Tuesday 24 April 2018

Tuesday's Serial: "BEN-HUR: a tale of the Christ." by Lew Wallace - XV (in English)


BOOK FOURTH

  "Alva.   Should the monarch prove unjust -
  And, at this time -

  Queen.         Then I must wait for justice
  Until it come; and they are happiest far
  Whose consciences may calmly wait their right."
                       Schiller, Don Carlos (act iv., sc. xv.)


CHAPTER I
                The month to which we now come is July, the year that of our Lord 29, and the place Antioch, then Queen of the East, and next to Rome the strongest, if not the most populous, city in the world.
                There is an opinion that the extravagance and dissoluteness of the age had their origin in Rome, and spread thence throughout the empire; that the great cities but reflected the manners of their mistress on the Tiber. This may be doubted. The reaction of the conquest would seem to have been upon the morals of the conqueror. In Greece she found a spring of corruption; so also in Egypt; and the student, having exhausted the subject, will close the books assured that the flow of the demoralizing river was from the East westwardly, and that this very city of Antioch, one of the oldest seats of Assyrian power and splendor, was a principal source of the deadly stream.
                A transport galley entered the mouth of the river Orontes from the blue waters of the sea. It was in the forenoon. The heat was great, yet all on board who could avail themselves of the privilege were on deck - Ben-Hur among others.
                The five years had brought the young Jew to perfect manhood. Though the robe of white linen in which he was attired somewhat masked his form, his appearance was unusually attractive. For an hour and more he had occupied a seat in the shade of the sail, and in that time several fellow-passengers of his own nationality had tried to engage him in conversation, but without avail. His replies to their questions had been brief, though gravely courteous, and in the Latin tongue. The purity of his speech, his cultivated manners, his reticence, served to stimulate their curiosity the more. Such as observed him closely were struck by an incongruity between his demeanor, which had the ease and grace of a patrician, and certain points of his person. Thus his arms were disproportionately long; and when, to steady himself against the motion of the vessel, he took hold of anything near by, the size of his hands and their evident power compelled remark; so the wonder who and what he was mixed continually with a wish to know the particulars of his life. In other words, his air cannot be better described than as a notice - This man has a story to tell.
                The galley, in coming, had stopped at one of the ports of Cyprus, and picked up a Hebrew of most respectable appearance, quiet, reserved, paternal. Ben-Hur ventured to ask him some questions; the replies won his confidence, and resulted finally in an extended conversation.
                It chanced also that as the galley from Cyprus entered the receiving bay of the Orontes, two other vessels which had been sighted out in the sea met it and passed into the river at the same time; and as they did so both the strangers threw out small flags of brightest yellow. There was much conjecture as to the meaning of the signals. At length a passenger addressed himself to the respectable Hebrew for information upon the subject.
                "Yes, I know the meaning of the flags," he replied; "they do not signify nationality - they are merely marks of ownership."
                "Has the owner many ships?"
                "He has."
                "You know him?"
                "I have dealt with him."
                The passengers looked at the speaker as if requesting him to go on. Ben-Hur listened with interest.
                "He lives in Antioch," the Hebrew continued, in his quiet way. "That he is vastly rich has brought him into notice, and the talk about him is not always kind. There used to be in Jerusalem a prince of very ancient family named Hur."
                Judah strove to be composed, yet his heart beat quicker.
                "The prince was a merchant, with a genius for business. He set on foot many enterprises, some reaching far East, others West. In the great cities he had branch houses. The one in Antioch was in charge of a man said by some to have been a family servant called Simonides, Greek in name, yet an Israelite. The master was drowned at sea. His business, however, went on, and was scarcely less prosperous. After a while misfortune overtook the family. The prince's only son, nearly grown, tried to kill the procurator Gratus in one of the streets of Jerusalem. He failed by a narrow chance, and has not since been heard of. In fact, the Roman's rage took in the whole house - not one of the name was left alive. Their palace was sealed up, and is now a rookery for pigeons; the estate was confiscated; everything that could be traced to the ownership of the Hurs was confiscated. The procurator cured his hurt with a golden salve."
                The passengers laughed.
                "You mean he kept the property," said one of them.
                "They say so," the Hebrew replied; "I am only telling a story as I received it. And, to go on, Simonides, who had been the prince's agent here in Antioch, opened trade in a short time on his own account, and in a space incredibly brief became the master merchant of the city. In imitation of his master, he sent caravans to India; and on the sea at present he has galleys enough to make a royal fleet. They say nothing goes amiss with him. His camels do not die, except of old age; his ships never founder; if he throw a chip into the river, it will come back to him gold."
                "How long has he been going on thus?"
                "Not ten years."
                "He must have had a good start."

