Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Tristram of Lyonesse - II - The Queen’s Pleasance by Algernon Charles Swinburne
Public domain poetry and public domain stories from the literary greats of yesteryear.
Custom Search
Main Menu

Home

Latest Poetry

Latest Authors

Authors Surname

Authors First Name

Poetry Title

Poetry First Lines

Latest Stories

Stories Title

Top Authors

Top Poetry


Top Stories Etc.

Search

Contact Us

Useless Information!!

Store



Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry

Tristram of Lyonesse - II - The Queen’s Pleasance

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    Out of the night arose the second day,
    And saw the ship’s bows break the shoreward spray.
    As the sun’s boat of gold and fire began
    To sail the sea of heaven unsailed of man,
    And the soft waves of sacred air to break
    Round the prow launched into the morning’s lake,
    They saw the sign of their sea-travel done.
    Ah, was not something seen of yester-sun,
    When the sweet light that lightened all the skies
    Saw nothing fairer than one maiden’s eyes,
    That whatsoever in all time’s years may be
    To-day’s sun nor to-morrow’s sun shall see?
    Not while she lives, not when she comes to die,
    Shall she look sunward with that sinless eye.
    Yet fairer now than song may show them stand
    Tristram and Iseult, hand in amorous hand,
    Soul-satisfied, their eyes made great and bright
    With all the love of all the livelong night;
    With all its hours yet singing in their ears
    No mortal music made of thoughts and tears,
    But such a song, past conscience of man’s thought,
    As hearing he grows god and knows it not.
    Nought else they saw nor heard but what the night
    Had left for seal upon their sense and sight,
    Sound of past pulses beating, fire of amorous light.
    Enough, and overmuch, and never yet
    Enough, though love still hungering feed and fret,
    To fill the cup of night which dawn must overset.
    For still their eyes were dimmer than with tears
    And dizzier from diviner sounds their ears
    Than though from choral thunders of the quiring spheres.
    They heard not how the landward waters rang,
    Nor saw where high into the morning sprang,
    Riven from the shore and bastioned with the sea,
    Toward summits where the north wind’s nest might be,
    A wave-walled palace with its eastern gate
    Full of the sunrise now and wide at wait,
    And on the mighty-moulded stairs that clomb
    Sheer from the fierce lip of the lapping foam
    The knights of Mark that stood before the wall.
    So with loud joy and storm of festival
    They brought the bride in up the towery way
    That rose against the rising front of day,
    Stair based on stair, between the rocks unhewn,
    To those strange halls wherethrough the tidal tune
    Rang loud or lower from soft or strengthening sea,
    Tower shouldering tower, to windward and to lee,
    With change of floors and stories, flight on flight,
    That clomb and curled up to the crowning height
    Whence men might see wide east and west in one
    And on one sea waned moon and mounting sun.
    And severed from the sea-rock’s base, where stand
    Some worn walls yet they saw the broken strand,
    The beachless cliff that in the sheer sea dips,
    The sleepless shore inexorable to ships,
    And the straight causeway’s bare gaunt spine between
    The sea-spanned walls and naked mainland’s green.
    On the mid stairs, between the light and dark,
    Before the main tower’s portal stood King Mark,
    Crowned: and his face was as the face of one
    Long time athirst and hungering for the sun
    In barren thrall of bitter bonds, who now
    Thinks here to feel its blessing on his brow.
    A swart lean man, but kinglike, still of guise,
    With black streaked beard and cold unquiet eyes,
    Close-mouthed, gaunt-cheeked, wan as a morning moon,
    Though hardly time on his worn hair had strewn
    The thin first ashes from a sparing hand:
    Yet little fire there burnt upon the brand,
    And way-worn seemed he with life’s wayfaring.
    So between shade and sunlight stood the king,
    And his face changed nor yearned not toward his bride;
    But fixed between mild hope and patient pride
    Abode what gift of rare or lesser worth
    This day might bring to all his days on earth.
    But at the glory of her when she came
    His heart endured not: very fear and shame
    Smote him, to take her by the hand and kiss,
    Till both were molten in the burning bliss,
    And with a thin flame flushing his cold face
    He led her silent to the bridal place.
    There were they wed and hallowed of the priest;
    And all the loud time of the marriage feast
    One thought within three hearts was as a fire,
    Where craft and faith took counsel with desire.
    For when the feast had made a glorious end
    They gave the new queen for her maids to tend
