Conrad Aiken - Herman Melville

 


'My towers at last!’—

What meant the word

from what acknowledged circuit sprung

and in the heart and on the tongue

at sight of few familiar birds

when seaward his last sail unfurled

to leeward from the wheel once more

bloomed the pale crags of haunted shore

that once-more-visited notch of world:

and straight he knew as known before

the Logos in Leviathan’s roar

he deepest sounding with his lead

who all had fathomed all had said.


Much-loving hero—towers indeed

were those that overhung your log

with entries of typhoon and fog

and thunderstone for Adam’s breed:

man’s warm Sargasso Sea of faith

dislimned in light by luck or fate

you for mankind set sail by hate

and weathered it, and with it death.

And now at world’s end coasting late

in dolphined calms beyond the gate

which Hercules flung down, you come

to the grim rocks that nod you home.

Depth below depth this love of man:

among unnumbered and unknown

to mark and make his cryptic own

one landfall of all time began:

of all life’s hurts to treasure one

and hug it to the wounded breast,

in this to dedicate the rest,

all injuries received or done.

Your towers again but towers now blest

your haven in a shoreless west

o mariner of the human soul

who in the landmark notched the Pole

and in the Item loved the Whole.