
The Earthly Paradise, (September-November), by William Morris, [1870], at sacred-texts.com
THIS tale, which is set forth as a dream, tells of a churl's son who won a fair Queen to his love, and afterwards lost her, and yet in the end was not deprived of her.
IN Norway, in King Magnus days,
 A man there dwelt, my story says,
 Who Gregory had got to name;
 Folk said from outland parts he came,
 Though none knew whence; he served withal
 The Marshal Biorn in field and hall,
 And little, yet was deft of hand
 And stout of heart, when men did stand
 Spear against spear; and his black eyes
 Folk deemed were somewhat overwise.
 For of the stars full well he knew,
 And whither lives of men they drew.
 So Gregory the Star gazer
 Men called him, and somewhat in fear
 They held him, though his daily mood p. 35
 Was ever mild enow and good.
    It chanced upon a summer day,
 When in the south King Magnus lay,
 With all his men, the Marshal sent
 A well-manned cutter, with intent
 To get him fish for house-keeping,
 And Gregory, skilful in this thing,
 The skipper over them to be;
 So merrily they put to sea,
 And of a little island lay,
 Amidst the firth, and fished all day,
 But when night fell, ashore they went
 Upon the isle, and pitched their tent,
 And ate and drank, and slept at last.
    But while sleep held the others fast
 Did Gregory waken, turning oft
 Upon his rough bed nothing soft,
 Till stealthily at last he rose
 And crept from the tent thronged and close
 Into the fresh and cloudless night,
 And neath the high-set moon's cold light
 Went softly down unto the sea;
 And sleep, that erst had seemed to be
 A thing his life must hope in vain,
 Now gan to fall on him again,
 Een as he reached the sandy bay
 Where on the beach their cutter lay.
 Calm was the sea twixt wall and wall
 Of the green bight; the surf did fall p. 36
 With little noise upon the sand,
 Where neath the moon the smooth curved strand
 Shone white twixt dark sea, rocks, and turf.
   There, hearkening to the lazy surf,
 Musing he scarcely knew of what,
 Upon a grey rock Gregory sat,
 Till sleep had all its will of him,
 And now at last, with slackened limb
 And nodding head, he fell to dream;
 And far away now did he seem,
 Waked up within the great hall, where
 King Magnus held right merry cheer
 In honour of the Christmas-tide,
 At Ladir; and on every side
 His courtmen and good bonders sat.
    There as folk talked of this and that,
 And drank, and all were blithe enow,
 Amid the drifting of the snow
 And howling of the wind without,
 Within the porch folk heard a shout,
 And opening of the outer door;
 Then one came in, who to the floor
 Cast down the weight of snow, and stood
 Undoing of his fur-lined hood,
 And muttering in his beard the while.
    The King gazed on him with a smile,
 Then said at last"What is it then?
 Art thou called one of my good men, p. 37
 And art thou of the country-side,
 Or hast thou mayhap wandered wide?
 Come sit thee down and eat and drink
 And yet hast thou some news, I think?"
   The man said, "News from over sea
 Of Mary and the Trinity,
 And goodman Joseph, do I bring;
 Nowell, Nowell, Nowell, O King!"
   Inward he stalked on, therewithal,
 But stopped amidmost of the hall,
 And cast to earth his cloak and hood,
 And there in glittering raiment stood,
 While the maids went about the board
 And deftly the cup's river poured,
 And mid great clank of ewer and horn
 Men drank the day when Christ was born.
   Then by the King the gold-clad man
 Sat, Gregory dreamed, and soon began
 Great marvels of far lands to tell,
 And said at last:
                  "Ye serve me well,
 And strange things therefore will I show,
 Wonders that none save ye may know;
 That ye this stormy night may call
 A joyful tide in kingly hall
 A night to be remembered." p. 38
    Then Gregory dreamed he turned his head
 Unto the stranger, and their eyes
 Met therewith, and a great surprise
 Shot through his heart, because indeed
 That strange man in the royal weed
 Seemed as his other self to be
 As he began this history.
IN this your land there once did dwell
 A certain carle who lived full well,
 And lacked few things to make him glad;
 And three fair sons this goodman had,
 Whereof were two stout men enow
 Betwixt the handles of the plough,
 Ready to drive the waggons forth,
 Or pen the sheep up from the north,
 Or help the corn to garner in,
 Or from the rain the hay to win;
 To dyke after the harvesting,
 And many another needful thing.
 But slothful was the youngest one,
 A loiterer in the spring-tide sun,
 A do-nought by the fire-side
 From end to end of winter-tide,
 And wont in summer heats to go p. 39
 About the garden to and fro,
 Plucking the flowers from bough and stalk;
 And muttering oft amid his walk
 Old rhymes that few men understood.
   "Now is he neither harm nor good,"
 His father said; "there, let him go
 And do what he has lust to do."
   Now so it chanced the goodman had
 A meadow meet to make him glad
 Full oft because of its sweet grass,
 Whereto an ill thing came to pass,
 When else the days were drawing nigh
 To hay-harvest, and certainly
 Our goodman thought all would be won
 Before the morrow of St. John.
 For as he walked thereto one day
 He fell to thinking on the way,
 "A fair east wind, and cloudless sky
 In scythes before two days go by."
 But yet befell a grievous slip
 Betwixt that fair cup and the lip,
 For when he reached the wattled fence,
 And looked across his meadow thence,
 His broad face drew into a frown,
 For there he saw all trodden down
 A full third of the ripening grass,
 So that no scythe might through it pass; p. 40
 Then in a rage he turned away
 And was a moody man that day.
   But when that eve he sat at home
 And his two eldest sons had come
 Back from the field, he spake and said:
   "Ill-doers, sons, by likelihood
 Be here about, or envious men;
 I thought the last had left us, when
 Skeggi's two sons put off to sea,
 Yet is there left some enemy
 Not bold enough on field or way
 To draw the sword his debt to pay;
 Therefore, son Thorolf, shalt thou go
 And bear with thee the great cross-bow,
 And hide within the white-thorn brake
 And lie there all this night awake
 Watching the great south meadow well;
 Because last night it so befell
 This gangrel thief thought fit to tread
 The grass to mammocks by my head!"
   So Thorolf rose unwillingly,
 And round about his waist did tie
 The case of bolts, and took adown
 The mighty cross-bow tough and brown,
 And in his strong belt set a knife
 Lest he should come to closer strife, p. 41
 And thereon, having drunk full well,
 Went on his way, and thought to tell,
 A goodly tale at break of day.
 Thus to the mead he gat, and lay
 Close hidden in the hawthorn brake,
 And kept but little time awake,
 But on the sorrel slept as soft
 As on his truckle in the loft,
 Nor woke until the sun was high,
 When looking thence full sleepily
 He saw yet more of that fair field,
 So dealt with, that it scarce would yield
 Much fodder to his father's neat
 That summer-tide, of sour or sweet.
    Then home he turned with hanging head,
 And right few words that tide he said,
 In answer to his father's scoff,
 But toward the middenstead went off.
   So that same night the vexed carle sent
 His next son Thord with like intent;
 But ere the yellow moon was down
 Asleep and snoring lay our clown,
 And waking at the dawn could see
 The meadow trodden grievously.
   Now when unto the house he came,
 Speaking no word for very shame,
 The good man gan to gibe and jeer, p. 42
 Saying, that many a groat too dear
 Such sleepy-headed fools he bought,
 That tide when he their mother sought
 With Flemish cloth and silver rings
 And chains, and far-fetched, dear-bought things
 The mariners had sold to him,
 For which had many a man to swim
 Head downward to the porpoises
 All to get gluttons like to these!
   The third son John, who on the floor
 Was lying kicking at the door,
 Turned round and yawned, and stretched, and said,
 "Alas, then, all my rest is sped,
 For now thou wilt be sending me,
 O father, the third watch to be.
 Well, keep thy heart up, I shall know
 To-morrow, what thing grieves thee so."
   "Yea, yea," his father said, "truly
 A noble son thou art to me!
 Thou fool, thou thinkest then to win
 The game when these have failed therein!
 Truly a mighty mind I have
 Thy bread and beer henceforth to save,
 And send thee with some skipper forth,
 Who brings back stockfish from the north;
 Then no more dreaming wouldst thou spend
 Thy days, but learn to know rope's-end, p. 43
 And stumble on the icy decks
 To no sweet music of rebecks.
 Yet since indeed a fool may do
 What no wise man may come unto,
 Go thou, if thou hast any will,
 Because thou canst not do me ill;
 And lo, thou! if thou dost me good
 Then will I fill thy biggest hood
 With silver pennies for thine own,
 To squander in the market-town."
   Nought answered John, but turned away,
 And underneath the trees all day
 He slept, but with the moon arose;
 Nor did he arm himself like those,
 His brethren, for he thought, 'Indeed
 Of bolt and bow have I no need,
 For if ill-doers there should be,
 Then will they slay me certainly,
 If I should draw on them a bolt;
 And, though my brethren call me dolt,
 Yet have I no such foolish thought
 For a shaft's whistle to be brought
 To deathwithal I shall not see
 Men-folk belike, but faërie,
 And all the arms within the seas
 Should help me nought to deal with these;
 Rather of such lore were I fain
 As fell to Sigurd Fafnir's-bane p. 44
 When of the dragon's heart he ate.
 Well whatso hap I gain of fate,
 I know I will not sleep this night,
 But wake to see a marvellous sight.'
   Therewith he came unto the mead,
 And looked around with utmost heed
 About the remnant of the hay;
 Then in the hawthorn brake he lay
 And watched night-long midst many a thought
 Of what might be, and yet saw nought
 As slowly the short night went by,
 Midst bittern's boom and fern-owl's cry;
 Then the moon sank, the stars grew pale,
 And the first dawn gan show the veil
 The night had drawn from tree to tree,
 A light wind rose, and suddenly
 A thrush drew head from under wing,
 And through the cold dawn gan to sing,
 And one by one about him woke
 The minstrels of the feathered folk,
 Long ere the first gleam of the sun.
 Then, though his watch was but begun,
 Een at that tide, as well he knew,
 Oer John a drowsiness there drew,
 And nothing seemed so good as sleep,
 And sweet dreams oer his eyes gan creep
 That made him smile, then wake again
 In terror that his watch was vain; p. 45
 But in the midst of one of these
 He started up, for through the trees
 A mighty rushing sound he heard,
 As of the wings of many a bird;
 And, stark awake, with beating heart,
 He put the hawthorn twigs apart,
 And yet saw no more wondrous thing
 Than seven white swans, who on wide wing
 Went circling round, till one by one
 They dropped the dewy grass upon.
 He smiled thereat, and thought to shout
 And scare them off; but yet a doubt
 Clung to him, as he gazed on those,
 And in the brake he held him close,
 And watched them bridle there, and preen
 Their snowy feathers well beseen;
 So near they were, that he a stone
 Might have cast oer the furthest one
 With his left hand, as there he lay.
   Apace came on the summer day,
 Though the sun lingered, and more near
 The swans drew, and began to peer
 About in strange wise, and John deemed,
 In after days, he must have dreamed
 Again, if for the shortest space;
 For a cloud seemed to dull the place
 And silence of the birds there was;
 And when he next looked oer the grass, p. 46
 Six swan-skins lay anigh his hand,
 And nearby on the grass did stand
 Seven white-skinned damsels, wrought so fair
 That John must sit and tremble there,
 And flush blood-red, and cast his eyes
 Down on the ground in shamefast wise,
 Then look again with longings sweet
 Piercing his heart; because their feet
 Moved through the long grey-seeded grass
 But some two yards from where he was.
   A while in gentle wise they went,
 Among the ripe long grass that bent
 Before their beauty; then there ran
 A thrill through him as they began,
 In musical sweet speech and low,
 To talk a tongue he did not know;
 But when at last one spake alone,
 It was to him as he had known
 That heavenly voice for many years,
 His heart swelled, till through rising tears
 He saw them now, nor would that voice
 Suffer his hot heart to rejoice,
 In all that erst his eyes did bless
 With unimagined loveliness:
 Because her face, that yet had been
 Alone among those girls unseen,
 He longed for with such strong desire,
 That his heart sickened, and quick-fire p. 47
 Within his parched throat seemed to burn.
   A while she stood and did not turn,
 While still the music of her voice
 Made the birds' song seem tuneless noise;
 And she alone of all did stand,
 Holding within her down-drooped hand
 The swan-skinlike a pink-tinged rose
 Plucked from amidst a July close,
 And laid on January snow,
 Her fingers on the plumes did show:
 A rosy flame of inner love
 Seemed glowing through her; she did move
 Lightly at whiles, or the soft wind
 Played in her hair no coif did bind.
 Then did he fear to draw his breath
 Lest he should find the hand of Death
 Was showing him vain images;
 Then did he deem the morning breeze
 Blew from the flowery fields of heaven,
 Such fragrance to the morn was given.
   And now across the long dawn's grey
 The climbing sun's first level ray,
 Long hoped, yet sudden when it came,
 Over the trembling grass did flame
 And made the world alive once more;
 And therewithal a pause came oer
 The earth and heaven, because she turned, p. 48
 And with such longing his heart burned
 That there he thought he needs must die,
 And, breathless, opened mouth to cry.
 And yet how soft and kind she seemed;
 What a sweet helpful smile there gleamed
 Over the perfect loveliness
 That now his feeble eyes did bless!
   Now fell the swan-skin from her hand,
 And silent all a space did stand,
 And then again she turned away,
 And seemed some whispered word to say
 Unto her fellows; and therewith
 Their delicate round limbs and lithe
 Began to sway in measured time
 Unto a sweet-voiced outland rhyme
 As they cleft through the morning air
 Hither and thither: fresh and fair
 Beyond all words indeed were these,
 Yet unto him but images
 Well wrought, fair coloured: while she moved
 Amid them all, a thing beloved
 By earth and heaven: could she be
 Made for his sole felicity?
 Yet if she were not, earth and heaven
 Belike for nought to men were given
 But to torment his weary heart.
 He put the thorny twigs apart
 A little more to gaze his fill; p. 49
 And as he gazed a thought of ill
 Shot through him: close unto his hand,
 Nigher than where she erst did stand,
 Nigher than where her unkissed feet
 Had kissed the clover-blossoms sweet,
 The snowy swan-skin lay cast down.
 His heart thought, 'She will get her gon
 Een as she came, unless I take
 This snow-white thing for her sweet sake;
 Then whether death or life shall be,
 She needs must speak one word to me
 Before I die.'
                 And therewithal
 His hand upon the skin did fall
 Almost without his will, while yet
 His eyes upon her form were set.
 He drew it to him, and there lay
 Until the first dance died away,
 And from amid the rest thereof
 Another sprang, whose rhythm did move
 Light foot, long hair, and supple limb,
 As the wind moves the poplars slim;
 Then as the wind dies out again,
 Like to the end of summer rain
 Amid their leaves, and quivering now
 No more their June-clad heads they bow,
 So sank the rippling song and sweet,
 And gently upon level feet
 They swayed, and circle-wise did stand p. 50
 Each scarcely touching each with hand,
 Until at last all motion ceased.
