Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/177

 What rest may we take ever? what have we Had ever more of peace than has the sea? Has not our life been as a wind that blows Through lonelier lands than rear the wild white rose That each year sees requickened, but for us Time once and twice hath here or there done thus And left the next year following empty and bare? What rose hath our last year's rose left for heir, What wine our last year's vintage? and to me More were one fleet forbidden sense of thee, One perfume of thy present grace, one thought Made truth one hour, ere all mine hours be nought, One very word, breath, look, sign, touch of hand, Than all the green leaves in Broceliande Full of sweet sound, full of sweet wind and sun; O God, thou knowest I would no more but one, I would no more but once more ere I die Find thus much mercy. Nay, but then were I Happier than he whom there thy grace hath found, For thine it must be, this that wraps him round, Thine only, albeit a fiend's force gave him birth, Thine that has given him heritage on earth Of slumber-sweet eternity to keep Fast in soft hold of everliving sleep. Happier were I, more sinful man, than he, Whom one love-worthier then than Nimue Should with a breath make blest among the dead.' And the wan wedded maiden answering said, Soft as hate speaks within itself apart: 'Surely ye shall not, ye that rent mine heart,