Page:Early poems of William Morris.djvu/58



"Alas, my maids, you loved not overmuch Queen Guenevere, uncertain as sunshine In March; forgive me! for my sin being such, About my whole life, all my deeds did twine,

"Made me quite wicked; as I found out then, I think; in the lonely palace, where each morn We went, my maids and I, to say prayers when They sang mass in the chapel on the lawn.

"And every morn I scarce could pray at all. For Launcelot's red-golden hair would play, Instead of sunlight, on the painted wall, Mingled with dreams of what the priest did say;

'"Grim curses out of Peter and of Paul; Judging of strange sins in Leviticus; Another sort of writing on the wall, Scored deep across the painted heads of us.

"Christ sitting wnth the woman at the well, And Mary Magdalen repenting there, Her dimmed eyes scorch'd and red at sight of hell So hardly 'scaped, no gold light on her hair.

"And if the priest said anything that seem'd To touch upon the sin they said we did,— (This in their teeth) they look'd as if they deem'd That I was spying what thoughts might be hid

"Under green-cover'd bosoms, heaving quick Beneath quick thoughts; while they grew red with shame, And gazed down at their feet—while I felt sick, And almost shrieked if one should call my name.