'THIS job's the best I've done.' He bent his head Over the golden vessel that he'd wrought. A bird was singing. But the craftsman's thought Is a forgotten language, lost and dead. He sighed and stretch'd brown arms. His friend came in And stood beside him in the morning sun. The goldwork glitter'd.... 'That's the best I've done. 'And now I've got a necklace to begin.' This was at Gnossos, in the isle of Crete... A girl was selling flowers along the street. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A BOOK OF AIRS: SONG 8 by THOMAS CAMPION THE VAMPIRE by RUDYARD KIPLING A UTILITARIAN VIEW OF THE MONITOR'S FIGHT by HERMAN MELVILLE TO S.M., A YOUNG AFRICAN PAINTER, ON SEEING HIS WORKS by PHILLIS WHEATLEY EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 44. TEARS THE SYMPTOM LOVE by PHILIP AYRES HELLENS RAPE; OR A LIGHT LANTHORNE FOR LIGHT LADIES by RICHARD BARNFIELD |