Page:Collected poems Robinson, Edwin Arlington.djvu/409

 Gawaine, your brothers, Gareth and Gaheris, Are by our royal order there to see And to report. They went unwillingly, For they are new to law and young to justice; But what they are to see will harden them With wholesome admiration of a realm Where treason's end is ashes. Ashes. Ashes! Now this is better. I am King again. Forget, I pray, my drowsy temporizing, For I was not then properly awake. . . . What? Hark! Whose crass insanity is that! If I be King, go find the fellow and hang him Who beats into the morning on that bell Before there is a morning ! This is dawn ! What! Bedivere? Gawaine? You shake your heads? I tell you this is dawn! . . . What have I done? What have I said so lately that I flinch To think on! What have I sent those boys_to see? I'll put clouts on my eyes, and I'll not see it! Her face, and hands, and little small white feet, And all her shining hair and her warm body No for the love of God, no ! it's alive! She's all alive, and they are burning her The Queen—the love——the love that never was! Gawaine! Bedivere! Gawaine!—Where is Gawaine! Is he there in the shadow? Is he dead? Are we all dead? Are we in hell? Gawaine! . . . I cannot see her now in the smoke. Her eyes Are what I see and her white body is burning! She never did enough to make me see her Like that—to make her look at me like that! There's not room in the world for so much evil As I see clamoring in her poor white face For pity. Pity her, God ! God ! . . . Lancelot!"