Who knows not the tragedy of Tristan and Isolt
The fair-haired Cornish harper
Whose hands held steel and string
And Ireland's greatest treasure
Borne like Helen cross the water
While the waves approaching
Bowed before her beauty
All who've heard the telling know
The blind and bitter fates
Placed the cup of love's sweet poison
To unconsenting lips
And as plank fell home to timber
And the king beheld his lady
Carols rang within the church and seagulls screamed
All the harpers laboured
On their agonies of passion
Unfulfilled and ever straining
Like lodestones to the north
But few will ever mention
How the cold breath of the Northlands
Let them lie at last as one without deceit
When Tristan could no longer bear
The shame of guilty conscience
He took ship to far Bretagne
Half-hearted and bereft
He cast aside his music
Cut the strings which brought him joy
And took solace in the fury of the field
Praise grew up around him like
The corn around a boulder
As the Cornishman did battle
With demons in and out
In singing sword and thunder
Tristan vainly sought distraction
Yet she whispered in the silence of the slain
In the way of warriors
Rewarding noble heroes
Fairest Blanchmaine of the Bretons
Was given for his wife
But Blanchmaine knew no pleasure
From her cold and grieving husband
For the marble face of memory was his bride
In that time the country was
Beset with Eden's serpents
And the basest of all creatures
Can bring the highest low
Two poisons coursed within him
And none could be his saviour
But the healing arts of Ireland and Isolt
Wings of hope departed
Struggling North against the tempest
With tender words entreating
For mercy and for grace
If his love no longer moved her
Hoist the black into the rigging
But if white brought them together
He would wait
Daylight creeping downward
Tristan's demons massed against him
And the words of his delusions
Brought hidden love to light
While the woman he had married
But to whom he'd given nothing
Sat her long and jealous vigil by his side
Morning framed the answer
Walking lightly o'er the water
Like Christ's own victory banner
It flew toward the shore
It was white as angels' raiments
But when feebly he begged her
Fairest Blanchemaine softly told him 'Tis of night
Who can say which venom
Took the soul from Tristan's body
And the bells began their tolling
As Isolt ran up the strand
The wind grew slow and silent
As she wept upon her lover
And in gentleness it took her grief away
Side by side they laid them
With the earth their separation
Even yet they were divided
By the morals of the world
But their spirits spiralled upwards
Ireland's briar and Cornwall's rose
And together at the last they lay entwined