Thursday, January 31, 2019
Good and Evil in The Horses :: Horses
Good and abomination in The Horses   The concepts of good and evil resonate throughout the work of the Scottish poet Edwin Muir. In Muirs important poem The Horses, guilt and innocence, good and evil, argon also in the plainest view. besides the poem is not sabotaged artistically because of it, as so many such poems are. The Horses is about the unexpected return, after an apocalypse, of crude horses that restore the long lost ancient companionship with the surviving humans. The cashier condemns the old openhanded world that wreaked the damage Barely a twelvemonth after The seven days war that put the world to sleep, tardy in the evening the strange horses came. By then we had made our convenant with silence, But in the first few days it was so still We listened to our eupneic and were afraid. On the second day The radios failed we turned the knobs no answer. But on the third day a warship passed us, heading north, Dead bodies piled on the deck. On the sixth day A plane plunged over us into the sea. Thereafter Nothing. The radios dumb. And still they stand in corners of our kitchens, And stand, perhaps, turned on, in a million rooms, All over the world. But now if they should speak, If on a sudden they should speak again If on the stroke of noon a voice should speak, We would not listen, we would not let it bring That old bad world that swallowed its children quick At one great gulp. We would not receive it again . . . Have Armageddon and its aftermath ever been more powerfully, more palpably imagined? And yet, I do not think that the poems curious vividness is the greatest strength of The Horses. Its special power is in the guidance cataclysm evokes Muirs most abiding theme the renewal of that long-lost archaic bond between life and the world even in the looking at of catastrophe (Our life is changed their coming our beginning).
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