The Night-Wind

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The Night-Wind
by Emily Brontë
From Selections from the literary remains of Emily and Anne Brontë (1850) and reprinted in The Complete Poems of Emily Brontë (1908).


Here again is the same mind in converse with a like abstraction. 'The Night-Wind,' breathing through an open window, has visited an ear which discerned language in its whispers.

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In summer's mellow midnight,
  A cloudless moon shone through
Our open parlour window,
  And rose-trees wet with dew.

I sat in silent musing;
  The soft wind waved my hair;
It told me heaven was glorious,
  And sleeping earth was fair.

I needed not its breathing
  To bring such thoughts to me;
But still it whispered lowly,
  How dark the woods will be!

'The thick leaves in my murmur
  Are rustling like a dream,
And all their myriad voices
  Instinct with spirit seem.'

I said, "Go, gentle singer,
  Thy wooing voice is kind:
But do not think its music
  Has power to reach my mind.

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'Play with the scented flower,
  The young tree's supple bough,
And leave my human feelings
  In their own course to flow.'

The wanderer would not heed me;
  Its kiss grew warmer still.
'O come!' it sighed so sweetly;
  'I'll win thee 'gainst thy will.

'Were we not friends from childhood?
  Have I not loved thee long?
As long as thou, the solemn night,
  Whose silence wakes my song.

'And when thy heart is resting
  Beneath the church-aisle stone,
I shall have time for mourning,
  And thou for being alone.'

PD-icon.svg This work published before January 1, 1923 is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.