Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Joyeuse Garde by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Joyeuse Garde

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    The sun was heavy; no more shade at all
    Than you might cover with a hollow cup
    There was in the south chamber; wall by wall,
    Slowly the hot noon filled the castle up.
    One hand among the rushes, one let play
    Where the loose gold began to swerve and droop
    From his fair mantle to the floor, she lay;
    Her face held up a little, for delight
    To feel his eyes upon it, one would say.
    Her grave shut lips were glad to be in sight
    Of Tristram's kisses; she had often turned
    Against her shifted pillows in the night
    To lessen the sore pain wherein they burned
    For want of Tristram; her great eyes had grown
    Less keen and sudden, and a hunger yearned
    Her sick face through, these wretched years agone.
    Her eyes said "Tristram" now, but her lips held
    The joy too close for any smile or moan
    To move them; she was patiently fulfilled
    With a slow pleasure that slid everwise
    Even into hands and feet, but could not build
    The house of its abiding in her eyes,
    Nor measure any music by her speech.
    Between the sunlight came a noise of flies
    To pain sleep from her, thick from peach to peach
    Upon the bare wall's hot red level, close
    Among the leaves too high for her to reach.
    So she drew in and set her feet, and rose
    Saying "Too late to sleep; I pray you speak
    To save me from the noises, lest I lose
    Some minute of this season; I am weak
    And cannot answer if you help me not,
    When the shame catches on my brow and cheek."
    For in the speaking all her face grew hot,
    And her mouth altered with some pain, I deem
    Because her word had stung like a bad thought
    That makes us recollect some bitter dream.
    She bowed to let him kiss her, and went on:
    "All things are changed so, will this day not seem
    Most sad and evil when I sit alone
    Outside your eyes? will it not vex my prayer
    To think of laughter that is twin to moan,
    And happy words that make not holier?
    Nathless I had good will to say one thing,
    Though it seems pleasant in the late warm air
    To ride alone and see the last of spring.
    I cannot lose you, Tristram; (a weak smile
    Moved her lips and went out) men say the king
    Hath set keen spies about for many a mile,
    Quick hands to get them gold, sharp eyes to see
    Where your way swerves across them. This long while
    Hath Mark grown older with his hate of me,
    And now his hand for lust to smite at us
    Plucks the white hairs inside his beard that he
    This year made thicker. Seeing this he does
    I pray you note that we may meet with him
    At riding through the branches growth, and then
    Our wine grow bitter at the golden rim
    And taste of blood and tears, not sweet to drink
    As this new honey wherein juices swim
    Of fair red vintage."

    Her voice done, I think
    He had no heart to answer; yet some time
    The noon outside them seem to throb and sink,
    Wrought in the quiet to a rounded rhyme.
    Then "certes," said he, "this were harm to both
    If spears grew thick between the beech and lime,
    Or amid reeds that let the river south,
    Yet so I think you might get help of me.
    Had I not heart to smile, when Iseult's mouth
    Kissed Palomydes under a thick tree?
    For I remember, as the wind sets low,
    How all that peril ended quietly
    In a green place where heavy sunflowers blow."



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