Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/114

 Not sin more strange than all sins past, and worse Evil, that cries upon thee for a curse, To pray such prayers from such a heart, do thou Hear, and make wide thine hearing toward me now; Let not my soul and his for ever dwell Sundered: though doom keep always heaven and hell Irreconcilable, infinitely apart, Keep not in twain for ever heart and heart That once, albeit by not thy law, were one; Let this be not thy will, that this be done. Let all else, all thou wilt of evil, be, But no doom, none, dividing him and me.' By this was heaven stirred eastward, and there came Up the rough ripple a labouring light like flame; And dawn, sore trembling still and grey with fear, Looked hardly forth, a face of heavier cheer Than one which grief or dread yet half enshrouds, Wild-eyed and wan, across the cleaving clouds. And Iseult, worn with watch long held on pain, Turned, and her eye lit on the hound Hodain, And all her heart went out in tears: and he Laid his kind head along her bended knee, Till round his neck her arms went hard, and all The night past from her as a chain might fall: But yet the heart within her, half undone, Wailed, and was loth to let her see the sun. And ere full day brought heaven and earth to flower, Far thence, a maiden in a marriage bower, That moment, hard by Tristram, oversea, Woke with glad eyes Iseult of Brittany.