Eyes the color of winter water, 
eyes the winter of water where I 
 
Quoits in the Spartan month 
Hyacinthius, the game 
joins us, pronounces 
 
us god and boy: I toss him 
the discus thinking This is mine 
and the wind says Not yet 
 
Memory with small hairs 
pasted to pale wet skin 
(the flower hyacinthos, 
perhaps a fritillaria, not 
the modern Hyacinthus orientalis) 
 
After he smells of orange groves, 
spreads white ass meat for me 
him with a hole drilled in him I try 
to fill: I ease my way into his orchard 
 
(the ornamental Liliaceae 
genera, including the spring 
-flowering Crocus and Hyacinthus, 
and the summer-flowering 
Hemerocallis or day lily; also 
Amaryllis, Hippeastrum, and Narcissus) 
 
A blow struck by jealous Zephyrus, or 
Boreas, by other accounts: 
his skin annotated by the wound 
that explicates his mortality 
in red pencil, wind edits him down to 
withering perennial, shriveled bulb 
 
(perhaps a pre-Hellenic god, his 
precise relationship to Apollo 
still obscure, though clearly 
a subordinate) 
 
Him with a hole I keep trying 
to make, dead meat of white 
 
blooms in hand 
 
(onion as well, garlic, leek, 
chive, and asparagus) 
 
And where he was 
this leafless stalk (bluebell, 
tulip, torch lily, trillium: 
snowdrop, Solomon’s 
seal) I break to take for my own, 
black at the core of blossoming 
 
(a bell-shaped nodding flower, 
usually solitary)
Reginald Shepherd
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/apollo-on-what-the-boy-gave/