OBIT DECEMBER 28, 1886

By James Whitcomb Riley

In the midmost glee of the Christmas

And the mirth of the glad New Year,

A guest has turned from the revel,

And we sit in silence here.

The band chimes on, yet we listen

Not to the air's refrain,

But over it ever we strive to catch

The sound of his voice again;—

For the sound of his voice was music,

Dearer than any note

Shook from the strands of harp-strings,

Or poured from the bugle's throat.—

A voice of such various ranges,

His utterance rang from the height

Of every rapture, down to the sobs

Of every lost delight.

Though he knew Man's force and his purpose,

As strong as his strongest peers,

He knew, as well, the kindly heart,

And the tenderness of tears.

So is it the face we remember

Shall be always as a child's

That, grieved some way to the very soul,

Looks bravely up and smiles.

O brave it shall look, as it looked its last

On the little daughter's face —

Pictured only — against the wall,

In its old accustomed place —

Where the last gleam of the lamplight

Out of the midnight dim

Yielded its grace, and the earliest dawn

Gave it again to him.