| The Collected Works of William Morris With Introductions by his Daughter May Morris | 
|  | I. | 
|  | II. | 
|  | III, IV, V, VI. | 
|  | VII. | 
|  | IX. | 
|  | X. | 
|  | XII. | 
|  | XIV. | 
|  | XV. | 
|  | 
|  | III. | 
|  | VI. | 
|  | IX. | 
|  | XV. | 
|  | XX. | 
|  | XXIX. | 
|  | XXXIV. | 
|  | XXXVII. | 
|  | XXXIX. | 
|  | XLI. | 
|  | XLIV. | 
|  | XLV. | 
|  | XLVIII. | 
|  | LI. | 
|  | LV. | 
|  | LVIII. | 
|  | XVI. | 
|  | XVII. | 
|  | XXI. | 
|  | XXIV. | 
|  | The Collected Works of William Morris |  | 
74
And the quelling a bale and a sorrow that the world hath endured o'erlong,
And the winning a treasure untold, that shall make thee more than the kings;
Thereof is the Helm of Aweing, the wonder of earthly things,
And thereof is its very fellow, the War-coat all of gold,
That has not its like in the heavens, nor has earth of its fellow told.”
|  | The Collected Works of William Morris |  |