Works of Edwin Arlington Robinson

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by Edwin Arlington Robinson


  Too smooth now for a wizard or a sage,

  Lay written, for the King’s remembering eyes, 480

  A pathos of a lost authority

  Long faded, and unconscionably gone;

  And on the King’s heart lay a sudden cold:

  “I might as well have left him in his grave,

  As he would say it, saying what was true, — 485

  As death is true. This Merlin is not mine,

  But Vivian’s. My crown is less than hers,

  And I am less than woman to this man.”

  Then Merlin, as one reading Arthur’s words

  On viewless tablets in the air before him: 490

  “Now, Arthur, since you are a child of mine —

  A foster-child, and that’s a kind of child —

  Be not from hearsay or despair too eager

  To dash your meat with bitter seasoning,

  So none that are more famished than yourself 495

  Shall have what you refuse. For you are King,

  And if you starve yourself, you starve the state;

  And then by sundry looks and silences

  Of those you loved, and by the lax regard

  Of those you knew for fawning enemies, 500

  You may learn soon that you are King no more,

  But a slack, blasted, and sad-fronted man,

  Made sadder with a crown. No other friend

  Than I could say this to you, and say more;

  And if you bid me say no more, so be it.” 505

  The King, who sat with folded arms, now bowed

  His head and felt, unfought and all aflame

  Like immanent hell-fire, the wretchedness

  That only those who are to lead may feel —

  And only they when they are maimed and worn 510

  Too sore to covet without shuddering

  The fixed impending eminence where death

  Itself were victory, could they but lead

  Unbitten by the serpents they had fed.

  Turning, he spoke: “Merlin, you say the truth: 515

  There is no man who could say more to me

  Today, or say so much to me, and live.

  But you are Merlin still, or part of him;

  I did you wrong when I thought otherwise,

  And I am sorry now. Say what you will. 520

  We are alone, and I shall be alone

  As long as Time shall hide a reason here

  For me to stay in this infested world

  Where I have sinned and erred and heeded not

  Your counsel; and where you yourself — God save us! — 525

  Have gone down smiling to the smaller life

  That you and your incongruous laughter called

  Your living grave. God save us all, Merlin,

  When you, the seer, the founder, and the prophet,

  May throw the gold of your immortal treasure 530

  Back to the God that gave it, and then laugh

  Because a woman has you in her arms …

  Why do you sting me now with a small hive

  Of words that are all poison? I do not ask

  Much honey; but why poison me for nothing, 535

  And with a venom that I know already

  As I know crowns and wars? Why tell a king —

  A poor, foiled, flouted, miserable king —

  That if he lets rats eat his fingers off

  He’ll have no fingers to fight battles with? 540

  I know as much as that, for I am still

  A king — who thought himself a little less

  Than God; a king who built him palaces

  On sand and mud, and hears them crumbling now,

  And sees them tottering, as he knew they must. 545

  You are the man who made me to be King —

  Therefore, say anything.”

  Merlin, stricken deep

  With pity that was old, being born of old

  Foreshadowings, made answer to the King: 550

  “This coil of Lancelot and Guinevere

  Is not for any mortal to undo,

  Or to deny, or to make otherwise;

  But your most violent years are on their way

  To days, and to a sounding of loud hours 555

  That are to strike for war. Let not the time

  Between this hour and then be lost in fears,

  Or told in obscurations and vain faith

  In what has been your long security;

  For should your force be slower then than hate, 560

  And your regret be sharper than your sight,

  And your remorse fall heavier than your sword, —

  Then say farewell to Camelot, and the crown.

  But say not you have lost, or failed in aught

  Your golden horoscope of imperfection 565

  Has held in starry words that I have read.

  I see no farther now than I saw then,

  For no man shall be given of everything

  Together in one life; yet I may say

  The time is imminent when he shall come 570

  For whom I founded the Siege Perilous;

  And he shall be too much a living part

  Of what he brings, and what he burns away in,

  To be for long a vexed inhabitant

  Of this mad realm of stains and lower trials. 575

  And here the ways of God again are mixed:

  For this new knight who is to find the Grail

  For you, and for the least who pray for you

  In such lost coombs and hollows of the world

  As you have never entered, is to be 580

  The son of him you trusted — Lancelot,

  Of all who ever jeopardized a throne

  Sure the most evil-fated, saving one,

  Your son, begotten, though you knew not then

  Your leman was your sister, of Morgause; 585

  For it is Modred now, not Lancelot,

  Whose native hate plans your annihilation —

  Though he may smile till he be sick, and swear

  Allegiance to an unforgiven father

  Until at last he shake an empty tongue 590

  Talked out with too much lying — though his lies

  Will have a truth to steer them. Trust him not,

  For unto you the father, he the son

  Is like enough to be the last of terrors —

  If in a field of time that looms to you 595

  Far larger than it is you fail to plant

  And harvest the old seeds of what I say,

  And so be nourished and adept again

  For what may come to be. But Lancelot

  Will have you first; and you need starve no more 600

  For the Queen’s love, the love that never was.

