Page:The Poems of Henry Kendall (1920).djvu/366



that was lent for a very few hours,

By the bountiful Spirit above us;

She sleeps like a flower in the land of the flowers,

She went ere she knew how to love us.

Her music of Heaven was strange to this sphere,

Her voice is a silence for ever;

In the bitter, wild fall of a sorrowful year,

We buried our bird by the river.

But the gold of the grass, and the green of the vine,

And the music of wind and of water,

And the torrent of song and superlative shine,

Are close to our dear little daughter.

The months of the year are all gracious to her,

A winter breath visits her never;

She sleeps like a bird in a cradle of myrrh,

By the banks of the beautiful river.

dark wild woods, where the lone owl broods

And the dingoes nightly yell—

Where the curlew's cry goes floating by,

We splitters of shingles dwell.

And all day through, from the time of the dew

To the hour when the mopoke calls,

Our mallets ring where the woodbirds sing

Sweet hymns by the waterfalls.

And all night long we are lulled by the song

Of gales in the grand old trees;

And in the brakes we can hear the lakes

And the moan of the distant seas.

For afar from heat and dust of street,

And hall and turret and dome,

In forest deep, where the torrents leap,

Is the shingle-splitter's home.