Frost at Midnight, poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, published in Lyrical Ballads (1798), in which Coleridge pioneered a new, informal mode of poetry unified by conversational tone and rhythm.
In the winter of 1798 Coleridge composed the four-stanza poem in the presence of his sleeping infant son, Hartley. The soliloquy begins with the description of a silent frosty night and proceeds through a meditation on the relationship between the quiet work of frost and the quiet breathing of the sleeping baby at the poet’s side, to conclude in a resolve that his child shall be brought up as a “child of nature,” so that the sympathies the poet has come to detect may be reinforced throughout the child’s education.