| Poems by Women |
The Prisoner
Emily Bronte. 1818-1848
STILL let my tyrants know, I am not doom'd to
wear
Year after year in gloom and desolate despair;
A messenger of Hope
comes every night to me,
And offers for short life, eternal liberty.
He comes with Western winds, with evening's wandering airs,
With that
clear dusk of heaven that brings the thickest stars:
Winds take a pensive
tone, and stars a tender fire,
And visions rise, and change, that kill me
with desire.
Desire for nothing known in my maturer years,
When Joy grew mad with awe,
at counting future tears:
When, if my spirit's sky was full of flashes
warm,
I knew not whence they came, from sun or thunder-storm.
But first, a hush of peace--a soundless calm descends;
The struggle of
distress and fierce impatience ends.
Mute music soothes my breast--unutter'd
harmony
That I could never dream, till Earth was lost to me.
Then dawns the Invisible; the Unseen its truth reveals;
My outward sense
is gone, my inward essence feels;
Its wings are almost free--its home, its
harbour found,
Measuring the gulf, it stoops, and dares the final bound.
O dreadful is the check--intense the agony--
When the ear begins to hear,
and the eye begins to see;
When the pulse begins to throb--the brain to think
again--
The soul to feel the flesh, and the flesh to feel the chain.
Yet I would lose no sting, would wish no torture less;
The more that
anguish racks, the earlier it will bless;
And robed in fires of hell, or
bright with heavenly shine,
If it but herald Death, the vision is divine.
From: Quiller-Couch, Arthur.
The Oxford Book of Verse. (1900)
This poet:
[Author index]
This collection assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis.
Collection © 1999-2002 Jone Johnson Lewis.
Citing poems from these pages:
| Author. "Poem Title." Women's History: Poems by Women. Jone Johnson Lewis, editor. URL: (date of logon) |

