Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/113

 What righteousness, what judgment, Lord most high, Were this, to bend a brow of doom as grim As threats me, me the adulterous wife, on him? There lies none other nightly by his side: He hath not sought, he shall not seek a bride. Far as God sunders earth from heaven above, So far was my love born beneath his love. I loved him as the sea-wind loves the sea, To rend and ruin it only and waste: but he, As the sea loves a sea-bird loved he me, To foster and uphold my tired life's wing, And bounteously beneath me spread forth spring, A springtide space whereon to float or fly, A world of happy water, whence the sky Glowed goodlier, lightening from so glad a glass, Than with its own light only. Now, alas! Cloud hath come down and clothed it round with storm, And gusts and fits of eddying winds deform The feature of its glory. Yet be thou, God, merciful: nay, show but justice now, And let the sin in him that scarce was his Stand expiated with exile: and be this The price for him, the atonement this, that I With all the sin upon me live, and die With all thy wrath on me that most have sinned.' And like man's heart relenting sighed the wind, And as God's wrath subsiding sank the sea. 'But if such grace be possible—if it be