    At dawn of bride-night, and thereafter bring
    With marriage music to the bridegroom king.
    Then by device of craft between them laid
    To him went Brangwain delicately, and prayed
    That this thing even for love’s sake might not be,
    But without sound or light or eye to see
    She might come in to bride-bed: and he laughed,
    As one that wist not well of wise love’s craft,
    And bade all bridal things be as she would.
    Yet of his gentleness he gat not good;
    For clothed and covered with the nuptial dark
    Soft like a bride came Brangwain to King Mark,
    And to the queen came Tristram; and the night
    Fled, and ere danger of detective light
    From the king sleeping Brangwain slid away,
    And where had lain her handmaid Iseult lay.
    And the king waking saw beside his head
    That face yet passion-coloured, amorous red
    From lips not his, and all that strange hair shed
    Across the tissued pillows, fold on fold,
    Innumerable, incomparable, all gold,
    To fire men’s eyes with wonder, and with love
    Men’s hearts; so shone its flowering crown above
    The brows enwound with that imperial wreath,
    And framed with fragrant radiance round the face beneath.
    And the king marvelled, seeing with sudden start
    Her very glory, and said out of his heart;
    “What have I done of good for God to bless
    That all this he should give me, tress on tress,
    All this great wealth and wondrous? Was it this
    That in mine arms I had all night to kiss,
    And mix with me this beauty? this that seems
    More fair than heaven doth in some tired saint’s dreams,
    Being part of that same heaven? yea, more, for he,
    Though loved of God so, yet but seems to see,
    But to me sinful such great grace is given
    That in mine hands I hold this part of heaven,
    Not to mine eyes lent merely. Doth God make
    Such things so godlike for man’s mortal sake?
    Have I not sinned, that in this fleshly life
    Have made of her a mere man’s very wife?”
    So the king mused and murmured; and she heard
    The faint sound trembling of each breathless word,
    And laughed into the covering of her hair.
    And many a day for many a month as fair
    Slid over them like music; and as bright
    Burned with love’s offerings many a secret night.
    And many a dawn to many a fiery noon
    Blew prelude, when the horn’s heart-kindling tune
    Lit the live woods with sovereign sound of mirth
    Before the mightiest huntsman hailed on earth
    Lord of its lordliest pleasure, where he rode
    Hard by her rein whose peerless presence glowed
    Not as that white queen’s of the virgin hunt
    Once, whose crown-crescent braves the night-wind’s brunt,
    But with the sun for frontlet of a queenlier front.
    For where the flashing of her face was turned
    As lightning was the fiery light that burned
    From eyes and brows enkindled more with speed
    And rapture of the rushing of her steed
    Than once with only beauty; and her mouth
    Was as a rose athirst that pants for drouth
    Even while it laughs for pleasure of desire,
    And all her heart was as a leaping fire.
    Yet once more joy they took of woodland ways
    Than came of all those flushed and fiery days
    When the loud air was mad with life and sound,
    Through many a dense green mile, of horn and hound
    Before the king’s hunt going along the wind,
    And ere the timely leaves were changed or thinned,
    Even in mid maze of summer. For the knight
    Forth was once ridden toward some frontier fight
    Against the lewd folk of the Christless lands
    That warred with wild and intermittent hands
    Against the king’s north border; and there came
    A knight unchristened yet of unknown name,
    Swart Palamede, upon a secret quest,
    To high Tintagel, and abode as guest
    In likeness of a minstrel with the king.
    Nor was there man could sound so sweet a string,
    Save Tristram only, of all held best on earth.
    And one loud eve, being full of wine and mirth,
    Ere sunset left the walls and waters dark,
    To that strange minstrel strongly swore King Mark,
    By all that makes a knight’s faith firm and strong,
    That he for guerdon of his harp and song
    Might crave and have his liking. Straight there came
    Up the swart cheek a flash of swarthier flame,
    And the deep eyes fulfilled of glittering night
    Laughed out in lightnings of triumphant light
    As the grim harper spake: “O king, I crave
    No gift of man that king may give to slave,
    But this thy crowned queen only, this thy wife,
    Whom yet unseen I loved, and set my life
    On this poor chance to compass, even as here,
    Being fairer famed than all save Guenevere.”
    Then as the noise of seaward storm that mocks
    With roaring laughter from reverberate rocks
    The cry from ships near shipwreck, harsh and high
    Rose all the wrath and wonder in one cry