"Yes, they say the procurator took only the prince's property ready at hand - his horses, cattle, houses, land, vessels, goods. The money could not be found, though there must have been vast sums of it. What became of it has been an unsolved mystery."
                "Not to me," said a passenger, with a sneer.
                "I understand you," the Hebrew answered. "Others have had your idea. That it furnished old Simonides his start is a common belief. The procurator is of that opinion - or he has been - for twice in five years he has caught the merchant, and put him to torture."
                Judah griped the rope he was holding with crushing force.
                "It is said," the narrator continued, "that there is not a sound bone in the man's body. The last time I saw him he sat in a chair, a shapeless cripple, propped against cushions."
                "So tortured!" exclaimed several listeners in a breath.
                "Disease could not have produced such a deformity. Still the suffering made no impression upon him. All he had was his lawfully, and he was making lawful use of it - that was the most they wrung from him. Now, however, he is past persecution. He has a license to trade signed by Tiberius himself."
                "He paid roundly for it, I warrant."
                "These ships are his," the Hebrew continued, passing the remark. "It is a custom among his sailors to salute each other upon meeting by throwing out yellow flags, sight of which is as much as to say, 'We have had a fortunate voyage.'"
                The story ended there.
                When the transport was fairly in the channel of the river, Judah spoke to the Hebrew.
                "What was the name of the merchant's master?"
                "Ben-Hur, Prince of Jerusalem."
                "What became of the prince's family?"
                "The boy was sent to the galleys. I may say he is dead. One year is the ordinary limit of life under that sentence. The widow and daughter have not been heard of; those who know what became of them will not speak. They died doubtless in the cells of one of the castles which spot the waysides of Judea."
                Judah walked to the pilot's quarter. So absorbed was he in thought that he scarcely noticed the shores of the river, which from sea to city were surpassingly beautiful with orchards of all the Syrian fruits and vines, clustered about villas rich as those of Neapolis. No more did he observe the vessels passing in an endless fleet, nor hear the singing and shouting of the sailors, some in labor, some in merriment. The sky was full of sunlight, lying in hazy warmth upon the land and the water; nowhere except over his life was there a shadow.
                Once only he awoke to a momentary interest, and that was when some one pointed out the Grove of Daphne, discernible from a bend in the river.


