ye who love the haunts of nature,
love the sunshine of the meadow,
love the shadow of the forest
love the wind among the branches,
and the rain-shower and the snow-storm
and the rushing of great rivers
through their palisades of pine trees,
and the thunder in the mountains
whose innumerable echoes
flap like eagles in their eyries;
listen to these wild traditions,
to this song of hiawatha!
ye who love a nation's legends,
love the ballads of a people,
that like voices from a far off
call to us to pause and listen,
speak in tones so plain and child-like,
scarcely can the ear distinguish
whether they are sung or spoken—
listen to this indian legend,
to this song of hiawatha! 79
ye whose hearts are fresh and simple,
who have faith in god and nature,
who believe that in all ages
every human heart is human,
that in even savage bosoms
there are longings, yearnings, strivings
for the good they comprehend not
that the feeble hands and helpless,
groping blindly in the darkness,
touch god's right hand in the darkness
and are lifted up and strengthened
listen to this simple story
to this song of hiawatha!
ye, who sometimes in your rambles
through the green lanes of the country,
where the tangled barbary bushes
hang their tufts of crimson berries
over stone walls gray with mosses,
pause by some neglected grave-yard
for a while to muse, and ponder
on a half-effaced inscription,
written with little skill of song-craft,
homely phrases, but each letter
full of hope and yet of heart-break,
full of all the tender pathos
of the here and the hereafter—
stay and read this rude inscription,
read this song of hiawatha!
—henry w. longfellow.