   Still as the dewy shade decreased,
 Panting John lay, and did not move,
 Sunk in the wonder of his love,
 Though fear weighed on him; for he knew
 That short his time of pleasance grew
 Though none had told him.
                               Now the one
 His heart was set on spake alone,
 And therewith hand and arm down-dropped,
 Their scarce-heard murmuring wholly stopped,
 And softly in long line they passed
 Unto the thorn-brake, she the last.
 Then unto agony arose
 John's fear, as once again all close
 She was to him. The wind ran by
 The notched green leaves, the sun was high,
 Dappling the grass whereon he lay:
 Fresh, fair, and cheery was the day,
 And nought like guile or wizardry
 Could one have thought there was anigh,
 Till, suddenly, did all things change,
 Een as his heart, and dim and strange
 The old familiar world had grown,
 That blithe and rough he erst had known,
 And racked and mined time did seem. p. 51
   A sudden, sharp cry pierced his dream,
 And then his cleared eyes could behold
 His love, half-hid with hair of gold,
 Her slim hands covering up her face,
 Standing amid the grassy place,
 Shaken with sobs, and round her woe,
 With long caressing necks of snow
 And ruffling plumes, the others stood'
 Bird-like again. Chilled to the blood,
 Yet close he lay and did not move,
 Strengthening his heart with thoughts of love,
 Wild as a morning dream. Withal
 Some murmured word from her did fall,
 Closer awhile the swans did press
 Around her woeful loveliness,
 As though a loth farewell they bade;
 And she one fair hand softly laid
 Upon their heads in wandering wise,
 Nor drew the other from her eyes,
 As one by one her body fair
 They left, and rose into the air
 With clangorous cries, and circled wide
 Above her, till the blue did hide
 Their soaring wings, and all were gone.
   As scarce she knew that she was lone,
 She stood there for a little space,
 One hand still covering up her face,
 The other drooped down, half stretched out, p. 52
 As if her lone heart yet did doubt
 Somewhat was left her to caress.
 Yet soon all sound of her distress
 Was silent, though thought held her fast
 And nought she moved; the field-mouse passed
 Close to her feet, the dragon-fly,
 A thin blue needle flickered by,
 The bee whirled past her as the morn
 Grew later, and strange thoughts were born
 Within her.
              So she raised her head
 At last, and, gazing round, she said:
 "Is pitying love all dead on earth?
 Is no heart left that holds of worth
 Love that hands touch not, and that eyes
 Behold not? Is none left so wise
 As not to know the smart of bliss
 That dieth out twixt kiss and kiss?"
   She stopped and trembled, for she heard
 The hawthorn brake beside her stirred,
 Then turned round, half unwittingly,
 Across the meadow-grass to flee,
 And knew not whither, as, half blind,
 She heard the rustling twigs behind,
 And therewithal a breathless cry
 And eager footsteps drawing nigh.
 With streaming hair, a little way
 She fled across the trodden hay, p. 53
 Then failed her feet, and turning round,
 She cowered low upon the ground,
 With wild eyes turned to meet her fate,
 Een as the partridge doth await,
 With half-dead breast and broken wing,
 The winged death the hawk doth bring.
   Dim with the horror of that race,
 Wild eyes her eyes met, and pale face,
 And trembling outstretched hands that moved
 No nigher to her body loved,
 Whereto they had been brought so near.
 For very fear of her wild fear.
   So each of other sore afraid,
 There fleer and pursuer stayed,
 Each gathering breath and heart to speak
 And he too hopeless, she too weak,
 For a long space to say a word.
   Yet first her own faint voice she heard,
 For in his hand she saw the skin,
 And deemed she knew what he would win,
 And how that morning's deed had gone:
   "What have I done? what have I done?
 Did I work ever harm to thee,
 That thou this day my bane shouldst be?
 Why is there such hate in thine eyes
 Against me?"
                    From his breast did rise p. 54
 A dumb sound, but no word came forth;
 She shrank aback yet more:
                              "What worth,
 What worth in all that thou hast done?
 For say my body thou hast won,
 Art thou God, then, to keep alive,
 Unless my will therewith I give?"
 Een as she spake, a look of pain
 Twitched at his face; she spoke again:   
"For now I see thou hatst me not,
 But thinkest thou a prize hast got
 Thou wilt not lightly cast away:
 O hearken, hearken!a poor prey
 Thy toils shall take, a thing of stone
 Amid your folk to dwell alone
 And hide a heart that hateth thee."
   He shrank back from her wretchedly,
 And dropped his hand and hung his head;
 "Nay, now I hate thee not," she said
 "And who knows what may come to be
 If thou but give mine own to me,
 And free this trembling body here?
 Wouldst thou rejoice if thou wert dear,
 Dear unto me though far away,
 And hope still fed thee day by day?"
   She deemed he wept now, as he turned p. 55
 Away from her, and her heart yearned
 Somewhat toward him as she spake:
   "And if thou dost this for my sake,
 Wilt thou, for all that, deem this morn
 Has made thee utterly forlorn?
 Hast thou not cast thine arms round Love
 At least, thy weary heart to move,
 To make thy wakening strange and new,
 And dull life false and old tales true;
 Yea, and a tale to make thy life
 To speed the others in the strife,
 To quicken thee with wondrous fire,
 And make thee fairer with desire?
 Wilt thou, then, think it all in vain,
 'The restless longing and the pain,
 Lightened by hope that shall not die?
 For thou shalt hope still certainly,
 And well mayst deem that thou hast part,
 Somewhat, at least, in this my heart,
 Whatever else therein may be."
   He turned about most eagerly
 And gazed upon her for a while .
 Wild fear had left her, and a smile
 Had lit up now her softened face,
 Sweet pleading kindness gave new grace
 To all her beauty; fresh again
 Her cheeks grew, haggard erst with pain p. 56
 She saw the deep love in his eyes,
 And slowly therewithal gan rise,
 While something in her heart there moved,
 Some pleasure to be well beloved,
 Some pain because of doubt and fear,
 Of once-loved things grown scarce so dear;
 Less clear all things she seemed to see,
 Her wisdom in life's mystery
 Seemed fleeting, and for very shame
 A tingling flush across her came.
   But close unto him did she stand,
 And, reaching out her little hand,
 Took his, and in strange searching wise
 Gazed on him with imploring eyes;
 And with the sweetness of that touch
 And look, wrought fear and hope oermuch
 Within him, and his eyes waxed dim,
 And trembling sore in every limb,
 He slid adown, and knelt, and said:
   "O sweetly certes hast thou prayed,
 Nor used vain words, but smitten me
 With all the greater agony
 For all thy sweetness: so, indeed,
 If thou art holpen well at need
 By this thy prayer, yet meet it is
 Ere this one moment of great bliss
 Has turned to nought all life to come, p. 57
 That thou shouldst hear me ere my doom,
 And yet indeed what prayer to make
 Thy heart amid its calm to shake,
 When thou art gonewhen thou art gone,
 And I and woe are left alone!
 What fiercest word shall yet avail
 If this my first and last one fail
 Wherewith shall the hard heart be moved
 If this move not, that it is loved?"
   His eager hand her hand did press,
 His eyes devoured her loveliness.
 But silent she a short while stood,
 Her face now pale, now red as blood,
 While her lip trembled, and her eyes
 Grew wet to see his miseries,
 At last she spake with down-cast head;
   "Alas, what shall I do?" she said,
 "Thy prayer shall make me sorrow more
 Whenas I go to that far shore
 I needs must go to; for I know,
 Poor soul! that thou wilt let me go,
 Since thou art grown too wise and kind
 My helpless soul with force to bind
 Would thou mightst have some part in me!"
   She shrank aback afraid, for he
 Now sprang up with a bitter cry: p. 58
 "Thou knowest not my agony!
 Thou knowest not the words thou sayst,
 Or what a wretched, empty waste
 This remnant of my life is grown,
 Or how I need thee all alone
 To heal the wound this morn has made!
 Why tremblest thou?be not afraid;
 I will not leave thee any more:
 Come near to me! My mother bore
 No dreadful thing when I was born.
 Fear not, thou art not yet forlorn,
 As I, as I, as I shall be
 If ever thou shouldst go from me."
   She shrank no more, but looked adown
 And said, "Alas! why dost thou frown?
 Wilt thou be ever angry thus?"
 Her voice was weak and piteous
 As thus she spake, and in her breast
 A sob there moved, yet hard she pressed
 The hand she held: too sweet was love
 For any word his lips to move;
 Too sweet was hope that lips might dare
 To touch her sweet cheek smooth and fair.
 Yet with her downcast eyes she knew
 That nigher ever his face drew
 To hers, and new-born love did flame
 Out from her heart, as now there came p. 59
 A sound half sigh, half moan from him;
 She trembled sore, all things gan swim
 Before her eyes, nor felt her feet
 The firm earthfor all over-sweet
 For sight or hearing life gan grow,
 As panting, and with changed eyes now,
 She raised her parted lips to his.
   But ere their fair young mouths might kiss,
 While hand stole unto hand, and breath
 Met breath, the image of cold death,
 With his estranging agonies,
 Smote on her heart that once was wise;
 As touched by some sharp sudden sting,
 Back from her love's arms did she spring,
 And stood there trembling; and her cry
 Rang through the morn:
                           "Why shouldst thou die
 Amidst thy just-won joy?" she said,
 "And must I see thee stark and dead
 Who have beheld thy gathering bliss?
 Touch me no more yetso it is
 That thy fierce heart hath conquered me,
 That I no more may look on thee
 Without desirefor such an end
 I hitherward, belike, did wend,
 Led on by fate, and knew it not
 But if thy love is een as hot
 As thine eyes say, what wilt thou do? p. 60
 Loved or loved not, still is it so,
 That in thy land I may not live.
 Too strong thou art that I should strive
 With thee and loveYet what sayst thou?
 Art thou content thy love to throw
 Unto the waste of time, and dwell
 Here in thy land, and fare right well,
 Feared, hated maybe, yet through all
 A conquering man, whateer shall fall
 Or, in mine own land be mine own,
 Live long, perchance, yet all unknown,
 Love for thy master and thy law,
 Nor hope another lot to draw
 From out life's urn?Think of it, then!
 Be great among the sons of men
 Because I love thee, and forget
 That here amid the hay we met
 Or else be loved and love, the while
 Life's vision doth thine eyes beguile."
   He fell upon his knees, and cried:
 "Ah, wilt thou go?the world is wide
 And waste; we were together here
 A while ago, and I grew dear
 To thee, I deemedwhat hast thou said?
 Behold, behold, the world is dead,
 And I must die, or ere I deal
 With its dead follies more, or feel
 The dead men's dreams that move men there, p. 61
 Alas, how shall I make my prayer
 To thee, who lovedest me time agone,
 No more to leave my heart alone?"
   Musing, his passionate speech she heard,
 And with a strange look, half afeard,
 Half pitying, did she gaze on him,
 Until through tears that sight waxed dim;
 At last she spake:
                       "No need to pray
 Lest I thy love, O love, betray;
 But many a thought there is in me
 If I through love might clearly see;
 But the morn wanes fast, dear, arise
 And let me hence, lest eviler eyes
 Than thine behold my body here,
 And thou shouldst buy thy bliss too dear;
 So bring me to some place anigh
 Amid thick trees, where thou and I
 May be alone a little space,
 To make us ready for the place
 Where love may still be happiness
 Unmixed with change and ill distress."
   He gazed on her, but durst not speak,
 Nor noted how a sigh did break
 The sweetness of her speech, but took
 Her white hand with a hand that shook
 For very love, and oer the grass, p. 62
 Scarce knowing where his feet did pass,
 He led her, till they came at last
 Unto a beech-wood, where the mast
 And dry leaves, made a carpet meet,
 Sun-speckled, underneath their feet.
 She stopped him, grown all grave and calm,
 And laid lips like a healing balm
 Upon his brow and spake:
                          "Ah, would
 That I who know of ill and good,
 And thou who mayst learn een as much
 By misery, might deem this touch
 Of calm lips, joy enough to last
 Till life with all its whirl were past
 This kiss, and memory of the morn
 Whereon the sweet desire was born."
   He trembled, and beseechingly
 Gazed on her: "Ah, no, no," said she,
 "No more with thee this day I strive,
 Een as thou prayedst will I give;
 Belike because I may not choose,
 Nay nor may let my own soul loose.
 Is it enow?"
                Once more he strove,
 With some sweet word to bless his love
 And might not; but she smiled and said:
 "The lovers of old time are dead,
 And so too shall it be with thee. p. 63
 Yea, hast thou heard no history
 Of lovers who outlived the love
 That once they deemed the world would move?
 And so too may it be with thee.
 Nay stretch thy right hand out to me,
 Poor soul, and all shall soon be done."
   A gold ring with a dark green stone
 Upon his finger then she set,
 And said: "Thou mayst repent thee yet
 The giving of this gift to-day;
 Be wise then! Cast the ring away,
 Give me my own and get thee gone;
 For all the past, not so alone
 Shall thou and I then be, as erst;
 Sad, longing, loving, not accurst."
   She trembled as she spake, and turned
 Unto his eyes a face that yearned
 With great desire, although her eyes
 Seemed wonderful and overwise.
 But pain of anger changed his face,
 He said; "I have compelled thy grace,
 But not thy love then; do to me
 Een as thou willest, and go free."
   She murmured; "Nay, what wilt thou have?
 Thou prayedst and the gift I gave,
 Giving what I might not withhold, p. 64
 In spite of wisdom clear and cold.
 Alas, poor heart unsatisfied,
 Why wilt thou love? the world is wide
 And holdeth many a joyous thing:
 Why wilt thou for thy misery cling
 To that desire that resteth not
 What part soever thou hast got
 Of that whose whole thou neer shalt gain?
 Alas for thee and me, most vain,
 Most vain to wrangle more of this!
 Come then, where wait us woe and bliss,
 Give me the swan-skin, lay thee down,
 Nought doubting, on the beech-leaves brown!"
   What spell weighed on his heart but love
 I know not, but nought might he move
 Except to do her whole command;
 He lay adown, and on his hand
 Rested his cheek; his eyes grew dim,
 Yet saw he the white beech-trunks slim
 At first; and his fair-footed love
 He saw twixt sun and shadow move
 Close unto him, and languidly
 Her rosy fingers did he see
 About the ruffled swan-skin white,
 Even as when that strange delight
 First maddened him; then dimmer grew
 His sight, and yet withal he knew
 That over him she hung, and blessed p. 65
 His face with her sweet eyes, till rest,
 As deep as death as soft as sleep,
 Across his troubled heart did creep;
 And then a long time seemed gone by
 And mid soft herbage did he lie
 With shut eyes, half awake, and seemed
 Some dream forgotten to have dreamed,
 So sweet, he fain would dream again;
 Then came back memory with a pain,
 Like death first heard of; with a cry
 And fear swift born of memory
 He oped his eyes, that dazed with light
 Long kept from them, saw nought aright;
 But something kind, and something fair,
 Seemed yet to be anigh him there,
 Whereto he stretched his arms, that met
 Soft hands, and his own hands were set
 On a smooth cheek, he seemed to know
 From days agone;
                      "Sweet, sweet doth blow
 The gentle wind," he said, "whereas
 Surely oer blossoms it doth pass
 If any there be made so sweet."
