| Who knows not the tragedy of Tristan and Isolt?
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| The fair-haired Cornish harper whose hands held steel and string?
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| And Ireland’s greatest treasure, borne like Helen 'cross the water
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| While the waves approaching bowed before her beauty?
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| All who’ve heard the telling know the blind and bitter Fates
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| Placed the cup of love’s sweet poison to unconsenting lips
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| And as plank fell home to timber and the king beheld his lady
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| Carols rang within the church and seagulls screamed.
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| All the harpers laboured on their agonies of passion
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| Unfulfilled and ever straining like lodestones to the north.
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| But few will ever mention how the cold breath of the Northlands
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| Let them lie at last as one without deceit.
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| When Tristan could no longer bear the shame of guilty conscience,
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| He took ship to far Bretagne, half-hearted and bereft.
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| He cast aside his music, cut the strings which brought him joy,
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| And took solace in the fury of the field.
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| Praise grew up around him like the corn around a boulder
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| As the Cornishman did battle with demons in and out.
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| In singing sword and thunder, Tristan vainly sought distraction
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| Yet she whispered in the silence of the slain.
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| In the way of warriors rewarding noble heroes,
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| Fairest Blanchmaine of the Bretons was given for his wife.
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| But Blanchmaine knew no pleasure from her cold and grieving husband
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| For the marble face of memory was his bride.
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| In that time the country was beset with Eden’s serpents
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| And the basest of all creatures can bring the highest low.
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| Two poisons coursed within him, and none could be his saviour
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| But the healing arts of Ireland and Isolt.
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| Wings of hope departed, struggling North against the tempest
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| With tender words entreating for mercy and for grace.
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| If his love no longer moved her, hoist the black into the rigging
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| But if white brought them together, he would wait.
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| Daylight creeping downward, Tristan’s demons massed against him
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| And the words of his delusions brought hidden love to light,
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| While the woman he had married but to whom he’d given nothing
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| Sat her long and jealous vigil by his side.
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| Morning framed the answer walking lightly o’er the water.
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| Like Christ’s own victory banner, it flew toward the shore.
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| It was white as angels' raiments, but when feebly he begged her,
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| Fairest Blanchemaine softly told him, «'Tis of night.»
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| Who can say which venom took the soul from Tristan’s body,
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| And the bells began their tolling as Isolt ran up the strand.
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| The wind grew slow and silent as she wept upon her lover,
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| And in gentleness it took her grief away.
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| Side by side they laid them with the earth their separation.
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| Even yet, they were divided by the morals of the world.
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| But their spirits spiralled upwards, Ireland’s briar and Cornwall’s rose,
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| And together at the last, they lay entwined. |