| SO Lancelot, with a worlds weight upon him, | 2365 |
| Went heavily to that heaviest of all toil, | |
| Which of itself tells hard in the beginning | |
| Of what the end shall be. He found an army | |
| That would have razed all Britain, and found kings | |
| For generals; and they all went to Dover, | 2370 |
| Where the white cliffs were ghostlike in the dawn, | |
| And after dawn were deathlike. For the word | |
| Of the dead Kings last battle chilled the sea | |
| Before a sail was down; and all who came | |
| With Lancelot heard soon from little men, | 2375 |
| Who clambered overside with larger news, | |
| How ill had fared the great. Arthur was dead, | |
| And Modred with him, each by the other slain; | |
| And there was no knight left of all who fought | |
| On Salisbury field save one, Sir Bedivere, | 2380 |
| Of whom the tale was told that he had gone | |
| Darkly away to some far hermitage, | |
| To think and die. There were tales told of a ship. | |
| |
| Anon, by further sounding of more men, | |
| Each with a more delirious involution | 2385 |
| Than his before him, he believed at last | |
| The Queen was yet aliveif it were life | |
| To draw now the Queens breath, or to see Britain | |
| With the Queens eyesand that she fared somewhere | |
| To westward out of London, where the Tower | 2390 |
| Had held her, as once Joyous Gard had held her, | |
| For dolorous weeks and months a prisoner there, | |
| With Modred not far off, his eyes afire | |
| For her and for the Kings avenging throne, | |
| That neither King nor son should see again. | 2395 |
| The world had paid enough for Camelot, | |
| Gawaine said; and the Queen had paid enough, | |
| God knows, said Lancelot. He saw Bors again | |
| And found him angryangry with his tears, | |
| And with his fate that was a reason for them: | 2400 |
| Could I have died with Modred on my soul, | |
| And had the King lived on, then had I lived | |
| On with him; and this played-out world of ours | |
| Might not be for the dead. | |
| |
| A played-out world, | 2405 |
| Although that world be ours, had best be dead, | |
| Said Lancelot: There are worlds enough to follow. | |
| Another Camelot and another King, | |
| Bedivere said. And where is Bedivere now? | |
| And Camelot? | 2410 |
| |
| There is no Camelot, | |
| Bors answered. Are we going back to France, | |
| Or are we to tent here and feed our souls | |
| On memories and on ruins till even our souls | |
| Are dead? Or are we to set free for sport | 2415 |
| An idle army for what comes of it? | |
| |
| Be idle till you hear from me again, | |
| Or for a fortnight. Then, if you have no word, | |
| Go back; and I may follow you alone, | |
| In my own time, in my own way. | 2420 |
| |
| Your way | |
| Of late, I fear, has been too much your own; | |
| But what has been, has been, and I say nothing. | |
| For there is more than men at work in this; | |
| And I have not your eyes to find the Light, | 2425 |
| Here in the darkthough some day I may see it. | |
| |
| We shall all see it, Bors, Lancelot said, | |
| With his eyes on the earth. He said no more. | |
| Then with a sad farewell, he rode away, | |
| Somewhere into the west. He knew not where. | 2430 |
| |
| We shall all see it, Bors, he said again. | |
| Over and over he said it, still as he rode, | |
| And rode, away to the west, he knew not where, | |
| Until at last he smiled unhappily | |
| At the vain sound of it. Once I had gone | 2435 |
| Where the Light guided me, but the Queen came, | |
| And then there was no Light. We shall all see | |
| He bit the words off short, snapping his teeth, | |
| And rode on with his memories before him, | |
| Before him and behind. They were a cloud | 2440 |
| For no Light now to pierce. They were a cloud | |
| Made out of what was gone; and what was gone | |
| Had now another lure than once it had, | |
| Before it went so far away from him | |
| To Camelot. And there was no Camelot now | 2445 |
| Now that no Queen was there, all white and gold, | |
| Under an oaktree with another sunlight | |
| Sifting itself in silence on her glory | |
| Through the dark leaves above her where she sat, | |
| Smiling at what she feared, and fearing least | 2450 |
| What most there was to fear. Ages ago | |
| That must have been; for a kings world had faded | |
| Since then, and a king with it. Ages ago, | |
| And yesterday, surely it must have been | |
| That he had held her moaning in the firelight | 2455 |
| And heard the roaring down of that long rain, | |
| As if to wash away the walls that held them | |
