the.com/clod
a lump of earth that wandered into insults and never left.
means a compact chunk of soil or clay, and by extension, a slow-witted, graceless person.
from old english clod/clodde, kin to clot; farmers used it for dirt-lumps in a plowed field, then people started calling their dim neighbors the same thing.
same rootclot and clod are etymological siblings
shakespeare used itclodpole and clodpate meant blockhead
farming originoriginally just a lump of turned-up dirt