"A Storm in the Mountains" | |
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by Charles Harpur | |
Written | 1856 |
First published in | The Empire |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Full text | |
A Storm in the Mountains at Wikisource |
"A Storm in the Mountains" (1856) is a poem by Australian poet Charles Harpur.[1]
The poem was originally published in The Empire on 15 July 1856 and subsequently reprinted in the author's major collections as well as other poetry anthologies.[1] It is also known under the title "A Storm on the Mountains".
While reviewing Harpur's Poems in 1883 a writer in the Adelaide Observer observed that while "Charles Harpur had not the dash and verve of Gordon, the rich vein of humour of Brunton Stephens, or such accurate and vivid descriptive powers as Kendall but still there is much ... that touches the heart and the imagination." They went on: "we seem to see the scenes, to hear the sounds, to watch the movements he describes."[2]
Michael Ackland, writing about the sublimity of the poem, noted that its "concern with the interplay of natural, mental and supernatural elements is raised in purely physical terms through the employment of surrogate figures to express man's imminent peril. Nature provides the raw materials of elemental force and victim, but it is cognitive intelligence which discerns in events the sublime of terror, and their relevance to our social and spiritual preoccupations." He concluded "Charles Harpur turned depiction of the Australian countryside into an occasion for humane and religious meditation. In his works, landscape becomes instinct with spiritual purpose, and ordinary, honest folk the heroes of elemental encounters projected on an epic scale."[3]
After the poem's initial publication in The Empire[1] it was reprinted as follows: