Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/86

 So with no sense abashed nor sunless look, But with exalted eyes and heart, he took His part of sun or storm-wind, and was glad, For all things lost, of these good things he had. And the spring loved him surely, being from birth One made out of the better part of earth, A man born as at sunrise; one that saw Not without reverence and sweet sense of awe But wholly without fear of fitful breath The face of life watched by the face of death; And living took his fill of rest and strife, Of love and change, and fruit and seed of life, And when his time to live in light was done With unbent head would pass out of the sun: A spirit as morning, fair and clear and strong, Whose thought and work were as one harp and song Heard through the world as in a strange king's hall Some great guest's voice that sings of festival. So seemed all things to love him, and his heart In all their joy of life to take such part, That with the live earth and the living sea He was as one that communed mutually With naked heart to heart of friend to friend: And the star deepening at the sunset's end, And the moon fallen before the gate of day As one sore wearied with vain length of way, And the winds wandering, and the streams and skies, As faces of his fellows in his eyes. Nor lacked there love where he was evermore Of man and woman, friend of sea or shore,