Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/163

 Bright as the sun and terrible as fire: And there had sword and spear their soul's desire, And blood that quenched the spear's thirst as it poured Slaked royally the hunger of the sword, Till the fierce heart of steel could scarce fulfil Its greed and ravin of insatiate will. For three the fiery spear of Tristram drove Down ere a point of theirs his harness clove Or its own sheer mid shaft splintered in twain; And his heart bounded in him, and was fain As fire or wind that takes its fill by night Of tempest and of triumph: so the knight Rejoiced and ranged among them, great of hand, Till seven lay slain upon the heathery sand Or in the dense breadth of the woodside fern. Nor did his heart not mightier in him burn Seeing at his hand that young knight fallen, and high The red sword reared again that bade him die. But on the slayer exulting like the flame Whose foot foreshines the thunder Tristram came Raging, for piteous wrath had made him fire; And as a lion's look his face was dire That flashed against his foeman ere the sword Lightened, and wrought the heart's will of its lord, And clove through casque and crown the wrongdoer's head. And right and left about their dark chief dead Hurtled and hurled those felons to and fro, Till as a storm-wind scatters leaves and snow