Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/84

 Can his face bring forth sunshine and give rain, Or his weak will that dies and lives again Make one thing certain or bind one thing fast, That as he willed it shall be at the last? How should the storms of heaven and kindled lights And all the depths of things and topless heights And air and earth and fire and water change Their likeness, and the natural world grow strange, And all the limits of their life undone Lose count of time and conscience of the sun, And that fall under which was fixed above, That man might have a larger hour for love?' So musing with close lips and lifted eyes That smiled with self-contempt to live so wise, With silent heart so hungry now so long, So late grown clear, so miserably made strong, About the wolds a banished man he went, The brown wolds bare and sad as banishment, By wastes of fruitless flowerage, and grey downs That felt the sea-wind shake their wild-flower crowns As though fierce hands would pluck from some grey head The spoils of majesty despised and dead, And fill with crying and comfortless strange sound Their hollow sides and heights of herbless ground. Yet as he went fresh courage on him came, Till dawn rose too within him as a flame; The heart of the ancient hills and his were one; The winds took counsel with him, and the sun