Page:Early poems of William Morris.djvu/206

 So gently on his drawn-up face,

And you would kiss him, and in soft

Cool scented clothes would lap him, pace

The quiet room and weep oft,—oft

Would turn and smile, and brush his cheek

With your sweet chin and mouth; and in

The order'd garden you would seek

The biggest roses—any sin.

And these say: "No more now my knight.

Or God's knight any longer"—you,

Being than they so much more white,

So much more pure and good and true,

Will cling to me for ever—there,

Is not that wrong turn'd right at last

Through all these years, and I wash'd clean?

Say, yea, Ellayne; the time is past,

Since on that Christmas-day last year

Up to your feet the fire crept,

And the smoke through the brown leaves sere

Blinded your dear eyes that you wept;

Was it not I that caught you then,

And kiss'd you on the saddle-bow?

Did not the blue owl mark the men

Whose spears stood like the corn a-row?

This Oliver is a right good knight,

And must needs beat me, as I fear,

Unless I catch him in the fight,

My father's crafty way—John, here!