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Hope

    (A poem by Emile Bronte)

    Hope was but a timid friend-
    She sat without my grated den
    Watching how my fate would tend
    Even as selfish-hearted men.

    She was cruel in her fear.
    Through the bars, one dreary day,
    I looked out to see her there
    And she turned her face away!

    Like a false guard false watch keeping
    Still in strife she whispered peace;
    She would sing while I was weeping,
    If I listened, she would cease.

    False she was, and unrelenting.
    When my last joys strewed the ground
    Even sorrow saw repenting
    Those sad relics scattered round;

    Hope – whose whisper would have given
    Balm to all that frenzied pain –
    Stretched her wings and soared to heaven;
    Went- and ne’er returned again!

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