Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/110

 And all her heart anhungered as the wind. 'Dost thou repent thee of the sin we sinned? Dost thou repent thee of the days and nights That kindled and that quenched for us their lights, The months that feasted us with all their hours, The ways that breathed of us in all their flowers, The dells that sang of us with all their doves? Dost thou repent thee of the wildwood loves? Is thine heart changed, and hallowed? art thou grown God's, and not mine? Yet, though my heart make moan, Fain would my soul give thanks for thine, if thou Be saved—yea, fain praise God, and knows not how. How should it know thanksgiving? nay, or learn Aught of the love wherewith thine own should burn, God's, that should cast out as an evil thing Mine? yea, what hand of prayer have I to cling, What heart to prophesy, what spirit of sight To strain insensual eyes toward increate light, Who look but back on life wherein I sinned?' And all their past came wailing in the wind, And all their future thundered in the sea. 'But if my soul might touch the time to be, If hand might handle now or eye behold My life and death ordained me from of old, Life palpable, compact of blood and breath, Visible, present, naked, very death, Should I desire to know before the day These that I know not, nor is man that may?