Herman Melville
1819 - 1891
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Clarel
Part IV. Bethlehem
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Canto xxiiOf Wickedness the Word.
Since, for the charity they knew,None cared the exile to upbraidOr further breast—while yet he threw,In silence that oppressive weighed, | |
5 | The after-influence of his spell—The priest in light disclaimer saidTo Rolfe apart: "The icicle,The dagger-icicle draws blood;But give it sun!" "You mean his mood |
10 | Is accident—would melt awayIn fortune's favorable ray.But if 'tis happiness he lacks,Why, let the gods warm all cold backsWith that good sun. But list!" |
15 | In ventOf thought, abrupt the malcontent:"What incantation shall make lessThe ever-upbubbling wickedness!Is this fount nature's?" |
20 | Under guardAsked Vine: "Is wickedness the word?""The right word? Yes; but scarce the thingIs there conveyed; for one need knowWicked has been the tampering |
25 | With wickedness the word." "Even so?""Ay, ridicule's light sacrilegeHas taken off the honest edge—Quite turned aside—perverted allThat Saxon term and Scriptural." |
30 | "Restored to the incisive wedge,What means it then, this wickedness?"Ungar regarded him with lookOf steady search: "And wilt thou brook?Thee leaves it whole?—This wickedness |
35 | (Might it retake true import well)Means not default, nor vulgar vice,Nor Adam's lapse in Paradise;But worse: 'twas this evoked the hell—Gave in the conscious soul's recess |
40 | Credence to Calvin. What's impliedIn that deep utterance decriedWhich Christians labially confess—Be born anew?""Ah, overstate |
45 | Thou dost!" the priest sighed; "but look there!No jarring theme may violateYon tender evening sky! How fairThese olive-orchards: see, the sheepMild drift toward the folds of sleep. |
50 | The blessed Nature! still her glanceReturns the love she well receivesFrom hearts that with the stars advance,Each heart that in the goal believes!"Ungar, though nettled, as might be, |
55 | At these bland substitutes in plea(By him accounted so) yet sealedHis lips. In fine, all seemed to yieldWith one consent a truce to talk.But Clarel, who, since that one hour |
60 | Of unreserve on Saba's tower,Less relished Derwent's pleasant walkOf myrtles, hardly might remainUninfluenced by Ungar's vein:If man in truth be what you say, |
65 | And such the prospects for the clay,And outlook of the future—cease!What's left us but the senses' sway?Sinner, sin out life's petty lease:We are not worth the saving. Nay, |
70 | For me, if thou speak true—but ah,Yet, yet there gleams one beckoning star—So near the horizon, judge I rightThat 'tis of heaven?But wanes the light— |
75 | The evening Angelus is rolled:They rise, and seek the convent's fold. |