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Epiphany Poem

The red king
Came to a great water. He said,
Here the journey ends.
No keel or skipper on this shore.

The yellow king
Halted under a hill. He said,
Turn the camels round.
Beyond, ice summits only.

The black king
Knocked on a city gate. He said,
All roads stop here.
These are gravestones, no inn.

The three kings
Met under a dry star.
There, at midnight,
The star began its singing.

The three kings
Suffered salt, snow, skulls.
They suffered the silence
Before the first word.

©George Mackay Brown

june's book

garcia marquez - One Hundred Years of Solitude

Epiphany | George Mackay Brown

Vow | Andrew Grieg

Testimony | Seamus Heaney

Hamnavoe | George Mackay Brown

De | Robert Alan Jamieson

jill paton walsh | knowledge of angels
kenneth lillington | an ash blonde witch
milan kundera | the unbearable lightness of being
gita sereny | cries unheard
peter ackroyd | the house of doctor dee
* this is the ledgend of the Orkney Library: a place where I have spent many happy hours.
Sweet Valley High, Mayan civilisation, George Mackay Brown, place name studies: it is all there