CHAPTER II
                When the city came into view, the passengers were on deck, eager that nothing of the scene might escape them. The respectable Jew already introduced to the reader was the principal spokesman.
                "The river here runs to the west," he said, in the way of general answer. "I remember when it washed the base of the walls; but as Roman subjects we have lived in peace, and, as always happens in such times, trade has had its will; now the whole river front is taken up with wharves and docks. Yonder" - the speaker pointed southward -”is Mount Casius, or, as these people love to call it, the Mountains of Orontes, looking across to its brother Amnus in the north; and between them lies the Plain of Antioch. Farther on are the Black Mountains, whence the Ducts of the Kings bring the purest water to wash the thirsty streets and people; yet they are forests in wilderness state, dense, and full of birds and beasts."
                "Where is the lake?" one asked.
                "Over north there. You can take horse, if you wish to see it - or, better, a boat, for a tributary connects it with the river."
                "The Grove of Daphne!" he said, to a third inquirer. "Nobody can describe it; only beware! It was begun by Apollo, and completed by him. He prefers it to Olympus. People go there for one look - just one - and never come away. They have a saying which tells it all - 'Better be a worm and feed on the mulberries of Daphne than a king's guest.'"
                "Then you advise me to stay away from it?"
                "Not I! Go you will. Everybody goes, cynic philosopher, virile boy, women, and priests - all go. So sure am I of what you will do that I assume to advise you. Do not take quarters in the city - that will be loss of time; but go at once to the village in the edge of the grove. The way is through a garden, under the spray of fountains. The lovers of the god and his Penaean maid built the town; and in its porticos and paths and thousand retreats you will find characters and habits and sweets and kinds elsewhere impossible. But the wall of the city! there it is, the masterpiece of Xeraeus, the master of mural architecture."
                All eyes followed his pointing finger.
                "This part was raised by order of the first of the Seleucidae. Three hundred years have made it part of the rock it rests upon."
                The defense justified the encomium. High, solid, and with many bold angles, it curved southwardly out of view.
                "On the top there are four hundred towers, each a reservoir of water," the Hebrew continued. "Look now! Over the wall, tall as it is, see in the distance two hills, which you may know as the rival crests of Sulpius. The structure on the farthest one is the citadel, garrisoned all the year round by a Roman legion. Opposite it this way rises the Temple of Jupiter, and under that the front of the legate's residence - a palace full of offices, and yet a fortress against which a mob would dash harmlessly as a south wind."
                At this point the sailors began taking in sail, whereupon the Hebrew exclaimed, heartily, "See! you who hate the sea, and you who have vows, get ready your curses and your prayers. The bridge yonder, over which the road to Seleucia is carried, marks the limit of navigation. What the ship unloads for further transit, the camel takes up there. Above the bridge begins the island upon which Calinicus built his new city, connecting it with five great viaducts so solid time has made no impression upon them, nor floods nor earthquakes. Of the main town, my friends, I have only to say you will be happier all your lives for having seen it."
                As he concluded, the ship turned and made slowly for her wharf under the wall, bringing even more fairly to view the life with which the river at that point was possessed. Finally, the lines were thrown, the oars shipped, and the voyage was done. Then Ben-Hur sought the respectable Hebrew.
                "Let me trouble you a moment before saying farewell."
                The man bowed assent.
                "Your story of the merchant has made me curious to see him. You called him Simonides?"
                "Yes. He is a Jew with a Greek name."
                "Where is he to be found?"
                The acquaintance gave a sharp look before he answered,
                "I may save you mortification. He is not a money-lender."
                "Nor am I a money-borrower," said Ben-Hur, smiling at the other's shrewdness.
                The man raised his head and considered an instant.
                "One would think," he then replied, "that the richest merchant in Antioch would have a house for business corresponding to his wealth; but if you would find him in the day, follow the river to yon bridge, under which he quarters in a building that looks like a buttress of the wall. Before the door there is an immense landing, always covered with cargoes come and to go. The fleet that lies moored there is his. You cannot fail to find him."
                "I give you thanks."
                "The peace of our fathers go with you."
                "And with you."
                With that they separated.
                Two street-porters, loaded with his baggage, received Ben-Hur's orders upon the wharf.
                "To the citadel," he said; a direction which implied an official military connection.
                Two great streets, cutting each other at right angles, divided the city into quarters. A curious and immense structure, called the Nymphaeum, arose at the foot of the one running north and south. When the porters turned south there, the new-comer, though fresh from Rome, was amazed at the magnificence of the avenue. On the right and left there were palaces, and between them extended indefinitely double colonnades of marble, leaving separate ways for footmen, beasts, and chariots; the whole under shade, and cooled by fountains of incessant flow.
                Ben-Hur was not in mood to enjoy the spectacle. The story of Simonides haunted him. Arrived at the Omphalus - a monument of four arches wide as the streets, superbly illustrated, and erected to himself by Epiphanes, the eighth of the Seleucidae - he suddenly changed his mind.
                "I will not go to the citadel to-night," he said to the porters. "Take me to the khan nearest the bridge on the road to Seleucia."
                The party faced about, and in good time he was deposited in a public house of primitive but ample construction, within stone's-throw of the bridge under which old Simonides had his quarters. He lay upon the house-top through the night. In his inner mind lived the thought, "Now - now I will hear of home - and mother - and the dear little Tirzah. If they are on earth, I will find them."
               

