Edited by Dava Sobel

The Dead Sea scrolls were mostly saved

by bribe and threat: unmindful finders

re-interred the rest in hopes of

gain. It vanished or decayed.

A trooper in the Greek campaign

blown by Wehrmacht mortars down

a limestone chute, glimpsed there a lettered

chest—lost masterworks? new graphs

by Euclid or his heirs, perhaps. Never

reclaimed: the next rounds covered it

up again. Fountains of blazing

loam, then forced retreat—the blasted

ground left no remains of site-map

to be guessed. Great Aztec wheels;

Lascaux red bulls; dried funeral garlands

of Neanderthals: all brought to

light by restless chance—a dropped hoe

or a wandering goat. Vast evidence

unknown, we stand on ranks

of shoulders buried deep in earth

a fragmentary tune, made by the

breeze against a bone protruding

from a crumbled canyon wall.