    Through all the long roof’s hollow depth and length
    That hearts of strong men kindled in their strength
    May speak in laughter lion-like, and cease,
    Being wearied: only two men held their peace
    And each glared hard on other: but King Mark
    Spake first of these: “Man, though thy craft be dark
    And thy mind evil that begat this thing,
    Yet stands the word once plighted of a king
    Fast: and albeit less evil it were for me
    To give my life up than my wife, or be
    A landless man crowned only with a curse,
    Yet this in God’s and all men’s sight were worse,
    To live soul-shamed, a man of broken troth,
    Abhorred of men as I abhor mine oath
    Which yet I may forswear not.” And he bowed
    His head, and wept: and all men wept aloud,
    Save one, that heard him weeping: but the queen
    Wept not: and statelier yet than eyes had seen
    That ever looked upon her queenly state
    She rose, and in her eyes her heart was great
    And full of wrath seen manifest and scorn
    More strong than anguish to go thence forlorn
    Of all men’s comfort and her natural right.
    And they went forth into the dawn of night.
    Long by wild ways and clouded light they rode,
    Silent; and fear less keen at heart abode
    With Iseult than with Palamede: for awe
    Constrained him, and the might of love’s high law,
    That can make lewd men loyal; and his heart
    Yearned on her, if perchance with amorous art
    And soothfast skill of very love he might
    For courtesy find favour in her sight
    And comfort of her mercies: for he wist
    More grace might come of that sweet mouth unkissed
    Than joy for violence done it, that should make
    His name abhorred for shame’s disloyal sake.
    And in the stormy starlight clouds were thinned
    And thickened by short gusts of changing wind
    That panted like a sick man’s fitful breath:
    And like a moan of lions hurt to death
    Came the sea’s hollow noise along the night.
    But ere its gloom from aught but foam had light
    They halted, being aweary: and the knight
    As reverently forbore her where she lay
    As one that watched his sister’s sleep till day.
    Nor durst he kiss or touch her hand or hair
    For love and shamefast pity, seeing how fair
    She slept, and fenceless from the fitful air.
    And shame at heart stung nigh to death desire,
    But grief at heart burned in him like a fire
    For hers and his own sorrowing sake, that had
    Such grace for guerdon as makes glad men sad,
    To have their will and want it. And the day
    Sprang: and afar along the wild waste way
    They heard the pulse and press of hurrying horse-hoofs play:
    And like the rushing of a ravenous flame
    Whose wings make tempest of the darkness, came
    Upon them headlong as in thunder borne
    Forth of the darkness of the labouring morn
    Tristram: and up forthright upon his steed
    Leapt, as one blithe of battle, Palamede,
    And mightily with shock of horse and man
    They lashed together: and fair that fight began
    As fair came up that sunrise: to and fro,
    With knees nigh staggered and stout heads bent low
    From each quick shock of spears on either side,
    Reeled the strong steeds heavily, haggard-eyed
    And heartened high with passion of their pride
    As sheer the stout spears shocked again, and flew
    Sharp-splintering: then, his sword as each knight drew,
    They flashed and foined full royally, so long
    That but to see so fair a strife and strong
    A man might well have given out of his life
    One year’s void space forlorn of love or strife.
    As when a bright north-easter, great of heart,
    Scattering the strengths of squadrons, hurls apart
    Ship from ship labouring violently, in such toil
    As earns but ruin—with even so strong recoil
    Back were the steeds hurled from the spear-shock, fain
    And foiled of triumph: then with tightened rein
    And stroke of spur, inveterate, either knight
    Bore in again upon his foe with might,
    Heart-hungry for the hot-mouthed feast of fight
    And all athirst of mastery: but full soon
    The jarring notes of that tempestuous tune
    Fell, and its mighty music made of hands
    Contending, clamorous through the loud waste lands,
    Broke at once off; and shattered from his steed
    Fell, as a mainmast ruining, Palamede,
    Stunned: and those lovers left him where he lay,
    And lightly through green lawns they rode away.
    There was a bower beyond man’s eye more fair
    Than ever summer dews and sunniest air
    Fed full with rest and radiance till the boughs
    Had wrought a roof as for a holier house
    Than aught save love might breathe in; fairer far
    Than keeps the sweet light back of moon and star
    From high kings’ chambers: there might love and sleep
    Divide for joy the darkling hours, and keep
    With amorous alternation of sweet strife
    The soft and secret ways of death and life
