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         Muir Edwin:     more books (101)
  1. The Trial (Modern Library, No. 318) by Franz Kafka, 1956
  2. Penguin Modern Poets: E.Muir, A.Stokes, G.Grigson Bk. 23 (Penguin modern poets, 23) by Edwin Muir and Adrian Stokes Geoffrey Grigson, 1973-06-28
  3. The Story and the Fable by Edwin Muir, 1987-09
  4. The Ugly Duchess: A Historical Romance by Lion Feuchtwanger, 1928-01-01
  5. ThE Three Brothers by Edwin Muir, 1931
  6. The marionette by Edwin Muir, 1927
  7. Scott and Scotland: The predicament of the Scottish writer by Edwin Muir, 1938
  8. The Structure Of The Novel by Edwin Muir, 2008-11-04
  9. The Romantic (Penguin Modern Classics) by Hermann Broch, 2000-03-30
  10. John Knox Portrait of a Culvinest by Edwin Muir, 1976-06
  11. The Queen's Doctor: Being The Strange Story Of The Rise And Fall Of Struensee, Dictator, Lover And Doctor Of Medicine by Robert Neumann, 2008-06-13
  12. Essays on literature and society by Edwin Muir, 1967
  13. The labyrinth by Edwin Muir, 1949
  14. Journeys and Places by Edwin Muir, 1937-01-01

41. Willa Muir @ Unverse
The Trial by Franz Kafka, George Steiner, Willa muir, edwin muir April, 1995 byFranz Kafka, Willa muir, edwin muir, Anne Rice November, 1995 More info / Buy.
http://www.unverse.com/list-books-find_artist Willa Muir

42. Edwin Muir, Le Lieu Secret
Translate this page edwin muir Le lieu secret suivi de L'impossible comme traduction Traductionet postface par Alain Suied 40 pages, 10 euros ISBN 2-84739-005-7.
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/revue.improbable/editions/muir.htm
Edwin Muir
Le lieu secret

suivi de
L'impossible comme traduction
Traduction et postface par Alain Suied
40 pages, 10 euros
ISBN 2-84739-005-7 Edwin Muir, poète de l’intégrité
Muir connut la gloire...pour son Autobiographie, publiée par Graywolf Press. Ses Poèmes complets sont publiés par Faber and Faber. Alain Suied Bon de commande:
format htm

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La revue improbable de mai 2002

43. Anne Mounic: Edwin Muir
Translate this page edwin muir poésie et mythe, ou l'autre du temps. Anne Mounic. Notes 1 edwinmuir, An Autobiography. Edinburgh Cannongate Classics, 1993, p. 187.
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/revue.improbable/juin02/mounicmuir.htm
Edwin Muir : poésie et mythe, ou l'autre du temps.
Anne Mounic Dans son autobiographie, publiée sous ce titre en 1954, Edwin Muir (1887-1959), expliquant qu'il n'a commencé à écrire qu'à l'âge de trente-cinq ans, présente ce retour sur soi comme guérison "de cette longue maladie qui s'était emparée de moi quand, à l'âge de quatorze ans, j'étais arrivé à Glasgow"(1). Il quittait, avec sa famille, la ferme de l'enfance sur une île des Orcades, au nord de l'Ecosse, pour ne trouver à Glasgow qu'étrangeté et tragédie. La famille y connut en effet une série de deuils qui éprouvèrent le jeune garçon.
La révélation de la nécessité de l'expression poétique se fit à Dresde en mars 1922 : "Je me rendis compte qu'il me fallait vivre à nouveau les années que j'avais vécues faussement et que chacun devrait vivre sa vie deux fois, car la première tentative se révèle toujours aveugle."(2) La poésie dessille l'être, lui permettant de se voir, mais ce n'est pas exactement lui-même qu'il contemple au lointain, car le temps le révèle comme autre et souvent, d'ailleurs, à la troisième personne, comme dans "Childhood" ("Enfance") : "And from the house his mother called his name", "Et de la maison sa mère l'appelait", ou bien en une négation d'identité, la première personne se dissociant sur le chemin de la vie, dans "Remembrance" ("Souvenir") :

