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				Title:     Hexameters [William, My Teacher, My Friend! Dear William And Dear Dorothea!] 
			    
Author: Samuel Taylor Coleridge [
More Titles by Coleridge]		                
			    
William, my teacher, my friend! dear William and dear Dorothea!
  Smooth out the folds of my letter, and place it on desk or on table;
  Place it on table or desk; and your right hands loosely  half-closing,
  Gently sustain them in air, and extending the digit didactic,
  Rest it a moment on each of the forks of the five-forkéd left hand,
  Twice on the breadth of the thumb, and once on the tip of each finger;
  Read with a nod of the head in a humouring recitativo;
  And, as I live, you will see my hexameters hopping before you.
  This is a galloping measure; a hop, and a trot, and a gallop!
  All my hexameters fly, like stags pursued by the stag-hounds, 
  Breathless and panting, and ready to drop, yet flying still  onwards,
  I would full fain pull in my hard-mouthed runaway hunter;
  But our English Spondeans are clumsy yet impotent curb-reins;
  And so to make him go slowly, no way left have I but to lame him.
  William, my head and my heart! dear Poet that feelest and thinkest!
  Dorothy, eager of soul, my most affectionate sister!
  Many a mile, O! many a wearisome mile are ye distant,
  Long, long comfortless roads, with no one eye that doth know us.
  O! it is all too far to send you mockeries idle:
  Yea, and I feel it not right! But O! my friends, my beloved!
  Feverish and wakeful I lie,--I am weary of feeling and thinking.
  Every thought is worn _down_, I am weary yet cannot be vacant.
  Five long hours have I tossed, rheumatic heats, dry and flushing,
  Gnawing behind in my head, and wandering and throbbing about me,
  Busy and tiresome, my friends, as the beat of the boding  night-spider.
_I forget the beginning of the line:_
      . . . my eyes are a burthen,
  Now unwillingly closed, now open and aching with darkness.
  O! what a life is the eye! what a strange and inscrutable essence!
  Him that is utterly blind, nor glimpses the fire that warms him;
  Him that never beheld the swelling breast of his mother;
  Him that smiled in his gladness as a babe that smiles in its slumber;
  Even for him it exists, it moves and stirs in its prison;
  Lives with a separate life, and 'Is it a Spirit?' he murmurs:
  'Sure it has thoughts of its own, and to see is only a language.'
_There was a great deal more, which I have forgotten. . . . The last
line which I wrote, I remember, and write it for the truth of the
sentiment, scarcely less true in company than in pain and solitude:--_
  William, my head and my heart! dear William and dear Dorothea! 
  You have all in each other; but I am lonely, and want you!
1798-9.
[The end]
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem: Hexameters [william, My Teacher, My Friend! Dear William And Dear Dorothea!]
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