HELEN B Cruickshank (1886-1975) shows her indomitable spirit – and wit – in these terse lines.

The remarkable woman from Angus, who for economic reasons did not get the higher education she so merited, worked for a time as a civil servant in London before returning to her native Scotland to become a luminary of the literary world in Edinburgh. Her Collected Poems were published by Reprographia in 1971.

ON BEING EIGHTY

Broad in the beam? More broad in sympathy.

Stiff in the joints? More flexible in mind.

Deaf on the right? Now voices from the Left

In politics and art more clearly sound.

Arteries harden? Movements then more slow

Allow more time to contemplate and ponder.

High on the Shelf? Horizons farther grow

Extending faculties for joy and wonder.

Acceptance gained of what one has to bear?

The hard is then become more bearable

And comrade Death himself finds welcome, so

Quite cheerfully towards eighty-one we go.