Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/50

 With cold waste cheeks and eyes as keen as pain, And the close angry lips of Agravaine; And gracious Gawain, scattering words as flowers, The kindliest head of worldly paramours; And the fair hand of Gareth, found in fight Strong as a sea-beast's tushes and as white; And of the king's self, glorious yet and glad For all the toil and doubt of doom he had, Clothed with men's loves and full of kingly days. Then Iseult said: 'Let each knight have his praise And each good man good witness of his worth; But when men laud the second name on earth, Whom would they praise to have no worldly peer Save him whose love makes glorious Guenevere?' 'Nay,' Tristram said, 'such man as he is none.' 'What,' said she, 'there is none such under sun Of all the large earth's living? yet I deemed Men spake of one—but maybe men that dreamed, Fools and tongue-stricken, witless, babbler's breed— That for all high things was his peer indeed Save this one highest, to be so loved and love.' And Tristram: 'Little wit had these thereof; For there is none such in the world as this.' 'Ay, upon land,' quoth Iseult, 'none such is, I doubt not, nor where fighting folk may be; But were there none such between sky and sea, The world's whole worth were poorer than I wist.' And Tristram took her flower-white hand and kissed, Laughing; and through his fair face as in shame The light blood lightened. 'Hear they no such name?'