Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/111

 For haply, seeing, my heart would break for fear, And my soul timeless cast its load off here, Its load of life too bitter, love too sweet, And fall down shamed and naked at thy feet, God, who wouldst take no pity of it, nor give One hour back, one of all its hours to live Clothed with my mortal body, that once more, Once, on this reach of barren beaten shore, This stormy strand of life, ere sail were set, Had haply felt love's arms about it yet— Yea, ere death's bark put off to seaward, might With many a grief have bought me one delight That then should know me never. Ah, what years Would I endure not, filled up full with tears, Bitter like blood and dark as dread of death, To win one amorous hour of mingling breath, One fire-eyed hour and sunnier than the sun, For all these nights and days like nights but one? One hour of heaven born once, a stormless birth, For all these windy weary hours of earth? One, but one hour from birth of joy to death, For all these hungering hours of feverish breath? And I should lose this, having died and sinned.' And as man's anguish clamouring cried the wind, And as God's anger answering rang the sea. 'And yet what life—Lord God, what life for me Has thy strong wrath made ready? Dost thou think How lips whose thirst hath only tears to drink Grow grey for grief untimely? Dost thou know, O happy God, how men wax weary of woe—