In Emily Dickinson's poem "Hope", the poetess describes hope in the form of a bird. Like a bird sings at times whether it is happy and sad, similarly, hope springs eternal in the mind of man. Like a dismal bird chooses to vent its grief through a wordless tune, hope soothes always soothes the battered, morbid soul of a grieving man in order to replenish ebbing vitality. One may not know where is hope springs from, just like the unknown words to the tune a bird sings, but its present is always felt by man in times of happiness and sorrow.