Bronze Age
BRONZE AGE
The magic man with his string of nags
And handsome, dark apprentices
Comes tinkling out of the haunted wood
And through the fields around the rath
And kids and household dogs run out
To mob him in. The king himself
Strides from his hall to meet a man
Dressed like himself in soft, fine wool
And both make speeches. Bales of samples-
Swords, spears, cowbells and chisels-
Are spread on the ground and pondered on
And the king chooses. Watched by kids
And smooth, unmarried daughters of generals
Master and men construct their furnace
There in the forecourt and cast the bronze.
Afterwards, when the king has tested
His fine new blade on a hide or two
And while the court draws round to hear
Such tales as only a smith can tell,
A bold apprentice and a daughter,
Risking blinding or something worse,
Slip from the firelight hand in hand
Out through the now unguarded gate
To lie in the high plumed grass all night
And wish on the bright star we call Vega.