The Small Bells of Benin
In a Chicago museum, these small bells of Benin
 are bringing their charm to a foreign scene, without ringing.
 The concave cylindrical draping of some
 is as prim as the poise of a Quaker maid,
 while the rare quadrangular forms of the rest,
 with their molded latticed designs, suggest
 the iron fences, displayed in New Orleans, and everywhere, now.
 And who can escape the quaint, spellbound, gargoyle-like bronze faces
 that stare from their settings of thin metal lace?
 I wish I could obtain one of these bells
 or even a facsimile, but the formula
 to their deft moldings was lost
 and hasn’t been quite rediscovered or found.
                
                    
                        Notes:
                        
            
                        
                                                
                                                                    
                            Reprinted with permission of Broadside Lotus Press from Impressions of African Art Forms in the Poetry of Margaret Danner (Broadside Press, 1960).
This work is part of the portfolio “‘These Blazing Forms’: The Life and Work of Margaret Danner” from the March 2022 issue.
                    
                        Source:
                        Poetry
                                                                                                                                                                    (March 2022)