   And as he spake, his lips did meet
 In one unhoped, undreamed-of kiss,
 The very heart of all his bliss.
   Like waking from an ecstasy, p. 66
 Too sweet for truth it seemed to be,
 Waking to life full satisfied
 When he arose, and side by side,
 Cheek touching cheek, hand laid in hand,
 They stood within a marvellous land,
 Fruitful, and summer-like, and fair.
 The light wind sported with her hair,
 Crowned with a leaf-like crown of gold,
 Or round her limbs drave lap and fold
 Of her light raiment strange of hue
 That earthly shuttle never knew;
 From overhead the blossoms sweet
 Fell soft, pink-edged upon her feet,
 That moved the grass now, as her voice
 Made the soft scented air rejoice
 And made him tremble; murmuring;
                                   "Come,
 These are the meadows of my home,
 My home and thine; much have I now
 To tell thee of, and much to show.
 Is it with thee, love, as with me
 That too much of felicity
 Maketh thee sad? yet sweet it is
 That little sadness born of bliss
 And thought of death, and memory
 That even this perchance goes by."
   Too glad his eyes now made his heart
 To let his tongue take any part p. 67
 In all his joy: afraid he felt,
 As though but for a while he dwelt
 Upon the outer ledge of heaven,
 And scarce he knew how much was given
 Of all his heart had asked, as she
 Led softly on from tree to tree.
 He shut his eyes that he might gain
 Some image of the world of pain,
 Some roughness of the world cast by,
 The more his heart to satisfy,
 The more to sound the depths of bliss
 That now belike was ever his.
BUT therewithal the dream did break,
 And Gregory sat up, stark awake,
 And gazing at the surf-line white,
 Sore yearning for some lost delight,
 Some pleasure gone, he knew not what;
 For all that dream was clean forgot.
 So rising with a smile and sigh,
 He gat him backward pensively
 Unto the tent, and past between
 The sturdy sleepers, all unseen
 Of sleep-bound eyes, sore troubled yet
 That he must needs his dream forget.
 So on his rough bed down he lay, p. 68
 And thought to wake until the day,
 But scarce had time to turn him round
 Ere the lost wonder was well found
 By sleep; again he dreamed that he
 Sat at the King's festivity,
 Again did that sweet tale go on,
 But now the stranger guest was gone
 As though he had not been, and he
 Himself, Star gazing Gregory,
 Sat by King Magnus, clad in gold,
 And in such wise the sequel told.
MIDST all that bliss, and part thereof,
 Full-fed with choicest gifts of love,
 The happy lover lived right long
 Till een the names of woe and wrong
 Had he forgotten.Of his bliss
 Nought may we tell, for so it is
 That verse for battle-song is meet,
 And sings of sorrow piercing-sweet,
 And weaves the tale of heavy years
 And hopeless grief that knows no tears
 Into a smooth song sweet enow,
 For fear the winter pass too slow;
 Yet hath no voice to tell of Heaven
 Or heavenly joys for long years given, p. 69
 Themselves an unmatched melody,
 Where fear is slain of victory
 And hope, held fast in arms of love,
 No more the happy heart may move.
 Sweet souls, grudge not our drearihead,
 But let the dying mourn their dead
 With what melodious wail they will!
 Even as we through good and ill
 Grudge not your soundless happiness,
 Through hope whereof alone, we bless
 Our woe with music and with tears.
   Now deems the tale that three long years
 John in that marvellous land abode,
 Till something like a growing load
 Of unacknowledged longing came
 Upon him, mingled with a shame,
 Which happiness slew not, that he
 Apart from his own kind must be,
 Nor share their hopes and fears: withal
 A gloom upon his face did fall,
 His love failed not to note, and knew
 Whither his heart, unwitting, drew.
   And so it fell that, on a day,
 As musing by her side he lay,
 She spake out suddenly, and said:
 "What burden on thy soul is laid,
 What veil through which thou canst not see, p. 70
 Thinkst thou that I hide aught from thee?"
   He caught her in his arms, and cried,
 "What is it that from love can hide?
 Thou knowest this, thou knowest this!"
   "Alas," she said, "yet so it is
 That never have I told to thee
 What danger crept toward thee and me!
 How could I spoil the lovesome years
 With telling thee of slow-foot fears,
 Or shade the sweetness of our home
 With what perchance might never come?
 But now we may not turn aside
 From the sharp thorn the rose did hide."
   He turned on her a troubled face,
 And said, "What is it, from what place
 Comes trouble on us?"
                          She flushed red
 As one who lies, and stammering said;
 "In thine own land, where while ago
 Thou dwelledst, doth the danger grow.
 How thinkst thou? hast thou such a heart,
 That thou and I a while may part
 To make joy greater in a while?"
   She smiled, but something in her smile
 Was like the heralding of tears, p. 71
 When lonely pain the grieved heart bears.
 But he sprang up unto his feet,
 Glad gainst his will, and cried; "O sweet,
 Fear nought at all, for certainly
 Thy fated fellow still am I;
 Tell me the tale, and let me go
 The nighest way to meet the foe."
   Something there was, that for a while
 Made her keep silence; with a smile
 His bright flushed visage did she note,
 And put her hand unto her throat
 As though she found it hard to breathe;
 At last she spake:
                     "The long years seethe
 With many things, until at last
 From out their caldron is there cast
 Somewhat like poison mixed with food;
 To leave the ill, and take the good
 Were sweet indeed, but nowise. life,
 Where all things ever are at strife.
 Thou, knowing not belike, and I,
 Wide-eyed indeed and wilfully,
 Through these three years have ever striven
 To take the sweet of what was given
 And cast the bitter half aside;
 But fate his own time well can bide,
 And so it fares with us to-day.
 Bear this too, that I may not say p. 72
 What danger threatens; thou must go
 Unto thy land and nothing know
 Of what shall bea hard, hard part
 For such as thee, with patient heart
 To sit alone, and hope and wait,
 Nor strive in anywise with fate,
 Whatever doubt on thee may fall,
 Unless by certain sign I call
 On thee to help me: to this end
 Each day at nightfall shalt thou wend
 Unto that place, where thou and I
 First met; there let an hour go by,
 And if thereby nought hap to thee
 Of strange, then deem thou certainly
 All goeth, or too well or ill
 For thee to help, and bide thou still."
   She had arisen, side by side
 They stood now, and all red had died
 From out his face, most wan he grew,
 He faltered forth:
                    "Would that I knew,
 If thou hadst ever loved me, sweet!
 Then surely all things would I meet
 With good heart."
                      Such a trouble came
 Across his face, that she, for shame
 Of something hidden, blushed blood-red,
 Then turned all pale again, and said: p. 73
   "Thou knowest that I love thee well!
 What shall I do then? can I tell
 In one short moment all the love
 That through these years my heart did move?
 Come nigher, love, and look at me,
 That thou in these mine eyes mayst see
 If long enow this troubled dream,
 That men call life, mine heart may deem
 To love thee in."
                   His arms he cast
 About her and his tears fell fast,
 Nor was she dry-eyed; slowly there
 Did their lips part, her fingers fair
 Sought for his hand:
                      "Come, love," she said,
 "Time wears;" withal the way she led
 Unto the place where first he woke
 Betwixt a hawthorn and an oak,
 And said: "Lie down, and dream a dream,
 That nought real, wasted then may seem
 When next we meet! yet hear a word
 Ere sleep comes: thou mayst well be stirred
 By idle talk, or longings vain,
 To wish me in thine arms again;
 Long then, but let no least word slip
 Of such a longing past thy lip;
 For if thou dost, so strangely now
 Are we twain wedded, I and thou,
 And that same golden green-stoned ring p. 74
 Is token of so great a thing
 That at thy word I needs must come
 Whereso I be unto thine home;
 And so were both of us undone:
 Because the great-eyed glaring sun
 That lights your world, too mighty is
 To look upon our secret bliss.
 What more to say or eer thou sleep?
 I would I yet had time to weep
 All that I would, then many a day
 Would pass, or thou shouldst go away.
 But time wears, and the hand of fate,
 For all our weeping, will not wait.
 Yet speak, before sleep wrap thee round,
 That I once more may hear the sound
 Of thy sweet voice, if never more."
   For all her words she wept right sore.
 "What wouldest thou?" he said in turn,
 "Thou knowst for thee and peace I yearn
 Past wordsbut now thy lips have sealed,
 My lips with mysteries unrevealed;
 How shall I pray, this bitter morn
 That joy and me atwain hath torn?
 While yet as in a dream it is
 Both bliss and this strange end of bliss.
 Ah what more can I say thereof?
 That never any end of love
 I know, though all my bliss hath end; p. 75
 That where thou willest I will wend,
 Abide where thou wouldst have me stay,
 Pass bitter day on bitter day
 Silent of thee, and make no sign
 Of all the love and life divine,
 That is my life and knowledge now."
   And with that word he lay a-low
 And by his side she knelt, and took
 His last kiss with a lovely look,
 Mingled of utmost love and ruth
 And knowledge of the hidden truth.
 And then he heard her sing again
 Unknown words to a soft low strain,
 Till dim his senses waxed, nor knew
 What things were false, and what were true,
 Mid all the things he saw and heard,
 But still among strange-plumaged bird,
 Strange-fruited tree, and strange-clad maid,
 And horrors making not afraid
 Of changing man, and dim-eyed beast,
 Through all he deemed he knew at least
 That over him his true-love hung
 And twixt her sobs in sweet voice sung
 That mystic song, until at last
 Into the dreamless land he passed
 Of deep, dark sleep without a flaw
 Where nought he heard and nought he saw. p. 76
   Amidst unreasoning huge surprise,
 Remembering nought, he oped his eyes
 And leapt up swiftly, and there stood
 Blinking upon a close beech-wood
 As one who knew not aught of it;
 Yet in a while gan memory flit
 Across him, and he muttered low
 Unwitting words said long ago
 When he was yet a child; then turned
 To where the autumn noon-sun burned
 Bright on a cleared space of the wood,
 Where midst rank grass a spruce-tree stood,
 Tall, grey-trunked, leafless a long way,
 And memory of another day,
 Like to a dream within a dream
 Therewith across his heart gan gleam,
 And gazing up into the tree,
 He raised his right arm suddenly,
 Een as he fain would climb the same;
 Then, as his vision clearer came,
 He muttered, 'O Nay, gone is the nest,
 Nor is it spring-tide; it were best
 Unto the stead to hurry back,
 Or else my dinner may I lack,
 For father's grip is close enow."
    And therewithal, with head hung low,
 Even as one who needs not sight,
 And looking nor to left nor right,
 Through blind ways of the wood he went, p. 77
 Seeming as he were right intent
 On heavy thoughts, as well might be,
 But scarcely waked yet verily,
 Or knowing in what place he was.
    In such wise swiftly did he pass
 Without a check straight through the wood,
 Until on the slope-side he stood,
 Where all its tangles were clean done;
 There staying, while the unclouded sun
 Gleamed on the golden braveries
 That clad him, did he raise his eyes,
 And neath his shading hand looked thence,
 And saw oer well-tilled close and fence
 A little knot of roofs between
 Dark leaves, their ridges bright and green
 With spiky house-leek; and withal
 Man unto man did he hear call
 Afar amid the fields below;
 And then a hoarse loud horn gan blow
 No point of war, but peasant-call
 To hurry toward the steaming hall.
 Then as a red spark lights a flame
 Among light straw, all memory came
 Back-rushing on his heart, and he
 Gan think of joy and misery,
 Trouble and hope, in tangled wise,
 Till longing in his heart gan rise
 Fretting with troublous ecstasy
 All else to nought. p. 78
                     So pensively
 Down the hill-side he slipped, and saw
 All folk unto the homestead draw,
 And noted how a homeman there
 Turned round unto the hillside bare
 Whereas amid the sun he went,
 Then side-long to his fellow bent
 And pointed, and all turned about
 And stood a while, as if in doubt
 Whether for him they should not stay,
 Yet went at last upon their way.
 Now thereat somewhat did he smile
 And walked the slower for a while,
 As though with something of a care
 To meet outside no loiterer,
 Then went on at a swifter pace:
 And all things with familiar face
 Gazed on him; till again the shame
 Of not being of them oer him came.
   Most fair to peaceful heart was all,
 Windless the ripe fruit down did fall,
 The shadows of the large grey leaves
 Lay grey upon the oaten sheaves
 By the garth-wall as he past by;
 The startled ousel-cock did cry
 As from the yew-tree by the gate
 He flew; the speckled hen did wait
 With outstretched neck his coming in, p. 79
 The March-hatched cockerel gaunt and thin
 Crowed shrilly, while his elder thrust
 His stiff wing-weathers in the dust
 That grew aweary of the sun:
 The old and one-eyed cart-horse dun
 The middenstead went hobbling round
 Blowing the light straw from the ground.
 With curious eyes the drake peered in
 Oer the barn's dusk, where dust and din
 Were silent now a little space.
There for a while with anxious face,
 Yet smiling therewithal, John stood,
 Then toward the porch of carven wood
 He turned, and hearkened to the hum
 Of mingled speech that thence did come
 Through the dumb clatter of the hall,
 Lest any word perchance might fall
 Upon his ears to tell of aught
 That change or death thereto had brought,
 And, listening so, deemed he could hear
 His father's voice, but nothing clear,
 And then a pause, and then again
 The mingled speech of maids and men.
 Again some word remembered
 From old days half aloud he said,
 And pulled his hood about his brow,
 And went with doubtful steps and slow
 Unto the door, and took the horn, p. 80
 His own hand time past did adorn,
 And blew a loud, clear blast thereon,
 And pushed the door, then like a sun
 New come to a dull world he stood,
 Gleaming with gold from shoes to hood,
 In the dusk doorway of the place
 Whence toward him now turned every face.
    From neath his hood he gazed around,
 And soothly there few gaps he found;
 Amidmost of the upper board
 His brethren sat, Thorolf and Thord;
 He saw his sire, half risen up
 From the high-seat, a silver cup
 In his brown hand; and by his side
 His mother oer her barm-cloth wide
 Gazed forward somewhat timidly
 The new-corner's bright weed to see.
 Small change in these indeed, John thought,
 By lapse of days had yet been wrought
 And for the rest, but one or two
 There were, he deemed, of faces new.
 There open-eyed, beer-can in hand,
 And staring did the damsels stand
 As he had known them; there he saw
 Haldor the Icelander half draw
 His heavy short-sword forth, as he
 The gleam of gold and steel did see
 Flash suddenly across the door
 An old man skilled in ancient lore, p. 81
 And John's own foster-sire withal.
