Get Your Premium Membership

Sculptor

 For Leonard Baskin

To his house the bodiless
Come to barter endlessly
Vision, wisdom, for bodies
Palpable as his, and weighty.
Hands moving move priestlier Than priest's hands, invoke no vain Images of light and air But sure stations in bronze, wood, stone.
Obdurate, in dense-grained wood, A bald angel blocks and shapes The flimsy light; arms folded Watches his cumbrous world eclipse Inane worlds of wind and cloud.
Bronze dead dominate the floor, Resistive, ruddy-bodied, Dwarfing us.
Our bodies flicker Toward extinction in those eyes Which, without him, were beggared Of place, time, and their bodies.
Emulous spirits make discord, Try entry, enter nightmares Until his chisel bequeaths Them life livelier than ours, A solider repose than death's.

Poem by Sylvia Plath
Biography | Poems | Best Poems | Short Poems | Quotes | Email Poem - SculptorEmail Poem | Create an image from this poem

Poems are below...



More Poems by Sylvia Plath

Comments, Analysis, and Meaning on Sculptor

Provide your analysis, explanation, meaning, interpretation, and comments on the poem Sculptor here.

Commenting turned off, sorry.


Book: Shattered Sighs