The search
This child of mine
squats by the water’s edge
examining stones.
Each wave renews
their licked-clean shine,
their washed-face wet.
He sorts and grades and stores.
Sometimes he chooses one
for a pocket.
They are not for throwing
or building or even for marking
a boundary.
It is a kind of search
for the right stones, the touchstones,
those that ring true.
Some have markings,
lines like the palm of a hand
crossing and fraying.
This for the heart,
this for the head
and a long life.
Some live in his satchel
under the books
and double its weight.
Under the desk
he takes one out and inspects it,
fingers its cool skin.
A piece of the earth.
A chip off the solar system.
The world in a grain of sand.