Herman Melville
1819 - 1891
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Clarel
Part IV. Bethlehem
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Canto xxxivVia Crucis.
Some leading thoroughfares of manIn wood-path, track, or trail began;Though threading heart of proudest town,They follow in controlling grade | |
5 | A hint or dictate, nature's own,By man, as by the brute, obeyed.
Within Jerusalem a lane,Narrow, nor less an artery main(Though little knoweth it of din), |
10 | In part suggests such origin.The restoration or repair,Successive through long ages there,Of city upon city tumbled,Might scarce divert that thoroughfare, |
15 | Whose hill abideth yet unhumbledAbove the valley-side it meets.Pronounce its name, this natural street's:The Via Crucis—even the wayTradition claims to be the one |
20 | Trod on that Friday far awayBy Him our pure exemplar shown.
'Tis Whitsun-tide. From paths without,Through Stephen's gate—by many a veinConvergent brought within this lane, |
25 | Ere sun-down shut the loiterer out—As 'twere a frieze, behold the train!Bowed water-carriers; Jews with staves,Infirm gray monks; over-loaded slaves;Turk soldiers—young, with home-sick eyes; |
30 | A Bey, bereaved through luxuries;Strangers and exiles; Moslem damesLong-veiled in monumental white,Dumb from the mounds which memory claims;A half-starved vagrant Edomite; |
35 | Sore-footed Arab girls, which toilDepressed under heap oŁ garden-spoil;The patient ass with panniered urn;Sour camels humped by heaven and man,Whose languid necks through habit turn |
40 | For ease—for ease they hardly gain.In varied forms of fate they wend—Or man or animal, 'tis one:Cross-bearers all, alike they tendAnd follow, slowly follow on.
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45 | But, lagging after, who is heCalled early every hope to test,And now, at close of rarer quest,Finds so much more the heavier tree?From slopes whence even Echo's gone, |
50 | Wending, he murmurs in low tone:"They wire the world—far under seaThey talk; but never comes to meA message from beneath the stone."
Dusked Olivet he leaves behind, |
55 | And, taking now a slender wynd,Vanishes in the obscurer town. |