Home     The Archive     Melville's Writings     Listen to this Story     Our Video Portal     About This Site  


Syra
By Herman Melville

------=====------

	(A Transmitted Reminiscence)

	Fleeing from Scio's smouldering vines
	(Where when the sword its work had done
	The Turk applied the torch) the Greek
	Came here, a fugitive stript of goods,
	Here to an all but tenantless isle,
	Nor here in footing gained at first
	Felt safe. Still from the turbaned foe
	Dreading the doom of shipwrecked men
	Whom feline seas permit to land
	Then pounce upon and drag them back,
	For height they made, and prudent won
	A cone-shaped fastness on whose flanks
	With pains they pitched their eyrie camp,
	Stone huts, whereto they wary clung;
	But, reassured in end, come down-
	Multiplied through compatriots now,
	Refugees like themselves forlorn-
	And building along the water's verge
	Begin to thrive; and thriving more
	When Greece at last flung off the Turk,
	Make of the haven mere a mart.

	    I saw it in its earlier day-
	Primitive, such an isled resort
	As hearthless Homer might have known
	Wandering about the Ægean here.
	Sheds ribbed with wreck-stuff faced the sea
	Where goods in transit shelter found;
	And here and there a shanty-shop


	Where fez-caps, swords, tobacco, shawls,
	Pistols, and orient finery, Eve's-
	(The spangles dimmed by hands profane)
	Like plunder on a pirate's deck
	Lay orderless in such loose way
	As to suggest things ravished or gone astray.

	    Above a tented inn with fluttering flag
	A sunburnt board announced Greek wine
	In self-same text Anacreon knew,
	Dispensed by one named 'Pericles.'
	Got up as for the opera's scene,
	Armed strangers, various, lounged or lazed,
	Lithe fellows tall, with gold-shot eyes,
	Sunning themselves as leopards may.

	    Off-shore lay xebecs trim and light,
	And some but dubious in repute.
	But on the strand, for docks were none,
	What busy bees! no testy fry;
	Frolickers, picturesquely odd,
	With bales and oil-jars lading boats,
	Lighters that served an anchored craft,
	Each in his tasselled Phrygian cap,
	Blue Eastern drawers and braided vest;
	And some with features cleanly cut
	As Proserpine's upon the coin.
	Such chatterers all! like children gay
	Who make believe to work, but play.

	    I saw, and how help musing too.
	Here traffic's immature as yet:
	Forever this juvenile fun hold out
	And these light hearts? Their garb, their glee,
	Alike profuse in flowing measure,


	Alike inapt for serious work,
	Blab of grandfather Saturn's prime
	When trade was not, nor toil, nor stress,
	But life was leisure, merriment, peace,
	And lucre none and love was righteousness.


 
------------
 
  Home     The Archive     Melville's Writings     Listen to this Story     Our Video Portal     About This Site