| The Collected Works of William Morris With Introductions by his Daughter May Morris | 
|  | I. | 
|  | II. | 
|  | III, IV, V, VI. | 
|  | VII. | 
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|  | 
|  | 
|  | 
|  | 
|  | 
|  | VIII. | 
|  | XIV. | 
|  | XVII. | 
|  | XIX. | 
|  | XX. | 
|  | XXVII. | 
|  | XXVIII. | 
|  | XXIX. | 
|  | XXX. | 
|  | XXXI. | 
|  | XXXIII. | 
|  | XLIII. | 
|  | 
|  | IX. | 
|  | X. | 
|  | XII. | 
|  | XIV. | 
|  | XV. | 
|  | XVI. | 
|  | XVII. | 
|  | XXI. | 
|  | XXIV. | 
|  | The Collected Works of William Morris |  | 
Through what wild lands he wandered wide,
Amongst what folk he did abide
Thereafter, nought my story saith.
Suffice it, that no outbraved death
Might end him; no chain of delay
His feet from his wild wanderings stay;
That every help he strove to gain
From wise or fools was still but vain;
Until, my story saith, at last
The second time in ship he passed
The wild waves of the Indian Sea,
And with a chaffering company
Long time abode, and ever heard
And saw great marvels, but no word,
No sight of what alone might give
A heart unto the dead-alive.
Amongst what folk he did abide
Thereafter, nought my story saith.
Suffice it, that no outbraved death
Might end him; no chain of delay
His feet from his wild wanderings stay;
That every help he strove to gain
98
Until, my story saith, at last
The second time in ship he passed
The wild waves of the Indian Sea,
And with a chaffering company
Long time abode, and ever heard
And saw great marvels, but no word,
No sight of what alone might give
A heart unto the dead-alive.
|  | The Collected Works of William Morris |  |