All summer's warmth was stored there in the hay; 
Below, the troughs of water froze: the boy 
Climbed nightly up the rungs behind the stalls 
And planted deep between the clothes he heard 
The kind wind bluster, but the last he knew 
Was sharp and filled his head, the smell of hay. 
Here wrapped within the cobbled mews he woke. 
Passing from summer, climbing down through winter 
He broke into an air that kept no season: 
Denying change, for it was always there. 
It nipped the memory numb, scalding away 
The castle of winter and the smell of hay. 
The ostlers knew, but did not tell him more 
Than hay is what we turn to. Other smells, 
Horses, leather, manure, fresh sweat, and sweet 
Mortality, he found them on the North. 
That was her sister, East, that shrilled all day 
And swept the mews dead clean from wisps of hay.





