Page:Collected poems Robinson, Edwin Arlington.djvu/309

 That melted slowly into what she said, Like snow in icy water: "This world of yours Will surely be the end of us. And why not?  I'm overmuch afraid we're part of it,  Or why do we build walls up all around us,  With gates of iron that make us think the day  Of judgment's coming when they clang behind us ?  And yet you tell me that you fear no specks !  With you I never cared for them enough  To think of them. I was too strange a lady.  And your return is now a speckled king  And something that you call a living sin  That's like an uninvited poor relation  Who comes without a welcome, rather late,  And on a foundered horse." "Specks? What are specks?" He gazed at her in a forlorn wonderment That made her say : "You said, 'I fear them not.' 'If I were king in Camelot,' you said,  'I might fear more than specks.' Have you forgotten?  Don't tell me, Merlin, you are growing old.  Why don't you make somehow a queen of me,  And give me half the world ? I'd wager thrushes  That I should reign, with you to turn the wheel,  As well as any king that ever was.  The curse on me is that I cannot serve  A ruler who forgets that he is king." In his bewildered misery Merlin then Stared hard at Vivian's face, more like a slave Who sought for common mercy than like Merlin: "You speak a language that was never mine, Or I have lost my wits. Why do you seize  The flimsiest of opportunities