| The Collected Works of William Morris With Introductions by his Daughter May Morris | 
|  | I. | 
|  | II. | 
|  | III, IV, V, VI. | 
|  | VII. | 
|  | IX. | 
|  | X. | 
|  | XII. | 
|  | XIV. | 
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|  | II. | 
|  | III. | 
|  | IV. | 
|  | V. | 
|  | VI. | 
|  | VIII. | 
|  | IX. | 
|  | XI. | 
|  | XIII. | 
|  | XV. | 
|  | XVI. | 
|  | XVII. | 
|  | XIX. | 
|  | XX. | 
|  | XXII. | 
|  | XXVI. | 
|  | XXVII. | 
|  | XXVIII. | 
|  | XXIX. | 
|  | XXX. | 
|  | XXXI. | 
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|  | XV. | 
|  | XVI. | 
|  | XVII. | 
|  | XXI. | 
|  | XXIV. | 
|  | The Collected Works of William Morris |  | 
“O Prince Bellerophon,” at last she said,
“I dreamed last night that I beheld thee dead;
I knew thee thus, for twice had I seen thee,
Unseen myself, in this festivity;
And since I know how loved a man thou art,
Here have I come, to bid thee to depart,
Since that thou mayst do yet.”
“I dreamed last night that I beheld thee dead;
I knew thee thus, for twice had I seen thee,
Unseen myself, in this festivity;
And since I know how loved a man thou art,
Here have I come, to bid thee to depart,
Since that thou mayst do yet.”
Nigher he came
And said: “O fair one, I am but a name
To thee, as men are to the Gods above;
And what thing, then, thy heart to this did move?”
And said: “O fair one, I am but a name
To thee, as men are to the Gods above;
And what thing, then, thy heart to this did move?”
|  | The Collected Works of William Morris |  |