   But on one face did John's eyes fall
 He needs must notea woman leaned
 Oer Thord, and though her face was screened
 By his wide bush of light red hair
 Yet might he see that she was fair,
 And deemed his brother newly wed.
   And now, as thoughts ran through his head
 About the tale that he should tell,
 His sire, as one who knew right well
 What manners unto men were meet,
 Rose up and cried from out his seat:
   "Knight, or fair lord, whatso thou best,
 If thou mayst share a bonder's feast,
 Sit by me, eat and drink thy fill;
 For this my hall is open still
 To peaceful men of all degree."
   Strange seemed his own voice there to be
 To John, as he in feigned speech said:
 "Thanks have thou for thy goodlihead
 And welcome, goodman; certainly
 Hungry and weary-foot am I,
 And fain of rest, and strange withal
 To this your land, for it did fall,
 That een now as I chanced to ride p. 82
 I lighted by a waterside
 To slake my thirst; and just as I
 Was drinking therefrom eagerly,
 A blue-winged jay, new-hatched in spring,
 Must needs start forth and fall to sing
 His villain plain-song oer my head;
 And like a ghost come from the dead
 Was that unto my horse, I trow,
 Who swerved and went off quick enow,
 To leave me as a gangrel churl."
   "Thou seemest liker to an Earl,"
 His father said; "but come to meat,
 To hungry men are bannocks sweet."
   So by his father's side he sat
 And of that homely cheer he ate,
 Remembered well; and oft he sighed
 To think how far away and wide
 The years had set him from all this,
 And how that all-devouring bliss
 Had made the simple life of old
 As a dull tale too often told.
 But as he sat thereby, full oft
 The goodwife's eyes waxed sad and soft,
 Beholding him; she muttered low:
   "Alas! fair lips, I ought to know,
 Like unto lips that once hung here; p. 83
 Eyes like to eyes that once were dear
 When all that body I could hold,
 And flaxen-white was hair of gold."
   So muttered she, but said not aught
 Aloud. Now the fair damsel brought
 Mead to the gay-clad man, and he
 Beheld her beauty thoughtfully,
 As she shook back her cloud of hair,
 And swung aside her figure fair,
 And clasped the cup with fingers slim,
 And poured and reached it forth to him;
 Then his heart changed again with shame
 As cold cup and warm fingers came
 Into his hand, the while his eyes
 A look in hers must needs surprise
 That made him flush, and shethe red
 Oer face and neck and bosom spread
 And her hand trembled; Thord the while
 Gazed on her with a foolish smile
 Across his wide face. So went by
 The hour of that festivity,
 And then the boards were set aside;
 But the host prayed his guest to bide
 As long as he had will thereto,
 And therewith to the field did go
 With sons and homemen, leaving John
 Among the women-folk alone. p. 84
   So these being set to rock and wool,
 John sat him down upon a stool
 And gan to ponder dreamily,
 Mid longings, on the days gone by,
 And many a glance did Thord's wife steal
 Upon him as she plied the reel
 Not noted much, though once or twice
 His pensive eyes did meet her eyes,
 And troubled and abashed thereat
 He reddened. But the good wife sat
 Meanwhile, and ever span and span
 With steady fingers, and yet wan
 Her face was grown; her mouth and eyes
 Seemed troubled with deep memories.
 At last to Thord's wife did she turn
 And said:
            "If honey we would earn
 Against Yule-tide, the weaving-room
 Must hear the clatter of the loom;
 Ere the long web is fully done;
 So, Thorgerd, thither get thee gone;
 Thou, Asa, to the cloth-room go
 And wait me there; and for you two,
 Mary and Kirstin, best were ye
 Sitting in Thorgerd's company,
 To give her help with reel and thread
 And shuttle."
                Therewith, as she said,
 So did they, and went, one and all; p. 85
 But in the doorway of the hall
 Did Thorgerd for a moment stand,
 Holding her gownskirt in her hand,
 Her body swaying daintily,
 Nor cared to hold aback a sigh.
 Nor son, nor mother noted her,
 A little time the twain sat there
 Nor spake, though twice the goodwife strove,
 But fear forbade her tongue to move;
 Nor had he noted much forsooth
 Midst his own longing and self-ruth,
 Her looks of loving and of doubt.
 So from the hall did she pass out,
 And left him there alone, and soon
 So longing dealt that afternoon
 That, fallen to musing pensively,
 In the lone hall, now scarce might he
 Know if his heart were glad or sad;
 And tunes within his head he had
 Of ancient songs learnt long ago,
 Remembered well through bliss and woe,
 And now withal a lovesome stave
 He murmured to a measure grave,
 Scarce thinking of its sense the while.
 But as he sat there, with a smile
 Came handmaid Asa back, who bare
 Heaped in her arms embroidered gear,
 Which by his feet did she let fall,
 Then gat her gone from out the hall; p. 86
 John, startled, ceased a while his drone
 To gaze upon the gear cast down,
 And saw a dark blue cloak and hood
 Wrought with strange needlework and rude
 That showed the sun and stars and moon;
 Then, gazing, John remembered soon
 How for Yule sport four years agone
 That selfsame raiment he did on,
 And thinking on that bygone mirth
 His own rich cloak he cast to earth,
 And did on him half wittingly
 That long-forgotten bravery;
 And though the sun was warm that day
 He hugged himself in his old way
 Within the warmth of fold on fold
 As though he came from out the cold,
 And gan the hall to pace about;
 And at the last must needs break out
 Into a song remembered well,
 That of the Christmas joy did tell.
Outlanders, whence come ye last?
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 Through what green seas and great have ye past?
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
From far away, O masters mine,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door. p. 87
 We come to bear you goodly wine,
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
From far away we come to you,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 To tell of great tidings strange and true.
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
News, news of the Trinity,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 And Mary and Joseph from over the sea!
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
For as we wandered far and wide,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 What hap do ye deem there should us betide!
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
Under a bent when the night was deep,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 There lay three shepherds tending their sheep.
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
"O ye shepherds, what have ye seen,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 To slay your sorrow, and heal your teen?"
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
"In an ox-stall this night we saw,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door. p. 88
 A babe and a maid without a flaw.
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
"There was an old man there beside,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 His hair was white and his hood was wide.
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
"And as we gazed this thing upon,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 Those twain knelt down to the Little One.
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
"And a marvellous song we straight did hear,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door.
 That slew our sorrow and healed our care."
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
News of a fair and a marvellous thing,
    The snow in the street and the wind on the door,
 Nowell, nowell, nowell, we sing!
    Minstrels and maids, stand forth on the floor.
   So sang he, and in pensive wise
 He sighed, but lifting up his eyes
 Beheld his mother standing nigh,
 Looking upon him pitifully.
 He ran to her, for now he knew p. 89
 Her yearning love, round her he threw
 Strong arms, and cried out:
                              "So it is,
 O mother, that some days of bliss
 I still may give thee; yet since I
 To thee at least will never lie
 Of what I am, and what I hope,
 And what with ill things I must cope,
 Sit thou aside, and look not strange
 When of my glory and great change
 I shall tell even such a tale
 As best for all things may avail.
 And if thou wouldst know verily
 Meanwhile, how matters fare with me,
 This thing of all things may I tell;
 I have been happy and fared well,
 But now with blind eyes must await
 Some unseen, half-guessed turn of fate,
 Before the dropping of the scale
 Shall make an ending to the tale,
 Or blithe or sad: think not meanwhile
 That fear my heart shall now beguile
 Of all the joy I have in thee."
   She wept about him tenderly
 A long while, ere she might say aught;
 Then she drew back, and some strange thought
 Stirred in her heart belike, for she
 Gazed at his splendour timidly, p. 90
 For the rude cloak to earth was cast,
 And whispered trembling at the last.
   "Fair art thou come again, sweet son,
 And sure a long way hast thou gone,
 I durst not ask thee where: but this
 I ask thee by the first sweet kiss,
 Wherewith I kissed thy new-born face
 Long since within the groaning place
 If thou hast been so far, that thou
 Canst tell to megrown old, son, now,
 Through weary life, unsatisfied
 Desires, and lingering hope untried
 If thou canst tell me of thy ruth,
 What thing there is of lies or truth,
 In what the new faith saith of those
 Great glories of the heavenly close,
 And how that poor folk twinned on earth
 Shall meet therein in joy and mirth."
   Smiling with pity and surprise,
 He looked into her wistful eyes,
 And kissed her brow therewith, and said:
   "Nought know I, mother, of the dead,
 More than thou dostlet bewe live
 This day at least, great joy to give
 Each unto other: but the tale
 Must come from thee about the dale, p. 91
 And what has happed therein, since I
 That summer eve went off to try
 What thing by folly might be wrought
 When strength and wisdom came to nought."
   She smiled amid her tears, and there
 She told him all he fain would hear,
 And happily they talked till eve,
 When the men-folk the field did leave
 And gat them to the hall, and then
 Was great rejoicing of all men
 Within a while, for, cloak and hood
 Thrown off, in glittering gear John stood
 And named himself; yet scarcely now
 His father durst his arms to throw
 Round his son's neck, remembering
 How he had thought him such a thing
 As scarce was meet his bread to win.
 Small thought had John of that old sin,
 Yea, scarce had heart to think of aught,
 But when again he should be brought
 Face to face with his love; and slow
 The leaden minutes lingered now;
 Nor could he fail to hope that he
 That very hour her face would see;
 Needs must he hope that his strong love,
 So sore the heart in her must move,
 That she no more might bear his pain. p. 92
   That very hour, he thought again
 That very hour; woe worth the while,
 Why should his heart not feel her smile
 Now, now?O weary time, O life,
 Consumed in endless, useless strife,
 To wash from out the hopeless clay
 Of heavy day and heavy day
 Some specks of golden love, to keep
 Our hearts from madness ere we sleep!
   Good welcome if of clownish kind
 Did John from both his brethren find,
 And from the homemen; Thorgerd seemed
 As somewhat less of him she deemed
 Than heretofore, and smiled, as she
 Put up her fair cheek daintily
 To take his kiss. So went the night
 Midst mirth and manifold delight,
 Till John at last was left alone
 To think upon the strange day gone,
 Scarce knowing yet, if nearer drew
 His bliss because it was gone through.
   Now in such wise, day passed by day,
 Till heavier on him longing lay,
 As still less strange it was to wake
 And no kind kiss of welcome take,
 And welcome with no loving kiss,
 Kind eyes to a new day of bliss; p. 93
 And as the days passed oer his head
 Sometimes he needs must wake in dread,
 That all the welfare, that did seem
 To be his life, was but a dream,
 Or all at least slipped swiftly by
 Into a wretched memory.
 Yet would hope leave him not, yea, whiles
 Wrapped round about by her strange guiles
 All seemed to go right well, and oft
 Would memory grow so sweet and soft,
 That scarce the thing it imaged had
 More might in it to make him glad.
   Well may ye deem that mid all this
 His brooding face would cloud the bliss
 Of many a boisterous night; his sire
 Would mutter, "He has clomb up higher.
 But still is moonstruck as before;"
 His brethren ill his silence bore,
 Yet feared him; such a tale he told
 That in that mead he did behold
 Strange outland people come that morn,
 'By whom afar he had been borne
 Into a fair land, where, he said,
 Thriving, the king's child did he wed
 Within a while; "Now, when once more
 Their keels shall leave their noble shore,
 At Norway will they touch, and then
 Back go I with those goodly men, p. 94
 Now I have seen my land and kin."
   Fair Thorgerd ever sought to win
 Kind looks of him, and many a day
 She from the hall would go away
 To rage within some secret place,
 That all the sweetness of her face,
 Her lingering fingers, her soft word,
 Twixt red half-opened lips scarce heard,
 Had bought for her so little ruth;
 Although there seemed some times, in sooth,
 When John, grown weary of the strife
 Within him between dreams and life,
 Must think it not so over ill
 To watch her hand the shuttle fill,
 While on her cheek the red and white
 Flickered and changed with new delight,
 And hope of being a thing to move
 That dreamy man to earthly love.
   So autumn fell to winter-tide,
 And ever there did John abide,
 Mid hope deferred and longing fierce,
 That strove the heavy veil to pierce;
 And howso strong his love might be,
 Yet were there tides of misery,
 When, in his helpless, hopeless rage,
 He felt himself as in a cage
 Shown to the gaping world; again p. 95
 Would heavy languor dull his pain,
 And make it possible to live,
 And wait to see if fate would give
 Some pleasure yet ere all was done.
   Meantime, with every setting sun,
 Unto the meadow as she bade
 He went, and often, half afraid
 Half hopeful, did he watch the night
 Suck slowly in the lingering light;
 But of the homefolk, though all knew
 Whither his feet at evening drew,
 Yet now so great a man he was,
 None asked him why he needs must pass
 Each eve along the self-same way,
 Save Thorgerd, who would oft waylay
 His feet returning, and would watch
 Some gesture or some word to catch
 From his unwariness; and whiles
 Her tender looks and words and smiles
 Would seem to move him now, and she
 Laughed to herself delightedly;
 And as the days grew heavier
 To John, he oft would gaze on her,
 At such times as she tripped along,
 And wonder where would be the wrong
 If he should tell her of his tale;
 Withal he deemed her cheek grew pale,
 As unto Yule-tide drew the days, p. 96
 And oft into her eyes would gaze
 In such kind wise, that she awhile
 Forgot her foolishness and guile
 Surprised by sparks of inner love.
   Yet nothing a long while did move
 His mouth to fatal speech, until
 When the snow lay on moor and hill
 And it was Yule-day, he did go
 Twixt the high drift oer beaten snow
 Unto the meadow, as the day
 Short, wind-bewildered, died away.
 And so, being come unto the thorn
 Where first that bitter love was born,
 He gazed around, but nothing saw
 But endless waste of grey clouds draw
 Oer the white waste, while cold and blind
 The earth looked; een the north-west wind
 Found there no long abiding place,
 But ever the low clouds did chase
 Nor let them weep their frozen tears.
   Strange is it how the grieved heart bears
 Long hours and days and months of woe,
 As dull and leaden as they go,
 And makes no sign, yea, and knows not
 How great a burden it bath got
 Upon it, till all suddenly
 Some thought scarce heeded shall flit by, p. 97
 That tears the veil as by it goes
 With seeming careless hand, and shows
 The shrinking soul that deep abyss
 Of days to come all bare of bliss.
 And now with John een so it fared.
 He saw his woe and longing bared
 Before his eyes, as slow and slow
 The twilight crept across the snow,
 Like to the dying out of hope;
 And suddenly he needs must cope
 With that in-rushing of despair
 Long held aback, till all things there
 Seemed grown his foes, his prison-wall;
 And, whatso good things might befall
 To others of the wide world, he
 Was left alone with misery.
 Why should he hold his peace or strive
 Amid these men as man to live
 Who recked not of him? Then he cried:
   "Would God, would God, that I had died
 Before the accursed name of Love
 My miserable heart did move!
