BRONTË POEMS

Lines Composed in Wood on a Windy Day

My soul is awakened, my spirit is soaring

And carried aloft on the wings of the breeze;
For above and around me the wild wind is roaring,
Arousing to rapture the earth and the seas.

The long withered grass in the sunshine is glancing,

The bare trees are tossing their branches on high;
The dead leaves beneath them are merrily dancing,

The white clouds are scudding across the blue sky. 

I wish I could see how the ocean is lashing

The foam of its billows to whirlwinds of spray;

I wish I could see how its proud waves are dashing,

And hear the wild roar of their thunder to-day!

Anne Brontë 


The night is darkening round me

The night is darkening round me, 
The wild winds coldly blow; 
But a tyrant spell has bound me, 
And I cannot, cannot go. 

The giant trees are bending 
Their bare boughs weighed with snow; 
The storm is fast descending, 
And yet I cannot go. 

Clouds beyond clouds above me, 
Wastes beyond wastes below; 
But nothing drear can move me; 
I will not, cannot go. 

Emily Brontë 

Speak of the North! 
Speak of the North! A lonely moor
Silent and dark and tractless swells,
The waves of some wild streamlet pour
Hurriedly through its ferny dells.
 
Profoundly still the twilight air,
Lifeless the landscape; so we deem
Till like a phantom gliding near
A stag bends down to drink the stream.
 
And far away a mountain zone,
A cold, white waste of snow—drifts lies,
And one star, large and soft and lone,
Silently lights the unclouded skies.

Charlotte Brontë 

© Copyright 2025  All Rights Reserved

DIRK HAGNER • INKSWINE PRESS/INTERROBANG BOOKS

Created with Mobirise bootstrap web themes