The Collected Works of William Morris With Introductions by his Daughter May Morris  | 
| I. | 
| II. | 
| III, IV, V, VI. | 
| VII. | 
| IX. | 
| X. | 
| I. | 
| VII. | 
| VIII. | 
| XI. | 
| XIII. | 
| XIV. | 
| XVI. | 
| XVII. | 
| XVIII. | 
| XII. | 
| XIV. | 
| XV. | 
| XVI. | 
| XVII. | 
| XXI. | 
| XXIV. | 
|  The Collected Works of William Morris | ||
He gazed about him timorously
While thus he spake, as though he thought
To see some sudden marvel wrought
In earth and heaven; some dreadful death,
Some sight, as when God threateneth
The world with speedy end; but still
Unchanged, o'er mead and wold and hill
Drave on the dull low twilight rack,
Till all light seemed the sky to lack,
And the snow-shrouded earth to gain
What it had lost.
While thus he spake, as though he thought
To see some sudden marvel wrought
In earth and heaven; some dreadful death,
Some sight, as when God threateneth
The world with speedy end; but still
Unchanged, o'er mead and wold and hill
Drave on the dull low twilight rack,
Till all light seemed the sky to lack,
And the snow-shrouded earth to gain
What it had lost.
“In vain, in vain!”
He cried, “and I was well bewrayed;
She wept o'er me when I was laid
Upon the grass beside her feet,
Because a pleasure somewhat sweet
She needs must lay aside, while I—
—What tears shall help my misery?”
He cried, “and I was well bewrayed;
She wept o'er me when I was laid
Upon the grass beside her feet,
Because a pleasure somewhat sweet
74
—What tears shall help my misery?”
|  The Collected Works of William Morris | ||