BOTH of them deaf, and close on eighty years old: She stone blind, and he nearly so; Side by side crouching over the fire in a little London hovelsix shillings a week Their joints knotted with rheumatism, their faces all day long mute like statues of all passing expression (no cloud flying by, no gleam of sunshine there)lips closed and silent: But for that now and then taking his pipe out of his mouth, He puts his face close to her ear and yells just a word into it, And she nods her blind head and gives a raucous screech in answer. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEMORIAL TO D.C.: 5. ELEGY by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY SONNET: 35 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE SEVEN SAD SONNETS: 2. THE OTHER ONE COMES TO HER by MARY REYNOLDS ALDIS THE TIME OF LOVE by FLORENCE E. BALDWIN A SONG OF MARY by AGNES H. BEGBIE |