Page:Facts and Fancies about Our "Son of the Woods", Henry Clarence Kendall and his Poetry (IA factsfanciesabou00hami).pdf/36

30 So we that knew this singer dead, Whose hands attuned the harp Australian, May set the face and bow the head, And mourn his fate and fortunes alien.

The burden of a perished faith Went sighing through his speech of sweetness, With human hints of time and death, And subtle notes of incompleteness.

But when the fiery power of youth Had passed away and left him nameless, Serene as light, and strong as truth, He lived his life, untired and tameless.

And far and free, this man of men, With wintry hair and wasted features, Had fellowship with gorge and glen, And learned the loves and runes of Nature.

Strange words of wind, and rhymes of rain, And whispers from the inland fountains. Are unhinged in his various strain, With leafy breaths of piny mountains.

But as the undercurrents sigh Beneath the surface of a river, The music of humanity Dwells in his forest-psalms for ever.

No soul was he to sit on heights And live with rocks apart and scornful; Delights of men were his delights, And common troubles made him mournful.

The flying forms of unknown powers, With lofty wonder caught and thrilled him; But there were days of gracious hours, When sights and sounds familiar thrilled him.

The pathos worn by wayside things, The passion found in simple faces, Struck deeper than the life of springs, Or strength of storms and sea-swept places.