The Rain Comes Sobbing to the Door
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| "The Rain Comes Sobbing to the Door" | |
|---|---|
| by Henry Kendall | |
| First published in | The Sydney Morning Herald |
| Country | Australia |
| Language | English |
| Publication date | 23 August 1861 |
| Lines | 32 |
| Full text | |
"The Rain Comes Sobbing to the Door" (1861) is a poem by Australian poet Henry Kendall.[1]
It was originally published in The Sydney Morning Herald on 23 August 1861[2] and was subsequently reprinted in the author's single-author collections and a number of Australian poetry anthologies.[1]
The poet and his companions are sitting in a house while the rain comes down outside. They toast to lost loved ones, and "the shades of other years."
Critical reception
In his chapter titled "Kendall's Sublime Melancholy", in Henry Kendall : The Muse of Australia edited by Russell McDougall, Peter Otto notes that "Kendall's poetry employs melancholy as an interpretative mood which ensures that the Australian landscape speaks the language of loss, division and separation." He then continues by statingvof this poem: "Although at first glance slight and sentimental, this poem outlines the denial constitutive of melancholy with such clarity that the poem verges on self-critique."[3]