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  1. Há 1 dia · The hollow sounds of night. Go where the warbling nightingale. In gushes rich doth sing, Till all the lonely, quiet vale. With melody doth ring. Go, sit upon a mountain steep, And view the prospect round; The hills and vales, the valley's sweep, The far horizon bound.

  2. 9 de jun. de 2023 · The cloud, the stillness that must part. The darling of my life from me; And then to thank God from my heart, To thank Him well and fervently; Although I knew that we had lost. The hope and glory of our life; And now, benighted, tempest-tossed, Must bear alone the weary strife. This poem is in the public domain.

  3. 14 de ago. de 2023 · In the present poem “Life”, the life’s “sunny hours” refer to “joyous moments” of our life which usually flit away. Poet Charlotte Bronte advises us to enjoy the beautiful moments of life “gratefully and cheerily” as they fly. She urges us to appreciate the value of the joyous moments that life has to offer. Question 4.

  4. The only poems by Emily Brontë that were published in her lifetime were included in a slim volume by Brontë and her sisters Charlotte and Anne titled Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell (1846), which sold a mere two copies and received only three unsigned reviews in the months following its publication.

  5. Unscared, the daw, and starling nestle, Where the tall turret rises high, And winds alone come near to rustle. The thick leaves where their cradles lie. I sometimes think, when late at even. I climb the stair reluctantly, Some shape that should be well in heaven, Or ill elsewhere, will pass by me.

  6. In the third and fourth quatrain of ‘On the Death of Anne Brontë’, the speaker turns her thoughts to God. She simultaneously sees God’s choice to take Anne as a “cloud” and as a mercy. She knows that Anne, the “darling of [her] life” has moved on to a better place, and it is due to God that she is there.

  7. Poetic Techniques. ‘Preference’ by Charlotte Brontë is a single stanza poem made up of sixty-five lines. The lines follow a rhyme scheme of alternating lines, with some of the end sounds, such as the long “e” and “-er” reoccurring. Brontë also makes use of a number of other poetic techniques. These include alliteration, metaphor ...