 Why did I leave thee in such wise,
 False heart, with lovesome, patient eyes,
 And soul intent to do thy will?
 And why, why must I love thee still, .
 And long for thee, and cast on thee
 Blessings wrung out of misery, p. 98
 That will not bless thee, if in sooth
 On my wrecked heart thou hast no ruth?
 O come, come, come to me, my love,
 If aught my heart thy heart may move,
 For I am wretched and alone,
 With head grown wild, heart turned to stone,
 Come, if there yet be truth in thee!"
   He gazed about him timorously
 While thus he spake, as though he thought
 To see some sudden marvel wrought
 In earth and heaven; some dreadful death,
 Some sight, as when God threateneth
 The world with speedy end; but still
 Unchanged, oer mead and wold and hill
 Drave on the dull low twilight rack,
 Till all light seemed the sky to lack,
 And the snow-shrouded earth to gain
 What it had lost.
                    "In vain, in vain!"
 He cried, "and I was well bewrayed;
 She wept oer me when I was laid
 Upon the grass beside her feet,
     Because a pleasure somewhat sweet
 She needs must lay aside, while I
 What tears shall help my misery?"
   Then back he turned in een such mood
 As when one thing seems no more good p. 99
 Than is another, and will seems
 To move the body but by dreams
 Of ancient life and energy.
 But as he wandered listlessly
 Midst the wind's howling, and the drift
 Of light snow that its force did lift,
 And gained at last the garth's great gate,
 He started back, for there did wait
 A grey form in the dull grey night,
 Yea, and a woman's; strange affright,
 Strange hope possessed him, and he strove
 To cry aloud some word of love,
 But his voice failed him; she came nigh
 And drew up to him quietly,
 Not speaking; when she reached his side
 Her hand unto his hand did glide
 And thrilled him with its soft warm touch,
 He stammered:
                   "Have I loved too much,
 Have I done wrong? I called thee, dear;
 Speak, love, and take away my fear!"
   A soft voice answered, "O speak not!
 I cannot bear my joy, oer hot
 Waxeth my heart, when in such wise
 Thou art changed to meO thine eyes,
 I see them through the darksome night
 Gazing upon me! sweet delight,
 How shall I deal with all my bliss p. 100
 So that the world know nought of this,
 When scarce now I may breathe or stand
 Holding thy lovesome clinging hand."
   Now therewith Thorgerd's voice he knew,
 And from her hand his hand he drew,
 While oer his heart there swept again
 The bitter blast of doubting pain,
 And scarce he knew who by his side
 Was going, as aloud he cried:
   "In vain I call; thou comest not
 And all our love is quite forgot;
 What new world hast thou got to rule?
 What mockeries makst thou of the fool
 Who trusted thee? Alas, alas!
 Whatever ill may come to pass
 Still must I love thee."
                        Now by him
 Went Thorgerd silent, every limb
 Tingling with madness and desire;
 Love lit within her such a fire
 As een that eve in nowise cooled,
 As of her sweet, fresh hope befooled
 She strove to speak, and found no word
 To tell wherewith her heart was stirred.
 So on they went, she knowing nought
 The bitterness of his ill thought,
 He heeding not in any wise p. 101
 The wretchedness of her surprise,
 Until, thus far estranged, they carne
 To where the hall's bright light did flame
 Over a space of trodden snow.
 Faster a space then did she go,
 But, as they drew anigh the door,
 Stopped suddenly, and stood before
 The musing, downcast man, and laid
 A hand upon his breast, and said,
 In a low smothered voice:
                              "Wait now,
 And tell me straightly what didst thou
 To call me love, and then to cry
 Thy love came not? I am anigh,
 What wouldst thou have, did I not move
 Thy cold heart? am I not thy love?"
   Then, trembling as those words she spoke,
 She cast to earth her heavy cloak;
 From head to foot clad daintily,
 Meet for that merry tide was she;
 A silver girdle clasped around
 Her well-wrought loins, her fair hair crowned
 With silver, and her gown enwrought
 With flowers whereof that tide knows nought;
 Nor needed she that rich attire
 To set a young man's heart afire,
 For she was delicately made
 As is the lily; there she swayed, p. 102
 Leaned forward to the strenuous wind
 That her gay raiment intertwined
 About her light limbs. Gazing there,
 Bewildered with a strange despair,
 John saw her beauty, yet in sooth
 Something within him slew all ruth
 If for a moment:
                  "Ah, what love,
 What love," he cried, "my heart should move,
 But mine own love, my worshipped sweet?
 Would God that her beloved feet
 Would bless our threshold this same night!"
   Then, even as a sudden light
 Shows to some wretch the murderer's knife
 Drawing anear his outworn life,
 Knowledge rushed oer him, and too late
 Did he bethink him of the fate
 That threatened, and, grown wild and blind,
 He turned to meet the western wind
 That hurried past him, thinking, "Now
 At least the formless sky will show
 Some sign of my undoing swift;
 Surely the sightless rack will lift
 To show some dreadful misery,
 Some image of the summer sky
 Defaced by the red lightning's sword."
 So spake he, and the fierce wind roared
 Amid the firs in sullen wise, p. 103
 But nothing met his fearful eyes
 Save the grey waste of night. Withal
 He turned round slowly to the hall,
 Trembling, yet doubtful of his heart,
 Doubtful of love. But for her part
 Thorgerd, half mad with love, had turned
 And fled from him; a red spot burned
 Amidst each smooth cheek, and her eyes
 Afire with furious jealousies,
 Followed him down the hall, as he
 Went toward the dais listlessly,
 And the loud horns blew up to meat,
 And restless were her fevered feet
 Throughout the feast that now befell.
   Now thereat men were served right well,
 And most were merry, and the horn
 Full oft from board to beard was borne;
 But no mead brewed of mortal man
 Could make John's face less wild and wan;
 For a long while he trembled sore
 Wheneer the west-wind shook the door
 More than its wont; nor heeded he
 The curse of Thorgerd's misery
 Wild-gleaming from her eyes; and when
 She fell to talk with the young men
 With hapless, haggard merriment,
 No pang throughout his heart there went:
 For clear across it were there borne p. 104
 Pictures of all the life forlorn
 That should be, yea, his life he saw,
 Unhelped and heavy-burdened, draw
 Through the dull joyless years, until
 The bitter measure they should fill,
 And he, unloved, unsatisfied,
 Unkissed, from foolish hope should hide
 In some dark corner of death's house.
   Yet, as the feast grew clamorous
 About him, and the night went past,
 The respite wrought on him at last,
 And from its midst did he begin
 A little rest from fear to win,
 And in the feast he joined and seemed
 No more as in their midst he dreamed.
   So passed a space, till presently
 As with a beaker raised on high
 He stood, and called on some great name
 Writ in the book of northern fame,
 Across the wind there came a sound
 As though afar a horn were wound,
 A dreadful sound to him; the men
 Sat hearkening, till it came again
 Nigher and sharper now, and John,
 Grown white, laid his left hand upon
 His beating heart; and then once more
 Loud rang the horn close by the door, p. 105
 And men began in haste to take
 Their weapons for their safety's sake;
 But John, the cup in his right hand,
 His left upon his heart, did stand,
 And might not either move nor speak.
   Then cried the goodman, "Not so weak
 Are we, but these may well come in
 Unmet with weapons; they shall win
 All good things on this stormy night;
 Go welcome them to our delight;
 For on this merry tide of Yule
 Shall Christ the Lord all matters rule."
   Then opened they the door, and strong
 The wild wind swept the hall along,
 Driving the hangings here and there,
 Making the torches ruddier,
 Darkening the fires. But therewithal
 An utter hush came oer the hall,
 And no man spake of bad or good;
 For in the midst of them there stood
 A white-clad woman, white as though
 A piece of fair moonlitten snow
 Had entered the red smoky hall.
 Then sweet speech on their ears did fall
 Thrilling all hearts through:
                              "Joy and peace
 Be on this house, and all increase p. 106
 Of all good things! and thou, my love,
 I knew how sore desire must move
 Thy longing heart, and I am come
 To look upon thee in thy home:
 Come to me, give me welcome here!"
   He stepped adown, and shame and fear
 Mixed with the joyful agony
 Of love and longing, as anigh
 He drew unto her loveliness.
 A moment, and his arms did press
 His own love to his heaving breast,
 And for an instant of sweet rest
 Midst clinging hands and trembling kiss
 Did he forget all things but bliss;
 And still she murmured:
                         "Now rejoice
 That far away I heard thy voice
 And came! rejoice this night at least,
 And make good ending to the feast!"
   Therewith from out his arms she drew,
 Yet held his hand still; scarce he knew
 Of where he was, and who were round,
 And strange and flat his voice did sound
 Unto himself, as now he spake:
   "Kinsmen, see her, who for my sake
 Has left her mighty state and home, p. 107
 Fair beyond words, that she might come
 With you a little to abide!
 How say ye, are ye satisfied
 Her sweet face in your midst to see?"
   Therewith, though somewhat timidly,
 Folk shouted; sooth, they deemed her such
 As mortal man might scarcely touch
 Or dare to love; with fear fulfilled,
 With shame of their rough joyance chilled,
 They sat, scarce moving: but to John
 Some sweet familiar thing seemed won
 Despite his fear, as down the hall
 He led her: if his eyes did fall
 On Thorgerd's face, how might he heed
 The anguish of unholpen need,
 That filled her heart with all despair,
 As on the twain her eyes did glare?
   Now softly to the fair high-seat
 With trembling hand he led his sweet,
 Who kissed the goodman and goodwife,
 And wished them fair and happy life,
 Then like the earth's and heaven's queen,
 She sat there beauteous and serene,
 Till, as men gazed upon her there,
 Joy of her beauty slew their fear;
 Hot grew their hearts now, as they turned
 Eyes on her that with strange light burned: p. 108
 And wild and eager grew the speech
 Wherewith they praised her each to each,
 As neath her eyes they sat.
                              If he
 Who knew the full felicity
 Of all they longed for, hushed at whiles,
 Might answer not her healing smiles
 With aught but sad imploring eyes,
 When he bethought him in what wise
 She there was comeyet none the less
 Amid bewildered happiness
 The time went by; until at last
 Night waned, and slowly all folk passed
 From out the hall, and the soft sleep
 Oer all the marvelling house did creep,
 Bearing to folk that night such dreams,
 As showed, through wild things, very gleams
 Of heaven and perfect love, to last
 Till grey light oer the world was cast.
   But, midst the other folk, she too
 His mazed and doubtful footsteps drew
 Unto the chamber; when alone
 They were, and his warm heart seemed one
 With her and bliss, without a word
 She gazed on him, and like a sword,
 Cleaving the very heart atwain
 That look was, laden with all pain,
 All love and ruth that she might feel. p. 109
   So through the dark the hours did steal
 Slow toward the rising of the sun;
 But long or ere the night was done
 He slept within her arms, nor heard
 The sobs wherewith her breast was stirred,
 Nor felt the tears and kisses sweet
 That round his set calm face did beat,
 As round its dead mate beats a bird
 With useless flutter no more heard:
 Nor did he move when she unwound
 The arms that clasped her breast around,
 And, weeping sore, the gold ring drew
 From off his hand: and nought he knew
 When from the bed at last she slid,
 And, with her body all unhid,
 Stood gazing on him till a sigh
 Burst from her heart; and wearily
 From her sad tear-stained troubled face
 She swept her hair back:
                          "O the days,
 Thy weary days, love! Dream not then
 Of named lands, and abodes of men!
 Alas, alas, the loneliest
 Of all such were a land of rest
 When set against the land where I
 Unhelped must note the hours go by!
 Ah, that my hope thy dream might pierce!
 That mid the dreadful grief and tears,
 Which presently shall rend thine heart, p. 110
 This word the cloud might draw apart
 My feet, lost Love, shall wander soon
 East of the Sun, West of the Moon!
 Tell not old tales of love, so strong,
 That all the world with all its wrong
 And heedlessness was weak to part
 The loving heart from loving heart?"
   Therewith she turned about, and now
 She wept no more; her cheeks gan glow,
 And her eyes glittered, and no more
 Sorrow her kind mouth brooded oer,
 And strange, unearthly beauty shone
 Oer all her face, whence ruth was gone,
 Till the dim-litten place was glad
 That in the midst thereof it had
 Her loveliness grown dangerous;
 Softly she gat her through the house
 Where here and there a dying light
 Shone on her wondrous limbs and white
 As through the rough place dreamily
 She moved: yet was the night wind high
 And its rude hand, as it did shake
 Window and door, served but to make
 The inner stillness yet more still.
 The clouds were riven; oer the hill
 The white moon shone out, yet its light
 Made the deep night so much more night,
 That now it seemed as neer again p. 111
 The sun would bless the eyes of men;
 That all the world had fallen to death.
   So on she passed, her odorous breath
 Seen now amidst the moonlit hall,
 Her unshod foot's light steady fall,
 The waving of her gust-moved hair,
 Well-nigh the lonely place might hear
 Despite the rush and stir without,
 As, slowly, yet all void of doubt
 She raised the latchet of the door,
 And let the wind and moonlight pour
 Wild clamour and strange light therethrough.
 She paused not; the wild west wind blew
 Her hair straight out from her; her feet
 The bitter, beaten snow did meet
 And shrank not; slowly forth she passed
 Nor backward any look she cast,
 Nor gazed to right or left, but went
 With eyes on the far sky intent
 Into the howling, doubtful night,
 Until at last her body white
 And its black shadow on the snow,
 No more the drift-edged way did know.
AGAIN the thread snapped; Gregory lay
 Awake; nor what had passed away
 Of the short night could tell, till he
 Through the tent's opening seemed to see
 A change creep oer the moonlit sky;
 So there a short while did he lie
 Striving to think what he had dreamed,
 Till utterly awake he seemed;
 And then, since no more on that night
 He thought to sleep, and lost delight
 Of the past dream grown more than dim,
 With causeless longing wearied him,
 He rose and left the tent once more,
 And passed down slowly toward the shore
 Until the boat he came unto:
 And there he set himself to do
 What things were needed to the gear,
 Until he saw the dawn draw near
 Across the sea: then, een as one
 Who through a marvellous land hath gone
 In sleep, and knowing nought thereof
 To tell, yet knows strange things did move
 About his sightless journeying,
 So felt he; and yet seemed to bring,
 Now and again, some things anigh
 Unto the wavering boundary
 Twixt sight and blindness that awhile
 Our troubled waking will beguile p. 113
 When happy dreams have just gone by,
 And left us without remedy
 Within the unpitying hands of life.