44. Edwin Muir
IN LOVE FOR LONG edwin muir, from his collection, The Voyage(1946). Biographicalnote on edwin muir (soon) Back to Poems Index Back to Friendship Home Page.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Academy/9499/muir1.html
IN LOVE FOR LONG Edwin Muir, from his collection, The Voyage I've been in love for long
With what I cannot tell
And will contrive a song
For the intangible
That has no mould or shape,
From which there's no escape,
It's not even a name,
Yet is all constancy;
Tried or untried the same,
It cannot part from me;
A breath yet as still As the established hill. It is not any thing, And yet all being is; Being, being, being, Its burden and its bliss. How can I ever prove What it is I love? This happy happy love Is seiged with crying sorrows, Crushed beneath and above Between todays and morrows; A little paradise Held in the world's vice. And there it is content As careless as a child, And in imprisonment Flourishes sweet and wild: In wrong, beyond wrong All the world's day long. This love a moment known for what I do not know And in a moment gone Is like the happy doe That keeps its perfect laws Between the tiger's paws And vindicates its cause. Biographical note on Edwin Muir (soon) Back to Poems Index Back to Friendship Home Page My thanks to Geocities , which has provided free space for this Page.

45. Meditations On "The Killing" By Edwin Muir- St Peter's Church, Nottingham, Engla
Four meditations on The Killing by edwin muir. Quiet Day at Sacrista Prebend,Southwell. Holy Week 2002. Meditation 1. Is that why, in edwin muir’s words
http://www.stpetersnottingham.org/sermon/killing-muir.html
Four meditations on "The Killing" by Edwin Muir
Quiet Day at Sacrista Prebend, Southwell.
Holy Week 2002
Meditation 1
What is it that attracts us to Jesus? Where does that attraction come from? The stories that each one of us will have to tell about our journey will be so different, and will relate such a variety of answers to that question, of that I have no doubt. But that only complicates the matter. We are fascinated. Despite all the challenges to belief which each one of us has faced, we are still here, fascinated, longing to know more, to understand more, to see more, with greater depth, greater vision, greater awareness. Does not our prayer, at least at times, include a pleading with God, ‘Please God, show me more.’ You remember how many times in the Gospels people said to Jesus ‘Come on show us a sign’; even in the last moments of his life, nailed to the cross, agonisingly vulnerable and human, they said, they taunted ‘Let him come down from the cross, then we will believe in him.” Wouldn’t that have been fantastic. There would have been no questions then, no need for the tantalising spectres of the empty tomb and the resurrection appearances. Is that why, in Edwin Muir’s words:

46. Canongate Classics - An Autobiography: Edwin Muir
An Autobiography edwin muir. edwin muir Introduced by Peter ButterList Price £6.99 Online Price £5.24 You save 25%, Published
http://www.canongate.net/classics/clp.taf?_p=2891

47. Edwin Muir In Canongate.net
Webtrader Code of Practice. edwin muir. edwin muir’s (18871959) novels includeThe Marionette (1927), The Three Brothers (1931) and Poor Tom (1932).
http://www.canongate.net/people/pep.taf?_p=2000

48. The New York Review Of Books: Edwin Muir By David Levine
David Levine Gallery. edwin muir. This drawing originally appeared with A Poet in Exile (March 17, 1966). Browse the gallery by year
http://www.nybooks.com/gallery/387
@import "/css/default-b.css"; Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books
David Levine Gallery
Edwin Muir This drawing originally appeared with " A Poet in Exile " (March 17, 1966) Browse the gallery by year: Search the gallery (by subject name or keyword): Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books with any questions about this site. The cover date of the next issue of The New York Review of Books will be May 1, 2003.

49. Edwin Muir - 'THE COMBAT'
'The Combat' (from 'The Labyrinth', 1949). by edwin muir. It was notmeant for was despair. Poem © Copyright edwin muir Tell Us What
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/lennich/MUIR_P1.HTM
'The Combat' (from 'The Labyrinth', 1949)
by Edwin Muir

50. The Horses By Edwin Muir
poem, A weekly poem, read by the author. The Horses By edwin MuirPosted Thursday, January 14, 1999, at 1230 AM PT To hear Robert
http://slate.msn.com/id/13105/
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poem A weekly poem, read by the author.
The Horses
By Edwin Muir
Posted Thursday, January 14, 1999, at 12:30 AM PT
To hear Robert Pinsky read "The Horses," click here Edwin Muir (1887-1959) is a mysteriously neglected, gorgeous, and emotionally penetrating poet. Of all the many pieces of writing spurred by the Cold War and the threat of nuclear apocalypse, and of the other kinds of 20 th century apocalyptic writing, his poem "The Horses" may be the most effective, perhaps because it is the most calm and gentle. The plainness of the writing, the persuasive speech rhythms under the almost hidden iambic pulse, manifest immense art, culminating in a last line that could be incised in stone. Robert Pinsky Barely a twelvemonth after
The seven days war that put the world to sleep,
Late in the evening the strange horses came. By then we had made our covenant with silence, But in the first few days it was so still We listened to our breathing and were afraid.

