Depart from us!'—And if He do? |
40 | (And that He may, the Scripture says)Is aught betwixt ye and the hells?For He, nor in irreverent view,'Tis He distills that savor trueWhich keeps good essences from taint; |
45 | Where He is not, corruption dwells,And man and chaos are without restraint.""Oh, oh, you do but generalizeIn void abstractions.""Hypothesize: |
50 | If be a people which beganWithout impediment, or letFrom any ruling which fore-ran;Even striving all things to forgetBut this—the excellence of man |
55 | Left to himself, his natural bent,His own devices and intent;And if, in satire of the heaven,A world, a new world have been givenFor stage whereon to deploy the event; |
60 | If such a people be—well, well,One hears the kettle-drums of hell!Exemplary act awaits its placeIn drama of the human race.""Is such act certain?" Rolfe here ran; |
65 | "Not much is certain.""God is—man.The human nature, the divine—Have both been proved by many a sign.'Tis no astrologer and star. |
70 | The world has now so old become,Historic memory goes so farBackward through long defiles of doom;Whoso consults it honestlyThat mind grows prescient in degree; |
75 | For man, like God, abides the sameAlways, through all varietyOf woven garments to the frame.""Yes, God is God, and men are men,Forever and for aye. What then? |
80 | There's Circumstance—there's Time; and theseAre charged with store of latenciesStill working in to modify.For mystic text that you recall,Dilate upon, and e'en apply— |
85 | (Although I seek not to decry)Theology's scarce practical.But leave this: the New World's the theme,Here, to oppose your dark extreme.(Since an old friend is good at need) |
90 | To an old thought I'll fly. Pray, heed:Those waste-weirs which the New World yieldsTo inland freshets—the free ventsSupplied to turbid elements;The vast reserves—the untried fields; |
95 | These long shall keep off and delayThe class-war, rich-and-poor-man frayOf history. From that aloneCan serious trouble spring. Even thatItself, this good result may own— |
100 | The first firm founding of the state."Here ending, with a watchful airInquisitive, Rolfe waited him.And Ungar:"True heart do ye bear |
105 | In this discussion? or but trimTo draw my monomania out,For monomania, past doubt,Some of ye deem it. Yet I'll on.Yours seems a reasonable tone; |
110 | But in the New World things make haste:Not only men, the state lives fast—Fast breeds the pregnant eggs and shells,The slumberous combustiblesSure to explode. 'Twill come, 'twill come! |
115 | One demagogue can trouble much:How of a hundred thousand such?And universal suffrage lentTo back them with brute elementOverwhelming? What shall bind these seas |
120 | Of rival sharp communitiesUnchristianized? Yea, but 'twill come!""What come?""Your Thirty Years (of) War.""Should fortune's favorable star |
125 | Avert it?""Fortune? nay, 'tis doom.""Then what comes after? spasms but tendEver, at last, to quiet.""Know, |
130 | Whatever happen in the end,Be sure 'twill yield to one and allNew confirmation of the fallOf Adam. Sequel may ensue,Indeed, whose germs one now may view: |
135 | Myriads playing pygmy parts—Debased into equality:In glut of all material artsA civic barbarism may be:Man disennobled—brutalized |
140 | By popular science—AtheizedInto a smatterer— —""Oh, oh!""Yet knowing all self need to knowIn self's base little fallacy; |
145 | Dead level of rank commonplace:An Anglo-Saxon China, see,May on your vast plains shame the raceIn the Dark Ages of Democracy."
America! |
150 | In stilled estate,On him, half-brother and co-mate—In silence, and with vision dimRolfe, Vine, and Clarel gazed on him;They gazed, nor one of them found heart |
155 | To upbraid the crotchet of his smart,Bethinking them whence sole it came,Though birthright he renounced in hope,Their sanguine country's wonted claim.Nor dull they were in honest tone |
160 | To some misgivings of their own:They felt how far beyond the scopeOf elder Europe's saddest thoughtMight be the New World's sudden broughtIn youth to share old age's pains— |
165 | To feel the arrest of hope's advance,And squandered last inheritance;And cry—"To Terminus build fanes!Columbus ended earth's romance:No New World to mankind remains!" |