Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/138

 Thou said'st, and earth fade as a leaf grows grey, Ere one word said of thine should pass away. Was this then not thy word, thou God most high, That sin shall surely bring forth death and die, Seeing how these twain live and have joy of life, His harlot and the man that made me wife? For is it I, perchance, I that have sinned? Me, peradventure, should thy wasting wind Smite, and thy sun blast, and thy storms devour Me with keen fangs of lightning? should thy power Put forth on me the weight of its awakening hour? Shall I that bear this burden bear that weight Of judgment? is my sin against thee great, If all my heart against them burn with all its hate? Thine, and not mine, should hate be? nay, but me They have spoiled and scoffed at, who can touch not thee. Me, me, the fullness of their joy drains dry, Their fruitfulness makes barren: thou, not I, Lord, is it, whom their wrongdoing clothes with shame, That all who speak shoot tongues out at thy name As all who hear mock mine? Make me thy sword At least, if even thou too be wronged, O Lord, At all of these that wrong me: make mine hand As lightning, or my tongue a fiery brand, To burn or smite them with thy wrath: behold, I have nought on earth save thee for hope or hold, Fail me not thou: I have nought but this to crave, Make me thy mean to give them to the grave,