Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/52

 'Nay,' said Iseult, 'your song is hard to read.' 'Ay?' said he: 'or too light a song to heed, Too slight to follow, it may be? Who shall sing Of love but as a churl before a king If by love's worth men rate his worthiness? Yet as the poor churl's worth to sing is less, Surely the more shall be the great king's grace To show for churlish love a kindlier face.' 'No churl,' she said, 'but one in soothsayer's wise Who tells but truths that help no more than lies. I have heard men sing of love a simpler way Than these wrought riddles made of night and day, Like jewelled reins whereon the rhyme-bells hang.' And Tristram smiled and changed his song and sang.

'The breath between my lips of lips not mine, Like spirit in sense that makes pure sense divine, Is as life in them from the living sky That entering fills my heart with blood of thine And thee with me, while day shall live and die.

'Thy soul is shed into me with thy breath, And in my heart each heartbeat of thee saith How in thy life the lifesprings of me lie, Even one life to be gathered of one death In me and thee, though day may live and die.

'Ah, who knows now if in my veins it be My blood that feels life sweet, or blood of thee, And this thine eyesight kindled in mine eye That shows me in thy flesh the soul of me, For thine made mine, while day may live and die?

'Ah, who knows yet if one be twain or one, And sunlight separable again from sun, And I from thee with all my lifesprings dry, And thou from me with all thine heartbeats done, Dead separate souls while day shall live and die?