Page:The complete poems of Emily Bronte.djvu/178

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POEMS OF EMILY BRONTË

XXIII

'Twas one of those dark, cloudy days
That sometimes come in summer blaze,
When heaven drops not, when earth is still,
And deeper green is on the hill.

—————

Lonely at her window sitting
While the evening steals away,
Fitful winds foreboding, flitting
Through a sky of cloudy grey.

—————

There are two trees in a lonely field,
They breathe a spell to me;
A dreary thought their dark boughs yield,
All waving solemnly.

What is that smoke that ever still
Comes rolling down the dark brown hill?

—————

Still as she spoke the ebon clouds
Would part and sunlight shone between,
But dreary, strange, and pale and cold.

Away, away, resign thee now
To scenes of gloom and thoughts of fear;
I trace the figure on thy brow,
Welcome at last, though once so drear.