Page:Collected poems Robinson, Edwin Arlington.djvu/417

 Alone with Gawaine. When a strong man goes Like that, it makes him sick to see his friends Around him. Leave us, and go now. Sometimes I'll scarce remember that he's not my son, So near he seems. I thank you, gentlemen." The King, alone with Gawaine, who said nothing, Had yet no heart for news of Lancelot Or Guinevere. He saw them on their way To Joyous Gard, where Tristram and Isolt Had islanded of old their stolen love, While Mark of Cornwall entertained a vengeance Envisaging an ending of all that; And he could see the two of them together As Mark had seen Isolt there, and her knight, Though not, like Mark, with murder in his eyes. He saw them as if they were there already, And he were a lost thought long out of mind; He saw them lying in each other's arms, Oblivious of the living and the dead They left in Camelot. Then he saw the dead That lay so quiet outside the city walls, And wept, and left the Queen to Lancelot Or would have left her, had the will been his To leave or take; for now he could acknowledge An inrush of a desolate thanksgiving That she, with death around her, had not died. The vision of a peace that humbled him, And yet might save the world that he had won, Came slowly into view like something soft And ominous on all-fours, without a spirit To make it stand upright. "Better be that, Even that, than blood," he sighed, "if that be peace." But looking down on Gawaine, who said nothing, He shook his head: "The King has had his world,