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The San Grail

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An Arthurian Miscellany

Sir Lancelot rode between the trees,

The evening sun was red:

He thought upon Queen Guinevere

With hair outspread.

He thought upon the Holy Grail

That he had come to win,

And knew his love of Guinevere

Was deadly sin.

Then from his horse he lighted down

Beneath the treen

And prayed that God would sain his soul

Of Arthur's queen.

A sudden glory filled the wood,

And there his eyes

Beheld a wonder that had come

From Paradise.

He saw the Grail-Maid with the Grail

Between her hands,

The sight that is most beautiful

In the world's lands.

Full humbly Lancelot bowed himself

Shamed and afraid

But the Grail-Maiden said to him

"Be not dismayed."

"Look up," she said, "and see the Grail

If thine eyes endure

And if thy heart hath flame of love

Through Love made pure."

He lifted up his eyes if so

The San-Grail might be found:

The splendour smote him to the earth

Deep in a swound.

But through the swound Sir Lancelot knew

The Grail-Maid stood

Like a bright-coloured bird of Heaven

In a dark wood.

And he besought of Christ the Lord

To lend him grace,

Although he might not see the Grail,

To see her face.

"Look up," she said, "and see my face,

The grace is won:

Quenched in me now the moon-fire is

And the fire of the sun."

He looked upon the Grail-Maid's face

Enshadowed by her hair:

He knew her, wan, and white, and still,

Queen Guinevere!
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