Page:Tristram of Lyonesse and other poems (IA tristramoflyonesswinrich).pdf/87

 Not measurable with weight of graven gold, Free as the sun's gift of the world to hold Given each day back to man's reconquering sight That loses but its lordship for a night. And now that after many a season spent In barren ways and works of banishment, Toil of strange fights and many a fruitless field, Ventures of quest and vigils under shield, He came back to the strait of sundering sea That parts green Cornwall from grey Brittany, Where dwelt the high king's daughter of the lands, Iseult, named alway from her fair white hands, She looked on him and loved him; but being young Made shamefastness a seal upon her tongue, And on her heart, that none might hear its cry, Set the sweet signet of humility. Yet when he came a stranger in her sight, A banished man and weary, no such knight As when the Swallow dipped her bows in foam Steered singing that imperial Iseult home, This maiden with her sinless sixteen years Full of sweet thoughts and hopes that played at fears Cast her eyes on him but in courteous wise, And lo, the man's face burned upon her eyes As though she had turned them on the naked sun: And through her limbs she felt sweet passion run As fire that flowed down from her face, and beat Soft through stirred veins on even to her hands and feet