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Home  »  The English Poets  »  To a Deaf and Dumb Little Girl

Thomas Humphry Ward, ed. The English Poets. 1880–1918.rnVol. IV. The Nineteenth Century: Wordsworth to Rossetti

Hartley Coleridge (1796–1849)

To a Deaf and Dumb Little Girl

LIKE a loose island on the wide expanse,

Unconscious floating on the fickle sea,

Herself her all, she lives in privacy;

Her waking life as lonely as a trance,

Doomed to behold the universal dance,

And never hear the music which expounds

The solemn step, coy slide, the merry bounds,

The vague, mute language of the countenance.

In vain for her I smooth my antic rhyme;

She cannot hear it, all her little being

Concentred in her solitary seeing—

What can she know of beaut[eous] or sublime?

And yet methinks she looks so calm and good,

God must be with her in her solitude.