| Then for that hour together. Ages ago, | |
| And always, it had been that he had seen her, | |
| As now she was, floating along before him, | 2460 |
| Too far to touch and too fair not to follow, | |
| Even though to touch her were to die. He closed | |
| His eyes, only to see what he had seen | |
| When they were open; and he found it nearer, | |
| Seeing nothing now but the still white and gold | 2465 |
| In a wide field of sable, smiling at him, | |
| But with a smile not hers until today | |
| A smile to drive no votary from the world | |
| To find the Light. She is not what it is | |
| That I see now, he said: No woman alive | 2470 |
| And out of hell was ever like that to me. | |
| What have I done to her since I have lost her? | |
| What have I done to change her? No, it is I | |
| I who have changed. She is not one who changes. | |
| The Light came, and I did not follow it; | 2475 |
| Then she came, knowing not what thing she did, | |
| And she it was I followed. The gods play | |
| Like that, sometimes; and when the gods are playing, | |
| Great men are not so great as the great gods | |
| Had led them once to dream. I see her now | 2480 |
| Where now she is alone. We are all alone, | |
| We that are left; and if I look too long | |
| Into her eyes
I shall not look too long. | |
| Yet look I must. Into the west, they say, | |
| She went for refuge. I see nuns around her; | 2485 |
| But she, with so much history tenanting | |
| Her eyes, and all that gold over her eyes, | |
| Were not yet, I should augur, out of them. | |
| If I do ill to see her, then may God | |
| Forgive me one more trespass. I would leave | 2490 |
| The world and not the shadow of it behind me. | |
| |
| Time brought his weary search to a dusty end | |
| One afternoon in Almesbury, where he left, | |
| With a glad sigh, his horse in an innyard; | |
| And while he ate his food and drank his wine, | 2495 |
| Thrushes, indifferent in their loyalty | |
| To Arthur dead and to Pan never dead, | |
| Sang as if all were now as all had been. | |
| Lancelot heard them till his thoughts came back | |
| To freeze his heart again under the flood | 2500 |
| Of all his icy fears. What should he find? | |
| And what if he should not find anything? | |
| Words, after all, he said, are only words; | |
| And I have heard so many in these few days | |
| That half my wits are sick. | 2505 |
| |
| He found the queen, | |
| But she was not the Queen of white and gold | |
| That he had seen before him for so long. | |
| There was no gold; there was no gold anywhere. | |
| The black hood, and the white face under it, | 2510 |
| And the blue frightened eyes, were all he saw | |
| Until he saw more black, and then more white. | |
| Black was a foreign foe to Guinevere; | |
| And in the glimmering stillness where he found her | |
| Now, it was death; and she Alcestis-like, | 2515 |
| Had waited unaware for the one hand | |
| Availing, so he thought, that would have torn | |
| Off and away the last fell shred of doom | |
| That was destroying and dishonoring | |
| All the world held of beauty. His eyes burned | 2520 |
| With a sad anger as he gazed at hers | |
| That shone with a sad pity. No, she said; | |
| You have not come for this. We are done with this. | |
| For there are no queens here; there is a Mother. | |
| The Queen that was is only a child now, | 2525 |
| And you are strong. Remember you are strong, | |
| And that your fingers hurt when they forget | |
| How strong they are. | |
| |
| He let her go from him | |
| And while he gazed around him, he frowned hard | 2530 |
| And long at the cold walls: Is this the end | |
| Of Arthurs kingdom and of Camelot? | |
| She told him with a motion of her shoulders | |
| All that she knew of Camelot or of kingdoms; | |
| And then said: We are told of other States | 2535 |
| Where there are palaces, if we should need them, | |
| That are not made with hands. I thought you knew. | |
| |
| Dumb, like a man twice banished, Lancelot | |
| Stood gazing down upon the cold stone floor; | |
| And she, demurely, with a calm regard | 2540 |
| That he met once and parried, stood apart, | |
| Appraising him with eyes that were no longer | |
| Those he had seen when first they had seen his. | |
| They were kind eyes, but they were not the eyes | |
| Of his desire; and they were not the eyes | 2545 |
| That he had followed all the way from Dover. | |
| I feared the Light was leading you, she said, | |
| So far by now from any place like this | |
| That I should have your memory, but no more. | |
