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‘The Jewellery Maker’ portrays a man engaged in a daily, almost ritualistic act of creation. Walking to his workshop each morning, as generations before him did, he is immersed in the sensory richness of his environment: the heat-baked stone, the scent of blossom, and the vivid blue sky. He greets his neighbours with warmth, suggesting a tight-knit community, yet there is a sense of quiet solitude in his task.

Inside the workshop, he arranges his tools with the precision of a surgeon. The process of working with metal is not just technical, but intimate and joyful. He transforms raw materials into golden butterflies, moons, and dragonflies – symbols of beauty and ephemerality. There is an implied reverence for both the act of making and the material itself.

His thoughts drift to his wife, whose simplicity contrasts with the opulence of his creations. She wears only a plain gold band, while he imagines younger women elsewhere adorning themselves with his work. This contrast introduces tension between function and fantasy, labour and luxury. The poem ends on this unspoken divide between the maker and the wearer – those who create beauty and those who merely display it.

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