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1844–1911

THE INDIAN GIRL.

Elizabeth Stuart Phelps

She standeth silent as a thought Too sacred to be uttered; all Her face unfurling like a flower That at a breath too near will shut.

Her life a little golden clock Whose shining hands, arrested, stay Forever at the hour of Love. She doubts, she dares, she dreams — of what?

I ask; she, shrinking, answers not, She swims before me, dim, a cup Of waste, untasted tenderness. I drink, I dread, until I seem

( Myself unto myself ) to be He whom she chose, and charmed — and missed, On some faint Asiatic day Of languorous summer, ages since.

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