51. "The Fathers" - Edwin Muir
The Fathers edwin muir. Our fathers all were poor, Poorer ourfathers' fathers; Beyond, we dare not look. We, the sons, keep
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~lanes/english/fathers.htm
"The Fathers" - Edwin Muir
Our fathers all were poor, Poorer our fathers' fathers; Beyond, we dare not look. We, the sons, keep store Of tarnished gold that gathers Around us from the night, Record it in this book That, when the line is drawn, Credit and creditor gone, Column and figure flown, Will open into light. Archaic fevers shake Our healthy flesh and blood Plumped in the passing day And fed with pleasant food. The fathers' anger and ache Will not, will not away And leave the living alone, But on our careless brows Faintly their furrows engrave Like veinings in a stone, Breathe in the sunny house Nightmare of blackened bone, Cellar and choking cave. Panics and furies fly Through our unhurried veins, Heavenly lights and rains Purify heart and eye, Past agonies purify And lay the sullen dust. The angers will not away. We hold our fathers' trust, Wrong, riches, sorrow and all Until they topple and fall, And fallen let in the day. Back to Course Page

52. "Scotland's Winter" - Edwin Muir
Scotland's Winter edwin muir. Now the ice lays its smooth clawson the sill, The sun looks from the hill Helmed in his winter
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~lanes/english/scotwint.htm
"Scotland's Winter" - Edwin Muir
Now the ice lays its smooth claws on the sill, The sun looks from the hill Helmed in his winter casket, And sweeps his arctic sword across the sky. The water at the mill Sounds more hoarse and dull. The miller's daughter walking by With frozen fingers soldered to her basket Seems to be knocking Upon a hundred leagues of floor With her light heels, and mocking Percy and Douglas dead, And Bruce on his burial bed, Where he lies white as may With wars and leprosy, And all the kings before This land was kingless, And all the singers before This land was songless, This land that with its dead and living waits the Judgement Day. But they, the powerless dead, Listening can hear no more Than a hard tapping on the floor A little overhead Of common heels that do not know Whence they come or where they go And are content With their poor frozen life and shallow banishment. Back to Course Page

53. Scottish Authors
edwin muir. WELCOME! Enjoy browsing our selection of used and collectable books.muir, edwin. Scottish Journey. Mainstream 1979 rep. Intro. by TC Smout.
http://www.grian.demon.co.uk/sa/em.html
Edwin Muir
WELCOME!
Enjoy browsing our selection of used and collectable books
Muir, Edwin. Scottish Journey. Mainstream 1979 rep. Intro. by T.C. Smout. 250pp., ex-lib. copy with usual stamps, lacks ffep., else good in d/w. 5.00
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54. Scottish Journey By Edwin Muir
One of Scotland's greatest writers of modern prose and poetry, edwin muir,takes you on a journey through Scotland. Scottish Journey. By edwin muir
http://claymore.wisemagic.com/scotradiance/bookreviews/journey.htm
SCOTTISH BOOKS FOR A RAINY DAY
Scottish Journey
By Edwin Muir Reviewed by Sharma Krauskopf and rated This book first published in 1935 is a story of a journey from Edinburgh, the Lowlands, Glasgow and the Highlands but it is not an ordinary travel story. The author delves deeply into the people of the country and the society as a whole. He shows you not only the good but the sad side of Scotland's society. Poverty and the grubby areas of the big cities are explored and the question he ask is why? Why is Scotland like it is? I found this book both enlightening but very thought provoking. Mir said "This book is a record of a journey and my intentiion in beginning it was to give my impressions of contemporary Scotland; not the romantic Scotland or the past nor the Scotland of the tourist, but the Scotland which presents itself to one who is not looking for anything in particular, and is willing to believe what his eyes and his ears tell him." My ranking is four thistles for a classic that will always be a window of Scotland both good and bad. This paper back book costs £5.59 plus shipping and handling. Click here to

