Poems and Songs

Poems and Songs
Author Henry Kendall
Country Australia
Language English
Publisher J.R. Clarke
Publication date
1862
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 144
Followed by Leaves from Australian Forests

Poems and Songs (1862) is the first collection of poems by Australian poet Henry Kendall. It was released in hardback by J.R. Clarke in 1862, and features the poet's widely anthologised poems "Song of the Cattle Hunters", and "The Muse of Australia".

The collection includes 45 poems by the author that are reprinted from various sources.[1]

Contents

Critical reception

Shortly after its original publication The Freeman's Journal opined "Here is music and delicate imagery, transporting our fancy, and enabling us in a moment — at a glance — to enter into the innermost heart of the poet's meaning."[2]

G. B. Barton, writing in Literature in New South Wales (1866) was effusive in his praise when he wrote "This volume represents the highest point to which the poetic genius of our country has yet attained...The author paints the scenery of his native land with the hand of a master."[3]

In the late 1960s, Adrian Mitchell wrote "..Kendall's first volume (Poems and Songs, 1862) is characterized by poems of regret and remembered parting of lovers, of nostalgia and of separation across the sea—or as a more melodramatic variation, a separation across the grave. These are conventional poems on conventional themes relying heavily on poetic cliché."[4]

In 1994 The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature stated: "Many of these early Kendall poems attempt, however imperfectly, to reflect the spirit and character of Australian life to picture the beauty of the Australian coastal landscape."[5]

See also

References

  1. Poems and Songs by Henry Kendall
  2. "Review", The Freeman's Journal, 1 November 1862, p2
  3. Literature in New South Wales by G. B. Barton (1866) pp97-98
  4. "The Radiant Dream: Notes on Henry Kendall" by Adrian Mitchell, Australian Literary Studies, October vol. 4 no. 2 1969; pp. 99-114
  5. The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature, 2nd edition, 1994, p608
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