    Made smooth for pleasure’s feet to rest and run
    Even from the moondawn to the kindling sun,
    Made bright for passion’s feet to run and rest
    Between the midnight’s and the morning’s breast,
    Where hardly though her happy head lie down
    It may forget the hour that wove its crown;
    Where hardly though her joyous limbs be laid
    They may forget the mirth that midnight made.
    And thither, ere sweet night had slain sweet day,
    Iseult and Tristram took their wandering way,
    And rested, and refreshed their hearts with cheer
    In hunters’ fashion of the woods; and here
    More sweet it seemed, while this might be, to dwell
    And take of all world’s weariness farewell
    Than reign of all world’s lordship queen and king.
    Nor here would time for three moons’ changes bring
    Sorrow nor thought of sorrow; but sweet earth
    Fostered them like her babes of eldest birth,
    Reared warm in pathless woods and cherished well.
    And the sun sprang above the sea and fell,
    And the stars rose and sank upon the sea;
    And outlaw-like, in forest wise and free,
    The rising and the setting of their lights
    Found those twain dwelling all those days and nights.
    And under change of sun and star and moon
    Flourished and fell the chaplets woven of June,
    And fair through fervours of the deepening sky
    Panted and passed the hours that lit July,
    And each day blessed them out of heaven above,
    And each night crowned them with the crown of love.
    Nor till the might of August overhead
    Weighed on the world was yet one roseleaf shed
    Of all their joy’s warm coronal, nor aught
    Touched them in passing ever with a thought
    That ever this might end on any day
    Or any night not love them where they lay;
    But like a babbling tale of barren breath
    Seemed all report and rumour held of death,
    And a false bruit the legend tear-impearled
    That such a thing as change was in the world.
    And each bright song upon his lips that came,
    Mocking the powers of change and death by name,
    Blasphemed their bitter godhead, and defied
    Time, though clothed round with ruin as kings with pride,
    To blot the glad life out of love: and she
    Drank lightly deep of his philosophy
    In that warm wine of amorous words which is
    Sweet with all truths of all philosophies.
    For well he wist all subtle ways of song,
    And in his soul the secret eye was strong
    That burns in meditation, till bright words
    Break flamelike forth as notes from fledgeling birds
    That feel the soul speak through them of the spring.
    So fared they night and day as queen and king
    Crowned of a kingdom wide as day and night.
    Nor ever cloudlet swept or swam in sight
    Across the darkling depths of their delight
    Whose stars no skill might number, nor man’s art
    Sound the deep stories of its heavenly heart.
    Till, even for wonder that such life should live,
    Desires and dreams of what death’s self might give
    Would touch with tears and laughter and wild speech
    The lips and eyes of passion, fain to reach,
    Beyond all bourne of time or trembling sense,
    The verge of love’s last possible eminence.
    Out of the heaven that storm nor shadow mars,
    Deep from the starry depth beyond the stars,
    A yearning ardour without scope or name
    Fell on them, and the bright night’s breath of flame
    Shot fire into their kisses; and like fire
    The lit dews lightened on the leaves, as higher
    Night’s heart beat on toward midnight. Far and fain
    Somewhiles the soft rush of rejoicing rain
    Solaced the darkness, and from steep to steep
    Of heaven they saw the sweet sheet lightning leap
    And laugh its heart out in a thousand smiles,
    When the clear sea for miles on glimmering miles
    Burned as though dawn were strewn abroad astray,
    Or, showering out of heaven, all heaven’s array
    Had paven instead the waters: fain and far
    Somewhiles the burning love of star for star
    Spake words that love might wellnigh seem to hear
    In such deep hours as turn delight to fear
    Sweet as delight’s self ever. So they lay
    Tranced once, nor watched along the fiery bay
    The shine of summer darkness palpitate and play.
    She had nor sight nor voice; her swooning eyes
    Knew not if night or light were in the skies;
    Across her beauty sheer the moondawn shed
    Its light as on a thing as white and dead;
    Only with stress of soft fierce hands she prest
    Between the throbbing blossoms of her breast
    His ardent face, and through his hair her breath
    Went quivering as when life is hard on death;
    And with strong trembling fingers she strained fast
    His head into her bosom; till at last,
    Satiate with sweetness of that burning bed,
    His eyes afire with tears, he raised his head
    And laughed into her lips; and all his heart
    Filled hers; then face from face fell, and apart