Saturday 21 April 2018

Good Readings: "O Cometa" by Gonçalves Dias (in Portuguese)

Eis nos céus rutilando ígneo cometa!
A imensa cabeleira o espaço alastra,
E o núcleo, como um sol tingido em sangue,
Alvacento luzir verte agoireiro
Sobre a pávida terra.
Poderosos do mundo, grandes, povo,
Dos lábios removei a taça ingente,
Que em vossas festas gira; eis que rutila
O sangüíneo cometa em céus infindos!...
Pobres mortais, - sois vermes!
O Senhor o formou terrível, grande;
Como indócil corcel que morde o freio,
Retinha-o só a mão do Onipotente.
Ao fim lhe disse: - Vai, Senhor dos Mundos,
Senhor do espaço infindo.
E qual louco temido, ardendo em fúria,
Que ao vento solta a coma desgrenhada,
E vai, néscio de si, livre de ferros,
De encontro às duras rochas, - tal progride
O cometa incansável.
Se na marcha veloz encontra um mundo,
O mundo em mil pedaços se converte;
Mil centelhas de luz brilham no espaço
A esmo, como um tronco pelas vagas
Infrenes combatido.
Se junto doutro mundo acaso passa,
Consigo o arrasta e leva transformado;
A cauda portentosa o enlaça e prende,
E o astro vai com ele, como argueiro
Em turbilhão levado.
Como Leviatã perturba os mares,
Ele perturba o espaço; - como a lava,
Ele marcha incessante e sempre; - eterno,
Marcou-lhe largo giro a lei que o rege,
- Às vezes o infinito.
Ele carece então da eternidade!
E aos homens diz - e majestoso e grande
Que jamais o verão; e passa, e longe
Se entranha em céus sem fim, como se perde
Um barco no horizonte!

Friday 20 April 2018

Friday's Sung Word: "Crioulo sambista" by Synval Silva (in Portuguese)

music by Nelson Trigueiro.

Quase todo crioulo do morro é sambista
Toda mulata bonita é artista
Desempenha diversos papéis sozinha
À noite, ela samba no morro
De dia ela enfrenta a cozinha

Trata bem o sinhô branco
Bem melhor a sinhazinha
À noite traz um jogo de marmita
Com arroz de forno e galinha
O crioulo espera sempre
Lá no morro a rainha
Ela não da importância
Ao zum zum zum da Candinha.



 You can listen "Crioulo Sambista" sung by Ronaldo Gonçalves here.