| Might not that way have been the wiser way? | 2550 |
| There is no Arthur now, no Modred now, | |
| No Guinevere. She paused, and her voice wandered | |
| Away from her own name: There is nothing now | |
| That I can see between you and the Light | |
| That I have dimmed so long. If you forgive me, | 2555 |
| And I believe you dothough I know all | |
| That I have cost, when I was worth so little | |
| There is no hazard that I see between you | |
| And all you sought so long, and would have found | |
| Had I not always hindered you. Forgive me | 2560 |
| I could not let you go. God pity men | |
| When women love too muchand women more. | |
| He scowled and with an iron shrug he said: | |
| Yes, there is that between me and the light. | |
| He glared at her black hood as if to seize it; | 2565 |
| Their eyes met, and she smiled: No, Lancelot; | |
| We are going by two roads to the same end; | |
| Or let us hope, at least, what knowledge hides, | |
| And so believe it. We are going somewhere. | |
| Why the new world is not for you and me, | 2570 |
| I cannot say; but only one was ours. | |
| I think we must have lived in our one world | |
| All that earth had for us. You are good to me, | |
| Coming to find me here for the last time; | |
| For I should have been lonely many a night, | 2575 |
| Not knowing if you cared. I do know now; | |
| And there is not much else for me to know | |
| That earth may tell me. I found in the Tower, | |
| With Modred watching me, that all you said | |
| That rainy night was true. There was time there | 2580 |
| To find out everything. There were long days, | |
| And there were nights that I should not have said | |
| God would have made a woman to endure. | |
| I wonder if a woman lives who knows | |
| All she may do. | 2585 |
| |
| I wonder if one woman | |
| Knows one thing she may do, Lancelot said, | |
| With a sad passion shining out of him | |
| While he gazed on her beauty, palled with black | |
| That hurt him like a sword. The full blue eyes | 2590 |
| And the white face were there, and the red lips | |
| Were there, but there was no gold anywhere. | |
| What have you done with your gold hair? he said; | |
| I saw it shining all the way from Dover, | |
| But here I do not see it. Shall I see it? | 2595 |
| Faintly again she smiled: Yes, you may see it | |
| All the way back to Dover; but not here. | |
| Theres not much of it here, and what there is | |
| Is not for you to see. | |
| |
| Well, if not here, | 2600 |
| He said at last, in a low voice that shook, | |
| Is there no other place left in the world? | |
| |
| There is not even the world left, Lancelot, | |
| For you and me. | |
| |
| There is France left, he said. | 2605 |
| His face flushed like a boys, but he stood firm | |
| As a peak in the sea and waited. | |
| |
| How many lives | |
| Must a man have in one to make him happy? | |
| She asked, with a wan smile of recollection | 2610 |
| That only made the black that was around | |
| Her calm face more funereal: Was it you, | |
| Or was it Gawaine who said once to me, | |
| We cannot make one world of two, nor may we | |
| Count one life more than one. Could we go back | 2615 |
| To the old garden
Was it you who said it, | |
| Or was it Bors? He was always saying something. | |
| It may have been Bors. She was not looking then | |
| At Lancelot; she was looking at her fingers | |
| In her old way, as to be sure again | 2620 |
| How many of them she had. | |
| |
| He looked at her, | |
| Without the power to smile, and for the time | |
| Forgot that he was Lancelot: Is it fair | |
| For you to drag that back, out of its grave, | 2625 |
| And hold it up like this for the small feast | |
| Of a small pride? | |
| |
| Yes, fair enough for a woman, | |
| Guinevere said, not seeing his eyes. How long | |
| Do you conceive the Queen of the Christian world | 2630 |
| Would hide herself in France
| |
| |
| Why do you pause? | |
| I said it; I remember when I said it; | |
| And it was not today. Why in the name | |
| Of grief should we hide anywhere? Bells and banners | 2635 |
| Are not for our occasion, but in France | |
| There may be sights and silences more fair | |
| Than pageants. There are seas of difference | |
| Between this land and France, albeit to cross them | |
| Were no immortal voyage, had you an eye | 2640 |
| For France that you had once. | |
| |
| I have no eye | |
| Today for France, I shall have none tomorrow; | |
| And you will have no eye for France tomorrow. | |
| Fatigue and loneliness, and your poor dream | 2645 |
| Of what I was, have led you to forget. | |
| When you have had your time to think and see | |
| A little more, then you will see as I do; | |
| And if you see France, I shall not be there, | |
| Save as a memory there. We are done, you and I, | 2650 |
| With what we were. Could we go back again, | |
| The fruit that we should findbut you know best | |
| What we should find. I am sorry for what I said; | |
| But a light word, though it cut one we love, | |
| May save ourselves the pain of a worse wound. | 2655 |
| We are all women. When you see one woman | |
| When you see mebefore you in your fancy, | |
| See me all white and gold, as I was once. | |
| I shall not harm you then; I shall not come | |
| Between you and the Gleam that you must follow, | 2660 |
| Whether you will or not. There is no place | |
| For me but where I am; there is no place | |
| For you save where it is that you are going. | |
| If I knew everything as I know that, | |
| I should know more than Merlin, who knew all, | 2665 |
| And long ago, that we are to know now. | |
| What more he knew he may not then have told | |
| The King, or anyone,maybe not even himself; | |
| Though Vivian may know something by this time | |
| That he has told her. Have you wished, I wonder, | 2670 |
| That I was more like Vivian, or Isolt? | |
| The dark ones are more devious and more famous, | |
| And men fall down more numerously before them | |
| Although I think more men get up again, | |
| And go away again, than away from us. | 2675 |
| If I were dark, I might say otherwise. | |
| Try to be glad, even if you are sorry, | |
| That I was not born dark; for I was not. | |
| For me there was no dark until it came | |
| When the King came, and with his heavy shadow | 2680 |
| Put out the sun that you made shine again | |
| Before I was to die. So I forgive | |
| The faggots; I can do no more than that | |
| For you, or God. She looked away from him | |
| And in the casement saw the sunshine dying: | 2685 |
| The time that we have left will soon be gone; | |
| When the bell rings, it rings for you to go, | |
| But not for me to go. It rings for me | |
| To stayand pray. I, who have not prayed much, | |
| May as well pray now. I have not what you have | 2690 |
| To make me see, though I shall have, sometime, | |
| A new light of my own. I saw in the Tower, | |
| When all was darkest and I may have dreamed, | |
| A light that gave to men the eyes of Time | |
| To read themselves in silence. Then it faded, | 2695 |
| And the men faded. I was there alone. | |
| I shall not have what you have, or much else | |
| In this place. I shall see in other places | |
| What is not here. I shall not be alone. | |
| And I shall tell myself that you are seeing | 2700 |
| All that I cannot see. For the time now, | |
| What most I see is that I had no choice, | |
| And that you came to me. How many years | |
| Of purgatory shall I pay God for saying | |
| This to you here? Her words came slowly out, | 2705 |
| And her mouth shook. | |
| |
| He took her two small hands | |
| That were so pale and empty, and so cold: | |
| Poor child, I said too much and heard too little | |
| Of what I said. But when I found you here, | 2710 |
| So different, so alone, I would have given | |
| My soul to be a chattel and a gage | |
| For dicing fiends to play for, could so doing | |
| Have brought one summer back. | |
| |
| When they are gone, | 2715 |
| She said, with grateful sadness in her eyes, | |
| We do not bring them back, or buy them back, | |
| Even with our souls. I see now it is best | |
| We do not buy them back, even with our souls. | |
| |
| A slow and hollow bell began to sound | 2720 |
| Somewhere above them, and the world became | |
| For Lancelot one wan faceGuineveres face. | |
| When the bell rings, it rings for you to go, | |
| She said; and you are going
I am not. | |
| Think of me always as I used to be, | 2725 |
| All white and goldfor that was what you called me. | |
| You may see gold again when you are gone; | |
| And I shall not be there.He drew her nearer | |
| To kiss the quivering lips that were before him | |
| For the last time. No, not again, she said; | 2730 |
| I might forget that I am not alone
| |
| I shall not see you in this world again, | |
| But I am not alone. No,
not alone. | |
| We have had all there was, and you were kind | |
| Even when you tried so hard once to be cruel. | 2735 |
| I knew it then
or now I do. Good-bye. | |
| He crushed her cold white hands and saw them falling | |
| Away from him like flowers into a grave. | |
| When she looked up to see him, he was gone; | |
