On a cruciform cloth squared in black and white two old men are playing, with ivory and ebony pieces, worn as the dust-caulked stones they squat on, a game. I do not understand game, rules, or anything else here. On the other side of the temple square a Garuda folds gilded wings at the top of a pillar in this town whose syllables are so strange I keep relocating them in the guide book as though their sounds could say the place I am. Turning from the play of old men I watch a girl squat before a rough circle of pebbles with open palm toss one to the air, gather in its fall three from the dust and capture the fourth's plummet in her cupped hand. By the catch of childhood she names. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...IN A BURYING GROUND by SARA TEASDALE SUMMER NIGHT-BROADWAY by LOUIS UNTERMEYER VOYAGE A L'INFINI by WALTER CONRAD ARENSBERG THE FIRESIDE by NATHANIEL COTTON A VALEDICTION: OF MY NAME IN THE WINDOW by JOHN DONNE NERVES by ARTHUR WILLIAM SYMONS GREENES FUNERALLS: SONNET 8 by RICHARD BARNFIELD DEATH'S JEST-BOOK: BRIDAL SONG AND DIRGE by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES |