Scotlands Winter
Now the ice lays its smooth claws on the sill,
The sun looks from the
Helmed in his winter casket,
And sweeps his arctic sword across the sky.
The water at the
Sounds more hoarse and dull.
The miller's daughter walking
With frozen fingers soldered to her
Seems to be knocking Upon a hundred leagues of
With her light heels, and
Percy and Douglas dead,
And Bruce on his burial bed,
Where he lies white as
With wars and leprosy,
And all the kings
This land was kingless,
And all the singers
This land was songless,
This land that with its dead and living waits the Judgement Day.
But they, the powerless dead,
Listening can hear no
Than a hard tapping on the floorA little
Of common heels that do not
Whence they come or where they
And are
With their poor frozen life and shallow banishment.
Edwin Muir
Other author posts
Horses
Those lumbering horses in the steady plough, On the bare field - I wonder, why, just now, They seemed terrible, so wild and strange, Like magic power on the stony grange
Scotland 1941
We were a tribe, a family, a people Wallace and Bruce guard now a painted field, And all may read the folio of our fable, Peruse the sword, the sceptre and the shield
The Killing
That was the day they killed the Son of On a squat hill-top by Jerusalem Zion was bare, her children from their Sucked by the dream of
The Horses
Barely a twelvemonth The seven days war that put the world to sleep, Late in the evening the strange horses came By then we had made our covenant with silence,