GEORGE MACKAY BROWN
BARD OF ORKNEY 1921-1996

  gmbsketch.jpg (16505 bytes)
sketch by Emilio Coia, 1986

80 quotes from GMB  in celebration of the 80th anniversary 
of the beginning of his journey  

~ 17.10.21  to  17.10.2001 ~

Page 2 of 2
(click on most images for larger view)



This second door stood open only a short while.
Now close it gently.
from Elegy for a Child, 
pub in Travellers, 2001
Storm and sea loss and sorrow is all
An old mouth at a rock.
Tomorrow's wave will cover that boy and his yawl
An old mouth at a rock.
from Time a Stone, 
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
There is enough stone in Alps, Urals,
          Himalayas
To quarry a million cornerstones.

But always, in winter, under
          stars like thorns
The wanderers wait, the breakers of icicles,
          the homeless ones.
from A Poem for Shelter,
pub in Following a Lark, 1996
islandsIsingcover2.jpg (10233 bytes) I never dared hope that one day my poems would be published in a book.  I remember that John Cook (teacher) typed one or two of my poems;  to see them in typescript sent a tremble of joy through me.
from For the Islands I Sing, autobiog, 1997
I have a deep-rooted belief that what has once existed can never die:  not even the frailest things, spindrift or clover-scent or glitter of star on a wet stone.  All is gathered into the web of creation, that is apparently established and yet perhaps only a dream in the eternal mind.
from Finished Fragrance, 
pub in Northern Lights 1999
A snowflake
Came like a white butterfly on his nose,
His mother's bucket
Was blue splashings at the well.
from Winter:  An Island Boy, 
pub in Following a Lark, 1996
We are folded all
In a green fable
And we fare
From early
Plough-and-daffodil sun
Through revel
Of wind-tossed oats and barley
Past sickle and flail
To harvest home
from Christmas Poem, 
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
I opened the door and sank knee-deep in dazzlement.  Stromness was about a foot and a half nearer heaven than it had been on Tuesday.  Transfiguration everywhere but it was my feet that bore the full enchantment.  I was wearing a pair of new shoes with smooth leather soles, and that afternoon they dissociated themselves from the rest of my body; they went off on an independent spree.
First Snow, from Letters from Hamnavoe, 
pub 1975
They have drawn and dragged a keel, down wet stones,
glim of a star on one stone.
Dark water.  Ropes glittered with night frost.
The ship lingered, languid as snowflakes.
from Voyage, 
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
Language unstable as sand, but poets
   Strike on hard rock, carving
   Rune and hieroglyph, to celebrate
        Breath's sweet brevity.
from To a Hamnavoe Poet of 2093,
pub in Following a Lark, 1996
The air is full of noises; sound is thought to be a natural and acceptable background in the twentieth century.  Silence is the thing to be dreaded.  But silence has always been precious to me.
from For the Islands I Sing, 
autobiog. pub 1997
No school today!  We drove our gig to the town
Grand-da bought us each a coloured balloon.
Mine was yellow, it hung high as the moon.
from Sonnet: Hamnavoe Market, 
pub in Voyages 1983
What it is to be an old one going with her rune
On the long road between flower and star.
from Neighbours, 
pub in Travellers 2001
Scan yesterday's prose-poem again;  only a shadow moves, here and there.  The greatest joy for a poet is when his poem comes off first time:  it must be one of the supreme delights.
from Shetland Diary, 
pub in Northern Lights 1999
Travelling even the short distances I have gone bores me, and I am continuously (while the journey lasts) apprehensive.  I think, in a spasm of panic, I must be on the wrong train . . .
from For the Islands I Sing, 
autobiog. pub 1997

horse.jpg (36235 bytes)








photograph by Gunnie Moberg

The Dounby Show breaks down barriers.  It is a foretaste of harvest and the year's plenitude.  All men exist by the fruits of the earth.  Here the creatures of the earth – animals, fowls and folk – appear at their most splendid and festive.
from Orkney Tapestry, 1969
We sat, seven, in the high pew on Sunday.
after the psalms, her paper poke*
Made sweet thunders all through the sermon.
from The Mother, pub in Travellers 2001
*paper bag
On the third morning
We came to the whale acre.
No whales, the net
Surged with a galaxy of herring.
from Voyager, pub in Voyages 1983
One wonders how the quality of farmed salmon will be affected now that their mysterious seven year circuit is cut . . . .  The salmon peregrination must be akin, somehow, to the force that drives the blood through the veins and keeps the stars in their courses.
from Shetland Diary, 
pub in Northern Lights 1999

Darkness when we sailed from Shetland, in a still darkling sea.
Then the brief flame of noon.

from The Silent Girl from Shetland, 
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
To lose one's own will in the will of God should be the true occupation of every man's time on earth. Only a few of us the saints are capable of that simplicity.
from For the Islands I Sing, autobiog. 
pub 1997
Cathedralwindow.jpg (21476 bytes)

 

 

 


photograph by Sue Tordoff

The cathedral (St Magnus, Kirkwall) and the reason for its building, and the building of it, and all that happened in it, have quickened my imagination again and again.
from For the Islands I Sing, autobiog. 
pub 1997
And here I am
Setting my basket of cod on the pier steps,
Alive and in love,
Just before the old women come in a flock with flashing
           tongues and knives.
from The Young Men, 
pub in Travellers 2001
A house never looks so happy as when you've been out of it for a few days - as if it was glad to see you.
from Shetland Diary, 
pub in Northern Lights 1999
While poets like columns of salt stood
Round the oaken Abbotsford bar.
from Stella Cartwright (for her birthday, 15th May 1982)
pub in For the Islands I Sing, autobiog. 1997

 boyslane.jpg (12156 bytes)









Boys Lane, Stromness,
young GMB's route to school.
photograph by Sue Tordoff

 

It was not an entirely doleful day, going back to school at the age of twelve. After the lightness and freedom of bare feet all summer, to put on stockings and boots and clump about in them gave you a certain dignity and importance.  Besides, we were moving from the Primary to the Secondary.  New mysteries were about to be unfolded to us:  geometry, Latin, science.
from Orkney Tapestry, 1969
How many thousands of years she has travelled
To come to this place.
Above, burning wind
Broken stone and water.
from Henry Moore:  Woman Seated in the Underground
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
(Stella Cartwright) died suddenly in her flat . . . .  somewhere in the great music she is lost:  but lost is the wrong word of course.  She wrote nothing herself, but what she truly was, her rare and lovely unique essence, is a part of the literature of Scotland.  May it be well with her, who loved and suffered so much.
from For the Islands I Sing, autobiog. 
pub 1997
As the 'Hamnavoe' made for the mouth of the harbour an immense blue-black cloud launched itself from the north-west, and we crossed Hoy Sound blind with rain.  But by the time we reached RAF 'Stromness', lying in the Bring Deeps between Graemsay and Hoy, there were splashes of wan sunlight again.  But oh, that ship's ladder we had to climb.  It was steep and it seemed to soar into the clouds.  Through every open rung, as up I went, I could glimpse snarling, ugly sea far below.  To one who is troubled with agoraphobia on a firm street on a fine day, it was a nightmare ascent.
from Letters from Hamnavoe, pub 1975
HoySound1.jpg (24117 bytes)  
photograph by Sue Tordoff

 

An eagle, circling high.
the swaddled child
Lay in the bronze
Shadow of a barley stook.
The mother,
Bronze-throated, bent and gathered and bound.
from Eagle: child stolen from the harvest field
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
God said,
'All things I leave in your hands, man,
For praise and profit
But never leave the dance.'
In the end the man turned from the music.
He studied numbers.
He forged a key to open the golden door of the sun.
from The Journey,  
pub in Following a Lark, 1996
I first heard the magic name Celtic at the age of seven or eight, and for no reason at all gave them my wholehearted allegiance.
from Letters from Hamnavoe, pub 1975
Realism is the enemy of the creative imagination.
from For the Islands I Sing, autobiog. pub 1997
The skald tuned his harp.  The riff-raff
   Lounged between the barrel
      And the hearth.
from The Long Hall, 
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989

Stones seem to have been the giants' only weapons.  They were inordinately stupid creatures, incapable of imagining arrows or axes.  They sometimes tried to build bridges between the islands, but they always failed;  usually the stones for the building slipped from their backs into the sea, and that is why there are so many skerries and holms around Orkney.
from Orkney Legends, 
pub in Northern Lights 1999

The three kings
   Met under a dry star.
          There, at midnight,
          The star began its singing.
from Epiphany Poem, 
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
Our donkey danders
Up small roads
To poor crofts.  We offer cheap enchantments.
from Twelve Days of Christmas:  Tinker Talk
pub in Wreck of the Archangel, 1989
An old man withdraws into a narrower circle, just as in November the light lessens.
from For the Islands I Sing, autobiog. 
pub 1997
To have got so far, alone
Almost to the seventieth stone
     Is a wonder.
     There was thunder
A few miles back, a storm-shaken
Hill and sea, the bridge broken
from One Star in the West, 
pub in Following a Lark, 1996
Here is a work for poets
Carve the runes
Then be content with silence.
from A Work for Poets,
pub in Following a Lark, 1996


GMB sauntering towards Loch of Harray 
photo by G.Gordon Wright

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