Page:Collected poems Robinson, Edwin Arlington.djvu/283

 She moaned, as if in sorrow: "Must it be ? Must every prophet and important wizard Be clouded so that nothing but his nose And eyes, and intimations of his ears, Are there to make us know him when we see him? Praise heaven I'm not a prophet! Are you glad?"- He did not say that he was glad or sorry; For suddenly came flashing into vision A thing that was a manor and a castle, With walls and roofs that had a flaming sky Behind them, like a sky that he remembered, And one that had from his rock-sheltered haunt Above the roofs of^his forsaken city Made flame as if all Camelot were on fire. The glow brought with it a brief memory Of Arthur as he left him, and the pain That fought in Arthur's eyes for losing him, And must have overflowed when he had vanished. But now the eyes that looked hard into his Were Vivian's, not the King's; and he could see, Or so he thought, a shade of sorrow in them. She took his two. hands : "You are sad," she said. He smiled: "Your western lights bring memories Of Camelot. We all have memories Prophets, and women who are like slim cedars; But you are wrong to say that I am sad." "Would you go back to Camelot?" she asked, Her fingers tightening. Merlin shook his head. "Then listen while I tell you that I'm glad," She purred, as if assured that he would listen: "At your first warning, much too long ago, Of this quaint pilgrimage of yours to see 'The fairest and most orgulous of ladies' No language for a prophet, I am sure