The tempting of misery forceth him, the dread
Child of fore-scheming Woe!
And help is vain; the fell desire within
Is veiled not, but shineth bright like Sin:
And as false gold will show
Black where the touchstone trieth, so doth fade
His honour in God’s ordeal. Like a child,
Forgetting all, he hath chased his winged
bird,
And planted amid his people
a sharp thorn.
And no God hears his prayer, or, have
they heard,
The man so base-beguiled
They cast to scorn.
Paris to Argos
came;
Love
of a woman led him;
So God’s
altar he brought to shame,
Robbing
the hand that fed him.
(Helen’s flight; the visions seen by the King’s seers; the phantom of Helen and the King’s grief.)
She hath left among her people a noise of shield and
sword,
A tramp of men armed where the long ships are moored;
She hath ta’en in her goings Desolation as a
dower;
She hath stept, stept quickly, through the great gated
Tower,
And the thing that could not
be, it hath been!
And the Seers they saw visions, and they spoke of
strange ill:
“A Palace, a Palace; and a great
King thereof:
A bed, a bed empty, that was once pressed
in love:
And thou, thou, what art thou? Let us be, thou
so still,
Beyond wrath, beyond beseeching, to the
lips reft of thee!”
For she whom he desireth is beyond the
deep sea,
And a ghost in his castle
shall be queen.
Images in sweet guise
Carven shall move him never,
Where is Love amid empty eyes?
Gone, gone for ever!
(His dreams and his suffering; but the War that he made caused greater and wider suffering.)
But a shape that is a dream, ’mid the phantoms
of the night,
Cometh near, full of tears, bringing vain vain delight:
For in vain when, desiring, he can feel the joy’s
breath
—Nevermore! Nevermore!—from
his arms it vanisheth,
On wings down the pathways
of sleep.
In the mid castle hall, on the hearthstone of the
Kings,
These griefs there be, and griefs passing these,
But in each man’s dwelling of the host that
sailed the seas,
A sad woman waits; she has thoughts of many things,
And patience in her heart
lieth deep.
Knoweth she them she sent,
Knoweth she? Lo, returning,
Comes in stead of the man that went
Armour and dust of burning.
(The return of the funeral urns; the murmurs of the People.)
And the gold-changer, Ares, who changeth quick for
dead,
Who poiseth his scale in the striving of the spears,
Back from Troy sendeth dust, heavy dust, wet with
tears,
Sendeth ashes with men’s names in his urns neatly
spread.
And they weep over the men, and they praise them one
by one,
How this was a wise fighter, and this nobly-slain—
“Fighting to win back
another’s wife!”
Till a murmur is begun,
And there steals an angry pain
Against Kings too forward
in the strife.


