Analysis of To the Spirit of Music

Henry Kendall 1839 (Australia) – 1882 (Sydney)



I
The cool grass blowing in a breeze
Of April valleys sooms and sways;
On slopes that dip to quiet seas
Through far, faint drifts of yellowing haze.
I lie like one who, in a dream
Of sounds and splendid coloured things,
Seems lifted into life supreme
And has a sense of waxing wings.
For through a great arch-light which floods
And breaks and spreads and swims along
High royal-robed autumnal woods,
I hear a glorious sunset song.
But, ah, Euterpe! I that pause
And listen to the strain divine
Can never learn its words, because
I am no son of thine.

How sweet is wandering where the west
Is full of thee, what time the morn
Looks from his halls of rosy rest
Across green miles of gleaming corn!

How sweet are dreams in shady nooks,
When bees are out, and day is mute,
While down the dell there floats the brook’s
Fine echo of thy marvellous lute!

And oh, how sweet is that sad tune
Of thine, within the evening breeze,
Which roams beneath the mirrored moon
On silver-sleeping summer seas!

How blest are they whom thou hast crowned,
Thy priests — the lords who understand
The deep divinity of sound,
And live their lives in Wonderland!

These stand within thy courts and see
The light exceeding round thy throne,
But I — an alien unto thee —
I faint afar off, and alone.

In hills where the keen Thessalonian
Made clamour with horse and with horn,
In oracular woods the Dodonian —
The mystical maiden was born.
And the high, the Olympian seven,
Ringed round with ineffable flame,
Baptized her in halos of heaven,
And gave her her beautiful name.
And Delphicus, loving her, brought her
Immutable dower of dreams,
And clothed her with glory, and taught her
The words of the winds and the streams.

She dwelt with the echoes that dwell
In far immemorial hills;
She wove of their speeches a spell —
She borrowed the songs of the rills;
And anthems of forest and fire,
And passionate psalms of the rain
Had life in the life of the lyre,
And breath in its infinite strain.

In a fair, in a floral abode,
Of purple and yellow and red,
The voice of her floated and flowed,
The light of her lingered and spread,
And ever there slipt through the bars
Of the leaves of her luminous bowers,
Syllables splendid as stars,
And faultless as moon-litten flowers.

Lady of a land of wonder,
Daughter of the hill supernal,
Far from frost and far from thunder
Under sons and moons eternal!
Long ago the strong Immortals
Took her hence on wheels of fire,
Caught her up and shut their portals —
Floral maid with fervent lyre.
But stray fallen notes of brightness
Yet within our world are ringing,
Floating on the winds of lightness
Glorious fragments of her singing.

Bud of light, she shines above us;
But a few of starry pinions —
Passioned souls who are her lovers —
Dwell in her divine dominions.
Few they are, but in the centric
Fanes of Beauty hold their station;
Kings of music, lords authentic,
Of the worlds of Inspiration.
These are they to whom are given
Eyes to see the singing stream-land,
Far from earth and near to heaven,
Known to gods and men as Dreamland.

Mournful humanity, stricken and worn,
Toiling for peace in undignified days,
Set in a sphere with the shadows forlorn,
Seeing sublimity dimmed by a haze —
Mournful humanity wearing the sign
Of trouble with time and unequable things,
Long alienated from spaces divine,
Sometimes remembers that once it had wings.
Chiefly it is when the song and the light
Sweeten the heart of the summering west,
Music and glory that lend to the night
Glimpses of marvellous havens of rest.

Chiefly it is when the beautiful day
Dies with a sound on its lips like a psalm —
Anthem of loveliness drifting away
Over a sea of unspeakable calm.

Then Euterpe’s harmonies
In the ballad rich and rare,
Freighted with old memories,
Float upon the evening air —
Float, like shine in films of rain,
Full of past pathetic themes,
Tales of perished joy and pain,
Frail and faint as dreams in dreams.
Then to far-off homes we rove,
Homes of youth and hope and faith,
Beautiful with lights of love —
Sanctified by shrines of death.

Ah! and in that quiet hour
Soul by soul is borne away
Over tracts of leaf and flower,
Lit with a supernal day;
Over Music-world serene,
Spheres unknown to woes and wars,
Homes of wildernesses green,
Silver seas and golden


Scheme XABABCDCDXEXEFGFG HIHI JKJK LALA MNMN OPOP GIGIQRQRSTST UXUASVWV XYXYZ1 Z1 SUSX2 S2 W3 4 3 4 3 A1 AEQXQQNQN IBIBGDGD5 H5 H 6 X6 X A7 A7 VTVTXXXX S6 S6 8 X8 Q
Poetic Form
Metre 1 01110001 11010101 11111101 111111001 11111001 11010101 11001101 01011101 11011111 01010101 11010101 11010011 111111 01010101 11011101 111111 111100101 11111101 11111101 01111101 11110101 11110111 11011101 1101111 01111111 11010101 11010101 11010101 11111111 1101101 01010011 0111010 11011101 01010111 111100101 11011001 011011 1111011 01101 01001011 0010010010 11101001 010010110 01001001 0110010 0100111 010110010 01101001 11101011 0101001 11111001 1101101 010110010 01001101 11001101 01011001 001001001 11001001 01101001 01101001 01011101 1011010010 1001011 01111010 10101110 101011 11101110 10101010 10101010 10111110 10101110 1011101 11101110 101101110 10101110 100101010 11111011 1011101 1111010 100011 1111001 11101110 11101010 1011010 11111110 11101011 11101110 1110111 1001001001 101100101 100110101 1011101 1001001001 11011011 1100011001 0101011111 1011101001 10011011 1001011101 10111011 1011101001 1101111101 10111001 1001101001 11100 0010101 111100 1010101 1110111 1110101 1110101 1011101 1111111 1110101 1001111 11111 10011010 1111101 10111010 11011 1010101 1011101 1111 101010
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,176
Words 777
Sentences 28
Stanzas 15
Stanza Lengths 17, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 12, 8, 8, 12, 12, 12, 4, 12, 8
Lines Amount 125
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 225
Words per stanza (avg) 52
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 28, 2023

3:53 min read
124

Henry Kendall

Thomas Henry Kendall was a nineteenth-century Australian author and bush poet, who was particularly known for his poems and tales set in a natural environment setting. more…

All Henry Kendall poems | Henry Kendall Books

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