Self-Interogation
by Emily Jane Bronte
English novelist and poet. Best known for her one novel Wuthering Heights (1847). She wrote nearly two hundred poems which were published along with those of her sisters in Poems, by Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell (1846).
Self-Interogation
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"The evening passes fast away. "The vanished day? It leaves a sense "Time stands before the door of Death, "And though I've said that Conscience lies "Then art thou glad to seek repose? "Nothing regrets to see thee go-- "Alas! the countless links are strong "And rest is sweet, when laurelled fame "Well, thou hast fought for many a year, "'Tis true, this arm has hotly striven, "Look on the grave where thou must sleep "The long war closing in defeat-- |