Thursday 19 April 2018

Thursday's Serial: "Edward II" by Christopher Marlowe (in English) - V


King Edward. He's gone, and for his absence thus I mourn:
   Did never sorrow go so near my heart
   As doth the want of my sweet Gaveston;
   And, could my crown's revenue bring him back,
   I would freely give it to his enemies,
   And think I gain'd, having bought so dear a friend.
Queen Isabella. Hark, how he harps upon his minion!
King Edward. My heart is as an anvil unto sorrow,
   Which beats upon it like the Cyclops' hammers,
   And with the noise turns up my giddy brain,
   And makes me frantic for my Gaveston.
   Ah, had some bloodless Fury rose from hell,
   And with my kingly sceptre struck me dead,
   When I was forc'd to leave my Gaveston!
Lancaster. Diablo, what passions call you these?
Queen Isabella. My gracious lord, I come to bring you news.
King Edward. That you have parled with your Mortimer?
Queen Isabella. That Gaveston, my lord, shall be repeal'd.
King Edward. Repeal'd! the news is too sweet to be true.
Queen Isabella. But will you love me, if you find it so?
King Edward. If it be so, what will not Edward do?
Queen Isabella. For Gaveston, but not for Isabel.
King Edward. For thee, fair queen, if thou lov'st Gaveston;
   I'll hang a golden tongue about thy neck,
   Seeing thou hast pleaded with so good success.
Queen Isabella. No other jewels hang about my neck
   Than these, my lord; nor let me have more wealth
   Than I may fetch from this rich treasury.
   O, how a kiss revives poor Isabel!
King Edward. Once more receive my hand; and let this be
   A second marriage 'twixt thyself and me.
Queen Isabella. And may it prove more happy than the first!
   My gentle lord, bespeak these nobles fair,
   That wait attendance for a gracious look,
   And on their knees salute your majesty.
King Edward. Courageous Lancaster, embrace thy king;
   And, as gross vapours perish by the sun,
   Even so let hatred with thy sovereign's smile:
   Live thou with me as my companion.
Lancaster. This salutation overjoys my heart.
King Edward. Warwick shall be my chiefest counsellor:
   These silver hairs will more adorn my court
   Than gaudy silks or rich embroidery.
   Chide me, sweet Warwick, if I go astray.
Warwick. Slay me, my lord, when I offend your grace.
King Edward. In solemn triumphs and in public shows
   Pembroke shall bear the sword before the king.
Pembroke. And with this sword Pembroke will fight for you.
King Edward. But wherefore walks young Mortimer aside?
   Be thou commander of our royal fleet;
   Or, if that lofty office like thee not,
   I make thee here Lord Marshal of the realm.
Young Mortimer. My lord, I'll marshal so your enemies,
   As England shall be quiet, and you safe.
King Edward. And as for you, Lord Mortimer of Chirke,
   Whose great achievements in our foreign war
   Deserve no common place nor mean reward,
   Be you the general of the levied troops
   That now are ready to assail the Scots.
Elder Mortimer. In this your grace hath highly honour'd me,
   For with my nature war doth best agree.
Queen Isabella. Now is the king of England rich and strong,
   Having the love of his renowmed peers.
King Edward. Ay, Isabel, ne'er was my heart so light.—
   Clerk of the crown, direct our warrant forth,
   For Gaveston, to Ireland!
Enter BEAUMONT with warrant.
                                            Beaumont, fly
   As fast as Iris or Jove's Mercury.
Beaumont. It shall be done, my gracious lord. [Exit.
King Edward. Lord Mortimer, we leave you to your charge.
   Now let us in, and feast it royally.
   Against our friend the Earl of Cornwall comes
   We'll have a general tilt and tournament;
   And then his marriage shall be solemnis'd;
   For wot you not that I have made him sure
   Unto our cousin, the Earl of Glocester's heir?
Lancaster. Such news we hear, my lord.
King Edward. That day, if not for him, yet for my sake,
   Who in the triumph will be challenger,
   Spare for no cost; we will requite your love.
Warwick. In this or aught your highness shall command us.
King Edward. Thanks, gentle Warwick. Come, lets in and revel.
                           [Exeunt all except the elder Mortimer and the younger Mortimer.
Elder Mortimer. Nephew, I must to Scotland; thou stay'st here.
   Leave now to oppose thyself against the king:
   Thou seest by nature he is mild and calm;