   At last, amid perplexing strife
 With things half seen, drowsy he grew
 Once more, and ever slower drew
 The tough brown lines from hand to hand,
 Until he sank upon the sand
 Beside the boat, and, staring out
 Oer the grey sea, lost hope and doubt
 In little while, nor noted now
 The dawn's line wide and wider grow,
 Nor waning of the shadow deep
 The moon cast from the boat; till sleep
 Had closed his eyes, and in the cold
 Of the first dawn the ending told
  that sweet tale. Yet so it was,
 That the King's hall and feast did pass
 Clean from his mind; and now it seemed
 That of no tale-telling he dreamed,
 But of his own life grown to be
 A new and marvellous history.
   Midst hope and fear and wretchedness,
 And Love, that all things doth redress,
 Adown the stream of fate he moved
 As the carle's son, the well-beloved,
 The fool of longing; in such wise
 He dealt with his own miseries. p. 114
THE winter night was on the wane
 When the poor wretch woke up again;
 The lone strange sound of cock-crow moved
 His heart to dream of his beloved
 Twixt sleep and waking, and he turned
 A face with utmost love that yearned
 And sighed, as his hot hand stole forth
 To touch a body of more worth
 To him than Heaven's unmeasured years;
 Upon his face were undried tears
 Left by some dream, and yet he smiled
 To think of deep joy so beguiled
 By sadness dreamed; his lips began
 To speak a name unknown to man.
 A little while in bliss he lay
 And gathered thoughts of day on day
 More joyful each than each, until
 Sweet thankful love his soul did fill
 With utter ecstasy of bliss,
 And low he murmured:
                          "Kind she is
 Beyond all kindness ever told!
 Thou wilt not leave me more, a-cold
 In the rough world; thou knowest how
 My weak and clinging heart will grow
 Unto the strength of thy great heart.
 O surely no more shall we part, p. 115
 And never canst thou hurt me more
 Till all the world and time is oer!"
   The moonlight waned, on drew the morn,
 The lessened west wind moaned forlorn
 In the garth nooks; the eaves dripped now
 Beneath the thaw, the faint cock-crow
 Through the dull dawn, and no sound more
 He heard. Awake, and yearning sore,
 He turned about and cried:
                            "Wake, wake!
 Day cometh, and my heart doth ache
 To think how sleep still takes from me
 Some minutes of felicity,
 From me and thee, my love, my sweet!
 O think of Death's forgotten feet,
 That somewhere surely drawn anigh,
 And let no minute more pass by
 With our lips parted each from each!"
   Wildly the ending of his speech
 Rang from his lips, all strange, as though
 The thought once thought needs thence must go
 In words, though all the world were changed.
 Wildly his opened eyes now ranged
 The twilight chamber void of her,
 And through his heart shot such a fear
 As words may tell notnay indeed
 No fearfor now he knew the meed p. 116
 Of his fool's word, and for a while
 No hope was left that might beguile
 His misery and his loneliness,
 No eager sight, born of distress,
 Might pierce the cloud that oer him spread.
 Such wild thoughts filled his 'wildered head,
 As once or twice may men endure
 Yet live; for the earth seemed not sure,
 Or the air fleeting; fire burned not,
 Nor water moyed; the snow was hot,
 The dark hid nought; the coming day
 No longer sober seemed and grey,
 But full of flashing light and blue.
 Yet all things round him well he knew,
 More real they seemed than eer before,
 They would not change, nor would pass oer
 One instant of his agony.
 It was as he had seen time die,
 And good turn evil neath his eyes,
 And God live to forge miseries
 For him alone, for him alone,
 For all the world beside seemed gone.
   A short while, risen in his bed,
 He hung his wretched brooding head
 Above the place her limbs had warmed,
 And shrieked not, though strange curses swarmed
 About his heart, and wild and fierce
 Strove hard his dead despair to pierce, p. 117
 And might not: nought his heart might ease
 Or for a moment gain him peace.
 Yet in that time of utter ill,
 Some reflex of the guiding will
 That moved his limbs in happier days
 Still wrought in him; round did he gaze
 With set eyes, and arose withal;
 And een therewith a thought did fall
 Upon him that some succour brought,
 "How can I meet their eyes?" he thought,
 "How can I bear to hear again
 The voices of the sons of men?"
And, nigh unwitting, at that word,
 Hearkening the while if any stirred,
 He clad himself and gazed around
 The place once more, and on the ground
 There lay her raiment: then he turned
 His head away, for wild-fire burned
 Within it, and he strove to speak;
 But, lest his wretched heart should break
 And torment end on that first day
 A new pain did his pain allay,
 And bitter tears and wailing came
 To dull the fierceness of the flame
 That so consumed him; and withal
 Desire of wandering forth gan fall
 Upon him, though he knew not where
 In all the world to seek for her. p. 118
   So, ere his burning tears were spent,
 Through the unwakened hall he went,
 And kissed the threshold of the door
 Her well-loved feet had touched before,
 Yet saw no signs upon the snow
 Of those departing feet to show.
 Cold blew the wind upon his face,
 As now he left behind the place
 Where he was born, nor turned again
 To look farewell; for nought and vain
 Seemed all things but his misery,
 That now had grown his life to be,
 Not to be given away for aught
 That earth might hold; nor had he thought
 That anything his lot could change,
 That anything could more be strange,
 Lovesome or fearful to his heart,
 Or in his life have any part.
   So he went on from that abode,
 Along a well-known, oft-trod road,
 He knew not why or where, until
 Clean hidden by a bare waste hill,
 Were the snow-covered roofs wherein
 His outward life did first begin.
 Then as he wandered on forlorn,
 From out his unrest was there born
 Some faint half-memory, that did seem
 To be the remnant of a dream; p. 119
 Some image to his mind there clung,
 Some speech upon his lips yet hung
 He might not utter.
                     And now he
 Had gone so long that the wide sea
 He saw afar, when the dull day
 Toward eve again had passed away,
 Amidst the utter solitude
 Of his time-slaying weary mood.
 But weak and way-worn was he now,
 Though greater did his longing grow
 To wander ever on and on,
 Until the unknown rest were won.
 And when he gazed from the hill-side,
 And saw the great sea spreading wide,
 All black and empty from the shore,
 So sharp a longing then came oer
 His dull despair, such wild desire,
 That stung, as when a coal of fire
 Is laid upon an aching wound,
 He cast himself upon the ground,
 And in the cold snow writhed and wailed,
 While over him the sea-mew sailed,
 Not silent, and the wind wailed too,
 As though his bitter grief they knew,
 And mocked him.
                      Yet or fell the night
 He rose, and on the waste of white
 Stood a black speck, then went until p. 120
 The black night mingled sea and hill
 And hurrying rack in nothingness.
 Yet, kept alive by his distress,
 He fainted not, nor went astray,
 For as in dreams he knew the way
 At last, and whitherward he went,
 Since round the heart of strong intent
 His woe was wrapped.
                         So oer the down
 He went, until a haven-town
 Shone like a patch of stars on earth,
 And something like a hope had birth
 Within him, and somewhat he knew
 His will, now that his body grew
 Well-nigh too weak to bear him on.
 Yet to the town at last he won,
 So heartened now unto the task
 That he for food and rest might ask;
 And, since no lack of wealth he had,
 Soon did he make a goodman glad
 With gift of gold, and, all outworn,
 Forgot his grief, and life forlorn
 In long deep sleep most like to death.
   Now at that town, my story saith,
 Long must he bide, for so it was
 That then no good ship well might pass
 From land to land, for winter-tide
 Still made the narrow seas full wide. p. 121
 Each morn did John wake there, to gaze
 With dead eyes on the waste of days,
 Each eve he laid him down to sleep,
 Much marvelling what his life did keep
 From passing: still the memory
 Of some faint, dreamlike thing gone by
 Perplexed his heart, and still he strove,
 Amid the anguish of his love,
 To speak that half-remembered word,
 Amidst a dream, belike, once heard.
   This helped him through his dull-eyed woe,
 That the time passed, and he should go
 To other lands ere many days,
 Seeming to seek for that lost face.
   At last the day desired came
 When oer the land the Spring did flame
 With love and flowers; and on an eve
 John's good ship did the haven leave,
 And pale he stood upon the prow,
 And to the weary place, left now
 Behind with all its patience dead,
 No more had will to turn his head,
 But thinking of the future still,
 Amid the shipman's tangled skill,
 Stood looking toward the flaming West,
 With eyes made strange by love's unrest.
   Upon the deck that night he lay, p. 122
 And nought he slept until the day
 Began to dawn, and woke again
 In short space, feeling little pain,
 And with his pale lips murmuring
 Some word half-dreamed, some fleeting thing.
 Then on his arm he rose, and saw
 The waste of waters seem to draw
 Unto him as the black prow clave
 With steady heart green wave on wave;
 None save the watch were on the deck,
 Who, sleepy-eyed, no whit did reck
 Of him and all his woe and love,
 But twixt the bulwarks slow did move,
 With little purpose, as it seemed;
 The helmsman steered as though he dreamed,
 Of seafolk's marvels vaguely told
 By firesides in the days of old;
 The light wind waxed and waned; the ship
 Still through the babbling waves did slip
 As though their talk she hearkened to:
 And midst it all John scarcely knew
 Whether he lived still, or was dead:
 Well-nigh it came into his head,
 That he by ghosts of men was borne
 From out his wasted life forlorn
 Oer a strange sea to some strange place
 Of unknown punishment or grace.
 Skyward he looked, and oer the mast
 He saw the moon with all light passed p. 123
 From out of her, and as he gazed
 The great sun oer the green sea blazed,
 And smote his head with sudden light.
   Then in his heart the flame burned bright
 That long had smouldered there, he cried;
 "Ah, woe betide, ah, woe betide,
 East of the Sun, West of the Moon!
 A land that no man findeth soon,
 The grave of greedy love that cries
 To all folk of its agonies:
 The prison of untrustful love,
 That thinketh a light word can move
 The heart of kindness, deep and wise.
 O love, love, would thy once-kissed eyes
 Were glad to-day, that thy sweet smile
 Forgat a wretch so base and vile,
 That he but lived to make thee sad,
 To weep the days that once were glad!"
   But now the dreamlike sight that wrapped
 His soul all suddenly was snapped.
 He heard the watch cry out their cry,
 The helmsman answer cheerily,
 And mid the homely noise of these
 Freshened awhile the morning breeze,
 The ship leaned oer the highway green,
 That led to England's meads unseen.
   At Dunwich, in the east country, p. 124
 John landed from the weary sea,
 Not recking where on earth he was;
 But quickly therefrom did he pass,
 Driven by growing hope; that word
 In some old dream belike half heard,
 East of the Sun, West of the Moon,
 Seemed unto him a heaven-sent boon,
 Yet made the merry world around
 A dreary cage, a narrow round
 Of dreamlike pain, a hollow place,
 Filled with a blind and dying race.
   That town and country-side, indeed,
 Seemed all the less to help his need,
 Whereas for common homely things
 That well he knew, with Easterlings
 And his own country-folk they dealt,
 And scarce knew aught of what folk dwelt
 Southward beyond the narrow seas;
 So giving few farewells to these,
 Towards London did he take his way,
 And, journeying on, at hostels lay
 Benights, or whiles at abbeys fair;
 And as his hope grew, would he dare,
 In manner of a tale, to tell
 In what wise woe upon him fell;
 And most men praised the tale enow,
 And said no minstrel-wight might show
 A merrier tale to feasting hall. p. 125
 And so at last it did befall
 That at a holy house he lay,
 A noble house, forsooth, to-day,
 Men call St. Alban's; there he told
 Once more, as a thing known of old,
 The story of his hapless love:
 Such passion there his tongue did move,
 That in that Abbey's guest-chamber
 It was a better thing to hear
 Than many a history nobly writ,
 And much were all folk moved by it.
 But when his speech was fully done,
 From the board's end there rose up one,
 A little dry old monk, right wise
 Of semblance, with small glittering eyes,
 Who came to John, and said:
                                 "Thy tale,
 Fair son, shall much my need avail,
 For I have many such-like things
 Writ out for sport of lords and kings;
 Bide thou with us to-morn, I pray,
 And hearken some for half a day;
 For certes shall their memory
 Help thee to pass the dull days by,
 When thou growest old."
                            Wide-eyed John stared,
 For scarce the old man's speech he heard,
 Or any speech of men, for still
 One thought his whole sad heart did fill. p. 126
 Howbeit constrained, he knew not why,
 He heard full many a history
 Like to his own next morn, and went
 Yet more upon his love intent;
 Yet more the world seemed nought but this,
 Longing for bliss and losing bliss.
 And yet, of those fresh tales withal
 Some endings on his heart did fall
 As scarcely new; he gan to make
 Tales to himself, how for his sake
 She wept and waited; how some way
 To Love fulfilled yet open lay;
 The grey morn often would beguile
 With dreams his sad lips to a smile,
 While still his shut eyes did behold
 Once more her sweetness manifold;
 And if the waking from delight
 Unto the real day void and white,
 Were well-nigh more than man could bear,
 Yet his own sad voice would he hear
 Muttering as oerword to the tune,
 East of the Sun, West of the Moon.
   Now come to London at the last,
 Among the chapmen there he passed,
 And many a tale of them he had
 Concerning outlands good and bad
 That they had journeyed through, but still
 He heard none speak for good or ill p. 127
 Of any way unto the place
 Whereto for him still led all ways.
 But his hope lived, nor might his heart
 In any life of man have part,
 And forth he wandered once again
 As merchant among chaffering men,
 And strange he seemed among them all;
 His face changed not, whateer might fall
 Of good or ill; he won, he lost,
 He gave, as counting not the cost;
 Fell sick, grew well, and heeded nought
 What the days took or what they brought;
 Nowhere he strove great deeds to do,
 Scarce spoke he save when spoken to;
 Hither and thither still he went
 As the winds blow, never content,
 Never complaining; resting nought,
 And yet scarce asking what he sought.
 A strange waif in the tide of life,
 With nought he seemed to be at strife,
 To nothing earthly to belong.
 Still burned his longing bright and strong,
 As when upon that bitter morn
 He hung with his white face forlorn,
 Over the bed yet scarcely cold,
 That erst her loveliness did hold.
   So chasing dreams, so dreamlike chased,
 Through lapse of years his life did waste; p. 128
 His body changed, and old he grew
 Before his time: his face none knew,
 When, on a time, from journeyings vain
 In southlands, wandering back again,
 He heard his father welcome call
 Across the smoke-wreaths of his hall.
 O lonely heart! the yearning shame
 That erst, when back thereto he came,
 He felt at being so all alone
 Among his own folk, was clean gone;
 No lingering kindness of old days
 Clung now to the familiar place;
 With unmoved mouth he wandered there,
 And saw his mother's empty chair,
 For she was dead: with unchanged eyes
 Thorgerd he saw from spinning rise,
 Fair still and young, though he was old.
 His father's face he did behold
 With no faint smile of memory,
 No pang for wasted youth gone by;
 Betwixt his brethren twain he sat,
 And heard them talk of this and that
 Mid stories of a bygone day,
 Scarce thinking how they used to play
 Fair children once, and innocent,
 With the next minute well content.
   No goodwill from his kith and kin,
 And things kind once, he now might win p. 129
 From out the well-loved wasting fire
 Of unfulfilled scarce-touched desire.
