The Night of Storms Has Passed: A Ghostly Poem by Emily Brontë

On a recent visit to The Morgan Library in New York City, I spotted a tiny autograph manuscript of the poem, “The Night of Storms has Passed,” by Emily Brontë, dated June 10, 1837. It was written in tiny, barely legible script on a card perhaps 3 by 4 inches. Written when she was about to turn nineteen years old (she was born July 30, 1818), it was unpublished in her lifetime, but has since been included in collected poems by Emily, perhaps the most inscrutable of the Brontë sisters. The text accompanying the poem read as follows:


A Graveyard Wail by the Teenage Emily Brontë


“A month before she turned nineteen, Emily Brontë wrote this poem about a ghost that opens its lips to emit a lament that mixes eerily with the sound of the wind. She copied an earlier draft, fitting fifty-eight lines onto a scrap a little smaller than an index card. In 1846, when she and her sisters self-published a book of poetry (choosing male pseudonyms to mask their identity), Brontë chose not to include this composition, it remained unpublished in her lifetime.”


The poem has been occasionally included in posthumous collections of Brontë poetry, but is still a rather buried treasure from the pen of Emily Brontë.



The Night of Storms Has Passed by Emily Bronte


You might also like: The Brontë Sisters’ Path to Publication



The Night of Storms Has Passed by Emily Brontë

The night of storms has past

The sunshine bright and clear

Gives glory to the verdant waste

And warms the breezy air


And I would leave my bed

Its cheering smile to see

To chase the visions from my head

Whose forms have troubled me


In all the hours of gloom

My soul was wrapt away

I dreamt I stood by a marble tomb

Where royal corpses lay

It was just the time of eve


When parted ghosts might come

Above their prisoned dust to grieve

And wail their woeful doom

And truly at my side


I saw a shadowy thing

Most dim and yet its presence there

Curdled my blood with ghastly fear

And ghastlier wondering


My breath I could not draw

The air seemed ranny*

But still my eyes with maddening gaze

Were fixed upon its fearful face

And its were fixed on me …


I fell down on the stone

But could not turn away

My words died in a voiceless moan

When I began to pray


And still it bent above

Its features full in view

It seemed close by and yet more far

Then this world from the farthest star

That tracks the boundless blue


Indeed ’twas not the space

Of earth or time between

But the sea of death’s eternity

The gulf o’er which mortality

Has never never been


O bring not back again

The horror of that hour

When its lips opened

And a sound

Awoke the stillness reigning round

Faint as a dream but the Earth shrank

And heavens lights shivered

‘Neath its power


 


* In some transcriptions of this poem, the word is “uncanny,” though it’s difficult to know which, if either, word was intended by Emily Brontë.



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Published on October 19, 2018 11:14
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