  Your Queen is now your Kingdom, and hereafter

  Let no man take it from you, or you die.

  Let no man take it from you for a day;

  For days are long when we are far from what 605

  We love, and mischief’s other name is distance.

  Let hat be all, for I can say no more;

  Not even to Blaise the Hermit, were he living,

  Could I say more than I have given you now

  To hear; and he alone was my confessor.” 610

  The King arose and paced the floor again.

  “I get gray comfort of dark words,” he said;

  “But tell me not that you can say no more:

  You can, for I can hear you saying it.

  Yet I’ll not ask for more. I have enough — 615

  Until my new knight comes to prove and find

  The promise and the glory of the Grail,

  Though I shall see no Grail. For I have built

  On sand and mud, and I shall see no Grail.” —

  “Nor I,” said Merlin. “Once I dreamed of it, 620

  But I was buried. I shall see no Grail,

  Nor would I have it otherwise. I saw

  Too much, and that was
never good for man.

  The man who goes alone too far goes mad —

  In one way or another. God knew best, 625

  And he knows what is coming yet for me.

  I do not ask. Like you, I have enough.”

  That night King Arthur’s apprehension found

  In Merlin an obscure and restive guest,

  Whose only thought was on the hour of dawn, 630

  When he should see the last of Camelot

  And ride again for Brittany; and what words

  Were said before the King was left alone

  Were only darker for reiteration.

  They parted, all provision made secure 635

  For Merlin’s early convoy to the coast,

  And Arthur tramped the past. The loneliness

  Of kings, around him like the unseen dead,

  Lay everywhere; and he was loath to move,

  As if in fear to meet with his cold hand 640

  The touch of something colder. Then a whim,

  Begotten of intolerable doubt,

  Seized him and stung him until he was asking

  If any longer lived among his knights

  A man to trust as once he trusted all, 645

  And Lancelot more than all. “And it is he

  Who is to have me first,” so Merlin says, —

  “As if he had me not in hell already.

  Lancelot! Lancelot!” He cursed the tears

  That cooled his misery, and then he asked 650

  Himself again if he had one to trust

  Among his knights, till even Bedivere,

  Tor, Bors, and Percival, rough Lamorak,

  Griflet, and Gareth, and gay Gawaine, all

  Were dubious knaves, — or they were like to be, 655

  For cause to make them so; and he had made

  Himself to be the cause. “God set me right,

  Before this folly carry me on farther,”

  He murmured; and he smiled unhappily,

  Though fondly, as he thought: “Yes, there is one 660

  Whom I may trust with even my soul’s last shred;

  And Dagonet will sing for me tonight

  An old song, not too merry or too sad.”

  When Dagonet, having entered, stood before

  The King as one affrighted, the King smiled: 665

  “You think because I call for you so late

  That I am angry, Dagonet? Why so?

  Have you been saying what I say to you,

  And telling men that you brought Merlin here?

  No? So I fancied; and if you report 670

  No syllable of anything I speak,

  You will have no regrets, and I no anger.

  What word of Merlin was abroad today?”

  “Today have I heard no man save Gawaine,

  And to him I said only what all men 675

  Are saying to their neighbors. They believe

  That you have Merlin here, and that his coming

  Denotes no good. Gawaine was curious,

  But ever mindful of your majesty.

  He pressed me not, and we made light of it.” 680

  “Gawaine, I fear, makes light of everything,”

  The King said, looking down. “Sometimes I wish

  I had a full Round Table of Gawaines.

  But that’s a freak of midnight, — never mind it.

  Sing me a song — one of those endless things 685

  That Merlin liked of old, when men were younger

  And there were more stars twinkling in the sky.

  I see no stars that are alive tonight,

  And I am not the king of sleep. So then,

  Sing me an old song.” 690

  Dagonet’s quick eye

  Caught sorrow in the King’s; and he knew more,

  In a fool’s way, than even the King himself

  Of what was hovering over Camelot.

  “O King,” he said, “I cannot sing tonight. 695

  If you command me I shall try to sing,

  But I shall fail; for there are no songs now

  In my old throat, or even in these poor strings

  That I can hardly follow with my fingers.

  Forgive me — kill me — but I cannot sing.” 700

  Dagonet fell down then on both his knees

  And shook there while he clutched the King’s cold hand

  And wept for what he knew.

  “There, Dagonet;

  I shall not kill my knight, or make him sing. 705

  No more; get up, and get you off to bed.