 One place was as another place,
 Haunted by memories of one face,
 Vocal with one remembered voice,
 Sad with one time's swift fleeting joys.
 Yet as he passed the time-worn door
 The last time, said farewell once more,
 Scarce mid his outward calm could he
 Stay quivering lip and trembling knee,
 That on the threshold longed to lie,
 Where surely had her feet gone by.
   Through what wild lands he wandered wide,
 Among what folk he did abide
 Thereafter, nought my story saith.
 Suffice it, that no outbraved death
 Might end him; no chain of delay
 His feet from his wild wanderings stay;
 That every help he strove to gain
 From wise or fools was still but vain;
 Until, my story saith, at last
 The second time in ship he passed
 The wild waves of the Indian Sea,
 And with a chaffering company
 Long time abode, and ever heard
 And saw great marvels, but no word,
 No sight of what alone might give
 A heart unto the dead-alive. p. 130
 At last from the strange city there
 He set sail in a dromond fair,
 With chapmen for his fellows, bound
 To such a land, that there the ground
 Bears gems and gold, but nourisheth
 Little besides save fear and death.
 So long they sailed, that at the last
 The skipper's face grew overcast,
 And the stout chapmen gan to fear,
 Because no signs of land drew near,
 And all the days were fully done
 When with fair wind they should have won
 Unto the shore for which they made;
 But of no death was John afraid
 While oer some space as yet untried
 He bore his love unsatisfied;
 With hate they eyed his calm face now,
 For greater still their fear did grow.
   Anigh the prow one eve he stood,
 And something new so stirred his blood
 With hope, that he at last might say,
 A thing unsaid for many a day,
 That he was happy; round about
 The shipmen stood, and gazed in doubt
 ' Upon a long grey bank of cloud
 The eastern sky-line that did shroud.
 He saw it not, grown soft with rest
 His face was turned unto the west; p. 131
 The low sun lit his golden hair
 Changed now with years of toil and care,
 The light wind stirred it as the prow
 The babbling ripple soft did throw
 From its black shining side; the sail
 Flapped oerhead as the wind did fail
 Fitful that eve; the western sky
 Was bright and clear as night drew nigh
 Beyond all words to tell; at last
 He shivered; to the tall white mast
 He raised his eyes just as the sun
 Blazed at his lowest: day was done,
 But yet night lingered, as oerhead,
 With a new-kindled hope and dread,
 The thin-curved moon, all white and cold,
 Twixt day and night did he behold.
   No need now of that word to think,
 Or where he heard it; he did shrink
 Back mid his fellows, for he strove
 This first time to forget his love
 Lest hope should slay him; therewith now
 He heard the shipmen speaking low
 With anxious puckered brows, and saw
 The merchants each to other draw
 As men who feared to be alone;
 And knew that a fresh fear had grown
 Beside their old fear, nathless nought
 To such things might he turn his thought. p. 132
 All watched that night but he, who slept
 While lovesome visions oer him crept,
 Making night happy with the sight
 Of kind hands, and soft eyes and bright.
 At last within a flowery mead
 He seemed to be, clad in such weed
 As fellows of the angels wear:
 Alone a while he wandered there
 Right glad at heart, until at last
 By a fair-blossomed brake he passed,
 And oer his shoulder gazed as he
 Went by it; and lo, suddenly,
 The odorous boughs were thrust apart,
 And with all heaven within his heart
 He turned, and saw his love, his sweet,
 Clad in green raiment to the feet,
 Her feet upon the blossoms bare,
 A rose-wreath round her golden hair;
 Her arms reached out to him, her mouth
 Trembling to quench his life-long drouth,
 Yet smiling neath her deep kind eyes
 Upon his trembling glad surprise.
 But when he would have gone to her
 Him seemed a cry of deadly fear
 Rang through the fair and lonely close,
 A cold thick mist betwixt them rose,
 And then all sight from him did pass,
 And darkness a long while there was. p. 133
   Then all at once he woke up, cast
 With mighty force against the mast,
 Whereto with desperate hands he clung
 Unwitting, while the storm-wind sung
 Its song of death about his ears.
 But he, though grief had long slain fears,
 Shouted midst clash of wind and sea,
 Unheard shrieks, unseen misery
 Of the black night:
                     "All come to nought!
 Yestreen I deemed that rest was brought
 Anigh me, and I thought I knew
 That toward my Love at last I drew.
 The loveless rest comes, all deceit
 Death treads to nothing with his feet!
 O idle Maker of the world,
 Art thou content to see me hurled
 To nought, from longing and from tears,
 When thou through all these weary years
 With love my helpless soul hast bound,
 And fed me in that narrow round
 With no delight thy fair world knows?
 Come close, my love, come close, come close,
 Why wilt thou let me die alone?"
   Howso he deemed his days were done,
 Yet there still clung he desperately,
 Mid wash of the in-rushing sea,
 Mid the storm's night, for no least whit p. 134
 Might he see through the rage of it,
 Nor know which unseen hill of wave
 The rash frail wooden toy would stave,
 Or if another man did cling
 Unto the hopeless shivering thing;
 Yea, or if day had dawned, and light
 High up serene now mocked the night
 Of waves and winds. How long he drave
 From windless trough to wind-sheared wave,
 No whit he knew, although it seemed
 So long, that all before was dreamed,
 That there was neither heaven nor earth
 Before that turmoil had its birth.
   And yet at last, as on and on
 He swept, and still death was not won;
 A pleasure in his heart gan rise;
 Love blossomed fresh mid fantasies,
 Mid dreams born of the overthrow
 Of sense and sight; he did not know
 If yet he lived, yet wrong and pain
 Were words, that hindered not the gain,
 Of sweet peace, whatso wild unrest
 Were round about; and all the best
 Seemed won, nor was one day of bliss
 Forgotten; all was once more his,
 That while agone he deemed so lost.
 How long in sooth the ship was tost
 From hill to hill of unseen sea p. 135
 The tale tells not; but suddenly,
 Amid the sweetest dream of all,
 A long way down John seemed to fall,
 Losing all sense of sight and sound;
 Then brake a sudden light around,
 Wherethrough he none the less saw nought,
 And as it waned, waned sense and thought,
 The peace of dull unconsciousness
 His wild torn heart at last did bless.
   He woke again upon the sand
 Of a wide bay's curved shell-strewn strand,
 And long belike had he lain there;
 For morn it was, and fresh and fair,
 And no least sign was on the sea
 Of storm or wrack, but peacefully
 On the low strand its last wave broke.
   Scarce might John dream when thus he woke
 Of what had happed or where he was;
 Soft thoughts of bygone days did pass
 Across his mind at first, and when
 His later memory came again,
 It was but with great toil that he
 Could think about his misery
 And all his latter wretched years;
 And if the thought to unused tears
 Did move him now, yet none the less
 A strange content and happiness
 Wrapped him around. p. 136
                        So to his feet
 He rose now, and most fresh and sweet
 The air was round him, and the sun
 As of the time when morn begun
 In early summer of the north,
 Maketh the world seem wondrous worth,
 And death and pain awhile doth hide.
 He gazed across the ocean wide
 With puzzled look; then up and down
 Sought curiously the sea-sand brown
 And at the last gan marvel how
 No sign the smooth sea-strand might show
 Of his lost ship and company;
 Then closer to that summer sea
 He went, and surely now it seemed
 That he of India had but dreamed,
 Because the sand beneath his feet
 Washed smooth and flat by the sea's beat,
 Or wrinkled by the ripple low,
 Such shells and creeping things did show
 As in the northland well he knew,
 And round about oerhead there flew
 Such sea-fowl as in days of old;
 Their unknown tales unto him told.
 He gave a deep sigh, yet his heart
 From that new bliss would nowise part,
 Or battle with its strange content;
 And no more midst his wonderment,
 Rather for more of pain, he yearned, p. 137
 Than any rest save one: he turned
 From the green sea his dreamy eyes,
 And saw soft slopes and lowly, rise
 Green and unburnt from the smooth strand,
 And further in, the rising land,
 Besprent with trees of no such clime
 As he had known for weary time;
 From slope and thicket then there grew
 High grassy, treeless hillsides, blue
 With the light haze of that fair tide.
   A little while did he abide
 Gazing upon that pleasant place,
 Then oer his shoulder turned his face
 Seaward, yet once more gan to go
 Unto the hills, and felt as though
 He bade unto the weltering flood
 A last farewell; and sweet and good
 His life seemed grown, een when he said,
 "It may be that my love is dead;
 Or living, still more like that I
 Shall see her not before I die;
 Fool am I then to feel my feet
 Drawn on some happiness to meet!"
   So went his words, but een as erst
 When most he felt forlorn and cursed,
 The words of hope seemed words and air,
 So now seemed all his words of care p. 138
 Empty of meaning. Forth he went
 Light-hearted, till his firm feet bent
 The daisies of the flowery grass,
 And swiftly onward did he pass
 From slope to slope: the land was fair,
 Yet saw he no house anywhere,
 No hedge or garden-close or corn;
 Nor heard he halloo there or horn,
 To make the dappled deer afraid,
 That here and there about him strayed
 Scarce heeding him: no arms he bare,
 His raiment that had once been fair,
 Was sorely stained, and worn, and rent,
 And thirst and hunger as he went
 Pressed on him; till he came at last
 To where a spreading fruit-tree cast
 Its shadows round deliciously;
 John stayed there, for that friendly tree
 Had load of apples; so he ate
 And found them sweet and delicate,
 As ever monk in garden grew,
 Though little care belike they knew.
 But now, when he had had his fill
 Thereof, there marvelling stood he still,
 Because to one bough blossoms clung
 As it were May, but ripe fruit hung
 Upon the other: then he smiled,
 As one by a strange dream beguiled,
 Then slowly on the grass sank down, p. 139
 For sorely sweet had longing grown
 With gathering languor of the day.
 But looking round, as there he lay,
 Upon the flowers besprent about,
 Still more was love confused with doubt
 If still he lived:
                    "Red roses fair
 To wreathe my love that wanders here,
 Gold-hearted lilies for her hand!
 And yet withal that she may stand
 On something other folk think sweet,
 March violets for her rosy feet;
 The black-heart amorous poppy, fain
 Death from her passing knee to gain,
 Bows to the gilliflower there:
 The fiery tulip stands to stare
 Upon her perfect loveliness,
 That gainst the corn-cockle will press
 Its fainting leaves: further afield
 The untended vine black fruit doth yield,
 That bore long torment of the heat,
 At last in bliss her lips to meet;
 The wind-flowers wotting of the thing
 Must gather round there in the Spring,
 And live and die and live again,
 That they might feel the joyous pain
 At last, of lying crushed and rent
 Beneath her feet, while well content
 Above their soft leaves she doth sing. p. 140
 What marvel, love, that everything
 That far apart the troubled year,
 Midst toil and doubt, gives otherwhere,
 Must gather in this land round thee,
 Living and dying, still to see
 A wonder God shall not make twice.
 Come swiftly, love, because mine eyes
 Grow dim with love; a little while
 Shall hope my fainting heart beguile
 To think me strong; yet well I know
 That nought of strength is in me now,
 Save wasting fire of love alone
 Come to me then, ere all is gone!
 And let it not be all for nought
 That ever one heart have I sought
 Of all the world, and cast aside
 All thought that any bliss might hide
 In aught save in thy love; thy love
 That even yet perchance might move
 The Great God not all utterly
 To slay me, casting my soul by
 As void henceforth for evermore,
 What love soever once it bore,
 That nothing mortal satisfied!"
   He sprang up, oer the countryside
 He gazed long, and down ran the tears,
 At thought of all the pain of years,
 When he beheld its emptiness; p. 141
 Yet presently on did he press,
 With longing grown not all a pain.
   The higher slopes now did he gain,
 Through flowers and blooming trees, until
 He gan to breast a steeper hill,
 And coming out of a close wood,
 High up above the lowlands stood,
 And far away beheld the sea
 Guarding the sweet land patiently,
 Then turning, clomb on, till the sun
 Sank low adown and day was done,
 Before the hill's top he might gain;
 Then een his restlessness was fain
 There to abide the next day's light.
 So down he lay, aid the short night
 Went by in dreams of that past day
 When in the hawthorn-brake he lay;
 How many lifetimes now agone
 That day seemed, when once more alone
 In the dawn's shiver he awoke!
 Nathless with sturdy heart he broke
 Through the morn's hopelessness, and still
 Pressed up the last steep of the hill,
 Until together with the sun
 Its grey and rugged brow he won.
   Then down into the vale he gazed,
 And held his breath, as if amazed p. 142
 By all its wondrous loveliness;
 For as the sun its depths did bless,
 It lighted up from side to side,
 A close-shut valley, nothing wide,
 But ever full of all things fair.
 A little way the hill was bare,
 Then clung to it a deep green wood
 That guarded many a fertile rood
 Of terraced vine and slopes of wheat;
 A white way wound about its feet,
 Beset with heavy-fruited trees
 And cleaving orchards through; midst these,
 Each hemmed round with its flowery close,
 The cottages and homesteads rose;
 But the hill-side sprang suddenly
 From level meadows that did lie
 On either side a noble stream,
 Oer which the morning haze did steam,
 Made golden now; then rose again
 The further hill-sides, bright with grain,
 And fair with orchard and close wood,
 From whence at last the scarped cliffs stood,
 And clear now, golden in the morn,
 Against the western sky upborne,
 Seemed like a guarded wall, lest care
 Or unrest yet should creep in there.
   At John's back now bright the sun shone
 Once more, once more with all light gone, p. 143
 Above the further hills hung high,
 The pale thin moon was in the sky;
 Then he cried out:
                      "Ah, end the strife
 Twin lights of God; give death or life!
 Surely shall I be lying soon
 East of the Sun, West of the Moon;
 What matter if alive or dead,
 If so once more our lips are wed!"
   And now he gan to look around,
 To see how he the lower ground
 Might gain, for there the hill had end
 In shear rocks, so he needs must wend
 Along its rugged brow; at last,
 When he a little way had passed,
 The hill's crest lowered, and gan draw
 Back from the vale, and then he saw
 How it grew wide, and neath his eyes
 The river wound now circle-wise,
 And at the furthest curve thereof
 There lay, half hid by close and grove,
 A marvellous house, that jewel-like
 Gleamed, where the sun its roofs did strike,
 Or strange-wrought walls; down-gazing now
 With fluttering heart, he wondered how
 Its white walls, and its roofs that burned,
 Should seem een like a dream returned
 From the forgotten land; then down p. 144
 The hill-side, soft and easy grown,
 He slipped, and when he reached the way
 Folk stirred about the morn of day
 In field and house: fair folk were all
 He saw, and yet a chill did fall
 Upon him when he noted them;
 White linen, well-embroidered hem,
 Round clean-made limbs he saw, above
 Were faces sweet, well wrought for love;
 Yet man and maid, young folk and old,
 With sad eyes, lonely, strange, and cold,
 Still seemed to go upon their ways.
