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  1. The poem’s first stanza describes how each element acts upon the other: “Water hollows stone” (Line 1), “wind scatters water” (Line 2), and “stone stops the wind” (Line 3). Paz concludes the stanza with a reformulation of the title: “Water, wind, stone” (Line 4).

  2. Analysis: “Wind, Water, Stone” “Wind, Water, Stone” begins with a pattern recalling the game rock-paper-scissors, juxtaposing each of the three titular elements with another and demonstrating how one of each pair acts upon the other.

  3. Wind sings in its whirling, water murmurs going by, unmoving stone keeps still. Wind, water, stone. Each is another and no other: crossing and vanishing. through their empty names: water, stone, wind. Octavio Paz, "Wind, Water, Stone" from The Collected Poems of Octavio Paz, 1957-1987.

  4. Octavio Paz. for Roger Caillois. Water hollows stone, wind scatters water, stone stops the wind. Water, wind, stone. Wind carves stone, stone's a cup of water, water escapes and is wind.

  5. In the poem, water “hollows,” “escapes,” and “murmurs” (Lines 1, 7, 10). Wind, on the other hand, “scatters,” “carves,” and “sings” (Lines 2, 5, 9), while stone “stops,” “ [is] a cup,” and “keeps still” (Lines 3, 6, 11). Each element is presented in the poem as an embodiment (or symbol) of a certain kind of ...

  6. Wind, Water, Stone by Octavio Paz | CommonLit. CommonLit does more so that you can spend less. Maximize growth and minimize costs with a partnership starting at just $2,500 / year! Connect with our team to learn more. Dismiss Announcement. Text. Paired Texts. Related Media. Teacher Guide.

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  8. Mar 12, 2014 · Octavio Paz: "Wind, Water, Stone". for Roger Caillois. Water hollows stone, wind scatters water, stone stops the wind. Water, wind, stone. Wind carves stone, stone's a cup of water, water escapes and is wind.