Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/109

 For now how should we live in twain or die? I am he indeed, thou knowest, and he is I. Not man and woman several as we were, But one thing with one life and death to bear. How should one love his own soul overmuch? And time is long since last I felt the touch, The sweet touch of my lover, hand and breath, In such delight as puts delight to death, Burn my soul through, till spirit and soul and sense, In the sharp grasp of the hour, with violence Died, and again through pangs of violent birth Lived, and laughed out with refluent might of mirth; Laughed each on other and shuddered into one, As a cloud shuddering dies into the sun. Ah, sense is that or spirit, soul or flesh, That only love lulls or awakes afresh? Ah, sweet is that or bitter, evil or good, That very love allays not as he would? Nay, truth is this or vanity, that gives No love assurance when love dies or lives? This that my spirit is wrung withal, and yet No surelier knows if haply thine forget, Thou that my spirit is wrung for, nor can say Love is not in thee dead as yesterday? Dost thou feel, thou, this heartbeat whence my heart Would send thee word what life is mine apart, And know by keen response what life is thine? Dost thou not hear one cry of all of mine? O Tristram's heart, have I no part in thee?' And all her soul was as the breaking sea,