Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/48

 Turns silent, and the moon holds hardly light Above them through the sick and star-crossed night; And of their hands through whom such holds lay waste, And all their strengths dishevelled and defaced Fell ruinous, and were not from north to south: And of the might of Merlin's ancient mouth, The son of no man's loins, begot by doom In speechless sleep out of a spotless womb; For sleeping among graves where none had rest And ominous houses of dead bones unblest Among the grey grass rough as old rent hair And wicked herbage whitening like despair And blown upon with blasts of dolorous breath From gaunt rare gaps and hollow doors of death, A maid unspotted, senseless of the spell, Felt not about her breathe some thing of hell Whose child and hers was Merlin; and to him Great light from God gave sight of all things dim And wisdom of all wondrous things, to say What root should bear what fruit of night or day, And sovereign speech and counsel higher than man; Wherefore his youth like age was wise and wan, And his age sorrowful and fain to sleep; Yet should sleep never, neither laugh nor weep, Till in some depth of deep sweet land or sea The heavenly hands of holier Nimue, That was the nurse of Launcelot, and most sweet Of all that move with magical soft feet