 Moreover, none on him did gaze;
 And if their eyes met his, as though
 They saw him not, past did they go;
 Nor heard he any spoken word
 Amongst them, nor saw any stirred
 To laugh or smile by anything.
 But fearful, yet his hope did cling
 Unto his heart, nay more, he thought
 Once more that surely not for nought
 Among such marvels he was come.
   So forth he passed by house and home
 Een like a ghost; the open door
 Of one fair house he stood before,
 Where folk got ready for their meal,
 With little sign of woe or weal;
 And as he stood before their eyes, p. 145
 They looked his way with no surprise,
 Nor seemed to see him: nought they spake,
 Neither durst he the silence break,
 But went his ways.
                     A tall man stood
 By the wayside a-hewing wood,
 And close by was a fair-haired child,
 Who watched him, but spake not nor smiled,
 Nor looked up at the wayfarer;
 John strove to make this goodman hear,
 Crying out to him cheerily
 What land of all lands this might be;
 But nowise did he turn him round,
 Nor did the youngling heed the sound.
 Next, as he turned therefrom, there came
 Along the road an ancient dame,
 High-perched upon a mule, a lad
 Of fifteen springs his left hand had
 Upon the bell-hung bridle-rein
 And still with these were all words vain.
 So on he went, and no more speech
 Had heart to try till he did reach
 The delicate house; and in the square
 Before it was a conduit fair,
 Where to and fro the girls did pass,
 Bearing their jars of earth or brass;
 Shrill sounded there the grey doves wings,
 The steep roof knew their murmurings,
 The sparrows chirped, the brass did clash, p. 146
 The water on the stones did plash,
 The damsels wind-blown raiment fair
 And tinkling gold toys sounded there,
 But not their voices: unto one
 Who stood and watched the water run
 Over her jar's lip pensively
 John turned, for kind she seemed to be:
 But when with soft beseeching eyes
 He spake, still in no other wise
 She dealt with him than had the rest;
 So when with growing fear oppressed
 He spake more earnestly, and she
 Still answered nought, then timidly
 Upon her hand his hand he laid;
 Warm was it, but no heed she paid
 Unto the touch, and he fell back,
 Wondering what thing those folk did lack
 That yet they died not: but still burned
 Hope amid great fear, and he turned
 Unto the palace door, wherethrough
 Passed fair-clad people to and fro.
   When he essayed to enter in
 None stayed or heeded; he did win
 Into a fair porch, set around
 With images of maidens crowned
 And kings all-armed; through this he gained
 A pillared court, where waxed and waned
 A babbling fountain, maidens fair p. 147
 And slim youths saw he loitering there
 As lovers loiter; but their eyes,
 Listless and sad, changed in nowise
 As past he brushed with hurrying feet
 And glittering eyes: then did he meet
 The all-armed clashing guard, and then
 The long line of the serving-men
 Bearing up victuals to the hall,
 And, without bell or trumpet-call,
 Thither folk streamed. He went with them,
 And many a wrought cloak and rich hem
 Brushed past him, many a jewelled sword
 Clinked at the side of knight or lord,
 And no word spoken yetat last
 Into the mighty hall he passed,
 And thought no greatest king on earth,
 Een were it he of Micklegarth,
 Or the great lord of Babylon,
 So fair a place as that had won.
   Now there he stood, till every place
 Was filled, save midmost of the dais
 The high-seat lacked a man; so then
 He laughed loud mid those silent men,
 Grown reckless in that kingdom cold,
 And clad in rags mid silk and gold,
 Barefooted in that dainty hall,
 He strode up to the ivory stall,
 And sat him down, and laughed once more p. 148
 Unheeded, while the servers bore
 Unto the guests rich meats and drink;
 Nor from the victuals did he shrink,
 But well his hunger satisfied
 Though not long there might he abide,
 For still his lovesome restlessness
 Midst all upon his heart did press.
   So rising ere the feast was done,
 He paced the echoing hall alone,
 And passed the door, and wandered now,
 Unchecked by any, high and low,
 And saw strange things and fair; at last
 A silent maid his side brushed past,
 And to a carven door did wend,
 At a long cloister's nether end,
 Passed in and shut it to again.
 Then John stood still and strove in vain,
 With a new hope and gathering fear,
 And weakly drew the door anear,
 And laid his hand upon the latch,
 And with a sob his breath must catch
 Because of thronging memories.
 He opened the door now, with eyes
 Cast down for fear, and therewith heard,
 As heretofore, no spoken word;
 But rustling as of women's gear
 And gentle breathing did he hear
 And the dull noise upon the ground p. 149
 Of restless spindles; all around
 Floated a delicate sweet scent,
 As though the wind oer blossoms went.
   His breath came fast, his fevered blood
 Tingled and changed, as there he stood,
 And each gainst each now smote his knees;
 Een as a world of images
 The past was grown to him; he knew
 What in those days he used to do,
 But knew not what it meant; and yet
 Would she the past days quite forget,
 And was she like these dead-alive?
   None came, sore trembling did he strive
 To search the strange place through, but still
 His hope, fear-tangled, and the ill
 That might be, bound his eyes full fast
 A long whilecrying out at last
 Een ere his eyes had left the ground,
 As one who some lost thing has found,
 He stepped forth, and with all surprise
 Made nought by love, his mortal eyes,
 His weary eyes, beheld indeed,
 His heart's desire, his life, his need,
 Still on the earth, still there for him;
 And as he gazed, most weak and dim,
 Seemed all the visions wherewith he
 Was wont to feed his misery, p. 150
 To dull the pain unsatisfied,
 That still for death or presence cried.
   Round the World's Love, the glorious one,
 My tale says, many maidens spun,
 Howso John's eyes beheld them not,
 And she upon her knees had got
 Some broidery fair, and whiles her hand
 Moved by her half-dead will's command
 Would raise it up, and whiles again,
 As too much all in all grew pain,
 Would let it fall adown: her face
 Was altered nothing from the grace
 That he remembered, save that erst
 A sad smile even at the worst
 Would gleam across her pity, but now
 Betwixt her round chin and smooth brow
 Lay bound the sorrow of the years,
 Too sharp for smiles, too hard for tears:
 Sometimes as some sweet memory
 Pierced the dull present, wearily
 She writhed her neck, and raised her head;
 Sometimes her hands, as feebly led
 By ghosts of her old longings, moved
 As though toward some one long time loved,
 And long time lost; then from her seat
 Whiles she half rose as if to meet
 Loved footfalls half-remembered; then
 The dull pain swallowed all again, p. 151
 Its child, dull patience, death-in-life,
 Choked down the rising rest of strife.
   Scarcely his feet might bear him oer
 The smoothness of the marble floor
 Unto her feet; scarce might he raise
 His wild eyes to her weary face,
 Scarcely his hand had strength to touch
 The open hand he loved so much;
 And yet his thirsting lips love drew
 Unto dear eyes that nothing knew
 What closed their lids, to lips still warm,
 But all forgetful of the harm
 Their fruitful sweetness erst had wrought,
 To feet desired, that erewhile brought
 Love's grief on the sad moaning man,
 Who fawned on them with lips grown wan,
 And cheeks grown thin for lack of love.
   How might he tell if aught could move
 Her grief-chilled heart; yet love slew fear,
 Lulled speech to sleepsweet to be near;
 Yea, even if all were changed, if all
 Into this dumb, strange life must fall,
 And all the longing and the pain
 For signs of love were spent in vain;
 If, in strange wise together brought,
 They were apart still, and still nought
 Might tell of better hope! O sweet p. 152
 Beyond all words, there at her feet
 To lie and watch her! By what word
 Might his deep love be better heard
 Than by that silence.
                       Nought he said
 A long while, and her weary head
 Hung low, and still she saw him not.
 At last the heart in him waxed hot,
 And he cried out:
                      "Time long ago,
 How long, how long, I know not now,
 I sinned and lost thee: scarce a hope
 Was left with the dull years to cope;
 Yet this my hand now touches thee,
 My cheek is laid upon thy knee;
 I am thy love, beloved, come,
 I know not how, to thy new home!"
   She moved not, but a rush of tears
 Blinded his eyes, as all the years
 With all their pain rose up to him;
 Her head moved then, through foot and limb
 A tremor ran, as the tears fell.
 Upon her hands:
                  "O Love, scarce well,"
 He sobbed, "that we should be apart,
 My sorrow laid upon thy heart,
 And my heart worn with thine, my love
 No word twixt lips and lips, to move p. 153
 The double burdenfound at last,
 What chain is it that binds thee fast?
 Was my great grief so hard to bear
 That thou art grown cold? Sweet and dear
 I bore thy grief yet love and live!"
   He trembled, for she seemed to strive
 To grasp strange thoughts that flitted round,
 She clenched her delicate hands, and frowned,
 And her feet moved uncertainly,
 The while the maidens sitting by
 Spun and spun on, nor changed at all.
   Then a strange thought on him did fall,
 To choke his tears back and tell oer
 The story of his longing sore,
 Een from that well-remembered day
 When in the hawthorn-brake he lay.
 God wot, if his hand trembled oft
 As he recalled words sweet and soft,
 And tender touches, all the bliss
 Of clinging hand and lingering kiss!
 God wot if he stayed tremblingly
 As from her breast brake forth a sigh
 And she fell trembling! And at last,
 Amid his tale of how she passed
 Away from him, and left him bare
 In the rough world of hate and care,
 Her fingers tightened round his own, p. 154
 And a sound like a tender moan
 Parted her lips; he stayed awhile,
 And on his face a quivering smile
 Masked the unshed tears, as he told
 How in that morning drear and cold
 He found her gone: and therewith she
 Raised up her head, and eagerly
 Gazed round, and yet looked not on him:
   "No hope," he said, "however dim,
 At first, sweet love, abode with me;
 I know not how I lived; the sea,
 The earth, and sky, that day had grown
 A heavy burden all mine own;
 As if mine hand all things had wrought
 To find their strength come all to nought,
 Their beauty perished, all made vain,
 Unnoticed parts of the huge pain
 That filled the world and crushed my heart.
 Then first, the heavy veil to part,
 Came memory of thy mouth divine,
 Some image of a word of thine
 Is it not so that thou saidst this,
 That morn that parted me and bliss,
 'Ah, couldst thou know, I go too soon
 East of the Sun, West of the Moon?'"
   With a great sigh, as one who throws
 A burden off, that sweet arose, p. 155
 And stood before him, trembling sore
 With love and joy; ah, me! once more
 Fulfilled of love their kind eyes met,
 Although apart they stood as yet,
 Helpless with pain of ecstasy;
 Till from her lips a joyful cry,
 Ringing and sweet, burst forth, and he,
 Strong no more with love's misery,
 Faint, changed with this new joyful love,
 His wandering hands toward her did move
 Een but a little way. But round
 His fluttering heart her arms she wound,
 And kissed his pale cheeks red again,
 And hung above his lovesome pain,
 Desiring him as the spring yearns
 For the young summer sun, that burns
 His soft heart into fruitful death.
 His parched mouth felt her odorous breath,
 His weary burning head did rest
 Upon the heaven of her sweet breast,
 His mazed ears heard her tender speech;
 His eyes, his silence did beseech
 For more and more and more of love.
   How this their joy fulfilled might move
 The world around I know not well;
 But yet this idle dream doth tell
 That no more silent was the place,
 That new joy lit up every face, p. 156
 That joyous lovers kissed and clung,
 Een as these twain, that songs were sung
 From mouth to mouth in rose-bowers,
 Where, hand in hand and crowned with flowers,
 Folk praised the Lover and Beloved
 That such long years, such pain had proved.
 But soft, they say, their joyance was
 When midst them soon the twain did pass,
 Hand locked in hand, heart kissing heart,
 No more this side of death to part
 No more, no moreFull soft I say
 Their greetings were that happy day,
 As though in pensive semblance clad;
 For fear their faces over-glad
 This certain thing should seem to hide,
 That love can neer be satisfied.
OER Gregory's eyes the pain of morn
 Flashed suddenly, and all forlorn
 Of late-gained clean forgot delight,
 He sat up, scowling on the bright
 Broad day that lit the hurrying crowd
 Of white-head waves, while shrill and loud
 About him cried the gulls; but he
 Lay still with eyes turned toward the sea,
 And yet beholding nought at all, p. 157
 Till into ill thoughts did he fall,
 Of what a rude and friendless place
 The world was, through what empty days
 Men were pushed slowly down to death.
    Then oer the fresh morn's breezy breath
 Was borne his fellows cheery cry;
 He rose up, sighing heavily,
 And turned round to the steep grey bent,
 Whereunder had been pitched their tent
 Upon the odorous thymy grass.
 And down the slope he saw them pass,
 And heard their voices blithe enough:
 But loathsome unto him, and rough
 Must all men seem urn that morn,
 Their speech a hard thing to be borne.
   He stood by as they launched the boat,
 And little did their labour note.
 And set no hand thereto at all;
 Until an awe on these did fall;
 They muttered, "Ah, the Stargazer
 Beholdeth strange things drawing near!"
    So somewhat silently they sailed
 In up the firth, till the wind failed,
 Betwixt the high cliffs, and with oars
 They swept midmost the rocky shores
 And spake few words.
                         But smoother now
 Was grown the worn Stargazer's brow, p. 158
 And his thin lips were less close-set,
 For well-nigh now did he forget
 Fellows and boat and land and sea,
 And, waking, seemed no less to be
 East of the Sun, West of the Moon,
 And when they landed at high-noon,
 From all men would he go apart
 In woods and meads, and deal by art
 With his returning memory;
 And, some things gained, and some slipped by,
 His weary heart a while to soothe,
 He wove all into verses smooth,
 As tells the tale: that wotteth not
 Hoer much within it it hath got
 That his hand writ: for soothly he
 Was deemed a craftsmaster to be
 In those most noble days of old,
 Whose words were een as kingly gold
 To our thin brass, or drossy lead:
 Well, een so all the tale is said
 How twain grew one and came to bliss
 Woe's me an idle dream it is! 
THE autumn day, the strange and dreamy tale
 Were soft as far-off bells adown a vale,
 Borne to the hill-top on the fitful wind;
 And like their music past, they left behind
 Sad thoughts of old desires unsatisfied,
 And pain and joy that long ago had died,
 Yea, long been buried neath the strife of days,
 Too hard and hapless any woe to raise
 And crown it with the flowery, fleeting crown
 Of that strange rest, whose seed is all unknown,
 That withereth while reproachfully we say;
 "Why growst thou unsought neath my hand to-day,
 Whose longed-for scent through many an ill day sought,
 Swift healing to my sickening soul had brought
 And kept me young. Fair rest, what dost thou here?"
   The wind dealt with the autumn haze, and clear
 The afternoon was, though the great clouds drew
 In piled-up hills across the faint-streaked blue,
 And gainst them showed the wind-hover's dark spot,
 Nor yet midst trembling peace was change forgot.
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