   And, seeing his mind so dotes on Gaveston,
   Let him without controlment have his will.
   The mightiest kings have had their minions;
   Great Alexander lov'd Hephæstion,
   The conquering Hercules for Hylas wept,
   And for Patroclus stern Achilles droop'd
   And not kings only, but the wisest men;
   The Roman Tully lov'd Octavius,
   Grave Socrates wild Alcibiades.
   Then let his grace, whose youth is flexible,
   And promiseth as much as we can wish,
   Freely enjoy that vain light-headed earl;
   For riper years will wean him from such toys.
Young Mortimer. Uncle, his wanton humour grieves not me;
   But this I scorn, that one so basely-born
   Should by his sovereign's favour grow so pert,
   And riot it with the treasure of the realm,
   While soldiers mutiny for want of pay.
   He wears a lord's revenue on his back,
   And, Midas-like, he jets it in the court,
   With base outlandish cullions at his heels,
   Whose proud fantastic liveries make such show
   As if that Proteus, god of shapes, appear'd.
   I have not seen a dapper Jack so brisk:
   He wears a short Italian hooded cloak,
   Larded with pearl, and in his Tuscan cap
   A jewel of more value than the crown.
   While others walk below, the king and he,
   From out a window, laugh at such as we,
   And flout our train, and jest at our attire.
   Uncle, 'tis this that makes me impatient.
Elder Mortimer. But, nephew, now you see the king is chang'd.
Young Mortimer. Then so I am, and live to do him service:
   But, whiles I have a sword, a hand, a heart,
   I will not yield to any such upstart.
   You know my mind: come, uncle, let's away. [Exeunt.
Enter the younger SPENSER and BALDOCK.
Baldock. Spenser,
   Seeing that our lord the Earl of Glocester's dead,
   Which of the nobles dost thou mean to serve?
Younger Spencer. Not Mortimer, nor any of his side,
   Because the king and he are enemies.
   Baldock, learn this of me: a factious lord
   Shall hardly do himself good, much less us;
   But he that hath the favour of a king
   May with one word advance us while we live.
   The liberal Earl of Cornwall is the man
   On whose good fortune Spenser's hope depends.
Baldock. What, mean you, then, to be his follower?
Younger Spencer. No, his companion; for he loves me well,
   And would have once preferr'd me to the king.
Baldock. But he is banish'd; there's small hope of him.
Younger Spencer. Ay, for a while; but, Baldock, mark the end.
   A friend of mine told me in secrecy
   That he's repeal'd and sent for back again;
   And even now a post came from the court
   With letters to our lady from the king;
   And, as she read, she smil'd; which makes me think
   It is about her lover Gaveston.
Baldock. 'Tis like enough; for, since he was exil'd,
   She neither walks abroad nor comes in sight.
   But I had thought the match had been broke off,
   And that his banishment had chang'd her mind.
Younger Spencer. Our lady's first love is not wavering;
   My life for thine, she will have Gaveston.
Baldock. Then hope I by her means to be preferr'd,
   Having read unto her since she was a child.
Younger Spencer. Then, Baldock, you must cast the scholar off,
   And learn to court it like a gentleman.
   'Tis not a black coat and a little band,
   A velvet-cap'd cloak, fac'd before with serge,
   And smelling to a nosegay all the day,
   Or holding of a napkin in your hand,
   Or saying a long grace at a table's end,
   Or making low legs to a nobleman,
   Or looking downward, with your eye-lids close,
   And saying, "Truly, an't may please your honour,"
   Can get you any favour with great men:
   You must be proud, bold, pleasant, resolute,
   And now and then stab, as occasion serves.
Baldock. Spenser, thou know'st I hate such formal toys,
   And use them but of mere hypocrisy.
   Mine old lord, whiles he liv'd, was so precise,
   That he would take exceptions at my buttons,
   And, being like pins' heads, blame me for the bigness;
   Which made me curate-like in mine attire,
   Though inwardly licentious enough,
   And apt for any kind of villany.
   I am none of these common pedants, I,
   That cannot speak without propterea quod.
Younger Spencer. But one of those that saith quando-quidem,
   And hath a special gift to form a verb.
Baldock. Leave off this jesting; here my lady comes.
Enter KING EDWARD'S Niece.