Page:Collected poems Robinson, Edwin Arlington.djvu/293

 "There's only this much in the world of it, And I am near to giving all to you Because you are so great and I so little." With a long-kindling gaze that caught from hers A laughing flame, and with a hand that shook Like Arthur's kingdom, Merlin slowly raised A golden cup that for a golden moment Was twinned in air with hers; and Vivian, Who smiled at him across their gleaming rims, From eyes that made a fuel of the night Surrounding her, shot glory over gold At Merlin, while their cups touched and his trembled. He drank, not knowing what, nor caring much For kings who might have cared less for themselves, He thought, had all the darkness and wild light That fell together to make Vivian Been there before them then to flower anew Through sheathing crimson into candle-light With each new leer of their loose, liquorish eyes. Again he drank, and he cursed every king Who might have touched her even in her cradle; For what were kings to such as he, who made them And saw them totter for the .world to see, And heed, if the world would? He drank again, And yet again to make himself assured No manner of king should have the last of it The cup that Vivian filled unfailingly Until she poured for nothing. "At the end Of this incomparable flowing gold," She prattled on to Merlin, who observed Her solemnly, "I fear there may be specks." He sighed aloud, whereat she laughed at him And pushed the golden cup a little nearer. He scanned it with a sad anxiety,