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To --------

By Anne Bronte

Topics: classic

I will not mourn thee, lovely one,     Though thou art torn away.     'Tis said that if the morning sun     Arise with dazzling ray     And shed a bright and burning beam     Athwart the glittering main,     'Ere noon shall fade that laughing gleam     Engulfed in clouds and rain.     And if thy life as transient proved,     It hath been full as bright,     For thou wert hopeful and beloved;     Thy spirit knew no blight.     If few and short the joys of life     That thou on earth couldst know,     Little thou knew'st of sin and strife     Nor much of pain and woe.     If vain thy earthly hopes did prove,     Thou canst not mourn their flight;     Thy brightest hopes were fixed above     And they shall know no blight.     And yet I cannot check my sighs,     Thou wert so young and fair,     More bright than summer morning skies,     But stern death would not spare;     He would not pass our darling by     Nor grant one hour's delay,     But rudely closed his shining eye     And frowned his smile away,     That angel smile that late so much     Could my fond heart rejoice;     And he has silenced by his touch     The music of thy voice.     I'll weep no more thine early doom,     But O! I still must mourn     The pleasures buried in thy tomb,     For they will not return.

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"I will not mourn thee, lovely one,..."

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Author:Anne Bronte

"I will not mourn thee, lovely one,..." by Anne Bronte

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Anne Bronte

About Anne Bronte

Anne Brontë (1820–1849) was the youngest of the three Brontë sisters and the author of "Agnes Grey" and "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall," one of the first sustained feminist novels in English. Her poetry explores faith, nature, and the condition of women.

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