Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Blue Bell by Emily Bronte
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The Blue Bell

    By Emily Bronte



    The blue bell is the sweetest flower
    That waves in summer air;
    Its blossoms have the mightiest power
    To soothe my spirit's care.

    There is a spell in purple heath
    Too wildly, sadly dear;
    The violet has a fragrant breath
    But fragrance will not cheer.

    The trees are bare, the sun is cold;
    And seldom, seldom seen;
    The heavens have lost their zone of gold
    The earth its robe of green;

    And ice upon the glancing stream
    Has cast its sombre shade
    And distant hills and valleys seem
    In frozen mist arrayed


    The blue bell cannot charm me now
    The heath has lost its bloom,
    The violets in the glen below
    They yield no sweet perfume.

    But though I mourn the heather-bell
    'Tis better far, away;
    I know how fast my tears would swell
    To see it smile today;

    And that wood flower that hides so shy
    Beneath the mossy stone
    Its balmy scent and dewy eye:
    'Tis not for them I moan.

    It is the slight and stately stem,
    The blossom's silvery blue,
    The buds hid like a sapphire gem
    In sheaths of emerald hue.

    'Tis these that breathe upon my heart
    A calm and softening spell
    That if it makes the tear-drop start
    Has power to soothe as well.

    For these I weep, so long divided
    Through winter's dreary day,
    In longing weep, but most when guided
    On withered banks to stray.

    If chilly then the light should fall
    Adown the dreary sky
    And gild the dank and darkened wall
    With transient brilliancy,

    How do I yearn, how do I pine
    For the time of flowers to come,
    And turn me from that fading shine
    To mourn the fields of home



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