The festival season hits Edinburgh again, filling her streets with crowds of the eager young and culture seekers. In contrast, today's poem by Norman MacCaig catches the sleepy capital city on a sabbath morning more than 60 years ago. It comes from the superb posthumous volume of his poems, edited by his son Ewen and published by Polygon.
EARLY SUNDAY MORNING, EDINBURGH
Crosshatch of streets: some waterfall
Down pits, some rear to lay their forepaws
On hilly ledges; others bore
Through lilac, gean and holly.
A stretch of sky makes what it can
Of ships sailing and sailing islands.
Trees open their rustling hands
And toss birds up, a fountain, a fanfare.
A yellow milk-cart clipclops by
Like money shaken in a box,
Less yellow than the golden coxcomb
Gallanting on St Giles's spire.
And people idle into space
And disappear again in it -
Apparitions from nowhere: unseen
Distances shine from their faces.
And, fore and hindpaws out of line,
An old dog mooches by, his gold
Eyes hung down below hunched shoulders
His tail switching, feathery, finely.
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