Public Domain Poetry - A Voice From The Dungeon by Anne Bronte
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A Voice From The Dungeon

    By Anne Bronte



    I'm buried now; I've done with life;
    I've done with hate, revenge and strife;
    I've done with joy, and hope and love
    And all the bustling world above.

    Long have I dwelt forgotten here
    In pining woe and dull despair;
    This place of solitude and gloom
    Must be my dungeon and my tomb.

    No hope, no pleasure can I find:
    I am grown weary of my mind;
    Often in balmy sleep I try
    To gain a rest from misery,

    And in one hour of calm repose
    To find a respite from my woes,
    But dreamless sleep is not for me
    And I am still in misery.

    I dream of liberty, 'tis true,
    But then I dream of sorrow too,
    Of blood and guilt and horrid woes,
    Of tortured friends and happy foes;

    I dream about the world, but then
    I dream of fiends instead of men;
    Each smiling hope so quickly fades
    And such a lurid gloom pervades

    That world -- that when I wake and see
    Those dreary phantoms fade and flee,
    Even in my dungeon I can smile,
    And taste of joy a little while.

    And yet it is not always so;
    I dreamt a little while ago
    That all was as it used to be:
    A fresh free wind passed over me;

    It was a pleasant summer's day,
    The sun shone forth with cheering ray,
    Methought a little lovely child
    Looked up into my face and smiled.

    My heart was full, I wept for joy,
    It was my own, my darling boy;
    I clasped him to my breast and he
    Kissed me and laughed in childish glee.

    Just them I heard in whisper sweet
    A well known voice my name repeat.
    His father stood before my eyes;
    I gazed at him in mute surprise,

    I thought he smiled and spoke to me,
    But still in silent ecstasy
    I gazed at him; I could not speak;
    I uttered one long piercing shriek.

    Alas! Alas! That cursed scream
    Aroused me from my heavenly dream;
    I looked around in wild despair,
    I called them, but they were not there;
    The father and the child are gone,
    And I must live and die alone.





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