| And that was all she saw till she awoke | 2740 |
| In her white cell, where the nuns carried her | |
| With many tears and many whisperings. | |
| She was the Queen, and he was Lancelot, | |
| One said. They were great lovers. It is not good | |
| To know too much of love. We who love God | 2745 |
| Alone are happiest. Is it not so, Mother? | |
| We who love God alone, my child, are safest, | |
| The Mother replied; and we are not all safe | |
| Until we are all dead. We watch, and pray. | |
| |
| Outside again, Lancelot heard the sound | 2750 |
| Of reapers he had seen. With lighter tread | |
| He walked away to them to see them nearer; | |
| He walked and heard again the sound of thrushes | |
| Far off. He saw below him, stilled with yellow, | |
| A world that was not Arthurs, and he saw | 2755 |
| The convent roof; and then he could see nothing | |
| But a wan face and two dim lonely hands | |
| That he had left behind. They were down there, | |
| Somewhere, her poor white face and hands, alone. | |
| No man was ever alone like that, he thought, | 2760 |
| Not knowing what last havoc pity and love | |
| Had still to wreak on wisdom. Gradually, | |
| In one long wave it whelmed him, and then broke | |
| Leaving him like a lone man on a reef, | |
| Staring for what had been with him, but now | 2765 |
| Was gone and was a white face under the sea, | |
| Alive there, and alonealways alone. | |
| He closed his eyes, and the white face was there, | |
| But not the gold. The gold would not come back. | |
| There were gold fields of corn that lay around him, | 2770 |
| But they were not the gold of Guinevere | |
| Though men had once, for sake of saying words, | |
| Prattled of corn about it. The still face | |
| Was there, and the blue eyes that looked at him | |
| Through all the stillness of all distances; | 2775 |
| And he could see her lips, trying to say | |
| Again, I am not alone. And that was all | |
| His life had said to him that he remembered | |
| While he sat there with his hands over his eyes, | |
| And his heart aching. When he rose again | 2780 |
| The reapers had gone home. Over the land | |
| Around him in the twilight there was rest. | |
| There was rest everywhere; and there was none | |
| That found his heart. Why should I look for peace | |
| When I have made the world a ruin of war? | 2785 |
| He muttered; and a Voice within him said: | |
| Where the Light falls, death falls; a world has died | |
| For you, that a world may live. There is no peace. | |
| Be glad no man or woman bears for ever | |
| The burden of first days. There is no peace. | 2790 |
| |
| A word stronger than his willed him away | |
| From Almesbury. All alone he rode that night, | |
| Under the stars, led by the living Voice | |
| That would not give him peace. Into the dark | |
| He rode, but not for Dover. Under the stars, | 2795 |
| Alone, all night he rode, out of a world | |
| That was not his, or the Kings; and in the night | |
| He felt a burden lifted as he rode, | |
| While he prayed he might bear it for the sake | |
| Of a still face before him that was fading, | 2800 |
| Away in a white loneliness. He made, | |
| Once, with groping hand as if to touch it, | |
| But a black branch of leaves was all he found. | |
| |
| Now the still face was dimmer than before, | |
| And it was not so near him. He gazed hard, | 2805 |
| But through his tears he could not see it now; | |
| And when the tears were gone he could see only | |
| That all he saw was fading, always fading; | |
| And she was there alone. She was the world | |
| That he was losing; and the world he sought | 2810 |
| Was all a tale for those who had been living, | |
| And had not lived. Once even he turned his horse, | |
| And would have brought his army back with him | |
| To make her free. They should be free together. | |
| But the Voice within him said: You are not free. | 2815 |
| You have come to the worlds end, and it is best | |
| You are not free. Where the Light falls, death falls; | |
| And in the darkness comes the Light. He turned | |
| Again; and he rode on, under the stars, | |
| Out of the world, into he knew not what, | 2820 |
| Until a vision chilled him and he saw, | |
| Now as in Camelot, long ago in the garden, | |
| The face of Galahad who had seen and died, | |
| And was alive, now in a mist of gold. | |
| He rode on into the dark, under the stars, | 2825 |
| And there were no more faces. There was nothing. | |
| But always in the darkness he rode on, | |
Alone; and in the darkness came the Light.
THE END | |