Warning and Reply

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Warning and Reply
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).


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In the earth—the earth—thou shalt be laid,
  A grey stone standing over thee;
Black mould beneath thee spread,
  And black mould to cover thee.

'Well—there is rest there,
  So fast come thy prophecy;
The time when my sunny hair
  Shall with grass roots entwined be.'

But cold—cold is that resting-place,
  Shut out from joy and liberty,
And all who loved thy living face
  Will shrink from it shudderingly,

'Not so. Here the world is chill,
  And sworn friends fall from me:
But there—they will own me still,
  And prize my memory.'

Farewell, then, all that love,
  All that deep sympathy:
Sleep on: Heaven laughs above,
  Earth never misses thee.

Turf-sod and tombstone drear
  Part human company;
One heart breaks only—here,
  But that heart was worthy thee!