  There’ll be another time for you to sing,

  So get you to your covers and sleep well.”

  Alone again, the King said, bitterly:

  “Yes, I have one friend left, and they who know 710

  As much of him as of themselves believe

  That he’s a fool. Poor Dagonet’s a fool.

  And if he be a fool, what else am I

  Than one fool more to make the world complete?

  ‘The love that never was!’ … Fool, fool, fool, fool!” 715

  The King was long awake. No covenant

  With peace was his tonight; and he knew sleep

  As he knew the cold eyes of Guinevere

  That yesterday had stabbed him, having first

  On Lancelot’s name struck fire, and left him then 720

  As now they left him — with a wounded heart,

  A wounded pride, and a sickening pang worse yet

  Of lost possession. He thought wearily

  Of watchers by the dead, late wayfarers,

  Rough-handed mariners on ships at sea, 725

  Lone-yawning sentries, wastrels, and all others

  Who might be saying somewhere to themselves,

  “The King is now asleep in Camelot;

  God save the King.”— “God save the King, indeed,

  If there be now a king to save,” he said. 730

  Then he saw giants rising in the dark,

  Born horribly of memories and new fears

  That in the gray-lit irony of dawn

  Were partly to fade out and be forgotten;

  And then there might be sleep, and for a time 735

  There might again be peace. His head was hot

  And throbbing; but the rest of him was cold,

  As he lay staring hard where nothing stood,

  And hearing what was not, even while he saw

  And heard, like dust and thunder far away, 740

  The coming confirmation of the words

  Of him who saw so much and feared so little

  Of all that was to be. No spoken doom

  That ever chilled the last night of a felon

  Prepared a dragging anguish more profound 745

  And absolute than Arthur, in these hours,

  Made out of darkness and of Merlin’s words;

  No tide that ever crashed on Lyonnesse

  Drove echoes inland that were lonelier

  For widowed ears among the fisher-folk, 750

  Than for the King were memories tonight

  Of old illusions that were dead for ever.

  Merlin IV

  THE TORTURED King — seeing Merlin wholly meshed

  In his defection, even to indifference,

  And all the while attended and exalted 755

  By some unfathomable obscurity

  Of divination, where the Grail, unseen,

  Broke yet the darkness where a king saw nothing —

  Feared now the lady Vivian more than Fate;

  For now he knew that Modred, Lancelot, 760

  The Queen, the King, the Kingdom, and the World,

  Were less to Merlin, who had made him King,

  Than one small woman in Broceliande.

  Whereas the lady Vivian, seeing Merlin

  Acclaimed and tempted and allured again 765

  To service in his old magnificence,

  Feared now King Arthur more than storms and robbers;

  For
Merlin, though he knew himself immune

  To no least whispered little wish of hers

  That might afflict his ear with ecstasy, 770

  Had yet sufficient of his old command

  Of all around him to invest an eye

  With quiet lightning, and a spoken word

  With easy thunder, so accomplishing

  A profit and a pastime for himself — 775

  And for the lady Vivian, when her guile

  Outlived at intervals her graciousness;

  And this equipment of uncertainty,

  Which now had gone away with him to Britain

  With Dagonet, so plagued her memory 780

  That soon a phantom brood of goblin doubts

  Inhabited his absence, which had else

  Been empty waiting and a few brave fears,

  And a few more, she knew, that were not brave,

  Or long to be disowned, or manageable. 785

  She thought of him as he had looked at her

  When first he had acquainted her alarm

  At sight of the King’s letter with its import;

  And she remembered now his very words:

  “The King believes today as in his boyhood 790

  That I am Fate,” he said; and when they parted

  She had not even asked him not to go;

  She might as well, she thought, have bid the wind

  Throw no more clouds across a lonely sky

  Between her and the moon, — so great he seemed 795

  In his oppressed solemnity, and she,

  In her excess of wrong imagining,

  So trivial in an hour, and, after all

  A creature of a smaller consequence

  Than kings to Merlin, who made kings and kingdoms 800

  And had them as a father; and so she feared

  King Arthur more than robbers while she waited

  For Merlin’s promise to fulfil itself,

  And for the rest that was to follow after:

  “He said he would come back, and so he will. 805

  He will because he must, and he is Merlin,

  The master of the world — or so he was;

  And he is coming back again to me

  Because he must and I am Vivian.

  It’s all as easy as two added numbers: 810

  Some day I’ll hear him ringing at the gate,

  As he rang on that morning in the spring,

  Ten years ago; and I shall have him then

  For ever. He shall never go away

  Though kings come walking on their hands and knees 815

  To take him on their backs.” When Merlin came,

  She told him that, and laughed; and he said strangely:

  “Be glad or sorry, but no kings are coming.

 

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