The Scottish poet, writer, traveller and translator Alastair Reid has died at the age of 88.

Reid, who for 40 years wrote for the New Yorker, and spent many years travelling in and writing about South America, passed away after a period of illness.

In his poetry, he was perhaps best known for his anthologised poem Scotland, which concludes ''We'll pay for it, we'll pay for it, we'll pay for it!' and he was renowned as a fine essayist.

Reid, who leaves his wife Leslie Clark and son Jasper, was described as "one of life's itinerants" as well as a man who mixed with the literary world in the US, South American and the UK.

Born in 1926 in Galloway, he lived in Spain, the Dominican Republic as well as Scotland and New York.

He travelled widely, to Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Chile and Argentina.