55. Jonas-Bibliographie I
Translate this page muir, edwin (The Magic Mountain) The Nation and Athenaeum London Nr. 41, 1927 45227.60 08 21 - STW zau proust joyce zeit tod @. muir, edwin The Fatal Chain.
http://www.bibliothek.uni-augsburg.de/fach/germ/jonasbiblmi.html
Fachinformation Germanistik Sammlung Jonas
Sammlung Klaus W. und Ilsedore B. Jonas
Verzeichnis der Thomas-Mann-Artikelsammlung
Verfasseralphabet - Buchstabe Mi - My
Michael, Friedrich: Bogen und Leier. Eine Symbolfigur bei Thomas Mann Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Frankfurt a. M. Jg. 20, Nr. 240, 15.10.1968 21, - NR: 68.108 03a-georg-potempa 20 - STW: red fontane symbol @ Michael, Wolfgang: F. Thomas Mann - STW: Ludwig Derleth, Stefan George Modern Language Forum Los Angeles Nr. 35, 1950 35-38 50.134 08 21 en-dok bem dok george derleth - @ Michaelis, Rolf Doppelgesicht deutschen Geistes. Hermann Hesse und Thomas Mann im Briefwechsel Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Literaturblatt Frankfurt a.M. Jg. 20, Nr. 178, 3.8.1968, - NR: 68.109 03 20 - bri-hesse hesse politik deutschland @ Mileck, Joseph: A Comparative Sudy of "Die Betrogene" and "Der Tod in Venedig" Modern Language Forum Los Angeles Jg. 42, 1957 124-129 57.110 08 21 te tod btg lessing tod symbol novelle @ Millett, Fred In My Opinion University of Chicago Magazine Chicago Nr. 30, 1938 17-19, - NR: 38.71 08 21 en-bud bud galsworthy familien-roman @ Mintz, Samuel I. ("Letter to the Editor") New York Times Book Review New York 8.9.1940 2, - NR: 40.35 07 21 - STW: lot - @

56. Scotland's Winter By Edwin Muir
Visit Dunkeld Home Page, Click here for the new Dougie MacLean CD. Scotland's Winter edwin muir Now the ice lays its smooth claws
http://www.visitdunkeld.com/scotlands-winter.htm
Dunkeld
Home Page

Tour Scotland on a relaxing, small group vacation of
my homeland. Click here for the Best Scottish Tours !
"Scotland's Winter" - Edwin Muir Now the ice lays its smooth claws on the sill,
The sun looks from the hill
Helmed in his winter casket,
And sweeps his arctic sword across the sky.
The water at the mill
Sounds more hoarse and dull.
The miller's daughter walking by With frozen fingers soldered to her basket Seems to be knocking Upon a hundred leagues of floor With her light heels, and mocking Percy and Douglas dead, And Bruce on his burial bed, Where he lies white as may With wars and leprosy, And all the kings before This land was kingless, And all the singers before This land was songless

57. Arts/Literature/Authors/M/Muir,_Edwin
Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligentsearch feature. / Arts / Literature / Authors / M / muir, edwin.
http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/M/Muir,_Edw
Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Literature Authors M Muir, Edwin Edwin Muir
"Site dedicated to Edwin Muir Oracdian poet critic and translator."
URL: http://www.rhizomatics.demon.co.uk/muir/
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58. Scotland's Winter By Edwin Muir
Home Page, Leave the herd behind on a small group tour of Scotland. Scotland's Winter edwin muir Now the ice lays its smooth claws
http://www.fife.50megs.com/scotlands-winter.htm
Tour Scotland
Home Page

The Craw's Nest Hotel is a superb base for
golfing in and around the Kingdom of Fife !
"Scotland's Winter" - Edwin Muir Now the ice lays its smooth claws on the sill,
The sun looks from the hill
Helmed in his winter casket,
And sweeps his arctic sword across the sky.
The water at the mill
Sounds more hoarse and dull.
The miller's daughter walking by With frozen fingers soldered to her basket Seems to be knocking Upon a hundred leagues of floor With her light heels, and mocking Percy and Douglas dead, And Bruce on his burial bed, Where he lies white as may With wars and leprosy, And all the kings before This land was kingless, And all the singers before This land was songless

59. Edwin Muir - Song
SONG. edwin muir. Why should your face so please me. That if one little lineshould stray. Bewilderment would seize me. And drag me down the tortuous way.
http://www.sharinglaw.net/personal/Poetry/Muir_Song.htm
SONG Edwin Muir Why should your face so please me That if one little line should stray Bewilderment would seize me And drag me down the tortuous way Out of the noon into the night? But so, into this tranquil light You raise me. How could our minds so marry That, separate, blunder to and fro, Make for a point, miscarry, And blind as headstrong horses go? Though now they in their promised land At pleasure travel hand in hand Or tarry. This concord is an answer To questions far beyond our mind Whose image is a dancer. All effort is to ease refined Here, weight is light; this is the dove Of love and peace, not heartless love The lancer. And yet I still must wonder That such an armistice can be And life roll by in thunder To leave this calm with you and me.

60. SciFan: Books: Blood Of The Colyn Muir By Paul Edwin Zimmer (from Our Database O
Blood of the Colyn muir, by Paul edwin Zimmer, Jon DeCles, Novel, firstpublication in 1988. Buy it online, Get most new and used editions
http://www.scifan.com/titles/title.asp?TI_titleid=1501

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