    Each hung on each with panting lips, and felt
    Sense into sense and spirit in spirit melt.
    “Hast thou no sword? I would not live till day;
    O love, this night and we must pass away,
    It must die soon, and let not us die late.”
    “Take then my sword and slay me; nay, but wait
    Till day be risen; what, wouldst thou think to die
    Before the light take hold upon the sky?”
    “Yea, love; for how shall we have twice, being twain,
    This very night of love’s most rapturous reign?
    Live thou and have thy day, and year by year
    Be great, but what shall I be? Slay me here;
    Let me die not when love lies dead, but now
    Strike through my heart: nay, sweet, what heart hast thou?
    Is it so much I ask thee, and spend my breath
    In asking? nay, thou knowest it is but death.
    Hadst thou true heart to love me, thou wouldst give
    This: but for hate’s sake thou wilt let me live.”
    Here he caught up her lips with his, and made
    The wild prayer silent in her heart that prayed,
    And strained her to him till all her faint breath sank
    And her bright light limbs palpitated and shrank
    And rose and fluctuated as flowers in rain
    That bends them and they tremble and rise again
    And heave and straighten and quiver all through with bliss
    And turn afresh their mouths up for a kiss,
    Amorous, athirst of that sweet influent love;
    So, hungering towards his hovering lips above,
    Her red-rose mouth yearned silent, and her eyes
    Closed, and flashed after, as through June’s darkest skies
    The divine heartbeats of the deep live light
    Make open and shut the gates of the outer night.
    Long lay they still, subdued with love, nor knew
    If cloud or light changed colour as it grew,
    If star or moon beheld them; if above
    The heaven of night waxed fiery with their love,
    Or earth beneath were moved at heart and root
    To burn as they, to burn and bring forth fruit
    Unseasonable for love’s sake; if tall trees
    Bowed, and close flowers yearned open, and the breeze
    Failed and fell silent as a flame that fails:
    And all that hour unheard the nightingales
    Clamoured, and all the woodland soul was stirred,
    And depth and height were one great song unheard,
    As though the world caught music and took fire
    From the instant heart alone of their desire.
    So sped their night of nights between them: so,
    For all fears past and shadows, shine and snow,
    That one pure hour all-golden where they lay
    Made their life perfect and their darkness day.
    And warmer waved its harvest yet to reap,
    Till in the lovely fight of love and sleep
    At length had sleep the mastery; and the dark
    Was lit with soft live gleams they might not mark,
    Fleet butterflies, each like a dead flower’s ghost,
    White, blue, and sere leaf-coloured; but the most
    White as the sparkle of snow-flowers in the sun
    Ere with his breath they lie at noon undone
    Whose kiss devours their tender beauty, and leaves
    But raindrops on the grass and sere thin leaves
    That were engraven with traceries of the snow
    Flowerwise ere any flower of earth’s would blow;
    So swift they sprang and sank, so sweet and light
    They swam the deep dim breathless air of night.
    Now on her rose-white amorous breast half bare,
    Now on her slumberous love-dishevelled hair,
    The white wings lit and vanished, and afresh
    Lit soft as snow lights on her snow-soft flesh,
    On hand or throat or shoulder; and she stirred
    Sleeping, and spake some tremulous bright word,
    And laughed upon some dream too sweet for truth,
    Yet not so sweet as very love and youth
    That there had charmed her eyes to sleep at last.
    Nor woke they till the perfect night was past,
    And the soft sea thrilled with blind hope of light.
    But ere the dusk had well the sun in sight
    He turned and kissed her eyes awake and said,
    Seeing earth and water neither quick nor dead
    And twilight hungering toward the day to be,
    “As the dawn loves the sunlight I love thee.”
    And even as rays with cloudlets in the skies
    Confused in brief love’s bright contentious wise,
    Sleep strove with sense rekindling in her eyes;
    And as the flush of birth scarce overcame
    The pale pure pearl of unborn light with flame
    Soft as may touch the rose’s heart with shame
    To break not all reluctant out of bud,
    Stole up her sleeping cheek her waking blood;
    And with the lovely laugh of love that takes
    The whole soul prisoner ere the whole sense wakes,
    Her lips for love’s sake bade love’s will be done.
    And all the sea lay subject to the sun.



Extra Info:
From "Tristram of Lyonesse and Other Poems" - 1882


Printable Page

Add Your Thoughts on this poem.



This page viewed 751 times.
Sponsored Links


Your Shops - Affordable Ecommerce stores and cheaper goods for customers - No listing fees!



Our Sites