He took a lump of yellow clay and folded it To make it round, And through the inner hollow shaped and molded it Upon the ground. He set it in the sun and watched till it had dried Enough to burn And then, with purging sand, smoothed off each bulging side And crooked turn. He died. They filled his jar with water, set bean-meal Inside his tomb Lest, waking ere his time, the Hunger-beast should steal Through earth's dark womb. Ten thousand years ago or more, his thought took form As now it stands: An Aztec jar upon my table, glowing, warm. From his deft hands. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HELIOTROPE by HARRY THURSTON PECK THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 23. LOVE'S BAUBLES by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI THE TROOPS by SIEGFRIED SASSOON THE SHEPHEARDES CALENDER: MAY by EDMUND SPENSER EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 31. 'TIS YIELDING GAINS THE LOVER VICTORY by PHILIP AYRES DUSK ON ENGLISH BAY by EARL (EARLE) BIRNEY |