Edwin Muir (1887 - 1959) was a prominent Scottish poet, critic, translator, essayist and novelist. His famous works include The Narrow Place, The Voyage and Other Poems and The Labyrinth. His final poetry collection was One Foot in Eden. Muir's poetry is characterized by the use of mythical and biblical allusions, folklore, visions, dreams and his abiding concern with time and timelessness. Closely related to Muir's poetry is his autobiographical writing The Story and the Fable which was later revised as An Autobiography.
Long time he lay upon the sunny hill,
To his father's house below securely bound,
Far off the silent, changing sound was still,
With the black islands lying thick around.
He saw each separate height, each vaguer hue,
Where the massed islands rolled in mist away,
And though all ran together in his view
He knew that unseen straits between them lay.
Often he wondered what new shores were there,
In thought he saw the still light on the sand,
The shallow water clear in tranquil air;
And walked through it in joy from ∫ to strand.
Over the sound a ship so slow would pass
That in the black hill's gloom it seemed to lie
The evening sound was smooth like sunken glass,
And time seemed finished ere the ship passed by.
Grey tiny rocks slept round him where he lay,
Moveless as they, more still as evening came,
The grasses threw straight shadows far away,
And from the house his mother called his name.
Paraphrase the following lines:
"Long time he lay...house below securely bound"
Paraphrase the following lines:
"Far off the silent...islands lying thick around"
Paraphrase the following lines:
"He saw each separate height... rolled in mist away"
Paraphrase the following lines:
"And though all ran together...between them lay"
Paraphrase the following lines:
"Often he wondered...light on the sand"
Paraphrase the following lines:
"The shallow water clear in tranquil...strand to strand"